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THE EPISTLE OF
PAUL THE APOSTLE TO THE
HEBREWS
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
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CHAPTER 9
@Heb
9:1-28. INFERIORITY OF THE
OLD TO THE NEW
COVENANT IN THE
MEANS OF ACCESS
TO GOD:
THE BLOOD
OF BULLS AND
GOATS OF NO
REAL AVAIL:
THE BLOOD
OF CHRIST
ALL-SUFFICIENT TO
PURGE AWAY
SIN, WHENCE
FLOWS OUR
HOPE OF HIS
APPEARING AGAIN
FOR OUR
PERFECT SALVATION.
1. Then verily--Greek,
"Accordingly then." Resuming the subject from @Heb
8:5. In accordance with the command given to Moses,
"the first covenant had," &c.
had--not "has," for as a covenant it
no longer existed, though its rites were observed till the
destruction of Jerusalem.
ordinances--of divine right and institution.
service--worship.
a worldly sanctuary--Greek, "its
(literally, 'the') sanctuary worldly," mundane;
consisting of the elements of the visible world.
Contrasted with the heavenly sanctuary. Compare @Heb
9:11,12, "not of this building," @Heb
9:24. Material, outward, perishing (however precious
its materials were), and also defective religiously. In @Heb
9:2-5, "the worldly sanctuary" is discussed; in
@Heb
9:6, &c., the "ordinances of worship." The outer
tabernacle the Jews believed, signified this world;
the Holy of Holies, heaven. JOSEPHUS
calls the outer, divided into two parts, "a secular and
common place," answering to "the earth and sea"; and the
inner holiest place, the third part, appropriated to God
and not accessible to men.
2. Defining "the worldly
tabernacle."
a tabernacle--"the tabernacle."
made--built and furnished.
the first--the anterior tabernacle.
candlestick . . . table--typifying light
and life (@Ex
25:31-39). The candlestick consisted of a shaft and
six branches of gold, seven in all, the bowls made like
almonds, with a knop and a flower in one branch. It was
carried in Vespasian's triumph, and the figure is to be
seen on Titus' arch at Rome. The table of shittim
wood, covered with gold, was for the showbread (@Ex
25:23-30).
showbread--literally, "the setting forth of
the loaves," that is, the loaves set forth: "the show of
the bread" [ALFORD].
In the outer holy place: so the Eucharist continues until
our entrance into the heavenly Holy of Holies (@1Co
11:26).
which, &c.--"which (tabernacle) is called the
holy place," as distinguished from "the Holy of Holies."
3. And--Greek,
"But."
after--behind; within.
second veil--There were two veils or
curtains, one before the Holy of Holies (catapetasma),
here alluded to, the other before the tabernacle door (calumma).
called--as opposed to "the true."
4. golden censer--The
Greek, must not be translated "altar of incense," for
it was not in "the holiest" place "after the second
veil," but in "the holy place"; but as in @2Ch
26:19, and @Eze
8:11, "censer": so Vulgate and Syriac.
This GOLDEN
censer was only used on the day of atonement (other kinds
of censers on other days), and is therefore associated
with the holiest place, as being taken into it on
that anniversary by the high priest. The expression "which
had," does not mean that the golden censer was deposited
there, for in that case the high priest would have had to
go in and bring it out before burning incense in it; but
that the golden censer was one of the articles
belonging to, and used for, the yearly service in the
holiest place. He virtually supposes (without specifying)
the existence of the "altar of incense" in the anterior
holy place, by mentioning the golden censer filled
with incense from it: the incense answers to the
prayers of the saints; and the altar though outside
the holiest place, is connected with it (standing close
by the second veil, directly before the ark of the
covenant), even as we find an antitypical altar in
heaven. The rending of the veil by Christ has brought the
antitypes to the altar, candlestick, and showbread of the
anterior holy place into the holiest place, heaven. In @1Ki
6:22, Hebrew, "the altar" is said to
belong to the oracle, or holiest place (compare @Ex
30:6).
ark--of shittim wood, that is, acacia. Not in
the second temple, but in its stead was a stone basement
(called "the stone of foundation"), three fingers high.
pot--"golden," added in the Septuagint,
and sanctioned by Paul.
manna--an omer, each man's daily portion. In
@1Ki
8:9 2Ch 5:10, it is said there was nothing in the ark
of Solomon's temple save the two stone tables of the law
put in by Moses. But the expression that there was nothing
THEN therein
save the two tables, leaves the inference to be drawn that
formerly there were the other things mentioned by the
Rabbis and by Paul here, the pot of manna (the memorial of
God's providential care of Israel) and the rod of Aaron,
the memorial of the lawful priesthood (@Nu
17:3,5,7,10). The expressions "before the Lord" (@Ex
16:32), and "before the testimony" (@Nu
17:10) thus mean, "IN
the ark." "In," however, may be used here (as the
corresponding Hebrew word) as to things attached
to the ark as appendages, as the book of the law was
put "in the side of the ark," and so the
golden jewels offered by the Philistines (@1Sa
6:8).
tables of the covenant--(@De
9:9 10:2).
