40. provided--with divine forethought from eternity (compare
Ge 22:8, 14).
some better thing for us--
(Heb 7:19);
than they had here. They had not in this world, "apart from us" (so the
Greek is for "without us," that is, they had to wait for us
for), the clear revelation of the promised salvation actually
accomplished, as we now have it in Christ; in their state, beyond the
grave their souls also seem to have attained an increase of
heavenly bliss on the death and ascension of Christ; and they
shall not attain the full and final glory in body and soul (the
regeneration of the creature), until the full number of the elect
(including us with them) is completed. The Fathers, CHRYSOSTOM, &c., restricted the meaning of
Heb 11:39, 40
to this last truth, and I incline to this view. "The connection is,
You, Hebrews, may far more easily exercise patience than Old Testament
believers; for they had much longer to wait, and are still waiting
until the elect are all gathered in; you, on the contrary, have not to
wait for them" [ESTIUS]. I think his object in
these verses
(Heb 11:39, 40)
is to warn Hebrew Christians against their tendency to relapse into
Judaism. "Though the Old Testament worthies attained such
eminence by faith, they are not above us in privileges, but the
reverse." It is not we who are perfected with them, but
rather they with us. They waited for His coming; we enjoy
Him as having come
(Heb 1:1; 2:3).
Christ's death, the means of perfecting what the Jewish law
could not perfect, was reserved for our time. Compare
Heb 12:2,
"perfecter (Greek) of our faith." Now that Christ is
come, they in soul share our blessedness, being "the spirits of the
just made perfect"
(Heb 12:23);
so ALFORD; however, see on
Heb 12:23.
Heb 9:12
shows that the blood of Christ, brought into the heavenly holy place by
Him, first opened an entrance into heaven (compare
Joh 3:13).
Still, the fathers were in blessedness by faith in the Saviour to come,
at death
(Heb 6:15;
Lu 16:22).
JFB.
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