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
Hebrews 12
Verse 1. Wherefore, being encompassed with a cloud - A great
multitude, tending upward with a holy swiftness. Of witnesses -
Of the power of faith. Let us lay aside every weight - As all who
run a race take care to do. Let us throw off whatever weighs us
down, or damps the vigour of our Soul. And the sin which easily
besetteth us - As doth the sin of our constitution, the sin of our
education, the sin of our profession.
Verse 2. Looking - From all other things. To Jesus - As the wounded
Israelites to the brazen serpent. Our crucified Lord was prefigured
by the lifting up of this; our guilt, by the stings of the fiery
serpents; and our faith, by their looking up to the miraculous
remedy. The author and finisher of our faith - Who begins it in us,
carries it on, and perfects it. Who for the joy that was set before
him - Patiently and willingly endured the cross, with all the pains
annexed thereto. And is set down - Where there is fulness of joy.
Verse 3. Consider - Draw the comparison and think. The Lord bore all
this; and shall his servants bear nothing? Him that endured such
contradiction from sinners - Such enmity and opposition of every
kind Lest ye be weary - Dull and languid, and so actually faint in
your course.
Verse 4. Unto blood - Unto wounds and death.
Verse 5. And yet ye seem already to have forgotten the exhortation -
Wherein God speaketh to you with the utmost tenderness. Despise
not thou the chastening of the Lord - Do not slight or make little
of it; do not impute any affliction to chance or second causes but
see and revere the hand of God in it. Neither faint when thou art
rebuked of him - But endure it patiently and fruitfully. Pro iii, 11,
&c.
Verse 6. For - All springs from love; therefore neither despise nor faint.
Verse 7. Whom his father chasteneth not - When he offends.
Verse 8. Of which all sons are partakers - More or less.
Verse 9. And we reverenced them - We neither despised nor fainted
under their correction. Shall we not much rather - Submit with
reverence and meekness To the Father of spirits - That we may
live with him for ever. Perhaps these expressions, fathers of our
flesh, and Father of spirits, intimate that our earthly fathers are
only the parents of our bodies, our souls not being originally
derived from them, but all created by the immediate power of
God; perhaps, at the beginning of the world.
Verse 10. For they verily for a few days - How few are even all our day
on earth! Chastened us as they thought good - Though frequently
they erred therein, by too much either of indulgence or severity.
But he always, unquestionably, for our profit, that we may be
partakers of his holiness - That is, of himself and his glorious
image.
Verse 11. Now all chastening - Whether from our earthly or heavenly
Father, Is for the present grievous, yet it yieldeth the peaceable
fruit of righteousness - Holiness and happiness. To them that are
exercised thereby - That receive this exercise as from God, and
improve it according to his will.
Verse 12. Wherefore lift up the hands - Whether your own or your
brethren's. That hang down - Unable to continue the combat. And
the feeble knees - Unable to continue the race. Isaiah xxxv, 3.
Verse 13. And make straight paths both for your own and for their feet -
Remove every hindrance, every offense. That the lame - They
who are weak, scarce able to walk. Be not turned out of the way -
Of faith and holiness.
Verse 14. Follow peace with all men - This second branch of the
exhortation concerns our neighbours; the third, God. And holiness
- The not following after all holiness, is the direct way to fall into
sin of every kind.
Verse 15. Looking diligently, lest any one - If he do not lift up the hands
that hang down. Fall from the grace of God: lest any root of
bitterness - Of envy, anger, suspicion. Springing up - Destroy the
sweet peace; lest any, not following after holiness, fall into
fornication or profaneness. In general, any corruption, either in
doctrine or practice, is a root of bitterness, and may pollute many.
Verse 16. Esau was profane for so slighting the blessing which went
along with the birth-right.
Verse 17. He was rejected - He could not obtain it. For he found no
place for repentance - There was no room for any such repentance
as would regain what he had lost. Though he sought it - The
blessing of the birth-right. Diligently with tears - He sought too
late. Let us use the present time.
Verse 18. For - A strong reason this why they ought the more to regard
the whole exhortation drawn from the priesthood of Christ:
because both salvation and vengeance are now nearer at hand. Ye
are not come to the mountain that could be touched - That was of
an earthy, material nature.