5. over it--over "the ark
of the covenant."
cherubim--representing the ruling powers by
which God acts in the moral and natural world. (See on Eze
1:6; Eze 10:1). Hence sometimes they answer to the
ministering angels; but mostly to the elect redeemed, by
whom God shall hereafter rule the world and set forth His
manifold wisdom: redeemed humanity, combining in, and with
itself, the highest forms of subordinate creaturely life;
not angels. They stand on the mercy seat, and on that
ground become the habitation of God, from which His
glory is to shine upon the world. They expressly say, @Re
5:8-10, "Thou hast redeemed us." They are there
distinguished from the angels, and associated with
the elders. They were of one piece with the mercy seat,
even as the Church is one with Christ: their sole standing
is on the blood-sprinkled mercy seat; they gaze down at it
as the redeemed shall for ever; they are "the habitation
of God through the Spirit."
of glory--The cherubim were bearers of
the divine glory, whence, perhaps, they derive
their name. The Shekinah, or cloud of glory, in
which Jehovah appeared between the cherubim over the mercy
seat, the lid of the ark, is doubtless the reference. THOLUCK
thinks the twelve loaves of the showbread represent the
twelve tribes of the nation, presented as a community
before God consecrated to Him (just as in the Lord's
Supper believers, the spiritual Israel, all partaking of
the one bread, and becoming one bread and one body,
present themselves before the Lord as consecrated to Him,
@1Co
10:16,17); the oil and light, the pure knowledge of
the Lord, in which the covenant people are to shine (the
seven (lights), implying perfection); the ark of
the covenant, the symbol of God's kingdom in the old
covenant, and representing God dwelling among His own; the
ten commandments in the ark, the law as the basis of union
between God and man; the mercy seat covering the law and
sprinkled with the blood of atonement for the collective
sin of the people, God's mercy [in Christ] stronger than
the law; the cherubim, the personified [redeemed]
creation, looking down on the mercy seat, where God's
mercy, and God's law, are set forth as the basis of
creation.
mercy seat--Greek, "the propitiatory":
the golden cover of the ark, on which was sprinkled the
blood of the propitiatory sacrifice on the day of
atonement; the footstool of Jehovah, the meeting place of
Him and His people.
we cannot--conveniently: besides what met the
eye in the sanctuary, there were spiritual realities
symbolized which it would take too long to discuss in
detail, our chief subject at present being the
priesthood and the sacrifices. "Which" refers
not merely to the cherubim, but to all the contents
of the sanctuary enumerated in @Heb
9:2-5.
6. The use made of the
sanctuary so furnished by the high priest on the
anniversary of atonement.
ordained--arranged.
always--twice at the least every day, for the
morning and evening care of the lamps, and offering of
incense (@Ex
30:7,8).
went--Greek, "enter": present tense.
7. once every year--the
tenth day of the seventh month. He entered within the veil
on that day twice at least. Thus "once" means here
on the one occasion only. The two, or possibly
more, entrances on that one day were regarded as parts of
the one whole.
not without blood--(@Heb
8:3).
offered--Greek, "offers."
errors--Greek, "ignorances":
"inadvertent errors." They might have known, as the law
was clearly promulged, and they were bound to study it; so
that their ignorance was culpable (compare @Ac
3:17 Eph 4:18 1Pe 1:14). Though one's ignorance may
mitigate one's punishment (@Lu
12:48), it does not wholly exempt from punishment.
8. The Holy Ghost--Moses
himself did not comprehend the typical meaning (@1Pe
1:11,12).
signifying--by the typical exclusion of all
from the holiest, save the high priest once a year.
the holiest of all--heaven, the antitype.
the first tabernacle--the anterior
tabernacle, representative of the whole Levitical system.
While it (the first tabernacle, and that which
represents the Levitical system) as yet "has a
standing" (so the Greek, that is, "has
continuance": "lasts"), the way to heaven (the
antitypical "holiest place") is not yet made manifest
(compare @Heb
10:19,20). The Old Testament economy is represented by
the holy place, the New Testament economy by the Holy of
Holies. Redemption, by Christ, has opened the Holy of
Holies (access to heaven by faith now, @Heb
4:16 7:19,25 10:19,22; by sight hereafter, @Isa
33:24 Re 11:19 21:2,3) to all mankind. The Greek
for "not yet" (me po) refers to the mind of the
Spirit: the Spirit intimating that men should not think
the way was yet opened [TITTMANN].
The Greek negative, "ou po," would deny the
fact objectively; "me po" denies the thing
subjectively.
9. Which--"The which,"
namely, anterior tabernacle: "as being that which was"
[ALFORD].
figure--Greek, "parable": a
parabolic setting forth of the character of the Old
Testament.
for--"in reference to the existing time."
The time of the temple-worship really belonged to
the Old Testament, but continued still in Paul's time
and that of his Hebrew readers. "The time of
reformation" (@Heb
9:10) stands in contrast to this, "the existing time";
though, in reality, "the time of reformation," the New
Testament time, was now present and existing. So
"the age to come," is the phrase applied to the
Gospel, because it was present only to believers,
and its fulness even to them is still to come.
Compare @Heb
9:11, "good things to come."
in which--tabernacle, not time,
according to the reading of the oldest manuscripts. Or
translate, "according to which" parabolic
representation, or figure.
were--Greek, "are."
gifts--unbloody oblations.
could not--Greek, "cannot": are not
able.
him that did the service--any worshipper. The
Greek is "latreuein," serve God,
which is all men's duty; not "leitourgein," to
serve in a ministerial office.
make . . . perfect--perfectly remove the
sense of guilt, and sanctify inwardly through love.
as pertaining to the conscience--"in respect
to the (moral-religious) consciousness." They can only
reach as far as the outward flesh (compare "carnal
ordinances," @Heb
9:10,13,14).
