18. Whereupon--rather, "Whence."
dedicated--"inaugurated." The Old Testament strictly and
formally began on that day of inauguration. "Where the
disposition, or arrangement, is ratified by the blood of
another, namely, of animals, which cannot make a covenant, much
less make a testament, it is not strictly a testament,
where it is ratified by the death of him that makes the arrangement, it
is strictly, Greek 'diathece,' Hebrew
'berith,' taken in a wider sense, a testament"
[BENGEL]; thus, in
Heb 9:18,
referring to the old dispensation, we may translate, "the first
(covenant)": or better, retain "the first (testament),"
not that the old dispensation, regarded by itself, is a
testament, but it is so when regarded as the typical
representative of the new, which is strictly a
Testament.
JFB.
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