Dr. Jack L. Arnold Equipping Pastors International Hebrews
Lesson 21
Melchizedek and Christ
Hebrews 7:1-19
Today we are going to discuss the central chapter of the
Book of Hebrews. This chapter is
important because it deals with the priesthood of Jesus Christ. In chapter 5, we saw how Christ qualified to be our Great High Priest because
He is truly man as well as truly God, but in chapter 7 the question arises, ÒIs ChristÕs priesthood a real one?Ó This was a vital, living question to
any Jew who was living in the first century and especially to these Hebrew-Christians
to whom this letter was written.
Remember, the Aaronic priesthood
of the Old Testament was the very heart of Judaism. The readers of the Epistle to the Hebrews were perplexed by
the revolutionary teaching of Christianity that the high priesthood of Christ
has completely supplanted the earthly Aaronic
priesthood of the Old Testament.
From childhood and from prior generations these Jews, although
professing Christians, had grown up with the Mosaic Law with its priesthood,
tabernacle and altar by which they believed they had access to God. Was all this that they believed in and
revered, which had come to them from Jehovah-God, to be done away with
entirely? These brethren were
having a hard time accepting change.
We, today, should be able to sympathize with these
Hebrew-Christians. We can
understand their reluctance to accept a new revelation of Christianity when
they were saturated and satisfied with the old. Think of yourself.
In one way or another you may have been brought up with certain conceptions
about the Christian Faith. Some of
the things you learned as a child or a new Christian and accepted as fact, may
not have been truth at all. As you
became more exposed to GodÕs Word, you had to face the reality of change. Here and there you may have found
radical departures from what you had been taught earlier, and you found it was
not easy to discard these errors you once held. Often change comes slowly and sometimes there is confusion
and even rebellion. Exposure to
GodÕs Word over a period of time brings change, but change comes slow and hard
for many. In order for us to
change, we have to be taught GodÕs Word, conflict with GodÕs Word, be honest
with GodÕs Word, and others have to be patient with us while we go through the
change process.
Hebrews chapter 7 is
deep truth and to grasp it one needs a good understanding of the Old
Testament. Back in Hebrews 5:10, the author began to speak about Jesus
Christ who was a high priest after the order of Melchizedek, but he abruptly
stopped because he felt it was too deep for them, for the majority of them were
babes in Christ and could not take in this deep truth. This is the meat, not the milk, of the
Word.
If you find yourself bored with this teaching on Melchizedek
and Christ, you can pretty well tell your level of spiritual maturity.
When I was a new Christian of about five months, I was
reading through my New Testament and became fascinated with Hebrews 7 and Melchizedek. I must confess I did not understand what I was reading, and
I could not break through. I went
to one of my leaders for Campus Crusade and asked him about Melchizedek. He gave me some oversimplified answer
and it was obvious he was not too interested either. I did not pursue this chapter until I went to seminary and
there I began to get more light on Hebrews
7. It was not until my
study this week that I began to revel in this chapter, but I must confess there
are still some things that are difficult for me to understand.
The general argument of the author is quite clear but the
details at times are a bit fuzzy.
He proves the priesthood of Christ is superior to the priesthood of
Aaron because Christ comes from the Melchizedekian
priesthood and not from the Aaronic priesthood. Melchizedek is a type or shadow of
Christ and Christ is the perfect substance or fulfillment of this Old Testament
type. With the coming of a new
priesthood, the old priesthood and the Mosaic Law from which the priesthood
derived its authority, has been done away with and supplanted by Christ Himself.
THE ORIGIN OF MELCHIZEDEK -
Hebrews 7:1-3
ÒFor this Melchizedek, king of Salem, priest of the Most
High God, who met Abraham as he was returning from the slaughter of the kings
and blessed him, to whom also Abraham apportioned a tenth part of all the
spoils, was first of all, by the translation of his name, king of
righteousness, and then also king of Salem, which is king of peace.Ó -- Melchizedek was a real Old Testament
character but there is only one Old Testament historical reference to this
obscure person. Genesis 14:18-20. Abraham, with 318 crack
soldiers, had inflicted a tremendous defeat upon one of his enemies, and after
the battle, Abraham was met by this great man, Melchizedek, who was both a king
and a priest. He was King of
Salem, which is a reference to Jerusalem, and he was a priest of the one, true,
and living God. Melchizedek did
two significant things in relation to Abraham: 1)
He received a tithe from Abraham, and 2)
He blessed Abraham.
Melchizedek is a type of Christ; therefore we know that Christ is the ultimate fulfillment of one who is King of righteousness and peace.
Ò... And this is His name by which He will
be called, The LORD our righteousnessÓ (Jer. 23:6).
Ò... And His name will be called Wonderful
Counselor, Mighty God, Eternal Father, Prince of PeaceÓ (Isa.
9:6).
