Hebrews Lesson 96
NKJ Isaiah 40:31 But those who wait on the LORD Shall
renew their strength; They shall mount up with wings like eagles, They
shall run and not be weary, They shall walk and not faint.
Well as you can see (visual
testimony that) overindulgence in ice cream and lobster is not fatal. I went up to
One of the members of the
ordination council is Dr. Elliott Johnson.
Elliott was a doctoral student – in fact he got his ThD the same year
that Charlie and George Meisinger got their ThM’s. So they knew him back then. Charlie hadn’t
seen Elliott since then. He is one of
the good guys up there at Dallas Seminary that are really holding the line
against the influence of progressive dispensationalism and several other things
- just a real solid guy. He was
impressed with the depth of the ordination and all that went into preparation
for it, even having the general public (the congregation) invited to witness
the questioning.
He said, “I have been to a
lot of ordinations and they are all back in the conference room somewhere. The elders or the deacons grill the pastor.”
He thought it was a great
idea to have the congregation there. He
saw a few things he liked.
Well, somebody sent me an
email today. I’ve had this before and I
thought it was rather amusing. I thought
I would read it to you and share the humor.
It has a lot to say about how things are interpreted today and how
people read things the way they want to read things and shape things the way
they want to shape them.
Judy
who is a professional genealogical researcher discovered that Hillary Clinton’s
great great uncle Remus Rodham, a fellow lacking in character, was hanged for
horse stealing and train robbery in
Remus
Rodham, horse thief, sent to
Judy
emailed Hillary Clinton for comments.
Hillary’s staff of professional image adjusters cropped Remus’s
picture, scanned it, enlarged it, and edited it with the image processing software
so that all that is seen is the headshot.
The accompanying biographical sketch is as follows:
Remus
Rodham was a famous cowboy in the
I guess it is all how you
look at things, right?
Well before we get started we
need to make sure that we are in fellowship.
I know the mention of Hillary Clinton probably got half of you out of
fellowship and it may take you 5 minutes to get you back in fellowship. Nevertheless we will have silent prayer and then
I will open in prayer. Let us pray.
Well, tonight we are back in
Hebrews 7:11. We will be back in Hebrews
7:11. As I started getting back into the
flow of Hebrews 7, I realized it was taking me a long time because it had been a
little over 2 months, maybe three months, since we actually went through this
first part of Hebrews 7. I figured if it
was taking me that long to get my head back into Hebrews 7 it would probably
take you even longer. So, I thought that
we needed to have some review to reorient ourselves.
What happened is that we hit
those last couple of verses (7, 9, 10, 11) that deal with (mostly 10 and 11) the
fact that Levi paid tithes in Abraham’s loins and how that verse was used as a proof
text in many theologies for different positions. So we took a little bit of a side track down
two major rabbit trails dealing with:
Now I concluded the second
part of those two series last week. So
we are back into our flow of Hebrews.
Let’s take some time this evening.
I want to review.
As I was doing this I went
back to the first chapter of Hebrews. I
noticed certain thematic elements that come into play in Hebrews 7, 8, 9, and
10 that were identified in the introduction.
Now that we have studied through the first 6 ½ chapters and are on the
verge of getting into this next section, it all of a sudden stands out a little
more as to what the writer was doing.
Hebrews takes a number of different threads as it were – threads of
doctrine related to the person of Christ, related to His sanctification in His
humanity during the time that He was on the earth, certain threads related to
His ascension and His present session at the right hand of the Father. The Psalm that is quoted the most in Hebrews
is Psalm 110. Psalm 110:1 is quoted two
or three times; Psalm 110:4 is quoted two or three times which are very
important for understanding the Doctrine of the Ascension. This doctrine is just embedded back there in
the Old Testament. If you went back and
just read Psalm110 you might not on your own pick out all the implications that
the writer of Hebrews is picking out.
That is the way that doctrine progresses.
Sometimes I will use the
phrase progress of doctrine. People don’t know what that means. It doesn’t mean…well, it can mean two things. It means that doctrine progresses in the
Scripture because you have progressive revelation. So with the Old Testament you have certain
things revealed in the Pentateuch, certain things revealed in the prophets,
certain things built on that when you get into the gospels, and more things
built on top of that in the epistles. But
once the canon is closed, you have another type of progress of doctrine. That is the progress of the church’s
understanding of doctrine so that our understanding of the doctrine of the
trinity today is far superior to the Apostle Paul’s doctrine of the
trinity.
