Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Hebrews 5:7
Who in the days of his flesh, when he had offered up prayers and supplications with strong crying and tears unto him that was able to save him from death, and was heard in that he feared;
7. Who ] i.e. the Christ.
of his flesh ] The word “flesh” is here used for His Humanity regarded on the side of its weakness and humiliation. Comp. Heb 2:14.
when he had offered up ] Lit. “having offered up.”
prayers and supplications ] The idiosyncrasy of the writer, and perhaps his Alexandrian training, which familiarised him with the style of Philo, made him fond of these sonorous amplifications or full expressions. The word rendered “prayers” ( deseis) is rather “supplications,” i.e. “special prayers” for the supply of needs; the word rendered “entreaties” (which is joined with it in Job 41:3, comp. 2 Mace. Heb 9:18) properly meant olive-boughs ( ) held forth to entreat protection. Thus the first word refers to the suppliant, the second implies an approach ( ) to God. The “supplications and entreaties “referred to are doubtless those in the Agony at Gethsemane (Luk 22:39-46), though there may be a reference to the Cross, and some have even supposed that there is an allusion to Psalms 22, 116. See Mar 14:36; Joh 12:27; Mat 26:38-42.
with strong crying and tears ] Though these are not directly mentioned in the scene at Gethsemane they are implied. See Joh 11:35; Joh 12:27; Mat 26:39; Mat 26:42; Mat 26:44; Mat 26:53; Mar 14:36; Luk 19:41.
and was heard ] Rather, “and being heard” or “hearkened to,” Luk 22:43; Joh 12:28 (comp. Psa 22:21; Psa 22:24).
in that he feared ] Rather, “ from his godly fear,” or “because of his reverential awe.” The phrase has been explained in different ways. The old Latin ( Vetus Itala) renders “ exauditus a metu,” and some Latin Fathers and later interpreters explain it to mean “having been freed from the fear of death.” The Greek might perhaps be made to bear this sense, though the mild word used for “fear” is not in favour of it; but the rendering given above, meaning that His prayer was heard because of His awful submission ( pro su reverenti, Vulg.) is the sense in which the words are taken by all the Greek Fathers. The word rendered “from” ( apo) may certainly mean “because of” as in Luk 19:3, “He could not because of ( apo) the crowd;” Luk 24:41, “disbelieving because of ( apo) their joy” (comp. Joh 21:6; Act 22:11, &c). The word rendered “feared” is eulabeia, which means “reverent fear,” or “reasonable shrinking” as opposed to terror and cowardice. The Stoics said that the wise man could thus cautiously shrink ( eulabeisthai) but never actually be afraid ( phobeisthai). Other attempts to explain away the passage arise from the Apollinarian tendency to deny Christ’s perfect manhood: but He was “perfectly man “as well as “truly God.” He was not indeed “saved from death,” because He had only prayed that “the cup might pass from Him” if such were His Father’s will (Heb 10:7); but He was saved out of ( ) death” by being raised on the third day, so that “He saw no corruption.” For the word eulabeia, “piety” or “reverent awe” see Heb 12:28.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
Who – That is, the Lord Jesus – for so the connection demands. The object of this verse and the two following is, to show that the Lord Jesus had that qualification for the office of priest to which he had referred in Heb 5:2. It was one important qualification for that office that he who sustained it should be able to show compassion, to aid those that were out of the way, and to sympathize with sufferers; in other words, they were themselves encompassed with infirmity, and thus were able to succour those who were subjected to trials. The apostle shows now that the Lord Jesus had those qualifications, as far as it was possible for one to have them who had no sin. In the days of his flesh he suffered intensely; he prayed with fervor; he placed himself in a situation where he learned subjection and obedience by his trials; and in all this he went far beyond what had been evinced by the priests under the ancient dispensation.
In the days of his flesh – When he appeared on earth as a man. Flesh is used to denote human nature, and especially human nature as susceptible of suffering. The Son of God still is united to human nature, but it is human nature glorified, for in his case, as in all others, flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God, 1Co 15:50. He has now a glorified body Phi 3:21, such as the redeemed will have in the future world; compare Rev 1:13-17. The phrase days of his flesh, means the time when he was incarnate, or when he lived on earth in human form. The particular time here referred to, evidently, was the agony in the garden of Gethsemane.