10. Which--sacrifices.
stood--consisted in [ALFORD];
or, "have attached to them" only things which appertain to
the use of foods, &c. The rites of meats, &c., go side
by side with the sacrifices [THOLUCK
and WAHL];
compare @Col
2:16.
drinks--(@Le
10:9 11:4). Usage subsequently to the law added many
observances as to meats and drinks.
washings--(@Ex
29:4).
and carnal ordinances--One oldest manuscript,
Syriac and Coptic, omit "and." "Carnal
ordinances" stand in apposition to "sacrifices" (@Heb
9:9). Carnal (outward, affecting only the
flesh) is opposed to spiritual. Contrast
"flesh" with "conscience" (@Heb
9:13,14).
imposed--as a burden (@Ac
15:10,28) continually pressing heavy.
until the time of reformation--Greek,
"the season of rectification," when the
reality should supersede the type (@Heb
8:8-12). Compare "better," @Heb
9:23.
11. But--in contrast to "could
not make . . . perfect" (@Heb
9:9).
Christ--The Messiah, of whom all the prophets
foretold; not "Jesus" here. From whom the "reformation" (@Heb
9:10), or rectification, emanates, which frees
from the yoke of carnal ordinances, and which is being
realized gradually now, and shall be perfectly in the
consummation of "the age (world) to come." "Christ . . .
High Priest," exactly answers to @Le
4:5, "the priest that is anointed."
being come an, &c.--rather, "having come
forward (compare @Heb
10:7, a different Greek word, picturesquely
presenting Him before us) as High Priest." The
Levitical priests must therefore retire. Just as on the
day of atonement, no work was done, no sacrifice was
offered, or priest was allowed to be in the tabernacle
while the high priest went into the holiest place to make
atonement (@Le
16:17,29). So not our righteousness, nor any other
priest's sacrifice, but Christ alone atones; and as the
high priest before offering incense had on common garments
of a priest, but after it wore his holy garments of "glory
and beauty" (@Ex
28:2,40) in entering the holiest, so Christ entered
the heavenly holiest in His glorified body.
good things to come--Greek, "the
good things to come," @Heb
10:1; "better promises," (@Heb
8:6; the "eternal inheritance," @Heb
9:15 1Pe 1:4; the "things hoped for," @Heb
11:1).
by a . . . tabernacle--joined with "He
entered." Translate, "Through the . . . tabernacle"
(of which we know) [ALFORD].
As the Jewish high priest passed through the
anterior tabernacle into the holiest place, so Christ
passed through heaven into the inner abode of the
unseen and unapproachable God. Thus, "the tabernacle" here
is the heavens through which He passed (see on Heb
4:14). But "the tabernacle" is also the glorified body
of Christ (see on Heb 8:2), "not of this building"
(not of the mere natural "creation, but of the
spiritual and heavenly, the new creation"), the
Head of the mystical body, the Church. Through this
glorified body He passes into the heavenly holiest place
(@Heb
9:24), the immaterial, unapproachable presence of God,
where He intercedes for us. His glorified body, as
the meeting place of God and all Christ's redeemed, and
the angels, answers to the heavens through which He
passed, and passes. His body is opposed to the
tabernacle, as His blood to the blood of goats, &c.
greater--as contrasted with the small
dimensions of the earthly anterior tabernacle.
more perfect--effective in giving pardon,
peace, sanctification, and access to closest communion
with God (compare @Heb
9:9 Heb 10:1).
not made with hands--but by the Lord Himself
(@Heb
8:2).
12. Neither--"Nor yet."
by--"through"; as the means of His approach.
goats . . . calves--not a bullock, such as
the Levitical high priest offered for himself, and a goat
for the people, on the day of atonement (@Le
16:6,15), year by year, whence the plural is
used, goats . . . calves. Besides the goat offered
for the people the blood of which was sprinkled before the
mercy seat, the high priest led forth a second goat,
namely, the scapegoat; over it he confessed the people's
sins, putting them on the head of the goat, which was sent
as the sin-bearer into the wilderness out of sight,
implying that the atonement effected by the goat sin
offering (of which the ceremony of the scapegoat is a
part, and not distinct from the sin offering) consisted in
the transfer of the people's sins on the goat, and their
consequent removal out of sight. The translation of sins
on the victim usual in other expiatory sacrifices being
omitted in the case of the slain goat, but employed in the
case of the goat sent away, proved the two goats were
regarded as one offering [ARCHBISHOP
MAGEE].
Christ's death is symbolized by the slain goat; His
resurrection to life by the living goat sent away. Modern
Jews substitute in some places a cock for the goat
as an expiation, the sins of the offerers being
transferred to the entrails, and exposed on the housetop
for the birds to carry out of sight, as the scapegoat did;
the Hebrew for "man" and "cock" being similar,
gebher [BUXTORF].
by--"through," as the means of His entrance;
the key unlocking the heavenly Holy of Holies to Him. The
Greek is forcible, "through THE blood of His own"
(compare @Heb
9:23).
once--"once for all."
having obtained--having thereby
obtained; literally, "found for Himself," as a thing of
insuperable difficulty to all save Divine Omnipotence,
self-devoting zeal, and love, to find. The access of
Christ to the Father was arduous (@Heb
5:7). None before had trodden the path.
eternal--The entrance of our Redeemer,
once for all, into the heavenly holiest place, secures
eternal redemption to us; whereas the Jewish high
priest's entrance was repeated year by year, and the
effect temporary and partial, "On redemption," compare @Mt
20:28 Eph 1:7 Col 1:14 1Ti 2:5 Tit 2:14 1Pe 1:19.