Now when I say that some people
say, “Wait a minute. He had the Holy
Spirit and he was inspired when he wrote all of that.”
He understood the trinity,
yes, but he didn’t have the word trinity.
See, you have the word trinity.
That encapsulates all that is taught there in that one vocabulary word and
he didn’t have that. That was not coined
until Tertullian coined it in the early part of the third century. So, with the development of vocabulary (came)
the development of technical language to articulate the nuances of these doctrines. We who live 2,000 years later understand things
that were only implicit in the minds of the apostles as they wrote these
things. They did not understand the full
import of everything that they said.
So let’s start with about 3
points of general introduction to Hebrews.
Now we have seen this outline
before. We have the prelude which is the
first four verses. The emphasis on the
prelude is on the God who speaks. Over
and over and over again as we go through Hebrews we focus on God’s
revelation. God has spoken; God has said;
God has revealed. These are the oracles
of God. Again and again and again there is
a reference to God speaking and because God has spoken, there is a necessary
response on our part to be obedient to what He has said.
We are not to sit there and go,
“Isn’t that interesting. God spoke. Well, let’s go into the classroom and talk
about this and bandy it about and see what our opinions are about it.”
No, when God speaks we are to
respond. It is like that commercial that
they had for one of the stock broker firms.
When they speak, everybody listens.
Well, it is sort of like when God speaks everybody is supposed to
respond and respond in obedience. So the
emphasis is on God speaking. He has
spoken in times past.
NKJ Hebrews 1:1 God, who at various times and in
various ways spoke in time past to the fathers by the prophets,
NKJ Hebrews 1:2 has in these last days spoken to us
by His Son, whom He has appointed heir of all things, through whom also
He made the worlds;
The emphasis there and the implication
is that He is speaking now. It is
something that is final and complete. It
has been - that revelation process has been completed.
The rest of the prelude introduces
the basic themes related to the Son. He
created all things. He has purged us
from sin. He has cleansed us from
sin. He has ascended to heaven. He is now seated at the right hand of God the
Father above the angels and this seating is related to His victory in His
humanity. He is the future heir of all
things.
NKJ Hebrews 1:4 having become so much better than
the angels, as He has by inheritance obtained a more excellent name than they.
So the session, the seating
at the right hand of the Father, is going to then be related to His
priesthood. But, before the writer can
get there, the first thing he has to establish is that Christ is superior to
the angels. That is the focus in the first section in chapter 1:5 to 2:4. So 1:5 to 2:4 has a doctrinal exposition of His
deity and humanity. The emphasis though
is going to be on both of these. Psalm
2:7 emphasizes His deity, His eternal sonship which is quoted in verse 5.
NKJ Hebrews 1:5 For to which of the angels did He
ever say: "You are My Son, Today I have begotten You"? And again:
"I will be to Him a Father, And He shall be to Me a Son"?
Then it is connected to Psalm
89 and the second part of the verse which relates to His humanity and His being
the Davidic Son. So these two things are
brought together and then in verse 8 it emphasizes again His deity. It will be an eternal reign. Then in the second part of that section in
verses 10 through 12 it talks about how we will be elevated up because of the
plan of God, that the Lord laid the foundation of the earth, laid the plans - verse 10 which quotes Psalm 102.
But the focal point of this is
that in His humanity, in His sonship and in His humanity, He is qualified and He
is elevated above the angels - because in His deity He is already there. But, in His humanity He has to go through
this second qualification process which when He passes the test when He is
buried, resurrected, ascended to heaven; then He is elevated over the angels in
His humanity.
At the end of the chapter we
read:
NKJ Hebrews
Then we have a quote from
Psalm 110:1 which reads:
NKJ Psalm 110:1 A Psalm of David. The LORD
Now I want you to watch
this. I am going to go ahead and connect
it to Psalm 110:4 in this introduction so you can watch how the theme develops.
The capital, the upper case
LORD is referring to YHWH. So that is
referring to God the Father.
said to my
Lord,
That is Adonai in the second “Lord”. That’s a reference to the Lord Jesus Christ,
the pre-incarnate Lord Jesus Christ.
"Sit
at My right hand, Till I make Your enemies Your footstool."
Now we all know from English
that when you have a second person singular command, it assumes the presence of
the second person singular pronoun.
So when I tell you to jump
what I have actually said is, “You jump.”
When I say to leave, I am actually saying, “You leave.”
So when the First Person of
the Trinity says to the Second Person of the Trinity, “Sit at My right hand” He
is actually saying, “You sit at My right hand.”