Verse 19. The sound of a trumpet - Formed, without doubt, by the
ministry of angels, and preparatory to the words, that is, the Ten
Commandments, which were uttered with a loud voice, Deut. v,
22.
Verse 20. For they could not bear - The terror which seized them, when
they heard those words proclaimed, If even a beast, &c. Exod.
xix, 12, &c.
Verse 21. Even Moses - Though admitted to so near an intercourse with
God, who "spake to him as a man speaketh to his friend." At other
times he acted as a mediator between God and the people. But
while the ten words were pronounced, he stood as one of the
hearers, Exod. xix, 25; Exod. xx, 19.
Verse 22. But ye - Who believe in Christ. Are come - The apostle does
not here speak of their coming to the church militant, but of that
glorious privilege of New Testament believers, their communion
with the church triumphant. But this is far more apparent to the
eyes of celestial spirits than to ours which are yet veiled. St. Paul
here shows an excellent knowledge of the heavenly economy,
worthy of him who had been caught up into the third heaven. To
mount Sion - A spiritual mountain. To the city of the living God,
the heavenly Jerusalem - All these glorious titles belong to the
New Testament church. And to an innumerable company -
Including all that are afterwards mentioned.
Verse 23. To the general assembly - The word properly signifies a stated
convention on some festival occasion. And church - The whole
body of true believers, whether on earth or in paradise. Of the
first-born-The first-born of Israel were enrolled by Moses; but
these are enrolled in heaven, as citizens there. It is observable,
that in this beautiful gradation, these first-born are placed nearer
to God than the angels. See Jam i, 18. And to God the Judge of all
- Propitious to you, adverse to your enemies. And to the spirits -
The separate souls. Of just men - It seems to mean, of New
Testament believers. The number of these, being not yet large, is
mentioned distinct from the innumerable company of just men
whom their Judge hath acquitted. These are now made perfect in
an higher sense than any who are still alive. Accordingly, St. Paul,
while yet on earth, denies that he was thus made perfect, Phil. iii,
12.
Verse 24. To Jesus, the mediator - Through whom they had been
perfected. And to the blood of sprinkling - To all the virtue of his
precious blood shed for you, whereby ye are sprinkled from an
evil conscience. This blood of sprinkling was the foundation of
our Lord's mediatorial office. Here the gradation is at the highest
point. Which speaketh better things than that of Abel - Which
cried for vengeance.
Verse 25. Refuse not - By unbelief. Him that speaketh - And whose
speaking even now is a prelude to the final scene. The same voice
which spake both by the law and in the gospel, when heard from
heaven, will shake heaven and earth. For if they escaped not - His
vengeance. Much more shall not we - Those of us who turn from
him that speaketh from heaven - That is, who came from heaven
to speak to us.
Verse 26. Whose voice then shook the earth - When he spoke from
mount Sinai. But now - With regard to his next speaking. He hath
promised - It is a joyful promise to the saints, though dreadful to
the wicked. Yet once more I will shake, not only the earth, but
also the heaven - These words may refer in a lower sense to the
dissolution of the Jewish church and state; but in their full sense
they undoubtedly look much farther, even to the end of all things.
This universal shaking began at the first coming of Christ. It will
be consummated at his second coming. Haggai ii, 6.
Verse 27. The things which are shaken - Namely, heaven and earth. As
being made - And consequently liable to change. That the things
which are not shaken may remain - Even "the new heavens and
the new earth," Rev. xxi, 1.
Verse 28. Therefore let us, receiving - By willing and joyful faith. A
kingdom - More glorious than the present heaven and earth. Hold
fast the grace, whereby we may serve God - In every thought,
word, and work. With reverence - Literally, with shame. Arising
from a deep consciousness of our own unworthiness. And godly
fear - A tender, jealous fear of offending, arising from a sense of
the gracious majesty of God.
Verse 29. For our God is a consuming fire - in the strictness of his
justice, and purity of his holiness.
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 Wesley's Notes on the Bible is a derivative of an electronic version, Copyright 1997, by Sulu D. Kelley. All rights reserved. Used by permission. It may not be modified or used commercially without permission of Wesleyan Heritage Publishing and Sulu Kelley. A special thanks to Mr. Kelley and Wesleyan Heritage Publishing for permission to create and post this version of Wesley's Notes on the Bible.
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