Prayers and supplications – These words are often used to denote the same thing. If there is a difference, the former – deeseis – means petitions which arise from a sense of need – from deomai – to want, to need; the latter refers usually to supplication for protection, and is applicable to one who under a sense of guilt flees to an altar with the symbols of supplication in his hand. Suppliants in such cases often carried an olive-branch as an emblem of the peace which they sought. A fact is mentioned by Livy respecting the Locrians that may illustrate this passage. Ten delegates from the Locrians, squalid and covered with rags, came into the hall where the consuls were sitting, extending the badges of suppliants – olive-branches – according to the custom of the Greeks; and prostrated themselves on the ground before the tribunal, with a lamentable cry; Lib. xxix. 100:16. The particular idea in the word used here – hiketeria – is petition for protection, help, or shelter (Passow), and this idea accords well with the design of the passage. The Lord Jesus prayed as one who had need, and as one who desired protection, shelter, or help. The words here, therefore, do not mean the same thing, and are not merely intensive, but they refer to distinct purposes which the Redeemer had in his prayers. He was about to die, and as a man needed the divine help; he was, probably, tempted in that dark hour (see the note, Joh 12:31), and he fled to God for protection.
With strong crying – This word does not mean weeping, as the word crying does familiarly with us. It rather means an outcry, the voice of wailing and lamentation. It is the cry for help of one who is deeply distressed, or in danger; and refers here to the earnest petition of the Saviour when in the agony of Gethsemane or when on the cross. It is the intensity of the voice which is referred to when it is raised by an agony of suffering; compare Luk 22:44, He prayed more earnestly; Mat 27:46, And about the ninth hour Jesus cried with a loud voice – My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me? see also Mat 26:38-39; Mat 27:50.
And tears – Jesus wept at the grave of Lazarus Joh 11:35, and over Jerusalem; Luk 19:41. It is not expressly stated by the Evangelists that he wept in the garden of Gethsemane, but there is no reason to doubt that he did. In such an intense agony as to cause a bloody sweat, there is every probability that it would be accompanied with tears. We may remark then:
- That there is nothing dishonorable in tears and that man should not be ashamed on proper occasions to weep. The fact that the Son of God wept is a full demonstration that it is not disgraceful to weep. God has so made us as to express sympathy for others by tears. Religion does not make the heart insensible and hard as stoical philosophy does; it makes it tender and susceptible to impression.
(2)It is not improper to weep. The Son of God wept – and if he poured forth tears it cannot be wrong for us. Besides, it is a great law of our nature that in suffering we should find relief by tears. God would not have so made us if it had been wrong.
(3)The fact that the Son of God thus wept should be allowed deeply to effect our hearts.
He wept that we might weep;
Each sin demands a tear.
He wept that he might redeem us we should weep that our sins were so great as to demand such bitter woes for our salvation. That we had sinned; that our sins caused him such anguish; that he endured for us this bitter conflict, should make us weep. Tear should answer to tear, and sigh respond to sigh, and groan to groan, when we contemplate the sorrows of the Son of God in accomplishing our redemption. That man must have a hard heart who has never had an emotion when he has reflected that the Son of God wept, and bled, and died for him.
Unto him that was able – To God. He alone was able then to save. In such a conflict man could not aid, and the help of angels, ready as they were to assist him, could not sustain him. We may derive aid from man in trial; we may be comforted by sympathy and counsel; but there are sorrows where God only can uphold the sufferer. That God was able to uphold him in his severe conflict, the Redeemer could not doubt; nor need we doubt it in reference to ourselves when deep sorrows come over our souls.