Now it is important to put
that first “you” in there because we connect it to the second use of the second
person pronoun - You sit until I make your enemies your footstool.
Now we have identified that
in the conversation in Psalm 110 that the “you” is a reference to the Second Person
of the Trinity, the pre-incarnate Lord Jesus Christ. So when we come to Psalm 110:4 which is the
key verse behind Hebrews 7 dealing with the Melchizedekean priesthood we read:
NKJ Psalm 110:4 The LORD
That is YHWH, the First Person of the Trinity.
has sworn And will not relent,
"You are a priest forever According to the order of
Melchizedek."
Who does that you refer to? Second person singular – the Messianic
Davidic King – the eternal Second Person of the Trinity.
So the point that we are
bringing out here is that this shows from the exegesis of Psalm 110 that this
other person is viewed as being fully divine in Psalm 110. You have a multiplicity of persons there in
the Old Testament. You don’t have a
singular deity. You have multiplicity of
persons there. You have two divine beings
in conversation. The second one is
identified as becoming a priest forever according to the order of
Melchizedek. It is the unpacking of that
verse that is going to be significant in the book of Hebrews.
So the first section closes
with this reference to Psalm 110:1 and then you have the practical exhortation
and warning in chapter 2 right here in 2:1-4.
In 2:1-4 there is a conclusion drawn and that conclusion is a challenge
to give strict attention to obedience lest we drift away. The default position of your sin nature is
carnality and to drift away from doctrine.
So whenever you stop walking by the Spirit, your spiritual gears shift
into carnality and you automatically start drifting away. So, there has to be attention given. We have to focus on our spiritual life. It is not something that is just going to
happen. There has to be discipline,
mental discipline.
The more I watch things today…
I have heard within the last two weeks of so many cases of young people. There has always been young people - teenagers
who grow up, leave, go off to college and sort of sow their wild oats. But what we are seeing today is a level of–
and I am hearing more and more reports of this where kids who grow up and are
well-taught and well-grounded in apologetics and worldview and the whole thing;
they leave and by the time they get into their twenties they are off almost to
the verge of neo-paganism and witchcraft.
There is such an incredible amount of pressure in the culture and from
the peers on these kids that they feel so left out. You go into some parts of this country and I
have seen this with young ladies and shall we say a little more mature ladies in
their 30’s and even 40’s trying to figure out if they are going to find a man who
is a believer and positive to doctrine. They
can barely find other women who are positive to doctrine much less a man. So when you look at young kids, teenagers,
college-aged kids growing up and going off to college, they feel like they are
completely isolated. It is very easy for
that peer pressure to convince them that Christianity and intense devotion to
doctrine is not that important. As soon
as they do their gears slip into carnality and it doesn’t take long at
all. Two or tree months and you don’t
even recognize them any more. That is
what the apostle was warning right here.
You have to give more earnest attention.
NKJ Hebrews 2:1 Therefore we must give the more
earnest heed to the things we have heard, lest we drift away
He gives an example from the
Old Testament. He goes to Sinai and says,
“Look at the Mosaic Law. If the Jews who had the Mosaic Law were rebellious and
were disciplined in such an extreme manner in coming out of the wilderness that
they weren’t allowed to enter into the Promised Land, how much more will we who
have such a greater salvation i.e. inheritance (Remember we are defining the
word salvation having to do with that
end result – salvation, deliverance, the full orbed manifestation of everything
we get with our justification) that how much more we will be accountable when
we stand before the Judgment Seat of Christ?”
From there we go to section two. Section two extends from 2:5 down through
Why was it necessary for Him
in His humanity to go through all of this kind of testing?
In verse 10 he writes:
NKJ Hebrews
That is the Father
for whom are all things and
by whom are all things, in bringing many sons to glory, to make the
captain of their salvation perfect through sufferings.
The “many sons to glory” are
the Church Age believers. So what he is
saying is that it is fitting in order to bring you to your maturation point so
that you can be a successful co-ruler with Jesus Christ in the Millennium. In order to do that it was necessary for the Captain
of Our Salvation to be perfected, that is to be brought to completion through
sufferings.
So he sets the standard and He
blazes the trail for us. He has to go
through the same kinds of suffering, the same kind of testing, the same kind of
temptation that we do, yet without sin. Now that comes up at the beginning of
the next section. So you see how each
section sort of builds on the sections before.
Then we come to Hebrews
2:17-18. At the conclusion of this
little section he says:
NKJ Hebrews
Why?
that He might be a merciful and
faithful High Priest in things pertaining to God, to make propitiation
for the sins of the people.
