Hebrews Lesson 98
NKJ Isaiah 40:7 The grass withers, the flower fades,
Because the breath of the LORD blows upon it; Surely the people are grass.
We are in Hebrews 7. Last time as we got started beginning in
verse 11we were looking at this contrast that is being made by the author
between the Levitical priesthood which had dominated Israel since the inception
of the Mosaic Law at Mt. Sinai and a previous and older and more extensive priesthood
called the Melchizedekean priesthood. So
just in terms of review of what we are seeing in this passage…back to point
one.
Last time we looked at
Hebrews 7:11. The writer concludes after
his discussion in the first ten verses:
NKJ Hebrews
Parenthetical thought.
(for under
it
That is the Levitical
priesthood – through the Levitical priesthood, on the basis of the Levitical
priesthood.
the people
received the law),
The priests were responsible
for communicating the law, teaching the Law to the people.
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?
We saw last time that the “if”
here is a second class condition which represents a condition of unreality. The author is assuming it is not true. He is basically saying if perfection came
through the Levitical priesthood (and of course we know that it didn’t), then
what need would there be for another priesthood? But what he is basically saying is that if we
set it up as a syllogism he would be saying, “First of all if completion came
through the Levitical priesthood there would be no need for another priest
because everything would be fulfilled with the Levitical priesthood.” Nothing more would be needed. But, there is another priesthood. He has been arguing for the priesthood, the
royal priesthood of the Lord Jesus Christ and the eternality of the
Melchizedekean priesthood. Therefore he
is concluding (This is the implication of his argument.) the Levitical
priesthood is limited and temporary. It
was never designed to be permanent.
Last time I took the time to
go back into the Old Testament to go to passages in Leviticus to talk about the
kinds of qualifications that were necessary to be a Levitical priest. The qualifications were all physical and they
were all genetic. You had to be a
descendent of Levi. To be the high priest
you had to be the physical descendent of Aaron and go through a particular line
of descent. You also had to fit certain physical
qualifications. There couldn’t be any
physical defects. You couldn’t be lame,
crippled. You couldn’t have leprosy or
some other problems. So there is nothing said about spirituality. There is nothing said about their
relationship to the Lord. That’s part of what makes it an inferior priesthood. You only had physical and genetic
requirements. So we create a little
comparison chart here between the Levitical priesthood and the Melchizedekean
priesthood.
The Levitical priesthood is
incomplete. That is what Hebrews
Then the Levitical priesthood
because the Levitical priests are sinners because they have to still be
cleansed of their own sins, they have to offer sacrifices for themselves and
the sacrifices that they are offering are inadequate (as the writer of Hebrews
will go on to say in chapter 10 that the blood of bulls and goats cannot take
away sin) that it is an inferior priesthood.
Yet the Melchizedekean priesthood is superior. It is based on the Messiah who is the eternal
Davidic High Priest and He is perfect.
He perfectly complies with the law. So his argument is that based on Old Testament
revelation there was this prophecy regarding the Melchizedekean priesthood that
it would supplant the Levitical priesthood when the Messiah came.
Now one of the problems that
they had was that these Jewish believers that the writer of Hebrews is
addressing very likely were influenced by some of the theology that characterized
the Essenes who lived in the
They thought there would be
two messianic figures – one of them would be a priestly messiah who would be
descended from the tribe of Aaron and another would be a royal messiah who
would rule over
The priesthood as we will see
in the next verse…
NKJ Hebrews
…is directly connected to the
Mosaic Law so you can’t separate the Aaronic high priesthood, the Levitical
priesthood from the Mosaic Law. The
Mosaic Law establishes the Aaronic priesthood and the Levitical priesthood
provides the qualifications for Levitical priesthood. Then it is through the Levitical priesthood
that the law is taught and propagated down through the generations. Now as we come to this we always have a
problem with Christians today who are trying to understand the role of the
Mosaic Law to today – how does the Mosaic Law related to Christians today? Is it just completely irrelevant? Does it have some relevance or are we to live
under parts of it? Those are basically
the three options.
You often hear people say,
“Well, we are in the Church Age, the Mosaic Law has no application whatsoever.”
Hummm…, what do you do with II Timothy
So you can’t come along and
many people get this idea that if you are a dispensationalist that means you
look at the Bible and say, “Well, forget the Old Testament.”
