6-8. In Paul's view this passage has more meaning than the mere
expression of grateful devotion to God's service. He represents Christ
as declaring that the sacrifices, whether vegetable or animal, general
or special expiatory offerings, would not avail to meet the demands of
God's law, and that He had come to render the required satisfaction,
which he states was effected by "the offering of the body of Christ"
[Heb 10:10],
for that is the "will of God" which Christ came to fulfil or do, in
order to effect man's redemption. We thus see that the contrast to the
unsatisfactory character assigned the Old Testament offerings in
Ps 40:6
is found in the compliance with God's law (compare
Ps 40:7, 8).
Of course, as Paul and other New Testament writers explain Christ's
work, it consisted in more than being made under the law or obeying its
precepts. It required an "obedience unto death"
[Php 2:8],
and that is the compliance here chiefly intended, and which makes the
contrast with
Ps 40:6
clear.
mine ears hast thou opened--Whether allusion is made to the custom of
boring a servant's ear, in token of voluntary and perpetual enslavement
(Ex 21:6),
or that the opening of the ear, as in
Isa 48:8; 50:5
(though by a different word in Hebrew) denotes obedience by the
common figure of hearing for obeying, it is evident that the clause is
designed to express a devotion to God's will as avowed more fully in
Ps 40:8,
and already explained. Paul, however, uses the words, "a body hast thou
prepared me"
[Heb 10:5],
which are found in the Septuagint in the place of the words,
"mine ears hast thou opened." He does not lay any stress on this
clause, and his argument is complete without it. It is, perhaps, to be
regarded rather as an interpretation or free translation by the
Septuagint, than either an addition or attempt at verbal
translation. The Septuagint translators may have had reference
to Christ's vicarious sufferings as taught in other Scriptures, as in
Isa 53:4-11;
at all events, the sense is substantially the same, as a body was
essential to the required obedience (compare
Ro 7:4;
1Pe 2:24).
JFB.
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