Now look back to verse 10. He had to go through this process of being
perfected through suffering. You connect
that with the fact that He might be a merciful and faithful High Priest because
He has been tested in all things as we are.
He had to be made like us. He had
to live His life on the earth in His humanity as a human being.
Now that brings up an interesting question that I have
been thinking through more and more dealing with the hypostatic union. We
think about the hypostatic union and I have talked to some degree about this already. You have the two natures in Christ, but it is
one person. It is one individual. He is not schizo.
He is not saying, “I am over here today. Now I am over here. Let’s go back over here and be divine; now
let’s go over here and be human.”
It is one person. So everything is coming out of one
person. But, He has two natures. One is
undiminished deity and the other is true humanity. He has always got both of these natures
there.
But some how and this is the issue with kenosis in
Philippians 2:5-11 where it is translated, “He did not think it robbery to be
thought equal to God, but He gave up His attributes.”
He didn’t give them up. He willingly restricts them.
The question came up when we were at the ordination
this last week. The standard question
was to define the hypostatic union. And
the answer that was given by David was the standard answer that you will find
like Jesus Christ our Lord John Walvoord’s book on Christology or any number
of other classic works on Christology that Christ willingly gave up the
independent use of His eternal attributes.
After he gave the definition I said, “Okay David, tell
me when Jesus the Second Person of the Trinity ever used His attributes
independently of the Father’s will.”
He never did. So
that’s really not a good definition, but it is one we have all heard and one
that has been used again and again and again for decades if not for
centuries. So we have to think through
what is really going on with the hypostatic union is that Jesus willingly sort
of blocks off His deity. He assesses
those divine attributes when it is important to demonstrate His divine
credentials and who He is as the Messiah, as the predicted Son of God because
remember in the Old Testament you have all those passages like Psalm 110:1,
110:4, Isaiah 7:14, Isaiah 9:6 all of which indicate that the Messiah is going
to be fully God. He is going to be
called eternal God. They will call Him
Emmanuel, God with Us. Micah 5:2 He will be born in
When we did that study a couple of weeks ago in
Genesis when we were dealing with sorrow and grief and dealing with funerals
and the loss of a loved one and I traced the use of the various compounds of lupeo and how antilupeo
is used to intensify. It is an
intensified grief and sorrow and anguish that Jesus is going through when He is
in the
NKJ Hebrews 2:17 Therefore, in all things He had to
be made like His brethren, that He might be a merciful and faithful High
Priest in things pertaining to God, to make propitiation for the sins of
the people.
NKJ Hebrews
Now that takes us through -
it emphasizes a few of these themes related to priesthood that we see in the teaching
portion, the doctrinal exposition part of that particular section. Then in 3:7 down to
NKJ Psalm 95:7 For He is our God, And we are
the people of His pasture, And the sheep of His hand. Today, if you will
hear His voice:
NKJ Psalm 95:8 "Do not harden your hearts, as
in the rebellion, As in the day of trial in the wilderness,
“If you hear His voice.” He takes us back to chapter 1, verse 1. God has spoken in these last days. God has spoken by the prophets and the fathers. So if He has spoken, our response is not to
harden our hearts to that. This Psalm 95
is an indictment on
That leads to the next
section which begins in
Now it begins in verse 14
with a statement.
NKJ Hebrews
What is he doing there? He is going back and picking up that theme that
ended the previous didactic section with in verse 17 and 18 talking about the
high priest. So he goes back and picks
up the thread of the high priest, he picks up the ascension. He passed through the heavens. Then we have an exhortation.
let us hold
fast our confession.
NKJ Hebrews
So he is unpacking this whole
doctrine of the high priestly ministry of Jesus Christ.
was in all points
tempted as we are, yet without sin.