@Heb
9:13-28. PROOF OF AND
ENLARGEMENT ON, THE
"ETERNAL REDEMPTION"
MENTIONED IN
@Heb
9:12.
For His blood, offered by Himself,
purifies not only outwardly, as the Levitical sacrifices
on the day of atonement, but inwardly unto the service of
the living God (@Heb
9:13,14). His death is the inaugurating act of the new
covenant, and of the heavenly sanctuary (@Heb
9:15-23). His entrance into the true Holy of Holies is
the consummation of His once-for-all-offered sacrifice of
atonement (@Heb
9:24,26); henceforth, His reappearance alone remains
to complete our redemption (@Heb
9:27,28).
13. if--as we know is the
case; so the Greek indicative means. Argument from
the less to the greater. If the blood of mere brutes could
purify in any, however small a degree, how much more shall
inward purification, and complete and eternal salvation,
be wrought by the blood of Christ, in whom dwelt all the
fulness of the Godhead?
ashes of an heifer--(@Nu
19:16-18). The type is full of comfort for us. The
water of separation, made of the ashes of the red heifer,
was the provision for removing ceremonial defilement
whenever incurred by contact with the dead. As she
was slain without the camp, so Christ (compare @Heb
13:11 Nu 19:3,4). The ashes were laid by for constant
use; so the continually cleansing effects of Christ's
blood, once for all shed. In our wilderness journey we are
continually contracting defilement by contact with the
spiritually dead, and with dead works, and need therefore
continual application to the antitypical life-giving
cleansing blood of Christ, whereby we are afresh restored
to peace and living communion with God in the heavenly
holy place.
the unclean--Greek, "those defiled" on
any particular occasion.
purifying--Greek, "purity."
the flesh--Their effect in themselves
extended no further. The law had a carnal and a spiritual
aspect; carnal, as an instrument of the Hebrew
polity, God, their King, accepting, in minor offenses,
expiatory victims instead of the sinner, otherwise doomed
to death; spiritual, as the shadow of good things to
come (@Heb
10:1). The spiritual Israelite derived, in partaking
of these legal rights, spiritual blessings not flowing
from them, but from the great antitype. Ceremonial
sacrifices released from temporal penalties and
ceremonial disqualifications; Christ's sacrifice
releases from everlasting penalties (@Heb
9:12), and moral impurities on the conscience
disqualifying from access to God (@Heb
9:14). The purification of the flesh (the mere outward
man) was by "sprinkling"; the washing followed by
inseparable connection (@Nu
19:19). So justification is followed by
renewing.
14. offered himself--The
voluntary nature of the offering gives it especial
efficacy. He "through the eternal Spirit," that is, His
divine Spirit (@Ro
1:4, in contrast to His "flesh," @Heb
9:3; His Godhead, @1Ti
3:16 1Pe 3:18), "His inner personality" [ALFORD],
which gave a free consent to the act, offered Himself. The
animals offered had no spirit or will to consent in
the act of sacrifice; they were offered according to
the law; they had a life neither enduring, nor of any
intrinsic efficacy. But He from eternity, with His
divine and everlasting Spirit, concurred with the
Father's will of redemption by Him. His offering began on
the altar of the cross, and was completed in His entering
the holiest place with His blood. The eternity and
infinitude of His divine Spirit (compare @Heb
7:16) gives eternal ("eternal
redemption," @Heb
9:12, also compare @Heb
9:15) and infinite merit to His offering, so that not
even the infinite justice of God has any exception to take
against it. It was "through His most burning love, flowing
from His eternal Spirit," that He offered Himself [OECOLAMPADIUS].
without spot--The animal victims had to be
without outward blemish; Christ on the cross was a
victim inwardly and essentially stainless (@1Pe
1:19).
purge--purify from fear, guilt, alienation
from Him, and selfishness, the source of dead works
(@Heb
9:22,23).
your--The oldest manuscripts read "our." The
Vulgate, however, supports English Version
reading.
conscience--moral religious consciousness.
dead works--All works done in the natural
state, which is a state of sin, are dead; for they
come not from living faith in, and love to, "the living
God" (@Heb
11:6). As contact with a dead body defiled
ceremonially (compare the allusion, "ashes of an heifer,"
@Heb
9:13), so dead works defile the inner consciousness
spiritually.
to serve--so as to serve. The
ceremonially unclean could not serve God in the
outward communion of His people; so the unrenewed cannot
serve God in spiritual communion. Man's works before
justification, however lifelike they look, are dead, and
cannot therefore be accepted before the living God. To
have offered a dead animal to God would have been an
insult (compare @Mal
1:8); much more for a man not justified by Christ's
blood to offer dead works. But those purified by Christ's
blood in living faith do serve (@Ro
12:1), and shall more fully serve God (@Re
22:3).
living God--therefore requiring living
spiritual service (@Joh
4:24).