Dispensationalists – or some
dispensationalists – have been their own worst enemies. I knew a very good doctrinal pastor up in
We don’t take out our razor
blades and cut out the Old Testament say, “That’s historical. That’s interesting. That helps us understand a little bit about
the background for the New Testament.”
It has greater relevance than
that.
We also come to the Mosaic
Law and we think, “Well, that just had to do with how God wants
Some people have even said,
“Well, you know they had all that legalism.
That is what the law was. It was
all about legalism. That is contrasted
to grace. We read in the New Testament
this contrast between law and grace. So
we have to exclude the Mosaic Law.”
Well, that is not quite right
either because when you do that, you completely misunderstand the purpose for
the law and the nature of the Law. So
let me give you about 7 points in understanding the significance of the Mosaic
Law and its relevance for the Church Age.
So
we can’t come in and say, “Golly, the Law led to legalism.”
No,
the sin nature led to legalism. The Law
was in its very essence holy and righteous and good. So we can’t come in and
just negate it. What we tend to do is
look at the Mosaic Law through the legalistic lens of the Pharisees and their
interpretation of the Law in the gospels.
As I pointed out last time, what happened in Judaism was that after the
return to
So
they said, “Well, let’s build a fence around the Law.”
That
was the rabbinic traditions. So for
example if the law said that you can’t boil a calf in the mother’s milk, then
they came up with the tradition that said that it means that we can’t mix dairy
products with meat products at all because it just might be that if we take a
dish and we have steak on it one day and the next day we have cheese on that
same plate that even though we washed it to the best of our ability, there
might be one molecule of meat that’s left on that plate. If it gets mixed with that cheese and there
may be the possibility that the cheese comes from the mother of the calf that
produced the meat. So it may be an
infinitesimal chance that they are related, but we can take that chance because
God will kick us out of the land again.
So we are going to have to have one set of dishes and one set of cookware
for meat and a completely different set of dishes and a completely different
set of cookware and silverware and everything for dairy. That’s true.
If
you go to
So
they built this fence around the Law. That
became codified in the Mishnah. Then
later on they built a second fence around that which became codified in the
Talmud. The Talmud is basically a commentary
on the Mishnah. When you see a Talmud
it will have a large page. In the middle
of the page it will have the Mishnah and then there will be a border around
that and then you will have writings in the margins (top and bottom, left and
right) and that’s the Talmud. That’s the
rabbinical commentary on the Mishnah. So they built these fences. The idea was that if they established these traditions,
then if you don’t break the traditions then you won’t break the Law. So it is to keep the Jews away from breaking
one of those 613 commandments. That’s legalism. That doesn’t indicate that the Law is
bad. That is a misuse and abuse and
misinterpretation of the Mosaic Law. The
New Testament says that the law was holy and righteous and good.
The second
thing they are held accountable for is their treatment of
God
says, “I will bless those who bless you and curse those who curse you.”
So
the Mosaic Law was not - no nation, no gentile was obligated to keep the Mosaic
Law. The Mosaic Law was just for Jews.
It had to do with their criminal law; it had to do with their civil law; it had
to do with their ceremonial law - those three aspects. They are interwoven. You can’t just say these chapters relate to
the criminal law. These chapters relate to civil law and these chapters relate
to ceremonial law although you can break out the ceremonial law more than you
can the civil and criminal law. Those
are kind of woven together. But all of
them are interwoven because it deals with the whole fabric of the culture and
of the society. So the Mosaic Law represents
God’s revelation in relationship to how a 4th divine institution (a nation,
a government) should operate. There are
implications and applications from the Mosaic Law because the Mosaic Law shows
how a national entity should support and defend the divine institutions of
human responsibility, marriage, family and government. Part of the responsibility of the government
of any nation is to protect and promote the 5 divine institutions which are
personal responsibility, marriage, family, government and national distinctions
– not giving up your identity to internationalism – not saying that we are
going to make up our laws on the basis of what the French do or on the basis of
what the Dutch do or what the Germans do.
But,
unfortunately we are losing that in our country.
We
have Supreme Court justices who are thinking, “Let’s see how the Germans and
the French and everybody else handle this.
Let’s base our law on someone else’s law.”
That
is the road to perdition. It is
rejection of the 5th divine institution. But that is what we see with the Mosaic
Law. It gives us a pattern for how criminal
law and civil law ought to function in terms of various penalties and in terms
of how it’s applied. It doesn’t mean you
should do it the same way, but it gives you a pattern or a model. It is not mandated for every nation.
