AN ADVANCE
IN THE EXHORTATION.
"Having therefore, brethren, boldness to enter
into the holy place by the blood of Jesus, by the way which He dedicated for
us, a new and living way, through the veil, that is to say, His flesh; and
having a great Priest over the house of God; let us draw near with a true heart
in fulness of faith, having our hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience, and
our body washed with pure water: let us hold fast the confession of our hope
that it waver not; for He is faithful that promised: and let us consider one another
to provoke unto love and good works; not forsaking the assembling of ourselves
together, as the custom of some is, but exhorting one another; and so much the
more, as ye see the day drawing nigh. For if we sin wilfully after that we have
received the knowledge of the truth, there remaineth no more a sacrifice for
sins, but a certain fearful expectation of judgment, and a fierceness of fire
which shall devour the adversaries. A man that hath set at nought Moses' law
dieth without compassion on the word of two or three witnesses: of how much
sorer punishment, think ye, shall he be judged worthy, who hath trodden under
foot the Son of God, and hath counted the blood of the covenant, wherewith he
was sanctified, an unholy thing, and hath done despite unto the Spirit of
grace? For we know Him that said, Vengeance belongeth unto Me.
I will recompense. And again, The Lord shall judge His people. It is a fearful
thing to fall into the hands of the living God. But call to remembrance the
former days, in which, after ye were enlightened, ye endured a great conflict
of sufferings; partly, being made a gazing-stock both by reproaches and
afflictions; and partly, becoming partakers with them that were so used. For ye both had compassion on them that were in bonds, and took
joyfully the spoiling of your possessions, knowing that ye yourselves have a
better possession and an abiding one. Cast not away therefore your boldness,
which hath great recompense of reward. For ye have need of patience, that,
having done the will of God, ye may receive the promise. For yet a very little
while, He that cometh shall come, and shall not tarry. But My
righteous one shall live by faith: And if he shrink back, My soul hath no
pleasure in him. But we are not of them that shrink back unto perdition; but of
them that have faith unto the saving of the soul."-- Hebrews 10:19-39 (R.V.).
The argument is closed. Christ is the eternal Priest and
King, and every rival priesthood or kingship must come to an end. This is the
truth won by the Apostle's original and profound course of reasoning. But he
has in view practical results. He desires to confirm the Hebrew Christians in
their allegiance to Christ. We shall be better able to understand the precise
bearing of his exhortation if we compare it with the appeal previously made to
his readers in the earlier chapters of the Epistle.[211]
At the very outset he plunged into the midst of his subject and proved that
Jesus Christ is Son of God and representative Man. The union in Christ of these two qualifications
constituted Him a great High-priest. He is able to succour the tempted; He is
faithful as a Son, Who is set over the house of God; He has experienced the
bitter humiliation of life, He is perfected as our Saviour, and has passed
through the heavens. The exhortation, based on these truths, is that we must
lay fast hold of our confidence.
Then come the big wave, the
hesitation to face it, the allegory of Melchizedek, the appeal to the prophet
Jeremiah, the comparison between the old covenant and the new. But the argument
triumphs and advances. Jesus not only is a great High-priest, but this is
interpreted as meaning that He is Priest and King, and that His priesthood and
power will never pass away. Their eternal duration involves the setting aside of
every other priesthood, the destruction of every opposing force. Christ has
entered into the true holiest place and enthroned Himself on the mercy-seat.
This being so, the Apostle no longer urges his readers to
be confident. He now appeals to them as having confidence,[212]
in virtue of the blood of Jesus, so that they tarry not in the precincts, but
enter themselves into the holiest. The high-priest alone dared enter under the
former covenant, and he approached with fear and trembling, lest he also, like
others before him, should fall down dead in the presence of God. The
exhortation now is, not to confidence, but to sincerity.[213]
Let their confidence become more objective. They had the boasting of hope. Let
them seek the silent, unboasting assurance that is grounded on faith, on the
realisation of the invisible. Instead of believing because they hoped, let them
hope because they believed. In the earlier chapters the exhortation rested
mainly on what Jesus was as Son over God's house. Now, however, the Apostle
speaks of Him as a great[214] Priest over God's house.
His authority over the Church springs, not only from His relation to God, but
also from His relation to men. He is King of His Church because He prays for it
and blesses it. Through His priesthood our hearts are cleansed by the
sprinkling of His blood from the consciousness of sin.[215]
But this blessing of the individual believer is now closely connected by the
Apostle with the idea of the Church, over which Christ is King in virtue of His
priesthood on its behalf. In addition to the cleansing of our hearts from an
evil conscience, our bodies have been washed with pure water. The Apostle
alludes primarily in both clauses to the rite of priestly consecration.