This Melchizedek brought out Òbread and wineÓ to Abraham
which is symbolic of Christ, who, as our High Priest, gave His sinless body and
shed His holy blood that we might have our sins forgiven. Today, we Christians memorialize
ChristÕs death by observing the LordÕs Table. Christ was the final King of righteousness and peace, and
the order is significant, for there can never be peace without first having
righteousness. A person must have
ChristÕs righteousness
before he can have ChristÕs peace. There is no peace with God until there is the receiving
of Christ and His righteousness.
ÒHe made Him who knew no sin to be sin
on our behalf, that we might become the righteousness of God in HimÓ (2 Cor.
5:21).
ÒTherefore, having been justified by
faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus ChristÓ (Rom.
5:1).
ÒWithout father, without mother, without genealogy, having
neither beginning of days or end of life, but made like the Son of God, he
abides a priest perpetually.Ó -- This is still a reference to the historical Melchizedek, but
because of the language, some have taken Melchizedek to be a theophany of Christ (that is, an appearance of Christ in
the Old Testament before He became the incarnate Son). That he is not a theophany
is evident because the text says he was Òmade like unto the Son of GodÓ and in 7:15 it says Christ is a priest Òaccording to
the likeness of Melchizedek.Ó
Melchizedek was a real person and a type of Christ, but a type can never
be perfect or fill every detail, for if it did, then the type would be the
reality. Melchizedek was not an
eternal person, and it is important to see that the Bible does not record his
ancestry. There is no record as to
who his parents were, when he was born or when he died. God purposely kept these out of the
record that Melchizedek might be a type of Christ, who is the eternal One, with
no beginning or ending. The
Biblical record merely gives the appearance that Melchizedek had no beginning
or ending. Melchizedek was a
priest perpetually in that his priesthood was a type of ChristÕs eternal
priesthood, and, furthermore, no one could ever take his office from him or
succeed him as did the priests in the Aaronic
priesthood.
THE ORDER OF MELCHIZEDEK -
Hebrews 7:4-10
Before any Jew could accept a new order of priesthood in
Jesus Christ, he would have to be convinced that the Melchizedekian
priesthood and Christ were superior to the Old Testament priesthood of Aaron
and the tribe of Levi, the priestly tribe.
ÒNow observe how great this man was to whom Abraham, the
patriarch, gave a tenth of the choicest spoils.Ó -- Before it can be shown that Christ is
superior to Aaron and Levi, it must be proven that Melchizedek was superior to
Abraham from whom Levi came.
Abraham actually paid tithes to Melchizedek, making Melchizedek superior
to Abraham.
ÒAnd those of the sons of Levi who receive the priestÕs
office have commandment in the Law to collect a tenth from the people, that is,
from their brethren, although these are descendents from Abraham. But the one whose genealogy is not
traced from them collected a tenth from Abraham, and blessed the one who had
the promises.Ó --
The Mosaic Law commanded that all the eleven other tribes of Israel pay tithes
to the tribe of Levi, who had the priestly function for the nation of
Israel. By law, they were
obligated to pay tithes. However,
Abraham voluntarily paid a tithe to Melchizedek, who had no revealed genealogy,
and besides this, Melchizedek gave a priestly blessing to Abraham.
This is the one verse that might indicate that tithing is
both an Old Testament and a New Testament principle because Abraham tithed
before the Mosaic Law was given; therefore, the Church should tithe after the
Law is done away with. There may
be several objections to this which are: 1)
Abraham did not give ten percent of all his spoils, but only of the Òchoicest
spoilsÓ, and 2) He gave only once and it
does not indicate this was a constant practice.
ÒBut without any dispute the lesser is blessed by the
greater.Ó --
Abraham had GodÕs promises and was the wealthiest and most affluent man of his
time; yet he humbly bowed and received a blessing from Melchizedek. Melchizedek is greater than Abraham
because the blessor is greater than the blessed, and
the receiver of the tithe is greater than the giver.
ÒAnd in this case mortal men receive tithes, but in that
case one receives them, of whom it is witnessed that he lives on.Ó -- In the Old Testament the priests were
mortal men subject to death and passed their priesthood on to their sons, but
Melchizedek, as a type of Christ, has his priesthood live on through Christ.
ÒAnd, so to speak, through Abraham even Levi, who received
tithes, paid tithes, for he was still in the loins of his father when Melchizedek
met him.Ó --
Now the author shows how Christ is superior to Levi, the originator
(progenitor) of the priestly tribe of Israel. Levi was in the loins (genes) of Abraham in some direct or
representative sense, and he actually paid tithes in Abraham before he ever
existed. This makes Melchizedek
greater than Levi and the Melchizedekian priesthood
greater than that of Aaron or Levi.