15. for this cause--Because
of the all-cleansing power of His blood, this fits Him to
be Mediator (@Heb
8:6, ensuring to both parties, God and us, the
ratification) of the new covenant, which secures both
forgiveness for the sins not covered by the former
imperfect covenant or testament, and also an eternal
inheritance to the called.
by means of death--rather, as Greek,
"death having taken place." At the moment that His death
took place, the necessary effect is, "the called receive
the (fulfilment of the) promise" (so @Lu
24:49 uses "promise"; @Heb
6:15 Ac 1:4); that moment divides the Old from the New
Testament. The "called" are the elect "heirs," "partakers
of the heavenly calling" (@Heb
3:1).
redemption of . . . transgressions . . . under
. . . first testament--the transgressions of all
men from Adam to Christ, first against the primitive
revelation, then against the revelations to the
patriarchs, then against the law given to Israel, the
representative people of the world. The "first testament"
thus includes the whole period from Adam to Christ, and
not merely that of the covenant with Israel, which was a
concentrated representation of the covenant made with
(or the first testament given to) mankind by
sacrifice, down from the fall to redemption. Before
the inheritance by the New Testament (for here the
idea of the "INHERITANCE,"
following as the result of Christ's "death," being
introduced, requires the Greek to be translated
"testament," as it was before covenant) could come
in, there must be redemption of (that is,
deliverance from the penalties incurred by) the
transgressions committed under the first testament,
for the propitiatory sacrifices under the first testament
reached only as far as removing outward ceremonial
defilement. But in order to obtain the inheritance which
is a reality, there must be a real propitiation, since God
could not enter into covenant relation with us so long as
past sins were unexpiated; @Ro
3:24,25, "a propitiation . . . His righteousness for
the remission of sins that are past."
might--Greek, "may receive,"
which previously they could not (@Heb
11:39,40).
the promise--to Abraham.
16. A general axiomatic
truth; it is "a testament"; not the testament.
The testator must die before his testament takes
effect (@Heb
9:17). This is a common meaning of the Greek
noun diathece. So in @Lu
22:29, "I appoint (by testamentary disposition; the
cognate Greek verb diatithemai) unto you a
kingdom, as my Father hath appointed unto me." The need of
death before the testamentary appointment takes effect,
holds good in Christ's relation as MAN to us; Of course
not in God's relation to Christ.
be--literally, be borne": "be involved in the
case"; be inferred; or else, "be brought forward in
court," so as to give effect to the will. This sense (testament)
of the Greek "diathece" here does not
exclude its other secondary senses in the other passages
of the New Testament: (1) a covenant between two
parties; (2) an arrangement, or disposition, made by
God alone in relation to us. Thus, @Mt
26:28 may be translated, "Blood of the covenant";
for a testament does not require blood
shedding. Compare @Ex
24:8 (covenant), which Christ quotes, though it
is probable He included in a sense "testament" also
under the Greek word diathece (comprehending
both meanings, "covenant" and "testament"), as this
designation strictly and properly applies to the new
dispensation, and is rightly applicable to the old also,
not in itself, but when viewed as typifying the new, which
is properly a testament. Moses (@Ex
24:8) speaks of the same thing as [Christ and] Paul.
Moses, by the term "covenant," does not mean aught save
one concerning giving the heavenly inheritance
typified by Canaan after the death of the Testator,
which he represented by the sprinkling of blood. And Paul,
by the term "testament," does not mean aught save one
having conditions attached to it, one which is at
the same time a covenant [POLI,
Synopsis]; the conditions are fulfilled by Christ,
not by us, except that we must believe, but even
this God works in His people. THOLUCK
explains, as elsewhere, "covenant . . . covenant
. . . mediating victim"; the masculine is used of
the victim personified, and regarded as mediator of the
covenant; especially as in the new covenant a
MAN (Christ) took
the place of the victim. The covenanting parties used to
pass between the divided parts of the sacrificed animals;
but, without reference to this rite, the need of a
sacrifice for establishing a covenant sufficiently
explains this verse. Others, also, explaining the Greek
as "covenant," consider that the death of the sacrificial
victim represented in all covenants the death of both
parties as unalterably bound to the covenant. So in
the redemption-covenant, the death of Jesus symbolized the
death of God (?) in the person of the mediating victim,
and the death of man in the same. But the expression is
not "there must be the death of both parties making
the covenant," but singular, "of Him who
made (aorist, past time; not 'of Him making')
the testament." Also, it is "death," not "sacrifice" or
"slaying." Plainly, the death is supposed to be past
(aorist, "made"); and the fact of the death is brought
(Greek) before court to give effect to the will.
These requisites of a will, or testament. concur here: (1)
a testator; (2) heirs; (3) goods; (4) the death of the
testator; (5) the fact of the death brought forward
in court. In @Mt
26:28 two other requisites appear: witnesses,
the disciples; and a seal, the sacrament of the
Lord's Supper, the sign of His blood wherewith the
testament is primarily sealed. It is true the heir
is ordinarily the successor of him who dies and so
ceases to have the possession. But in this case Christ
comes to life again, and is Himself (including all that He
hath), in the power of His now endless life, His people's
inheritance; in His being Heir (@Heb
1:2), they are heirs.
17. after--literally,
"over," as we say "upon the death of the
testators"; not as THOLUCK,
"on the condition that slain sacrifices be there," which
the Greek hardly sanctions.
otherwise--"seeing that it is never availing"
[ALFORD]. BENGEL
and LACHMANN
read with an interrogation, "Since, is it ever in force
(surely not) while the testator liveth?"
