15. For--the motive to "holding our profession"
(Heb 4:14),
namely the sympathy and help we may expect from our High Priest. Though
"great"
(Heb 4:14),
He is not above caring for us; nay, as being in all points one with us
as to manhood, sin only excepted, He sympathizes with us in every
temptation. Though exalted to the highest heavens, He has changed His
place, not His nature and office in relation to us, His condition, but
not His affection. Compare
Mt 26:38,
"watch with me": showing His desire in the days of His flesh for the
sympathy of those whom He loved: so He now gives His suffering
people His sympathy. Compare Aaron, the type, bearing the names
of the twelve tribes in the breastplate of judgment on his heart, when
he entered into the holy place, for a memorial before the Lord
continually
(Ex 28:29).
cannot be touched with the feeling of--Greek, "cannot
sympathize with our infirmities": our weaknesses, physical and
moral (not sin, but liability to its assaults). He, though sinless, can
sympathize with us sinners; His understanding more acutely perceived
the forms of temptation than we who are weak can; His will repelled
them as instantaneously as the fire does the drop of water cast into
it. He, therefore, experimentally knew what power was needed to
overcome temptations. He is capable of sympathizing, for He was at the
same time tempted without sin, and yet truly tempted [BENGEL]. In Him alone we have an example suited to men of
every character and under all circumstances. In sympathy He adapts
himself to each, as if He had not merely taken on Him man's nature in
general, but also the peculiar nature of that single individual.
but--"nay, rather, He was (one) tempted"
[ALFORD].
like as we are--Greek, "according to (our) similitude."
without sin--Greek, "choris," "separate
from sin"
(Heb 7:26).
If the Greek "aneu" had been used, sin would have
been regarded as the object absent from Christ the subject; but
choris here implies that Christ, the subject, is regarded
as separated from sin the object [TITTMANN]. Thus,
throughout His temptations in their origin, process, and result, sin
had nothing in Him; He was apart and separate from it [ALFORD].
JFB.
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