Chapter 12:
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Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Philemon James
Hebrews 12
The epistle now enters on the practical exhortation, that flow from its
doctrinal instruction, with reference to the dangers peculiar to the Hebrew
Christians-instruction suited throughout to inspire them with courage.
Surrounded with a cloud of witnesses like these of chapter 11, who all
declared the advantages of a life of faith in promises still unfulfilled,
they ought to feel themselves impelled to follow their steps, running with
patience the race set before them, and above all looking away from every
difficulty [
37] to Jesus, who had run the whole career of
faith, sustained by the joy that was set before Him, and, having reached
the goal, had taken His seat in glory at the right hand of God.
This passage presents the Lord, not as He who bestows faith, but as He who
has Himself run the whole career of faith. Others had traveled a part of
the road, had surmounted some difficulties; the obedience and the
perseverance of the Lord had been subjected to every trial of which human
nature is susceptible. Men, the adversary, the being forsaken of God,
everything was against Him. His disciples flee when He is in danger, His
intimate friend betrays Him; He looks for some one to have compassion on
Him and finds no one. The fathers (of whom we read in the previous chapter)
trusted in God and were delivered, but as for Jesus. He was a worm, and no
man;His throat was dry with crying. His love for us, His obedience to His
Father, surmounted all. He carries off the victory by submission, and takes
His seat in a glory exalted in proportion to the greatness of His abasement
and obedience, the only just reward for having perfectly glorified God
where He had been dishonoured by sin. The joy and the rewards that are set
before us are never the motives of the walk of faith-we know this well with
regard to Christ, but it is not the less true in our own case-they are the
encouragement of those who walk in it.
Jesus, then, who has attained the glory due to Him becomes an example to us
in the sufferings through which He passed in attaining it; therefore we are
neither to lose courage nor to grow weary. We have not yet, like Him, lost
our lives in order to glorify God and to serve Him. The way in which the
apostle engages them to disentangle themselves from every hindrance,
whether sin or difficulty, is remarkable; as though they had nothing to do
but to cast them off as useless weights. And in fact, when we look at
Jesus, nothing is easier; when we are not looking at Him, nothing more
impossible.
There are two things to be cast off: every weight, and the sin that would
entangle our feet (for he speaks of one who is running in the race). The
flesh, the human heart, is occupied with cares and difficulties; and the
more we think of them, the more we are burdened by them. It is enticed by
the object of its desires, it does not free itself from them. The conflict
is with a heart that loves the thing against which we strive; we do not
separate ourselves from it in thought. When looking at Jesus, the new man
is active; there is a new object, which unburdens and detaches us from
every other by means of a new creation which has its place in a new nature:
and in Jesus Himself, to whom we look, there is a positive power which sets
us free.
It is by casting it all off in an absolute way that the thing is easy-by
looking at that which fills the heart with other things, and occupies it in
a different sphere, where a new object and a new nature act upon each
other; and in that object there is a positive power which absorbs the heart
and shuts out all objects that act merely on the old nature. What is felt
to be a weight is easily cast off. Everything is judged of by its bearing
on the object we aim at. If I run in a race and all my thought is the
prize, a bag of gold is readily cast away. It is a weight. But we must look
to Jesus. Only in Him can we cast off every hindrance easily and without
reservation. We cannot combat sin by the flesh.
But there is another class of trials that come from without: they are not
to be cast off, they must be borne. Christ, as we have seen, went through
them. We have not like Him resisted even to the shedding of our blood
rather than fail in faithfulness and obedience. Now God acts in these
trials as a father. He chastises us. They come perhaps, as in the case of
Job, from the enemy, but the hand and the wisdom of God are in them. He
chastises those whom He loves.
We must therefore neither despise the chastisement nor be discouraged by
it. We must not despise it, for He does not chastise without a motive or a
cause (moreover, it is God who does it); nor must we be discouraged, for He
does it in love.
If we lose our life for the testimony of the Lord and in resisting sin, the
warfare is ended; and this is not chastisement, but the glory of suffering
with Christ. Death in this case is the negation of sin. He who has died is
free from sin; he who has suffered in the flesh has done with sin. But up
to that point, the flesh in practice (for we have a right to reckon
ourselves dead) is not yet destroyed; and God knows how to unite the
manifestation of the faithfulness of the new man, who suffers for the Lord,
with the discipline by which the flesh is mortified. For example, Paul's
thorn in the flesh united these two things. It was painful to him in the
exercise of his ministry, for it was something that tended to make him
contemptible when preaching, and this he endured (for the Lord's sake), but
at the same time it kept his flesh in check.