To save him from death – It would seem from this, that what constituted the agony of the Redeemer was the dread of death, and that he prayed that he might be saved from that. This might be, so far as the language is concerned, either the dread of death on the spot by the intensity of his sufferings and by the power of the tempter, or it might be the dread of the approaching death on the cross. As the Redeemer, however, knew that he was to die on the cross, it can hardly be supposed that he apprehended death in the garden of Gethsemane. What he prayed for was, that, if it were possible, he might be spared from a death so painful as he apprehended; Mat 26:39. Feeling that God had power to save him from that mode of dying, the burden of his petition was, that, if human redemption could be accomplished without such sufferings, it might please his Father to remove that cup from him.
And was heard – In Joh 11:42, the Saviour says, I know that thou hearest me always. In the garden of Gethsemane, he was heard. His prayer was not disregarded, though it was not literally answered. The cup of death was not taken away; but his prayer was not disregarded. What answer was given; what assurance or support was imparted to his soul, we are not informed. The case, however, shows us:
(1) That prayer may be heard even when the sufferings which are dreaded, and from which we prayed to be delivered, may come upon us. They may come with such assurances of divine favor, and such supports, as will be full proof that the prayer was not disregarded.
(2) That prayer offered in faith may not be always literally answered. No one can doubt that Jesus offered the prayer of faith; and it is as little to be doubted, if he referred in the prayer to the death on the cross, that it was not literally answered; compare Mat 26:39. In like manner, it may occur now, that prayer shall be offered with every right feeling, and with an earnest desire for the object, which may not be literally answered. Christians, even in the highest exercise of faith, are not inspired to know what is best for them, and as long as this is the case, it is possible that they may ask for things which it would not be best to have granted. They who maintain that the prayer of faith is always literally answered, must hold that the Christian is under such a guidance of the Spirit of God that he cannot ask anything amiss; see the notes on 2Co 12:9.
In that he feared – Margin, For his piety. Coverdale, Because he had God in honor. Tyndale, Because he had God in reverence. Prof. Stuart renders it, And was delivered from what he feared. So also Doddridge. Whitby, Was delivered from his fear. Luther renders it, And was heard for that he had God in reverence – dass er Gott in Ehren hatte. Beza renders it, His prayers being heard, he was delivered, from fear. From this variety in translating the passage, it will be seen at once that it is attended with difficulty. The Greek is literally from fear or reverence – apo tes eulabeias. The word occurs in the New Testament only in one other place, Heb 12:28, where it is rendered fear. Let us serve him with reverence and godly fear. The word properly means caution, circumspection; then timidity, fear; then the fear of God, reverence, piety.
Where the most distinguished scholars have differed as to the meaning of a Greek phrase, it would be presumption in me to attempt to determine its sense. The most natural and obvious interpretation, however, as it seems to me, is, that it means that he was heard on account of his reverence for God; his profound veneration; his submission. Such was his piety that the prayer was heard, though it was not literally answered. A prayer may be heard and yet not literally answered; it may be acceptable to God, though it may not consist with his arrangements to bestow the very blessing that is sought. The posture of the mind of the Redeemer perhaps was something like this. He knew that he was about to be put to death in a most cruel manner. His tender and sensitive nature as a man shrank from such a death. As a man he went under the pressure of his great sorrows and pleaded that the cup might be removed, and that man might be redeemed by a less fearful scene of suffering.
That arrangement, however, could not be made. Yet the spirit which he evinced; the desire to do the will of God; the resignation, and the confidence in his Father which he evinced, were such as were acceptable in his sight. They showed that he had unconquerable virtue; that no power of temptation, and no prospect of the intensest woes which human nature could endure, could alienate him from piety. To show this was an object of inestimable value, and much as it cost the Saviour was worth it all. So now it is worth much to see what Christian piety can endure; what strong temptations it can resist; and what strength it has to hear up under accumulated woes; and even though the prayer of the pious sufferer is not directly answered, yet, that prayer is acceptable to God, and the result of such a trial is worth all that it costs.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Heb 5:7-11
With strong crying and tears
The exercise of the Son of God in His agony
I.
In the first place we shall illustrate the definition of THE SEASON OF THE AGONY OF THY, SON OF GOD in these words: The days of His flesh. In general, it may he observed that the application of the term flesh to the mystery of His incarnation is remarkable. By the application of this term something more is expressed than the subsistence of our nature in His person.