18. Whereupon--rather,
"Whence."
dedicated--"inaugurated." The Old Testament
strictly and formally began on that day of inauguration.
"Where the disposition, or arrangement, is
ratified by the blood of another, namely, of animals,
which cannot make a covenant, much less make a
testament, it is not strictly a testament,
where it is ratified by the death of him that makes the
arrangement, it is strictly, Greek 'diathece,'
Hebrew 'berith,' taken in a wider sense, a
testament" [BENGEL];
thus, in @Heb
9:18, referring to the old dispensation, we may
translate, "the first (covenant)": or better,
retain "the first (testament)," not that the old
dispensation, regarded by itself, is a
testament, but it is so when regarded as the
typical representative of the new, which is strictly a
Testament.
19. For--confirming the
general truth, @Heb
9:16.
spoken . . . according to the law--strictly
adhering to every direction of "the law of commandments
contained in ordinances" (@Eph
2:15). Compare @Ex
24:3, "Moses told the people all the words of the
Lord, and all the judgments; and all the people
answered with one voice," &c.
the blood of calves--Greek, "the
calves," namely, those sacrificed by the "young men" whom
he sent to do so (@Ex
24:5). The "peace offerings" there mentioned were "of
oxen" (Septuagint, "little calves"), and the
"burnt offerings" were probably (though this is not
specified), as on the day of atonement, goats. The
law in Exodus sanctioned formally many sacrificial
practices in use by tradition, from the primitive
revelation long before.
with water--prescribed, though not in the
twenty-fourth chapter of Exodus, yet in other
purifications; for example, of the leper, and the water of
separation which contained the ashes of the red heifer.
scarlet wool, and hyssop--ordinarily used for
purification. Scarlet or crimson, resembling
blood: it was thought to be a peculiarly deep, fast dye,
whence it typified sin (see on Isa 1:18). So Jesus wore a
scarlet robe, the emblem of the deep-dyed sins He bore
on Him, though He had none in Him. Wool was
used as imbibing and retaining water; the hyssop, as a
bushy, tufty plant (wrapt round with the scarlet wool),
was used for sprinkling it. The wool was also a symbol of
purity (@Isa
1:18). The Hyssopus officinalis grows on walls,
with small lancet-formed woolly leaves, an inch long, with
blue and white flowers, and a knotty stalk about a foot
high.
sprinkled . . . the book--namely, out of
which he had read "every precept": the book of the
testament or covenant. This sprinkling of the book is not
mentioned in the twenty-fourth chapter of Exodus. Hence BENGEL
translates, "And (having taken) the book itself (so @Ex
24:7), he both sprinkled all the people, and (@Heb
9:21) moreover sprinkled the tabernacle." But the
Greek supports English Version. Paul, by
inspiration, supplies the particular specified here, not
in @Ex
24:7. The sprinkling of the roll (so the
Greek for "book") of the covenant, or testament, as
well as of the people, implies that neither can the law
be fulfilled, nor the people be purged from their sins,
save by the sprinkling of the blood of Christ (@1Pe
1:2). Compare @Heb
9:23, which shows that there is something antitypical
to the Bible in heaven itself (compare @Re
20:12). The Greek, "itself," distinguishes
the book itself from the "precepts" in it which he "spake."
20. @Ex
24:8, "Behold the blood of the covenant, which
the Lord has made with you concerning all these
words." The change is here made to accord with Christ's
inauguration of the new testament, or covenant, as
recorded in @Lu
22:20, "This cup (is) the new Testament in My blood,
which is shed for you": the only Gospel in which the "is"
has to be supplied. Luke was Paul's companion,
which accounts for the correspondence, as here too "is"
has to be supplied.
testament--(See on Heb 9:16,17). The Greek
"diathece" means both "testament" and "covenant":
the term "covenant" better suits the old dispensation,
though the idea testament is included, for the old
was one in its typical relation to the new dispensation,
to which the term "testament" is better suited. Christ has
sealed the testament with His blood, of which the
Lord's Supper is the sacramental sign. The testator was
represented by the animals slain in the old dispensation.
In both dispensations the inheritance was bequeathed: in
the new by One who has come in person and died; in the old
by the same one, only typically and ceremonially present.
See ALFORD'S
excellent Note.
enjoined unto you--commissioned me to
ratify in relation to you. In the old dispensation
the condition to be fulfilled on the people's part is
implied in the words, @Ex
24:8, "(Lord made with you) concerning all these
words." But here Paul omits this clause, as he
includes the fulfilment of this condition of obedience to
"all these words" in the new covenant, as part of God's
promise, in @Heb
8:8,10,12, whereby Christ fulfils all for our
justification, and will enable us by putting His Spirit in
us to fulfil all in our now progressive, and finally
complete, sanctification.
21. Greek, "And,
moreover, in like manner." The sprinkling of the
tabernacle with blood is added by inspiration here to
the account in @Ex
30:25-30 40:9,10, which mentions only Moses' anointing
the tabernacle and its vessels. In @Le
8:10,15,30, the sprinkling of blood upon Aaron and his
garments. and upon his sons, and upon the altar, is
mentioned as well as the anointing, so that we might
naturally infer, as JOSEPHUS
has distinctly stated, that the tabernacle and its vessels
were sprinkled with blood as well as being anointed: @Le
16:16,20,33, virtually sanctions this inference. The
tabernacle and its contents needed purification (@2Ch
29:21).