NKJ Hebrews
So he begins an exposition of
the high priestly ministry of the Lord Jesus Christ. Again He connects that to Melchizedek in
verse 6. He quotes from Psalm 110:4 and
then he breaks off. In verse 10 he says:
NKJ Hebrews
NKJ Hebrews
So, he didn’t get very far
into the topic and he broke off in order to challenge them and to warn them
because they have become sluggish and dull of hearing because they didn’t take
their spiritual life seriously enough. So they have slipped into carnality gear and
they are veering way off course and he has to grab their attention and warn
them about the dangerous consequences of what is going to happen if they are
off course. If they continue they can
even end up in the sin unto death. So we
have this lengthy section from
Okay, that brings us now to
section four which is chapter 7:1 through
Okay, let’s look at chapter
7. The section is going to emphasize the
necessity of a new high priest, a high priest that has to be superior to the
priestly ministry that was part of the Mosaic Law. The Aaronic high priesthood
and the Levitical priesthood were tied to the Mosaic Law. The Mosaic Law was intended to be
temporary. It had limitations. It was designed to provide a priesthood only
for the Jews because the Jews had come to
But, even as God was speaking
to them from
In other words the people
don’t want - as a nation they rejected the idea of being a priestly
nation. They wanted to have a subcategory
to be the intercessor for them. This is
where God sets up in the Mosaic Law the intercessory ministry of the Levitical
priesthood in relationship to their rejection.
So we have a development of the limitations of the Levitical priesthood
in this section. So we have a doctrinal
exposition from 7:1 through
So we come to Hebrews 7:1 and
it’s a contrast between the priesthood of Melchizedek and the priesthood of
Aaron. Let me just remind you of some
things that we covered already in relationship the Levitical priesthood in
contrast to Christ’s priesthood.
NKJ Hebrews
The
Messiah, the Lord Jesus Christ, was from another tribe and the tribe of
NKJ Hebrews 7:1 For this Melchizedek, king of Salem, priest of the Most High
God, who met Abraham returning from the slaughter of the kings and blessed him,
Melchizedek is a picture by
analogy of the source of blessing. But
it is to Melchizedek that Abraham gave a tenth.
He is not required to. It is a
grace offering. Ten percent just happened
to be the round figure that most people used in the ancient world. There was nothing magical or mystical about
10%. It was a standard round number and there is evidence throughout the
ancient world that this was a standard number in many different cases for taxes
- property taxes, different kinds of religious taxes as well. It is just a
tenth.
And so Abraham gives that to
Melchizedek and that shows that Abraham who is the father of the Jews as a
people that he used himself spiritually as inferior to Melchizedek. Now that is important to understand because
any priesthood that derives from Abraham would also be viewed as being inferior
to Melchizedek. That is the thrust of
this whole initial section.
It talks about Melchizedek
that he was without father, without mother, without genealogy. That is not saying (I will go over this one
more time) that he didn’t have parents.
There is only one person in the Bible who didn’t have any parents other
than Adam. That was Joshua the son of
Nun. (Laughter) Melchizedek was without father and without mother in the
genealogical record. We don’t know who
his parents were. There is no indication
in the canon of Scripture as to who his parents were. He was without genealogy. Why? Because, he is not in the line of the
seed. The genealogies in Genesis deal
with tracing the line of the seed from Adam to Noah and from Noah to Terah and
from Terah down to Joseph. But
Melchizedek isn’t in the line so there is no genealogy. We don’t know who his parents are. We don’t need
to know. It is irrelevant to the purpose
of Genesis.
NKJ Hebrews 7:3 without father, without mother,
without genealogy, having neither beginning of days nor end of life, but made
like the Son of God, remains a priest continually.
In other words there is no genealogy so there
is no record of when he was born or when he died, not that he wasn’t born or that
he didn’t die. Melchizedek is not some
pre-incarnate manifestation of the Lord Jesus Christ. There are always some people
who come along and think that this is what it means. He is made like the Son of God in terms of
this literary analogy. So he becomes the
forerunner in terms of the prototype for this royal priesthood.
Verse 4 through 11 focuses on
the greatness of Melchizedek.
NKJ Hebrews 7:4 Now consider how great this man was,
to whom even the patriarch Abraham gave a tenth of the spoils.
This is what he is
unpacking. This is his purpose of
focusing on Melchizedek. Abraham paid
tribute to his superior.
NKJ Hebrews 7:5 And indeed those who are of the
sons of Levi, who receive the priesthood, have a commandment to receive tithes
from the people according to the law, that is, from their brethren, though they
have come from the loins of Abraham;
Levi is a great grandson of
Abraham.
They are set up over the rest
of the Jews as the spiritual representative of God. Therefore they are to receive the tithes.
NKJ Hebrews 7:6 but he whose genealogy is not
derived from them received tithes from Abraham and blessed him who had the
promises.
The point is his genealogy is
not derived from him. It is Melchizedek. So he makes the point in verse 8.
NKJ Hebrews 7:8 Here mortal men receive tithes, but
there
That is in that instance with
Melchizedek…
he receives
them, of whom it is witnessed that he lives.
That is that Melchizedek lived. So he drives home the point in verses 9 and
10.
