Lesson 10
Priest Forever
Hebrews 7:1-10
November 22, 2015
Some of my favorite places to visit are the homes of famous historical people. There are those that seem to perpetuate the memory of the person. Others, in my opinion, are just museums where the artifacts connected with that individual are housed. Just this past summer while visiting in Charleston my wife and I went to Middleton Plantation. While interesting I did not have the sense of the personality of those who had lived there. Many years ago I had a chance to go to Dwight Eisenhower’s home in Gettysburg, Pa. One room in particular caught my attention. It was the sun porch where he and his wife, Mamie, had spent much of their time during the last years of his life. His son, John, had put the items that were very personal to them in that room. There was a television set of the fifties with a little round screen measuring 8 to 10” in diameter. We have Ipads now with screens almost that big. In one corner was a painting that he had been working on when he died. The setting of the room evoked a feeling of the presence of the man. It was almost as if he was still living on in the things that he cherished. History was so real there that one could almost expect him to walk into the room any minute. The spirit of those men and women live on in the places that we associate with them.
Churches memorialize individuals with stained glass windows or portraits hung in different rooms. It is fun to look back at the memorabilia and imagine what those people were like. We would not be here today without their hard work and dedication to the church. In a way they are living on in each of us as we carry on the legacy they have left us. It is now our turn to pass on to the next generation what is valuable for their growth in the faith. Although we do not have a genealogy with physical ties with them, we are in a way connected because of our continuing faith in Christ. We are temporary but He is eternal. We do have a beginning and an end, but He is forever. This is sometimes hard to understand. The writer of Hebrews speaking in terms that the people of his day would have understood spent a good deal of effort explaining the eternality of Christ using a mysterious person from the Old Testament as a type of Christ. It is difficult from our vantage point to understand what he was trying to say. When I come upon one of these passages I trust that the writer was speaking the words God wanted me to have. Some Scripture is easier than others so I have to accept that it will sometimes be a real challenge to comprehend the meaning. I do not feel bad not knowing everything because even the best of the theologians sometimes wrestle with a particular text. This chapter is going somewhere so let’s just stick with and find out in the end what lesson the writer wants us to learn.
Hebrews 7:1-3
The writer of Hebrews provided a picture of a type of Christ in the personage of Melchizedek. He began with the story found in Genesis 14:17-20. Abraham had returned from the battle that rescued Lot. He was met by two separate people with two different approaches. The king of Sodom understood that he had no kingdom without people. He was willing to give up any claim to the goods taken by Abraham, that did not belong to him anyway, but to the people, for the people themselves. This would have allowed him to remain as king without any real loss on his part. Melchizedek on the other hand came with refreshment for the people who had gone with Abraham. It is a powerful message to see how humble the king was as he brought the wine and bread to Abraham to provide for his needs. He also realized the importance of him in the eyes of God therefore blessed him and God. About two thousand years later another king who not yet claimed His kingdom offered bread and wine to his followers that they might remember the suffering that He was going to bear for them.
The important aspect of this narrative to which the writer referred out of Genesis 14 lay in the action of Abraham. He took ten percent of the spoil he had acquired and gave it to a complete stranger. It was quite evident why Abraham gave a tithe to the stranger because the writer described Melchizedek in the following way:
- His name itself means king of righteousness.
- He was also the king of Salem (Jerusalem).
- He was a man whose genealogy is not given.
- He stepped into history as from nowhere and disappeared just as quickly locking him in place as if he had no beginning or end of life. See the example above of Eisenhower’s home where time seemed to stop. Because of this one appearance he is like Jesus who remains priest forever.
- What differences do you observe in the actions of the three men involved in this event?
- What was the incident that prompted the writer’s description of Melchizedek?
- How did the writer describe Melchizedek?
- How did Abraham show respect to Melchizedek?
- What does it mean to describe someone in the Old Testament as a type of Christ? (The same characteristics are seen both in man and Jesus the Son of God?
- In what ways is the reasoning of the writer of picturing Melchizedek as a type of Christ acceptable to you?
- In what ways would you have a problem with what he said? Why?
Hebrews 7:4
The writer considered Melchizedek greater than the father of the Hebrew people. Abraham presented him a tithe of the very best of the spoils of war. Abraham somehow understood that he was in the presence of probably one of the greatest men of his day. Here the patriarch of the entire nation gave homage to Melchizedek. In a way it shows that every man no matter how important he may be always will find someone who is superior in someway than he is.
- What tells us of the greatness of Melchizedek?
- How do we recognize those that we consider greater than ourselves?
- What must we understand about our position in life, organizations and work? (There will always be someone superior to you in some aspect.
Hebrews 7:5-7
The writer keeps building the case for the supremacy of Christ through the image of Melchizedek. According to Jewish law it was the sons of Levi, the descendants of Abraham who were to receive the tithes and offerings from the people. In this case the one who was descended from Abraham or the Levites was given the tenth of the goods by the founder of the Hebrew nation. By this act Abraham recognized this unknown individual as greater than himself even though he was the recipient of the promise of God. The writer makes it very clear that the lesser of two individuals is blessed by the greater.
- According to the writer, who were those that would eventually have the right to present the offerings and sacrifices of the people?
- What point was the writer trying to make? (Unlike the Levites, Melchizedek received the never-ending priesthood from the Father even though he was not of the lineage of Abraham.)
- How do we deal with passages like this one that are strange or hard to understand? (We just have to accept them as the inspired accurate word of God.)
Hebrews 7:8-10
Here is one of those difficult passages to understand. The writer is building a foundation leading to the position Jesus holds in the universe. Before he began that discussion he wanted to make one more point concerning the greatness of the priesthood of Melchizedek. He indicated that although not yet born Levi vicariously presented the tithe to this non Jew priest based on the fact that his ancestor, Abraham gave him a tenth of what had been recovered in battle. This would mean that the priesthood of Melchizedek was greater than that of the descendants of Levi.
- How do you build a case for something you believe in very strongly? (You present the evidence step by step until you are ready to present the whole picture.)
- What is the process the writer used to prove his point?
- Why was this last point so important? (To show how much greater the priesthood of both Melchizedek and Jesus was than that of the Levites)
- What examples have you seen that indicate that some people try to live vicariously through others? (A claim to be a Christian because his or her grandfather was a Baptist preacher. Parents living through the successes of there children. We are all a little part of those who have gone before us.)
- Never skip over the hard passages of the Bible knowing that God has something in them for each of us to learn.
- Think about the context of the passages you are studying and see how they relate to today.
- Trust God’s word in the things you do not understand knowing that God inspire those words written for your benefit. Because He is the ultimate author behind the words you can know that they are true.
- Know the sequence of the case the writer is taking is to keep us focused on the One who is the eternal high priest who is faithful to His children therefore you are to be continually faithful to him.
I am sure that often we have walked away from a Bible Study or sermon scratching our heads wondering what the words have to do with life that is to be lived in the chaotic world in which we live. The author although using an argument strange to twentieth first century thinking drove home the one point that every person can understand. The members of the trinity are eternal. It is hard to comprehend for some because Jesus stepped out of that role He held as the second member of the godhead in heaven for a period of thirty-three He still carried within Himself His eternal nature. As Philippians 2 tells us He was willing to put aside His rightful place with the Father so that He could become like man. The one thing that all Scripture tells us is that the work Christ did on earth has guaranteed our eternal salvation because He is our eternal high priest just we get from the picture of the status of Melchizedek. Let us therefore hold fast to the faith because of all He has done and is doing on our behalf.