1. The beginning of these days is at His birth. In His birth the Son of God entered into the infirmities of our flesh, and, for our sakes, exposed Himself not only to sufferings attending ordinary births, but unto hardships peculiar to the circumstances of His own extraordinary birth.
2. These days ended at His resurrection. The human nature subsisting in the person of the Son of God, was the same nature after His resurrection that it had been before His death. But the likeness, or appearance, was different. Before His death it had the likeness of sinful flesh; after His resurrection it appeared in the original glory of human nature subsisting still in His person.
3. The number of these days is not exactly known. The Author of revelation is the Judge of what is proper to appear in the witness which He hath testified of His Son, and what is proper to be concealed.
4. These were the days of His sufferings and temptations. At their beginning, the Son of God entered into His sufferings, and suffered every day until their end.
5. Toward the close of these days He suffered an agony. Day after day, all the days of His flesh, He waded deeper and deeper in the ocean of sorrow, and toward the last the waves rose high and broke over Him in the fury and vengeance of the curse.
6. These were the days of His supplication, prayers, and tears.
II. But in regard our text refers unto THE PRAYERS AND SUPPLICATIONS WHICH IN THE CLOSE OF THE DAYS OF HIS FLESH HE OFFERED UP, under His agony, we proceed to the second head of our general method, and shall illustrate these words of the text: When He had offered up prayers and supplications, with strong crying and tears, unto Him who was able to save Him from death.
1. Offering up prayers and supplications is the action of the Son of God under His agony in the close of the days of His flesh. In our nature, He is the High Priest of our profession; and His suffering and dying for our sins are represented in many texts of Scripture as actions of a priest offering sacrifice, and making atonement and reconciliation for sins.
2. To Him who was able to save Him from death, is the description of the object unto whom the Son of God, under His agony, in the days of His flesh, offered up prayers and supplications. In our nature, and in that station wherein the Son of God stood, He considered His righteous and holy Father as possessing sovereign power ever Him with respect to life and death, and executing the curse upon Him according to the penalty of the law; He considered Him as able, not to deliver Him from dying-this is not the object of His prayers–but to uphold His suffering nature in conflicting with the pangs and sorrows of death, and to save Him from the mouth of the lion, and from the horns of the unicorn, or from being overcome by the prince of this world who had the power of death; and He considered Him as able to loose the cords and pains of death, and, through the blood of the everlasting covenant, to bring Him again from the dead by a glorious resurrection on the third day.
3. Strong crying and tears are expressions of the fervency with which the Son of God, under His agony, in the close of the days of His flesh, offered up prayers and supplications to His righteous Father, who was able to save Him from death.
III. We proceed to illustrate His ACCEPTANCE, which is affirmed by the apostle in the latter part of our text: Heard in that He feared.
1. The nature of that fear, which is ascribed to the Son of God under His agony, is to be ascertained. The term used by the apostle, and translated fear, signifies godly fear, accompanied with weakness and feelings in the present frame of our nature. Impressions of the holiness of His Father, together with sensations of His displeasure, sunk deep into His soul, and affected every member of His body, exciting that fear which is the sum of obedience and the essence of adoration, and which, in His state, was accompanied with infirmities and feelings of flesh and blood. Obedience and adoration were in His prayer; and His agony itself, in one consideration, was suffering affliction, and, in another, subjection to the will and obedience to the commandment of His Father.
2. We shall collect several principles which gave force to the operation of fear in the Son of God under His agony in the days of His flesh.
(1) His apprehensions of the glory and majesty of His Father were clear and sublime.
(2) His burden was heavy and pressed His suffering nature to the ground.
(3) His sensations of the wrath and curse of God were deep and piercing.
(4) His temptations were violent and extraordinary.
(5) The sorrows of death drew up and stood before Him in battle array. But while His soul was offering for sin, and sorrowing even unto death, every desponding and gloomy apprehension which attacked His faith was resisted and broken, and full assurance of His hope of a resurrection by the glory of the Father held firm unto the end. Thy right hand, triumphant Sufferer, doth ever valiantly!
