9. But--We see not man as yet exercising lordship over
all things, "but rather, Him who was made a little lower than
the angels (compare
Lu 22:43),
we behold (by faith: a different Greek verb from that for
'we see,'
Heb 2:8,
which expresses the impression which our eyes passively receive
from objects around us; whereas, 'we behold,' or 'look at,' implies the
direction and intention of one deliberately
regarding something which he tries to see: so
Heb 3:19; 10:25,
Greek), namely, Jesus, on account of His suffering of death,
crowned," &c. He is already crowned, though unseen by us, save by
faith; hereafter all things shall be subjected to Him visibly and
fully. The ground of His exaltation is "on accoumt of His having
suffered death"
(Heb 2:10;
Php 2:8, 9).
that he by the grace of God--
(Tit 2:11; 3:4).
The reading of ORIGEN, "That He without
God" (laying aside His Divinity; or, for every being save
God: or perhaps alluding to His having been temporarily "forsaken,"
as the Sin-bearer, by the Father on the cross), is not supported by the
manuscripts. The "that," &c., is connected with "crowned with glory,"
&c., thus: His exaltation after sufferings is the perfecting or
consummation of His work
(Heb 2:10)
for us: without it His death would have been ineffectual; with it, and
from it, flows the result that His tasting of death is available
for (in behalf of, for the good of) every man. He is crowned
as the Head in heaven of our common humanity, presenting His blood as
the all-prevailing plea for us. This coronation above makes His death
applicable for every individual man (observe the
singular; not merely "for all men"),
Heb 4:14; 9:24;
1Jo 2:2.
"Taste death" implies His personal experimental undergoing of death:
death of the body, and death (spiritually) of the soul, in His being
forsaken of the Father. "As a physician first tastes his medicines to
encourage his sick patient to take them, so Christ, when all men feared
death, in order to persuade them to be bold in meeting it, tasted it
Himself, though He had no need" [CHRYSOSTOM].
(Heb 2:14, 15).
JFB.
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