22. almost--to be joined
with "all things," namely almost all things under
the old dispensation. The exceptions to all things
being purified by blood are, @Ex
19:10 Le 15:5, &c., @Le
16:26,28 22:6 Nu 31:22-24.
without--Greek, "apart from."
shedding of blood--shed in the
slaughter of the victim, and poured out at the altar
subsequently. The pouring out of the blood on the altar
is the main part of the sacrifice (@Le
17:11), and it could not have place apart from the
previous shedding of the blood in the slaying. Paul
has, perhaps, in mind here, @Lu
22:20, "This cup is the new testament in my blood,
which is shed for you."
is--Greek, "takes place": comes to
pass.
remission--of sins: a favorite expression of
Luke, Paul's companion. Properly used of remitting a debt
(@Mt
6:12 18:27,32); our sins are debts. On the truth here,
compare @Le
5:11-13, an exception because of poverty, confirming
the general rule.
23. patterns--"the
suggestive representations"; the typical copies (see on
Heb 8:5).
things in the heavens--the heavenly
tabernacle and the things therein.
purified with these--with the blood of bulls
and goats.
heavenly things themselves--the archetypes.
Man's sin had introduced an element of disorder into the
relations of God and His holy angels in respect to man.
The purification removes this element of disorder
and changes God's wrath against man in heaven (designed to
be the place of God's revealing His grace to men and
angels) into a smile of reconciliation. Compare "peace in
heaven" (@Lu
19:38). "The uncreated heaven of God, though in itself
Untroubled light, yet needed a purification in so far as
the light of love was obscured by the fire of wrath
against sinful man" [DELITZSCH
in ALFORD].
Contrast @Re
12:7-10. Christ's atonement had the effect also of
casting Satan out of heaven (@Lu
10:18 Joh 12:31, compare @Heb
2:14). Christ's body, the true tabernacle (see on Heb
8:2; Heb 9:11), as bearing our imputed sin (@2Co
5:21). was consecrated (@Joh
17:17,19) and purified by the shedding of His blood to
be the meeting place of God and man.
sacrifices--The plural is used in expressing
the general proposition, though strictly referring to the
one sacrifice of Christ once for all. Paul implies
that His one sacrifice, by its matchless excellency, is
equivalent to the Levitical many sacrifices. It, though
but one, is manifold in its effects and applicability to
many.
24. Resumption more fully
of the thought, "He entered in once into the holy place,"
@Heb
9:12. He has in @Heb
9:13,14, expanded the words "by his own blood," @Heb
9:12; and in @Heb
9:15-23, he has enlarged on "an High Priest of good
things to come."
not . . . into . . . holy places made with hands--as
was the Holy of Holies in the earthly tabernacle (see on
Heb 9:11).
figures--copies "of the true" holiest place,
heaven, the original archetype (@Heb
8:5).
into heaven itself--the immediate presence of
the invisible God beyond all the created heavens,
through which latter Jesus passed (see on Heb 4:14;
1Ti 6:16).
now--ever since His ascension in the present
economy (compare @Heb
9:26).
to appear--To PRESENT
HIMSELF;
Greek, "to be made to appear." Mere man may have a
vision through a medium, or veil, as Moses had (@Ex
33:18,20-23). Christ alone beholds the Father without
a veil, and is His perfect image. Through seeing HIM
only can we see the Father.
in the presence of God--Greek, "to
the face of God." The saints shall hereafter see God's
face in Christ (@Re
22:4): the earnest of which is now given (@2Co
3:18). Aaron, the Levitical high priest for the
people, stood before the ark and only saw the
cloud, the symbol of God's glory (@Ex
28:30).
for us--in our behalf as our Advocate and
Intercessor (@Heb
7:25 Ro 8:34 1Jo 2:1). "It is enough that Jesus should
show Himself for us to the Father: the sight of
Jesus satisfied God in our behalf. He brings before the
face of God no offering which has exhausted itself, and,
as only sufficing for a time, needs renewal; but He
himself is in person, by virtue of the eternal Spirit,
that is, the imperishable life of His person, now and for
ever freed from death, our eternally present offering
before God" [DELITZSCH
in ALFORD].
25. As in @Heb
9:24, Paul said, it was not into the typical, but the
true sanctuary, that Christ is entered; so now he says,
that His sacrifice needs not, as the Levitical sacrifices
did, to be repeated. Construe, "Nor yet did He
enter for this purpose that He may offer Himself often,"
that is, "present Himself in the presence of God,
as the high priest does (Paul uses the present tense,
as the legal service was then existing), year by year, on
the day of atonement, entering the Holy of Holies.
with--literally, "in."
blood of others--not his own, as
Christ did.
26. then--in that case.
must . . . have suffered--rather as Greek,
"It would have been necessary for Him often to suffer." In
order to "offer" (@Heb
9:25), or present Himself often before God in the
heavenly holiest place, like the legal high priests making
fresh renewals of this high priestly function. He would
have had, and would have often to suffer. His oblation
of Himself before God was once for all (that is, the
bringing in of His blood into the heavenly Holy of
Holies), and therefore the preliminary suffering
was once for all.
since the foundation of the world--The
continued sins of men, from their first creation, would
entail a continual suffering on earth, and consequent
oblation of His blood in the heavenly holiest place,
since the foundation of the world, if the one oblation
"in the fulness of time" were not sufficient. PHILO
[The Creation of the World, p. 637], shows that the
high priest of the Hebrews offered sacrifices for the
whole human race. "If there had been greater efficacy in
the repetition of the oblation, Christ necessarily would
not have been so long promised, but would have been sent
immediately after the foundation of the world to suffer,
and offer Himself at successive periods" [GROTIUS].
now--as the case is,
once--for all; without need of renewal.
