12. this man--emphatic
(Heb 3:3).
for ever--joined in English Version with "offered one
sacrifice"; offered one sacrifice, the efficacy of which endures for
ever; literally. "continuously," (compare
Heb 10:14).
"The offering of Christ, once for all made, will continue the one and
only oblation for ever; no other will supersede it"
[BENGEL]. The mass, which professes to be the
frequent repetition of one and the same sacrifice of Christ's body, is
hence disproved. For not only is Christ's body one, but also His
offering is one, and that inseparable from His suffering
(Heb 9:26).
The mass would be much the same as the Jewish sacrifices which Paul
sets aside as abrogated, for they were anticipations of the one
sacrifice, just as Rome makes masses continuations of it, in opposition
to Paul's argument. A repetition would imply that the former
once-for-all offering of the one sacrifice was imperfect, and so would
be dishonoring to it
(Heb 10:2, 18).
Heb 10:14,
on the contrary, says, "He hath PERFECTED FOR EVER
them that are sanctified." If Christ offered Himself at the last
supper, then He offered Himself again on the cross, and there would be
two offerings; but Paul says there was only one, once for
all. Compare Note, see on
Heb 9:26.
English Version is favored by the usage in this Epistle, of
putting the Greek "for ever" after that which it qualifies.
Also, "one sacrifice for ever," stands in contrast to "the same
sacrifices oftentimes"
(Heb 10:11).
Also,
1Co 15:25, 28,
agrees with
Heb 10:12, 13,
taken as English Version, not joining, as
ALFORD does, "for ever" with "sat down," for Jesus
is to give up the mediatorial throne "when all things shall be
subdued unto Him," and not to sit on it for ever.
JFB.
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