Into Thy Word Bible Study in Hebrews
Into Thy Word Bible Study in Hebrews
This passage is set at the time the Temple and sacrificial system were still active
and this new Christian faith needed real, hard biblical evidence to prove its
relevance and significance to the Jews. An argument is made that you no longer
need to go to the Temple and to a priest in order to know and relate to God. This
is a contrast: the imperfect Levitical and Mosaic Law versus Christ the perfect
Sacrifice and Redeemer who fulfills this Law. The old system could not give us
access to God or allow us to be in Him, whereas Christ does both. Psalm 110
foretells that this system to know God was to give way to One (Christ) who was
far better. Also during this time, the Romans were interfering by appointing their
own high priests to have control over the Jews, then disposing of the real ones.
This was also prophetic, as in a couple years after this was written, the Temple
and the entire Jewish system of faith and practice would be destroyed. Even
though the Book of Leviticus tells us the priesthood was “perpetual,” it merely
pointed to Christ who is “eternal”. The sacrificial system was transitory both for
this worship and practice and for their culture, because a new system based on
the Torah will come into play as the replacement for the Temple. The point is that
the old system is obsolete and has been superseded by Christ’s role as Priest
and Sacrifice; He is greater and superior to the old way anyway, so why bother
with it (Gen. 14:17-24, Ex. 32:10; 40:15; Psalm 110; Heb. 5:6)?
• Perfection. The Levitical priesthood and system were not able to give people
an intimate relationship with or access to God. Thus, the law and priesthood
were only temporary and would be replaced with a permanent solution—
Christ the Redeemer. The term “last days,” often used in Scripture to mean
the New Covenant we have in Christ that superseded the Law, is often
misunderstood today as meaning waiting for Christ’s return, which is only an
application of it, not the substance; Christ’s work is the Substance. This was a
philosophical term used by Philo, meaning the perfect priest, who Philo saw
as Levi (I guess he did not read Genesis). What is perfect does not need to
change; the old way was flawed and only pointed to the One who is Perfect,
and now His New Order is here (Heb. 1:2; 4:8; 8:7).
• Levitical priesthood. Refers to the Law of Moses and how we must love our
Lord and at the same time follow the 619 laws and offer sacrifices for our
atonement to be right with God. Under the Law, we are all under
condemnation before God; under Christ, we are not. The priests administered
this Law and mediated between the people and God; Christ fulfills all of this.
Just as a temporary change happened during the exile, now a permanent
change supersedes the Levitical system—the Kingdom of Christ, a better
covenant (Jer. 3:16; Rom. 8)
• Melchizedek. Conveys that Christ is not in or from the order of Aaron and the
Levitical priesthood. Here, it is argued that Christ is superior to the Levitical
system that pointed to Christ; now, Christ is the Ultimate, Eternal High Priest.
The Jews expected a warrior messiah from the tribe of Judah and most of the
priestly groups expected a priestly messiah from the line of Levi; here Christ
fulfills both roles (Psalm 110; Heb. 7:3-10).
• Not …ancestry. Jesus was ordained not by man’s laws and regulations, but
by the perfect oath of God; yet He fulfils man’s need of a Savior (Deut. 18:1)
• The power of an indestructible life. Christ is the One who is eternal and holds
the “indomitable” power, proven by His sinless life and resurrection. This
refers to Psalm 110:4 and how Melchizedek is a priest forever who was the
forerunner to Christ (Rom. 6:9-10).
• Former regulation. The Law was not a bad or a wrong idea; in fact, it is holy
and good and points to a God of Holiness and us as a people in sin and in
need of redemption and reconciliation. It was also a pointer to Christ and our
need for Him, as no one was able to obey and fulfill the Law’s demands, but
Christ does on our behalf. Now we have a better system—a perfect way: His
Way (Rom. 7:12).
• Weak and useless. Indicates that the Law and system could not redeem a
sinful person; it was only “preparatory” and looked to Christ who is the
fulfillment (Matt. 5:17; Gal. 3:23-25).
• Better hope. God’s promise is certain and perfect so we have real, effectual
hope. In Christ, we have complete redemption, thus the New Covenant is
better than the old system that could not do this. Christ’s work assures our
salvation when we receive Him by Faith, and He brings us into the very
presence of God (Col 1:5).
• Not without an oath. God has sworn this; it is unchangeable and effective.
This means there was no oath by God with the institution of the Levitical
priesthood order, because an oath is subscribed to something greater, and
Christ is the Greater. Christ is supreme; they could not appeal to a higher
power or order, as in the human priestly system, because Christ is the Higher
Power. Jesus’ Priesthood is established by a Divine oath. God says it is so,
Christ is greater; He assures Christ’s Priesthood, it is sealed, and it is
effectual. This is God’s promise that binds; He pledges that this is trustworthy
and infallible (Gen. 15:8-21; 22:17; Psalm 89:35, 49; 106:26; 110; 132:11;
Heb. 6:13-18).