Verse 9. Now we are subject to our natural parents who discipline us after
their own will: how much more then to the Father of spirits, [
38] who
makes us partakers of His own holiness!
Observe here the grace that is appealed to. We have seen how much the
Hebrews needed warning-their tendency was to fail in the career of faith.
The means of preventing this is doubtless not to spare warning, but yet to
bring the soul fully into connection with grace. This alone can give
strength and courage through confidence in God.
We are not come to Mount Sinai, to the law which makes demands on us, but
to Sion, where God manifested His power in re-establishing Israel by His
grace in the person of the elect king, when, as to the responsibility of
the people, all was entirely lost, all relationship with God impossible on
that footing, for the ark was lost; there was no longer a mercy-seat, no
longer a throne of God among the people. Ichabod was written on Israel.
Therefore in speaking of holiness he says, God is active in love towards
you, even in your very sufferings. It is He who has not only given free
access to Himself, by the blood and by the presence of Christ in heaven for
us, but who is continually occupied with all the details of your life;
whose hand is in all your trials, who thinks unceasingly about you, in
order to make you partakers of His holiness. This is not to require
holiness on our part-necessary as it must ever be-it is in order to make us
partakers of His own holiness. What immense and perfect grace! What a
means! It is the means by which to enjoy God Himself perfectly.
Verse 11. God does not expect us to find these exercises of soul pleasant
at the moment (they would not produce their effect if they were so): but
afterwards, the will being broken, they produce the peaceable fruits of
righteousness. The pride of man is brought down when he is obliged to
submit to that which is contrary to his will. God also takes a larger (ever
precious) place in his thoughts and in his life.
Verse 12. On the principle then of grace, the Hebrews are exhorted to
encourage themselves in the path of faith, and to watch against the
buddings of sin among them, whether in yielding to the desires of the
flesh, or in giving up christian privileges for something of the world.
They were to walk so courageously that their evident joy and blessing
(which is always a distinct testimony and one that triumphs over the enemy)
should make the weak feel that it was their own assured portion also; and
thus strength and healing would be administered to them instead of
discouragement. The path of godliness as to circumstances was to be made
easy, a beaten path to weak and lame souls; and they would feel more than
stronger souls the comfort and value of such a path.
Grace, we have already said, is the motive given for this walk; but grace
is here presented in a form that requires to be considered a little in
detail.
We are not come, it says, to Mount Sinai. There the terrors of the majesty
of God kept man at a distance. No one was to approach Him. Even Moses
feared and trembled at the presence of Jehovah. This is not where the
Christian is brought but, in contrast with such relationships as these with
God, the whole millennial state in all its parts is developed; according
however to the way in which these different parts are now known as things
hoped for. We belong to it all; but evidently these things are not yet
established. Let us name them: Sion; the heavenly Jerusalem; the angels and
general assembly; the Church of the firstborn, whose names are inscribed in
heaven; God the Judge of all; the spirits of the just made perfect; Jesus
the Mediator of the new covenant, and finally, the blood of sprinkling
which speaketh better things than that of Abel.
Sion we have ,spoken of as a principle. It is the intervention of sovereign
grace (in the king) after the ruin, and in the midst of theruin, of
Israel, re-establishing the people according to the counsels of God in
glory, and their relationships with God Himself. It is the rest of God on
the earth, the seat of the Messiah's royal power. But, as we know, the
extent of the earth is far from being the limits of the Lord's inheritance.
Sion on earth is Jehovah's rest; it is not the city of the living God-the
heavenly Jerusalem is that, the heavenly capital, so to speak of His
kingdom, the city that has foundations, whose founder and builder is God
Himself.
Having named Sion below, the author turns naturally to Jerusalem above; but
this carries him into heaven, and he finds himself with all the people of
God, in the midst of a multitude of angels, the great universal assembly
[
39] of the invisible world. There is however one
peculiar object on which his eye rests in this marvelous and heavenly
scene. It is the assembly of the firstborn whose names are inscribed in
heaven. They were not born there, not indigenous like the angels, whom God
preserved from falling. They are the objects of the counsels of God. It is
not merely that they reach heaven: they are the glorious heirs and
firstborn of God, according to His eternal counsels, in accordance with
which they are registered in heaven. The assembly composed of the objects
of grace, now called in Christ, belongs to heaven by grace. They are not
the objects of the promises, who, not having received the fulfillment of
the promises on earth, do not fail to enjoy them in heaven. They have the
anticipation of no other country or citizenship than heaven. The promises
were not addressed to them. They have no place on earth. Heaven is prepared
for them by God Himself. Their names are inscribed there by Him. It is the
highest place in heaven above the dealings of God in government, promise,
and law on the earth. This leads the picture of glory on to God Himself.