NKJ Hebrews 7:9 Even Levi, who receives tithes,
Now Levi never received
tithes; only his descendents did some 300 or 400 years later at the time of the
Exodus and the giving of the Law. Only
then did you have any kind of tithing or priesthood set up. So Levi didn’t literally receive tithes. He is simply set up as a metonymy of
source.
paid tithes
through Abraham, so to speak,
NKJ Hebrews
That last phrase has to be
understood in light of the phrase “so to speak” or “in a manner of speaking” or
“figuratively speaking” he is still in the loins of his father.” He is simply drawing the physical connection
that if the father is inferior to someone then the grandson is inferior. That is the simple point that is being made
here.
Then we get to verse 11.
NKJ Hebrews
Therefore, conclusion.
Now this passage is going to sets
up an argument. It starts with what is
called a first class condition in the Greek which we usually understand to mean
if and the speaker assumes it to be true.
Now he can assume it to be true and it may not be true. He can assume it to be true and it is
true. He can assume it to be true for
the sake of argument. That is how it is
set up in a debate. That’s the kind of
first class condition we have here.
“Therefore, assuming” he is
saying. “That perfection came through
the Levitical priesthood.” But it didn’t.
That is the point of the parenthesis.
what
further need was there that another priest should rise according to the
order of Melchizedek, and not be called according to the order of Aaron?
What he is saying is. “Why
would we need another priesthood if the first priesthood was sufficient?”
We could set it up in terms
of a logical syllogism this way. P1 is
your first proposition. If completion
came (but it didn’t) (assuming it did) through ht Levitical priesthood, there
would be no need of another priesthood.
Now who is he
addressing? Remember, he is addressing
we believe mostly converted Levites. They
are tempted to go back to all of the pomp and circumstance and all of the ritual
of the temple from their own Jewish patriotism.
We believe that the writer wrote this in that era around 62 to 66 AD
just before the Jewish revolt. There was
just this maelstrom of Jewish patriotism going on against the Romans. There is all this rebellion that is being
fomented so there is pressure there that “you guys were Levites and you have
become Christians. You are anti-Jewish
now.” So there is cultural pressure on
them to give up their Christianity for patriotic reasons and to come back into
the fold as it were. It was a time of
tremendous division among the Jews. They
were fighting each other more than they were fighting the Romans. You had the Zealots. You had the Pharisees. You have the Sadducees. You had the Essenes. You
have all these different (many other) groups and subgroups and they were all
fighting each other. It was a time of
incredible arrogance. This is why they
couldn’t unite against a common enemy. When
you look at how much they did to defend against the Romans and they were that divided
we can only imagine what they would have done and they would never have been
defeated by the Romans if they hadn’t been that divided at their core.
So he is writing to these
Levites and he is saying, “Look you have to understand this. If completion had come through the Levitical
priesthood there would be no need of priesthood.”
Proposition 2: Completion did not come through the Levitical
priesthood. We know that because Jesus
Christ is the final completion of all the prophecies and promises in the Old
Testament.
What is the conclusion?
Therefore another superior priesthood was intended and necessary. This is why
in verse 17 he is going to quote from Psalm 110:4 to show that from the Old
Testament from the time of David it was understood that another order of
priests would be necessary according to the order of Melchizedek, not the order
of Aaron or the Mosaic Law. The Mosaic
Law had a purpose, but it was not a purpose that was related to salvation or a
purpose that was permanent.
Last time we looked at a
couple of references in Romans related to the purpose of the Law and there are
basically three.
NKJ Romans
So
the first thing that happens is the law exposes the fact that we just can’t do
it. It is impossible. Man is incapable of
living up to God’s standard. Other
verses we looked at were Romans 7:5 and Romans 7:7.
NKJ Romans 7:9 I was alive once without the law,
but when the commandment came, sin revived and I died.
What
he is saying is, “I thought I was alive.
But once I really understood the Law when the commandment came, sin revived
and I died. I realized that I was a
sinner and that I was dead.”
NKJ Romans
That
is spiritual death, not physical death.
It is revealing; it is not producing.
He is already spiritually dead.
It is producing a knowledge of that death in him. That is what you would have to understand of
Romans 7.
So the Law was not given for
salvation but to expose sin, to expose man’s inability, and to reveal the fact
that man was spiritually dead.
Okay, we made it into Hebrews
7:11. Next time we will deal with the
change of the priesthood and the necessity of that getting into the rest of
this particular section.
Let’s bow our heads in
closing prayer.