Now let’s look at Hebrews
7:12. We will take a minute to exegete through
the passage and look at it grammatically.
NKJ Hebrews
“For” tells us that it is an
explanation. It is an explanation of the
principle laid down in the previous verse through the second class condition.
Here we have the participial
form of the verb metatithemi which denotes a
place or condition. It is the combination of two words, meta
and tithemi.
Then we have a related word in
the second part of the verse, the noun form metathesis which has to do
with transposition, moving something from one place to another. So we have a statement for the priesthood
“being changed of necessity.” That word for necessity is the preposition ek plus the noun anagke
meaning from an internal compelling force. There is an essential or an inherent logic to
the whole situation that when you move from a temporary insufficient priesthood
to an eternal permanent sufficient priesthood that there is a logic that that
kind of a transition changes everything.
It is not going to be the same. The
Mosaic Law must end because the priesthood has ended because the former
priesthood was essential to the Mosaic Law.
So once the priesthood is supplanted by a superior priesthood there is
going to be a substitution of a superior law and thus a superior covenant.
So this is a great passage to
indicate that a major shift takes place with the death of Christ on the
cross. The Law is going to end. So therefore everything that has been
operational and normative for 1400 years since the giving of the Mosaic Law comes
to a conclusion and we go into a completely new era with a new priesthood, a new
spiritual life and a new high priest. The new High Priest is not going to be based
on the old order but is going to be based on a superior order which is the
order of Melchizedek. So this sets up
and is the foundation of this is dispensationalism – a complete change of the
law. Romans
Paul says in Romans 3:27:
NKJ Romans
So he is contrasting a law of
faith with the law of works. It is on not
on the basis of works, but it’s on the basis of faith. There is a new law which supplants the old
law. So this is related to the new
priesthood.
NKJ Psalm 110:4 The LORD has sworn And will not
relent, "You are a priest forever
It’s not limited.
According to the order of
Melchizedek."
So at the very least this
involves what we call a dispensational shift.
Now there are those who would say that everybody is a dispensationalist
in one sense. If you are not going to
So we need to answer the
question, what is a dispensation. Many
people get confused at this point. Let
me try to clarify this. Most of us think
of dispensation in terms of a timeframe.
Actually the term dispensation doesn’t have a time aspect to it. That comes from other words. So just keep that in mind as I go through
this explanation.
The first word that we want
to look at is the term seasons. This is the
translation of the Greek word kairos. Sometimes it is translated ages or times. Different English translations use different
words. It indicates broad expanses of
time. It is synonymous with ages. But these seasons, these times have definable
characteristics. It is very easy to look
at the period before the cross and say that it is clearly different from the
period after the cross. The period of the
We also have the word “age”
which comes from the Greek word aion which
relates to a period of time. These two
words focus on the temporal aspect of God’s plan, that there are different
times and seasons.
The third word that is used
is this word, oikonomos. See that is where we get our word
economy. Oikonomos
– economy - you can hear the similarity. Now we think of economy as having to do with
money, but the root meaning in the Greek has to do with stewardship or how you
handle money or financial affairs or things that you are responsible for. It comes to refer to an administration. That’s the idea in a dispensation. God is going to administer human history in
different ways in different eras.
There are some things that
are going to be the same in all the ages.
Whether you are in the Old Testament or New Testament, salvation is
always by grace through faith. The
object of faith is going to differ. Whether
you are living in the Old Testament or in the New Testament there are certain principles
related to the spiritual life and faith rest living that are similar.
But, there are also
differences. In the Old Testament, believers did not have the Holy Spirit living
within them. In the New Testament we
have the Holy Spirit living inside every believer. In the Old Testament there is a term related
to the filling of the Holy Spirit that has nothing to do with the filling of
the Spirit in the New Testament era. In
the Old Testament the Spirit came upon certain key individuals who had
responsibility in administering the
The Holy Spirit’s ministry in
their lives is not related to their spiritual life, their spiritual growth; but
to give them the ability to do what God wants them to do in relationship to the
administration of the kingdom.
But the role of the Holy
Spirit is very different in the Old Testament.
You get in the New Testament
and every believer is indwelt by the Holy Spirit. Then when we are in fellowship the Holy
Spirit is active in a special way related to our spiritual growth but is
referred to as the filling of the Spirit.