THE OFFICE OF CHRIST GIVES A NEW PRIESTHOOD - Hebrews
7:11-19
ÒNow if (and it
is not) perfection was through the Levitical priesthood (for on the basis
of it the people received the Law), what further need was there for another
priest to arise according to the order of Melchizedek, and not be designated
according to the order of Aaron?Ó -- It is the purpose here to show that the Melchizedekian
priesthood not only surpasses, but supercedes for all time, the Levitical priesthood and Aaron. The Levitical priesthood could
bring no one to perfection, that is, to completion, fulfillment or
maturity. No one was saved (completed)
or sanctified (matured) by the Levitical priesthood
because the priesthood was powerless to bring inward cleansing. All the ritual of the priesthood
pointed forward to Christ who would take away sin. The Levitical system was a system
of shadows, types, promises and symbols, and not the real substance of
redemption. There would have been
no need for a new priesthood if the old one could have perfected people.
Perfection comes because Christ has come. Perfection could not be in the Old
Testament. Did you know the last
word in the Old Testament, the last word of the Book of Malachi is
Òcurse?Ó But the last word of the
New Testament, the last sentence in the Book of Revelation is, ÒThe grace of
the Lord Jesus be with all.Ó In
the New Testament we have a full manifestation of GodÕs grace because God has
spoken to us in His Son.
ÒFor when the priesthood is changed, of necessity there
takes place a change of law also.Ó -- This verse is one of the most theological verses in the
entire Bible. The change of the
priesthood demanded a change of the covenant of law. The priesthood and the law go hand in hand, and to do away
with one, you must do away with the other. The Mosaic Law, in its entirety, is done away with because
Christ is the fulfillment of the Law.
ÒFor Christ is the end of the law for righteousness to everyone
who believesÓ (Rom. 10:4).
This change of the Law includes the judicial, ceremonial,
and social aspects, and, in my understanding, it does not include the moral law
as expressed in the Ten Commandments, although I cannot be dogmatic on this
last point. For sure, any mixture
of the Mosaic Law in the gospel, under any guise whatsoever, is contrary to
this verse. Mosaic Law and grace
can never mix!
ÒFor the one concerning whom these things are spoken belongs
to another tribe, from which no one has officiated at the altar. For it is evident that our Lord was
descended from Judah, a tribe with reference to which Moses spoke nothing
concerning priests.Ó --To
be a priest according to the Mosaic Law, one had to be from the tribe of Levi, but Christ was from the tribe of Judah. How then could He be a priest? Christ did not come from the Levitical priesthood but from the Melchizedekian
priesthood.
ÒAnd this is clearer still, if (since) another priest arises according to the likeness of
Melchizedek, who has become such not on the basis of a law of physical
requirement (fleshy commandment),
but according to the power of an indestructible life.Ó -- ChristÕs priesthood did not rest on the
carnal commandments of the Mosaic Law, but His priesthood rests on His eternal
character which is the power of an indestructible life. Christ is eternal. He always was. He is Alpha and Omega, the beginning
and the ending, the first and the last.
He is the One who is, who was and who is to come, the Almighty. As the eternal One, He has an eternal
priesthood.
ÒFor it is witnessed of Him, ÔThou art a priest forever
according to the order of Melchizedek.ÕÓ -- This is a quote from Psalm 110:4.
About 1,000 years after the
historical Melchizedek, God declared through King David that Christ would be a
priest according to Melchizedek.
Then about 1,000 years after that,
Jesus Christ lived, died and was resurrected and ascended to the FatherÕs right
hand to remain forever our Great High Priest. How gloriously accurate is GodÕs Word!
ÒFor on the one hand, there is a setting aside of a former
commandment because of its weakness and uselessness (for the law made nothing
perfect), and on the other hand there is a bringing in of a better hope, ...Ó -- The Mosaic Law and the Levitical
priesthood were weak and useless for they could perfect (save or mature) no
one. Why? Because the Law was made weak by human
flesh, and the Law was a type or shadow that pointed forward to Christ. Christ has come! Christ left heaven and became man! The long awaited Messiah has arrived! Because of this, we who live in the
gospel age, or the age of grace, have a better hope. Why? Because we worship Christ who has come and have the full revelation
of Christ. We have Christ
who the Old Testament saints looked forward to! Old Testament saints were saved by grace through faith
in the promise of Messiah to come, but their hope was limited
because they had limited revelation and understanding of Christ. Today we have
a better hope!
Ò... . through which
we draw near to God.Ó --
It is only through Christ that men can be brought near to God. The Law never brought any person to
God. The Levitical
priesthood never saved anyone.
Only Christ can save men and draw them near to God.
CONCLUSION
Christ can and does bring men and women to God. Christ alone can save people from their
sins. Christ alone can give
sinners eternal life.
Since Christ is the only one who can save, then draw near to
God and receive the Lord Jesus as your all-sufficient Savior for sin.