4. Implying that Christ's priestly office is exercised in
heaven, not in earth; in the power of His resurrection life, not of His
earthly life.
For--The oldest manuscripts read, "accordingly then."
if, &c.--"if He were on earth, He would not even (so the
Greek) be a priest"
(compare
Heb 7:13, 14);
therefore, certainly, He could not exercise the high priestly function
in the earthly Holy of Holies.
seeing that, &c.--"since there are" already, and exist now (the
temple service not yet being set aside, as it was on the destruction of
Jerusalem), "those (the oldest manuscripts omit 'priests') who offer
the (appointed) gifts according to (the) law." Therefore, His
sacerdotal "ministry" must be "in the
heavens," not on earth
(Heb 8:1).
"If His priesthood terminated on the earth, He would not even be a
priest at all" [BENGEL]. I conceive that the
denial here of Christ's priesthood on earth does not extend to
the sacrifice on the cross which He offered as a priest on
earth; but applies only to the crowning work of His priesthood, the
bringing of the blood into the Holy of Holies, which He could
not have done in the earthly Holy of Holies, as not being an
Aaronic priest. The place (the heavenly Holy of Holies) was as
essential to the atonement being made as the oblation (the
blood). The body was burnt without the gate; but the sanctification was
effected by the presentation of the blood within the sanctuary by the
high priest. If on earth, He would not be a priest in the sense of
the law of Moses ("according to the law" is emphatic).
JFB.
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