So these words indicate different aspects of God’s plan and the
outworking of that plan historically.
The terms for times and
seasons (aionos and kairos
and chronos) have to do with the temporal
aspect. There are different time
periods. Then oikonomos
has to do with how God is administering human history during those time
periods.
That leads us to the word
dispensation. Perhaps the simplest term or the simplest definition for
dispensation is simply to say that it is a distinct and identifiable
administration in the development of God’s plan and purposes for human history.
Now I am going to stop there
with that bit of a definition. When we
take this word and apply it consistently as a theological system or as a system
of interpretation, then it becomes known as dispensationalism. Now dispensationalism
is unique. It is completely different
from all other theological systems.
You have a number of
different overall theological systems. The one that is most often contrasted
with dispensationalism is covenant theology.
Covenant theology is usually associated with reformed theology, Presbyterian
theology – associated with Calvinism.
Covenant theology emphasizes two theological covenants – not biblical
covenants. See we all believe in
biblical covenants – the Noahic Covenant, the Abrahamic Covenant, the Mosaic
Covenant, and the New Covenant.
Everybody believes in those. But
when you talk about covenant theology, the covenants they are referring to are
not the biblical covenants. They are
talking about extrapolated theological covenants – that when Adam was fist
placed in the garden, there was a condition placed upon him that if he was
going to have eternal life - he would not eat from the fruit of the Tree of
Knowledge of Good and Evil. So it was a
covenant of works as they would say.
Then after Adam ate from the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge of Good and
Evil and sinned, then God established a covenant of grace. So in covenant theology, you primarily have
these two covenants – the covenant of works until Adam sinned and then the rest
of human history is the covenant of grace.
There are some within the
reformed camp who will say there is a third covenant, a covenant of
redemption. But for them there is one covenant
of grace that began with Adam and extends all the way through history. Now that fits in their understanding of
Scripture because they see that the primary purpose of the Bible and God’s plan
in history as redemption. It’s
redemption. Redemption of whom? Redemption of the human race. What about angels?
“Oh well, they are not
included.”
See that’s a limitation in
covenant theology. It really doesn’t
deal well with the angels because the purpose of the Bible is redemptive. Angels don’t get redeemed so they are sort of
left out.
I remember several years ago
I was going to
He said, “Well, you have done
a lot of work on spiritual warfare. Why
is it that within the reformed camp, very little has ever been written on spiritual
warfare until the 20th century?”
I get forced into some things
because that is what other people are talking about. I thought that was interesting. I hadn’t thought about that. But this why, within the reformed camp they
haven’t given enough emphasis to the Holy Spirit or to angles or to some of
these things. They don’t give enough
attention to the Holy Spirit.
You talk to anybody who has
gone to seminary and you ask, “What are the two most important books ever
written on the Holy Spirit” and they will tell you it is John Owen’s book on the Holy Spirit (John Owens was Oliver
Cromwell’s chaplain. It was written in
the 1600’s around 1640 or 1650.) and Abraham Kyper’s
work on the Holy Spirit written in the 1890’s.
Neither one of them even
mentions the indwelling, filling or the baptism of the Holy Spirit. This is reformed theology. Everything is basically the same. That is why they end up saying there is one people
of God. There is
Now you have to be
careful. I have watched a couple of
specials on TV in the last year looking at A&E or one of the other
channels. They’ll talk about replacement
theology and they will talk to a Roman Catholic priest.
“Oh, we don’t believe in
replacement theology.”
What they are doing is they
are loading the term with anti-Semitism.
So they want to make it an extreme form of replacement theology. But replacement theology is the view that the
church replaces
Now I mentioned covenant
theology. That’s one form of replacement
theology. You also have Lutheran
theology. You have Eastern Orthodox
theology. You have various other smaller
categories of theology -
Like I said, covenant
theology starts off with two covenants.
Where do you find those two covenants in the Bible? You don’t. They are abstract. They are abstractly developed theologically
and then you impose that on the text.
But even though you may hear
people say, “Well, I am a dispensationalist so I think that is what this verse
means.”
Don’t take it that way. That
is not what a dispensationalist is saying.
He is a dispensationalist because that is what the Bible says.