• The guarantee/surety. Jesus is our security and has become our better
Covenant so we can go before God directly (Jer. 31:31-34).
• Better covenant. This was a promise in the Old Testament and is now a
reality because of Christ. The Levitical order was an order of deficiency. It
was one of duty and honoring God, but it was also incomplete because it was
waiting for the One (Christ) to complete it. We could not work for a salvation
that we could not attain; now we have it as a gift of grace through Christ.
• Death prevented. The priests did not have permanence; they could not meet
anyone’s real needs. Because of the frailty of human life, and the weakness
of the flesh and the will, they could not perform their duties with efficiency and
true sincerity. This also means impermanence; the cycle of human life from
birth to death, and in Christianity, our sinful nature as physical death,
prevented them from carrying out their office.
• High priest meets our need. Our greatest problem is solved, our greatest
need—salvation—is given, our sin is redeemed, and we are freed from its
consequences. The human priests could never compare to Christ; they were
the representatives, but He is the Real One. The Levitical priests had to go
through elaborate cleansing ceremonies prior to entering the temple, and
even more so for the once-a-year Day of Atonement, even being excluded
from everyone for a week so not to be defiled (Lev. 16:6-16; Ex. 29:29-30).
• Holy, blameless, pure. Jesus Christ, the perfect substitute, sacrificed Himself
once for all, meaning because He was sinless, He did not have to make any
personal atonement or sacrifice for His sins, which a human priest must do.
Now Christ is our atonement cover; He really is these things, whereas as the
human representative could only pretend—to a point (Heb. 9:12, 26; 10:2,
10).
• Set apart from sinners. Jesus, who was without sin, identifies with us and
lived a life on our behalf to save us. Thus He understands our lives,
situations, and circumstances; He can relate to our plight and gives us His
hand and heart. This also refers to how Jesus handled temptation and
remained sinless—something we could not do, nor could the Law fully atone
for us permanently (Heb. 2:18; 4:15-5:3).
• Day after day. Jesus deals with our sins effectually and completely. Also
refers to the duty of continually offering sacrifices—not just on the Day of
Atonement, but also throughout the year. Now Jesus performs this role
perfectly (Ex. 29:36-42).
• Men who are weak. Referring to the sinful nature, fragility, and selfishness of
humanity, able to truly represent neither themselves nor one another. Christ is
the One who is Permanent and who saves us eternally and continually (Gen.
1:26-28; Rom. 3:23; 6:23).
• Made perfect forever. Refers to Christ’s sinless life; His work on the cross and
His resurrection qualifies Him to be our Savior, Lord, and priest.
How has that affected your life and relationships with others? We have to
realize some of the depth, such as this passage showing us Christ’s intercession
on our behalf. He goes to God the Father, pays our ransom, purchases our
salvation, and He lives to do this! This must manifest itself in how we respond
back to Him and make intersession by prayer and action in others’ lives too, just
as our Lord demonstrated as He walked this earth. But for this to work, to actively
seek God’s presence and intercession so it flows from Him into us and to others
around us, we have to look to Him. We have to see our weakness and need for
His continual intervention into our lives so we have a heart for Him and others.
Christ was our offering; how can you be an offering to bring Him honor and show
Him your gratitude? How would that improve your life and circumstances?
The Essential Inductive Questions (for more Inductive questions see Inductive
Bible Study):
Additional Questions:
1. If God were to give you a long life, what legacy would you like to leave? What
legacy do you think He wants you to leave? What is the difference?
2. How does Jesus meet your need? How and why did He become the Altar?
3. What is the Hope of Christ for you? How can His hope give you fuel for life?
4. How did Melchizedek point to God and the Christ to come? Why is this
important? How do you point to Christ?
5. What does it mean to you that we have a God who is there, who cares, and in
whom we can have assurance and take refuge?
6. Why do you need Jesus as Savior, Lord, and Priest? If the law and the
priesthood of Aaron were good, sufficient, and working, why did God need to
send His Son as a sacrifice?
7. Why is this order that Christ is in (Melchizedek) far superior and effectual for
our salvation and building of our faith and Church?
8. How is Christ your Power and Life? How do you feel that He will never go
away and that He gives you all that you need?
9. Do you have a heart after God? Do you have a heart for His children? Why is
this important for Christian leadership and maturity? How can you make this
more so? What would it do for you?
10. How has Christ affected your life and relationships with others? Why is this
important for Christian leadership and maturity? How can you make this more
so? What would it do for you?
11. Do you realize His role that paid your debt of sin? Why is this important for
Christian leadership and maturity? How can you incorporate this more and
what would it do for you?