24. new--not the usual term (kaine) applied to the
Christian covenant
(Heb 9:15),
which would mean new as different from, and superseding
the old; but Greek, "nea," "recent," "lately
established," having the "freshness of youth," as opposed to age. The
mention of Jesus, the Perfecter of our faith
(Heb 12:2),
and Himself perfected through sufferings and death, in His resurrection
and ascension
(Heb 2:10; 5:9),
is naturally suggested by the mention of "the just made perfect"
at their resurrection (compare
Heb 7:22).
Paul uses "Jesus," dwelling here on Him as the Person realized as our
loving friend, not merely in His official character as the
Christ.
and to the blood of sprinkling--here enumerated as distinct from
"Jesus." BENGEL reasonably argues as follows: His
blood was entirely "poured out" of His body by the various ways in
which it was shed, His bloody sweat, the crown of thorns, the
scourging, the nails, and after death the spear, just as the blood was
entirely poured out and extravasated from the animal sacrifices of the
law. It was incorruptible
(1Pe 1:18, 19).
No Scripture states it was again put into the Lord's body. At His
ascension, as our great High Priest, He entered the heavenly holiest
place "BY His own blood" (not after
shedding His blood, nor with the blood in His body, but),
carrying it separately from his body (compare the type,
Heb 9:7, 12, 25; 13:11).
Paul does not say, by the efficacy of His blood, but, "by His own
proper blood"
(Heb 9:12);
not MATERIAL blood, but "the blood of Him who,
through the eternal Spirit, offered Himself without spot unto God"
(Heb 9:14).
So in
Heb 10:29,
the Son of God and the blood of the covenant wherewith he
(the professor) was sanctified, are mentioned separately. Also
in
Heb 13:12, 20;
also compare
Heb 10:19,
with Heb 10:21.
So in the Lord's Supper
(1Co 10:16; 11:24-26),
the body and blood are separately represented. The blood
itself, therefore, continues still in heaven before God, the perpetual
ransom price of "the eternal covenant"
(Heb 13:20).
Once for all Christ sprinkled the blood peculiarly for us at His
ascension
(Heb 9:12).
But it is called "the blood of sprinkling," on account also of its
continued use in heaven, and in the consciences of the saints on earth
(Heb 9:14; 10:22;
Isa 52:15).
This sprinkling is analogous to the sprinkled blood of the Passover.
Compare
Re 5:6,
"In the midst of the throne, a Lamb as it had been slain." His
glorified body does not require meat, nor the circulation of the blood.
His blood introduced into heaven took away the dragon's right to
accuse. Thus Rome's theory of concomitancy of the blood with the
body, the excuse for giving only the bread to the laity, falls to the
ground. The mention of "the blood of sprinkling" naturally follows the
mention of the "covenant," which could not be consecrated without
blood
(Heb 9:18, 22).
speaketh better things than that of Abel--namely, than the
sprinkling (the best manuscripts read the article masculine,
which refers to "sprinkling," not to "blood," which last is neuter) of
blood by Abel in his sacrifice spake. This comparison between two
things of the same kind (namely, Christ's sacrifice, and Abel's
sacrifice) is more natural, than between two things different in kind
and in results (namely, Christ's sacrifice, and Abel's own blood
[ALFORD], which was not a sacrifice at all);
compare
Heb 11:4;
Ge 4:4.
This accords with the whole tenor of the Epistle, and of this passage
in particular
(Heb 12:18-22),
which is to show the superiority of Christ's sacrifice and the new
covenant, to the Old Testament sacrifices (of which Abel's is the first
recorded; it, moreover, was testified to by God as acceptable to Him
above Cain's), compare
Heb 9:1-10:39.
The word "better" implies superiority to something that is good: but
Abel's own blood was not at all good for the purpose for which Christ's
blood was efficacious; nay, it cried for vengeance. So ARCHBISHOP MAGEE, HAMMOND, and KNATCHBULL. BENGEL takes "the blood of Abel" as put for all
the blood shed on earth crying for vengeance, and greatly increasing
the other cries raised by sin in the world; counteracted by the blood
of Christ calmly speaking in heaven for us, and from heaven to us. I
prefer MAGEE'S view. Be this as it may, to deny
that Christ's atonement is truly a propitiation, overthrows Christ's
priesthood, makes the sacrifices of Moses' law an unmeaning mummery,
and represents Cain's sacrifice as good as that of Abel.
JFB.
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