I remember (I think it was about
10 years ago now.) I went up to Dallas Seminary and I had a meeting with John
Walvoord. We were talking about various
aspects of sanctification. He had written
a very good article in the early ‘80’s called The Augustinian Dispensational
View of the Spiritual Life. I am
not going to try to explain that to you, but the point was that Walvoord clearly
understood that there was a view of the spiritual life that was unique to
dispensationalism that was distinct from all the other systems of theology,
that there was a dispensational view of the Holy Spirit.
I would make the mistake of
saying, “Well, if we look at this as a dispensational view…”
“No, no, no, Robby. It’s biblical.
We are dispensationalists because that is what the Bible says. We don’t think the Bible says that because we
are dispensationalists. We are
dispensationalists because that is what the Bible says.”
He would correct me every
time I would say that. It was very good emphasis. We are dispensationalists because that is
what the Bible says, not because we developed a nice tight integrated theological
system that we then read back into the text.
That’s what reformed theology has done and what other systems have
done. But dispensationalism begins with
a consistent, literal, plain interpretation of Scripture.
In fact, Dr. Ryrie who was
the chairman of the Systematic Theology Department at Dallas Seminary for many
years wrote an excellent book on dispensationalism that came out in the ‘60’s. It was originally called Dispensationalism
Today and he revised it in the ‘90’s.
Now it is called Dispensationalism. But
Ryrie tried to boil down dispensational theology to its essential core. He came up with three things that are the key
to dispensationalism.
“Pick
me up and take me and go across the river. Strike the tent.”
He
is talking about going across the river.
That was the idea. That imagery
is embedded in his Presbyterian theology that we are crossing the River Jordan
to get into heaven. So the land of
Israel is now allegorized to heaven. The
River Jordan is now allegorized to that transition point from physical life to
eternal life. That is what happens when
you get away from a literal interpretation.
So dispensationalism starts with a literal hermeneutic (literal interpretation
of Scripture) that leads to a consistent distinction between Israel and the church.
So these are the three key
elements that Dr. Ryrie emphasized and that is still understood by traditional
dispensationalists to be the key to dispensationalism today.
Now where did we get this
term dispensation?
The word dispensation is used
(oikonomos) in several key passages in the New
Testament. We will get to those in just
a minute.
Let me give you 6 features, 6
characteristics of a dispensation.
That leads me to the quote of
the week. This is from a Southern
Baptist pastor here in town. When he was
talking with an assistant pastor of his who has been meeting with me for some
time, they got into a discussion over a passage in Proverbs.
So the young man who has been
meeting with me said, “I wonder what the Hebrew says.”
To which the Southern Baptist
pastor replied (something to the effect that) “Only an idiot goes to the Hebrew
to find out what the Bible says.”
That’s the quote of the
week.
So
pastors are to be faithful to the Word – faithful to the Word.
Ephesians
NKJ Ephesians 1:10 that in the dispensation of the
fullness of the times He might gather together in one all things in Christ,
both which are in heaven and which are on earth -- in Him.
That is the summing up of all
things in Christ. There is an
administration or dispensation called the fullness of times. When is that?
That is the Millennial Kingdom. So that is clearly demarcated in
Scripture as a separate time period.
Then you have Ephesians
3:8-9. Paul says:
NKJ Ephesians 3:8 To me, who am less than the least of
all the saints, this grace was given, that I should preach among the Gentiles
the unsearchable riches of Christ,
NKJ Ephesians 3:9 and to make all see what is
Present tense is.
the
fellowship of the mystery, which from the beginning of the ages has been hidden
in God who created all things through Jesus Christ;
It clearly states a present
administration and implies a previous administration where this information was
hidden. So just looking at those two
verses we see three dispensations - the future
Paul mentions these three
dispensations. Ephesians
NKJ Colossians
Colossians
NKJ Colossians
That’s the previous
dispensation.
It is interesting that the
doctrinal statement of Dallas Seminary only defines these three dispensations.
Some people get the idea that a dispensationalist depends on how many
dispensations you believe in. But, that’s
not true. Dallas Seminary just has these
three in their doctrinal statement. So
it is not a matter of how many dispensations you have. It’s a matter of primarily I believe of
consistent distinction between
Well, we will get back to
dispensations next time. We need to get
through this introduction because we will go into covenants, the role of
covenants in history. That will help us understand and set things up for
chapter 8 in Hebrews.
With our heads bowed and our
eyes closed…