But (having, reached the highest point, that which is most excellent in
grace) He is seen under another character, namely, as the Judge of all, as
looking down from on high to judge all that is below. This introduces
another class of these blessed inhabitants of the heavenly glory: those
whom the righteous Judge owned as His before the heavenly assembly was
revealed, the spirits of the just arrived at perfection. They had finished
their course, they had overcome in conflict, they were waiting only for
glory. They had been connected with the dealings of God on the earth,
but-faithful before the time for its blessing was come-they had their rest
and their portion in heaven.
It was the purpose of God nevertheless to bless the earth. He could not do
so according to man's responsibility: His people even were but as grass. He
would therefore establish a new covenant with Israel a covenant of pardon,
and according to which He would write the law in the hearts of His people.
The Mediator of this covenant had already appeared and had done all that
was required for its establishment. The saints among the Hebrews were come
to the Mediator of the new covenant: blessing was thus prepared for the
earth and secured to it.
Finally, the blood of Christ had been shed on earth, as that of Abel by
Cain; but, instead of crying from the earth for vengeance, so that Cain
became a fugitive and a vagabond in the earth (a striking type of the Jew,
guilty of the death of Christ), it is grace that speaks; and the shed blood
cries to obtain pardon and peace for those who shed it.
It will be observed that although speaking of the different paths of
millennial blessing, with its foundations, all is given according to the
present condition of things, before the coming of that time of blessing
from God. We are in it as to our relationships; but the spirits of the just
men of the Old Testament only are here spoken of, and only the Mediator of
this new covenant: the covenant itself is not established. The blood cries,
but the answer in earthly blessing has not
yet come. This is easily understood. It is exactly according to the
existing state of things, and even throws considerable light on the
position of the Hebrew Christians and on the doctrine of the epistle. The
important thing for them was, that they should not turn away from Him who
spoke from heaven. It was with Him they had to do. We have seen them
connected with all that went before, with the Lord's testimony on earth;
but in fact they had to do at that time with the Lord Himself as speaking
from heaven. His voice then shook the earth; but now, speaking with the
authority of grace and from heaven, He announced the dissolution of
everything which the flesh could lean upon, or on which the creature could
rest its hopes.
All that could be shaken should he dissolved. How much more fatal to turn
away from Him that speaketh now, than from the commandments even of Sinai!
This shaking of all things (whether here or in the analogous passage in 2
Peter) evidently goes beyond Judaism, but has a peculiar application to it.
Judaism was the system and the frame of the relationships of God with men
on earth according to the principle of responsibility on their part. All
this was of the first creation, but its springs were poisoned; heaven, the
seat of the enemy's power, perverted and corrupted; the heart of man on
earth was corrupt and rebellious. God will shake and change all things. The
result will be a new creation in which righteousness shall dwell.
Meanwhile the first fruits of this new Creation were being formed; and in
Christianity God was forming the heavenly part of the kingdom that cannot
be moved; and Judaism-the centre of the earthly system and of human
responsibility-was passing away. The apostle therefore announces the
shaking of all things-that everything which exists as the present creation
shall be set aside. With regard to the present fact he says only, " we
receive a kingdom
that cannot be moved;" and calls us to serve God with true piety, because
our God is a consuming fire; not- as people say-God out of Christ, but our
God. This is His character in holy majesty and in righteous judgment of
evil.
[
37] It is not insensibility to them, but, when they are felt to be there,
looking from them to Christ. This is the secret of faith. "Be careful for
nothing" need not have been said, if nothing had been there calculated to
awaken care. Abraham considered not his body now dead.
[
38] "Father of spirits" is simply in contrast with "fathers of our flesh."
[
39] The word here translated "assembly" was that of all the states of
Greece; that of the "firstborn" is the word for the assembly of citizens of
any particular state.
Chapter 12:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Johnson
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Philemon James
This version of Darby's Synopsis of the New Testament is a derivative of an electronic version, Copyright 1995 by L. Hodgett. Used by permission. This material may be freely copied for private use or for distribution without charge but must not be used commercially without written permission from the compiler--L. Hodgett. A special thanks to L. Hodgett for permission to create and post this version of Darby's Synopsis of the New Testament.
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