"Moses brought Aaron and his sons, and washed them with water." He
also "took of the blood which was upon the altar and sprinkled it upon
Aaron, and upon his garments, and upon his sons, and upon his sons' garments
with him, and sanctified Aaron, and his garments, and his sons, and his sons' garments
with him."[216] The meaning of our author seems
certainly to be that the worshippers have the privilege of the high-priest
himself. They lose their priestly character only in the more excellent glory
and greatness of that High-priest through Whom they
have received their priesthood. In comparison with Him, they are but humble
worshippers, and He alone is Priest. In contrast to the world around them, they
also are priests of God. But the words of the Apostle contain another allusion.
Both clauses refer to baptism. The mention of washing the "body"
renders it, we think, unquestionable that baptism is meant. But baptism is not
here said to be the antitype of the priestly consecration of the old covenant.
One rite cannot be the type of another rite, which is itself an external
action. The solution of this apparent difficulty is simply that both clauses
together mean baptism, which is invariably represented in the New Testament as
much more than an outward rite. The external act may be performed without its
being a true baptism. For the meaning of baptism is the forgiveness of sin, the
cleansing of the heart or innermost consciousness from guilt, and the reception
of the absolved sinner into the Church
of God. "Christ
loved the Church, and gave Himself up for it, that He might sanctify it, having
cleansed it by the washing of water with the word."[217]
In an earlier chapter our author told his readers that
they were the house of God if they held fast their confidence. He does not
repeat it. The Church consciousness has sprung up within them. They were
previously taught to look steadfastly at Jesus as the Apostle and High-priest
of their confession.[218] They are now urged to look
as steadfastly at one another as fellow-confessors of the same Apostle and High-priest,
and to sharpen one another's love and activity even to the point of
jealousy.[219] In the earlier exhortation no mention was made of the Church
assemblies. Here prominence is given them. Importance is attached to the words
of encouragement addressed at these gatherings of believers. Christian habits
were at this time forming and consolidating into customs of the Church.
Occasional and eccentric manifestations of the religious life and temperament
were yielding to the slow, normal growth of true vitality. As faithfulness in
frequenting the Church assemblies began to rank among the foremost virtues,
unfaithfulness would, by force of contrast, harden into habitual neglect of the
house of prayer: "As the custom of some is."[220]
The chief of all reasons for exhorting the readers to
habitual attendance on the Church assemblies the writer of the Epistle finds in
the expectation of the Lord's speedy return. They could see for themselves that
the day was at hand. The signs of the Son of man's coming were multiplying and
thrusting themselves on the notice of the Church. Perhaps the voice of Joshua,
the son of Hanan, had already been heard in the streets, exclaiming, "Woe
to Jerusalem!"
The holy city was plainly doomed. But Christ will come to His Church, not to
individuals. He will not be found in the wilderness, nor
in the inner chambers. "As the lightning cometh forth from the east, and
is seen even unto the west, so shall be the coming of the Son of
man."[221]
The day of Christ is a day of judgment. The two meanings
of the word "day,"--day in contrast to night, and day as a fixed time
for the transaction of public business,--coalesce in the New Testament usage.
The second idea seems to have gradually superseded the former.
The author proceeds to unfold the dreadful character of
this day of judgment. Here, again, the precise force
of his declarations will best appear by comparison with the warnings of the
first part of the Epistle in reference to the sin and to the punishment.
First, the sin referred to here has a wider range than the
transgression spoken of in the second chapter. For there he mentions the
special sin of neglecting so great salvation. But in the present passage his
words seem to imply that rejection of Christ has given birth to a progeny of
evil through the self-abandonment of those who wilfully persist in sinning, as
if from reckless bravado.[222] The special guilt, too, of rejecting Christ is
here painted in darker hues. For in the earlier passage it is indifference;
here it is contempt. In the former case it is ingratitude to a merciful Saviour; in the latter it is treason against the majesty of God's own Son.
"To trample under foot" means to desecrate. Christ is the holy
High-priest of God, and is now ministering in the true holiest place. Therefore
to choose Judaism, with its dead rites, and to reject the living Christ, is no
longer the action of a holy zeal for God's house. Quite the
reverse. The sanctuary of Judaism has been shorn of its glory, and its
sacredness transferred to the despised Nazarene. To tread under foot the Son of
God is to trample with revel rout on the hallowed floor of the holiest place.
Further, the Apostle's former warnings contained no allusion to the covenant.
Now he reminds his readers that they have been sanctified--that is, cleansed
from guilt--through the blood of the covenant. Is the cleansing blood itself unclean? Shall we deem the reeking gore of a slain
beast or the grey ashes of a burnt heifer holy, and consider the blood of the
Christ, Who with an eternal spirit offered Himself without spot to God, unholy
and defiling?[223] Moreover, that eternal spirit in the Son of God is a spirit
of grace[224] towards men. But His infinite compassion is spurned. And thus the
Apostle brings us once more[225] in sight of the
hopeless character of cynicism.
