Hebrews Chapter 7
Having admonished his readers for their lack of spiritual growth (5:11-6:20) the writer now resumes His purpose to further discuss Christ being a high priest after the order of Melchizedek (5:11). This section could be a response to Jewish Christians who were confused. They may have been thinking, “How could Jesus be this priest-king Messiah promised in the Scriptures, seeing that Jesus was from the wrong tribe to be a priest after the order of Aaron?” All along the Jews had been taught that legitimate priests could only come from the tribe of Levi. The writer points out that in Scripture there was a greater priest mentioned, in fact, greater than the Levitical priests. Verse 4 will point out that Melchizedek was greater than Abraham, seeing that Abraham paid tithes to Melchizedek, who in turn blessed Abraham. The writer argues that no one would dispute the fact that the lesser is always blessed by the greater (7:7). Verses 9-10 extend the argument and demonstrate that the high priesthood of Melchizedek is even greater than the Levitical priesthood, for in a sense, Levi and his descendants (who were descendants of Abraham) and collected tithes from the Jewish people (7:5,9), paid tithes to Melchizedek (7:9-10). 7:1 “For this Melchizedek”: “If you want to do a character study of some person in the Bible, it is necessary to look up all the passages that tell about that person. The author of Hebrews is doing just that! He had already quoted Psalm 110:4. Now he gets back to the only other place in the Old Testament where Melchizedek is mentioned, Genesis 14” (Reese p. 102). The name “Melchizedek” means “king of righteousness”; he is only mentioned here and Genesis 14:18-20; Psalm 110:4; Hebrews 5:6-11 and 6:20-7:28. Melchizedek was the subject of tremendous speculation in Jewish circles, including the Essene community of the Qumran Dead Sea Scrolls. The writer of Hebrews clearly views Melchizedek as a real historical person, just as he is described in Genesis (7:1).
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