Rome's fiction of an UNBLOODY
sacrifice in the mass, contradicts her assertion that the
blood of Christ is present in the wine; and also
confutes her assertion that the mass is propitiatory; for,
if unbloody, it cannot be propitiatory; for
without shedding of blood there is no remission (@Heb
9:22). Moreover, the expression "once" for all here,
and in @Heb
9:28, and @Heb
10:10,12, proves the falsity of her view that there is
a continually repeated offering of Christ in the Eucharist
or mass. The offering of Christ was a thing once done that
it might be thought of for ever (compare Note, see
on Heb 10:12).
in the end of the world--Greek, "at
the consummation of the ages"; the winding up of all the
previous ages from the foundation of the world; to be
followed by a new age (@Heb
1:1,2). The last age, beyond which no further age is
to be expected before Christ's speedy second coming, which
is the complement of the first coming; literally, "the
ends of the ages"; @Mt
28:20 is literally, "the consummation of the age,"
or world (singular; not as here, plural, ages).
Compare "the fulness of times," @Eph
1:10.
appeared--Greek, "been manifested" on
earth (@1Ti
3:16 1Pe 1:20). English Version has confounded
three distinct Greek verbs, by translating all
alike, @Heb
9:24,26,28, "appear." But, in @Heb
9:24, it is "to present Himself," namely, before
God in the heavenly sanctuary; in @Heb
9:26, "been manifested" on earth. in @Heb
9:28, "shall be seen" by all, and especially
believers.
put away--abolish; doing away sin's power as
well by delivering men from its guilt and penalty, so that
it should be powerless to condemn men, as also from its
yoke, so that they shall at last sin no more.
sin--singular number; all the sins of men of
every age are regarded as one mass laid on Christ.
He hath not only droned for all actual sins, but
destroyed sin itself. @Joh
1:29, "Behold the Lamb of God that taketh away the
sin (not merely the sins: singular, not plural)
of the world."
by the sacrifice of himself--Greek,
"by (through) His own sacrifice"; not by "blood
of others" (@Heb
9:25). ALFORD
loses this contrast in translating, "by His sacrifice."
27. as--inasmuch as.
it is appointed--Greek, "it is laid
up (as our appointed lot)," @Col
1:5. The word "appointed" (so Hebrew "seth"
means) in the case of man, answers to "anointed" in the
case of Jesus; therefore "the Christ," that is, the
anointed, is the title here given designedly. He is
the representative man; and there is a strict
correspondence between the history of man and that
of the Son of man. The two most solemn facts of our
being are here connected with the two most gracious truths
of our dispensation, our death and judgment answering in
parallelism to Christ's first coming to die for us, and
His second coming to consummate our salvation.
once--and no more.
after this the judgment--namely, at Christ's
appearing, to which, in @Heb
9:28, "judgment" in this verse is parallel. Not,
"after this comes the heavenly glory." The intermediate
state is a state of joyous, or else agonizing and fearful,
expectation of "judgment"; after the judgment comes
the full and final state of joy, or else woe.
28. Christ--Greek, "THE
Christ"; the representative MAN;
representing all men, as the first Adam did.
once offered--not "often," @Heb
9:25; just as "men," of whom He is the representative
Head, are appointed by God once to die. He did not
need to die again and again for each individual, or each
successive generation of men, for He represents all
men of every age, and therefore needed to die but once for
all, so as to exhaust the penalty of death incurred by
all. He was offered by the Father, His own "eternal
Spirit" (@Heb
9:14) concurring; as Abraham spared not Isaac, but
offered him, the son himself unresistingly submitting to
the father's will (@Ge
22:1-24).
to bear the sins--referring to @Isa
53:12, "He bare the sins of many," namely, on
Himself; so "bear" means, @Le
24:15 Nu 5:31 14:34. The Greek is literally "to
bear up" (@1Pe
2:24). "Our sins were laid on Him. When, therefore, He
was lifted up on the cross, He bare up our sins along with
Him" [BENGEL].
many--not opposed to all, but to few.
He, the One, was offered for many; and that
once for all (compare @Mt
20:28).
look for him--with waiting expectation
even unto the end (so the Greek). It is
translated "wait for" in @Ro
8:19,23 1Co 1:7, which see.
appear--rather, as Greek, "be seen."
No longer in the alien "form of a servant," but in His own
proper glory.
without sin--apart from, separate from, sin.
Not bearing the sin of many on Him as at His first
coming (even then there was no sin in Him). That
sin has been at His first coming once for all taken away,
so as to need no repetition of His sin offering of Himself
(@Heb
9:26). At His second coming He shall have no more to
do with sin.
unto salvation--to bring in completed
salvation; redeeming then the body which is as yet subject
to the bondage of corruption. Hence, in @Php
3:20 he says, "we look for THE
SAVIOUR."
Note, Christ's prophetical office, as the divine
Teacher, was especially exercised during His earthly
ministry; His priestly is now from His first to His
second coming; His kingly office shall be fully
manifested at, and after, His second coming.
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