Second, the punishment is partly negative. A sacrifice for
sins is no more left to men who have spurned the sacrifice of the Son.[226] Here again we notice an advance in the thought. The
Apostle told his readers before that it is impossible to renew to repentance
those who crucify afresh the Son of God and put Him to an open shame. But the
impossibility consists in hardness of heart and spiritual blindness. The result
also is subjective,--they cannot repent. He now adds the impossibility of
finding another propitiation than the offering of
Christ or of finding in His offering a different kind of propitiation, seeing
that He is the final revelation of God's forgiving grace. Then, further, the punishment
has a positive side. After hardness of heart comes stinging remorse, arising
from a vague, but on that account all the more fearful, expectation of the
judgment. The abject terror is amply justified. For the fury[227]
of a fire, already kindling around the doomed city, warns the Hebrew
backsliders that the Christ so wilfully scoffed at is at the door. Observe the
contrast. The law of Moses is on occasion set aside.
The matter is almost private. Only two or three persons witnessed it.[228] Its evil influence did not spread, and when the
criminal was led out to be stoned to death, they who passed by went their way
unheeding. The Christ of God is put to an open shame;[229] the covenant, for
ever established on the sure foundation of God's oath and Christ's death, and
the spirit of all grace that filled the heart of Christ are mocked. Of how much
sorer punishment shall Christ at His speedy coming deem the scorner worthy? The
answer is left by the Apostle to his readers. They knew with Whom they had to do.[230] It was not with angels, the swift messengers and
flaming ministers of His power. It was not with Moses, who himself exceedingly
feared and quaked.[231] It was not with the blind
pressure of fate. They had to do with the living God Himself directly. He will lay upon them His living hand,--the hand that might and, if
they had not spurned it, would have protected and saved. Retribution descends
swift and resistless. It can only be likened to a sudden falling into the very
hands of a waiting avenger.[232] He will not entrust
the work of vengeance to another. No extraneous agent shall come between the
smiting hand and the heart that burns with the anger of the sincere against the
false, of the compassionate against the pitiless. Does not Scripture teach that
the Lord will execute judgment on behalf of His people?[233]
If on behalf of His people, will He not enter into judgment for His Son?
From the terrible expectation of future judgment the
Apostle turns away, to recall to his readers the grounds of hope supplied by
their steadfastness in the past. He has already spoken of their work and the
love which they had shown in ministering to the saints.[234]
God's justice would not forget their brotherly kindness. Now, however, His
purpose in bidding them remember the former days is something different. He
writes to convince them that they needed no other and greater confidence to
face the future than had carried them triumphantly through conflicts in days of
yore. They had endured sufferings; let them conquer their own indifference and
put away their cynicism with the lofty disdain of earnest faith. The courage
that could do the former can also do the latter.
From the first break of day in their souls[235] they had
felt the confidence of men who walk, not in darkness, not knowing whither they
go and fearing to take another step, but in the light, so that they trod firmly
and stepped boldly onward. Their confidence was based on conviction and
understanding of truth. For that reason it inspired them with the courage of
athletes,[236] when they had to endure also the shame
of the arena. Made a gazing-stock to a scoffing theatre, they had not turned
pale at the roar of the wild beasts. Instead of tamely submitting, they had
turned their sufferings into a veritable contest against the world, and
maintained the conflict long.[237] Taunted by the spectators, torn by the
lions, reproaches and afflictions alike had been ineffectual to break their
spirit. When they witnessed the prolonged tortures of their brethren whose Christian
life was one martyrdom,[238] they had not shrunk from
the like usage. They had pitied the brethren in prisons and visited them. They
had taken joyfully the spoiling of their substance, knowing that now they had
themselves,[239] as a better and an abiding
possession. If they had lost the world, they had gained for themselves their
souls.[240] As true athletes, therefore, let them not throw away[241] their
sword, which is no other than their old, undaunted confidence. There was none
like that sword. Their victory was assured. Their reward would be, not the
plaudits of the fickle onlookers, but the fulfilment of God's promise to
Abraham. They had need of endurance, because in enduring they were doing the
will of God. But the Deliverer would be with them in a twinkling.[242] He had delayed His chariot wheels, but He would delay
no more. Hear ye not His voice? It is He that speaks
in the words of the prophet, "Those whom I deny will perish out of the
way. But I have My righteous ones[243] here and there,
unseen by the world, and out of their faith will be wrought for them eternal
life. But let even Mine own beware of lowering sail.
My soul will have no delight even in him if he draws back."
The Apostle reflects on the words of Christ in the
prophecy of Habakkuk. But he has an assured hope that he and his readers would
repudiate the thought of drawing back. They were men of faith, bent on
winning[244] the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus; and the
prize would be their own souls. May we not conjecture that the Apostle's fervid
appeal prevailed with the Christians within the doomed city "to break the
last bands of patriotism and superstition which attached them to the Temple and
the altar, and proclaim themselves missionaries of the new faith, without a
backward glance of lingering reminiscence"?[245]
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