3. The sense in which the Son of God under His agony, in the days of His flesh, was heard is to be ascertained and illustrated.
(1) The prayers and supplications, which in the days of His flesh the Son of God offered up unto Him who was able to save Him from death, were answered.
(2) His fatigued and dying nature was strengthened.
(3) His sacrifice was accepted; and, in the odour of perfection, came up before His Father with a sweet-smelling savour.
(4) His body was raised from the dead and saw no corruption.
(5) He was received up into heaven, crowned with glory and honour, and made Captain of salvation, to bring unto glory the multitude of sons.
IV. After illustrating the several parts of our text, SOME APPLICATIONS are proper for reproof, correction, and instruction, unto the peculiar people who are in the fellowship of Gods dear Son in the first place; and, in the second, unto the children of disobedience who will not enter into this holy fellowship.
1. Holy brethren, consider the Apostle and High Priest of our profession. Consider His infirmities, consider His temptations, consider His conflict, consider His example, consider His acceptance, and consider His divinity.
2. After these considerations which have been addressed unto the peculiar people who are in the fellowship of the mystery of godliness, we would have the children of disobedience to consider the existence and holiness of God; the provocation which they have given Him; the necessity of reconciliation; the access to the benefit of the reconciliation which the merciful and faithful High Priest of our profession made for the sins of the people; and the penal and certain consequences of refusing the benefit of this reconciliation. (Alex. Shanks.)
The mental sadness of Christ
I. HIS MIND WAS THE SUBJECT OF INTENSE EMOTIONS.
II. A DREAD OF DEATH SEEMS TO HAVE BEEN ONE OF HIS MOST DISTRESSING EMOTIONS.
III. UNDER THIS MOST INTENSE EMOTION HE SOUGHT RELIEF IN PRAYER.
IV. HIS PRAYERS WERE ANSWERED IN CONSEQUENCE OF HIS PIETY. The dread was taken away and strength given to bear it. (Homilist.)
The benefit arising to Christ from His own sufferings
I. His CONDUCT UNDER HIS SUFFERINGS. Never were the sufferings of any creature comparable with those of Christ. His bodily sufferings perhaps were less than many of His followers have been called to endure–but those of His soul were infinitely beyond our conception (Psa 22:14, Mat 26:38; Luk 22:44). Under them He poured out His heart in prayer unto His heavenly Father. He never lost sight of God as His Father, but addressed Him with the greater earnestness under that endearing title (Mar 14:36). Not that He repented of the work He had undertaken; but only desired such a mitigation of His sufferings as might consist with His Fathers glory and the salvation of men. Nor did He desist from prayer till He had obtained His request. Him the Father always heard; nor was an answer now denied Him. Though the cup was not removed, He was not suffered to faint in drinking it. His sufferings indeed could not be dispensed with; but they were amply recompensed by
II. THE BENEFIT HE DERIVED FROM THEM.
1. Personal. It was necessary for Him, as our High Priest, to experience everything which His people are called to endure in their conflicts with sin and Satan (Heb 2:17). Now the difficulty of abiding faithful to God in arduous circumstances is exceeding great. This is a trial which all His people are called to sustain. Though as the Son of God He knew all things in a speculative manner, yet He could not know this experimentally, but by being reduced to a suffering condition. This therefore was one benefit which He derived from His sufferings. He learned by them more tenderly to sympathise with His afflicted people, and more speedily to succour them when imploring His help with strong crying and tears (verse 18).
2. Official. As the priests were consecrated to their office by the blood of their sacrifices, so was Jesus by His own blood. From that time He had a right to impart salvation.
III. LEARN
1. What we should do under sufferings, or a dread of Gods displeasure. We should not hastily conclude that we are not His children (Heb 12:6). We should rather go with humble boldness to God as our Father Luk 15:17-18). We should plead His gracious promises (Psa 51:15).
2. Whither to go for salvation. The Father was able to save His Son from death. And doubtless He can save us also. But He has exalted His Son to be a Prince and a Saviour (Act 5:31). To Christ therefore we are to go, and to the Father through Christ (Eph 2:18). In this way we shall find Him to be the author of eternal salvation to us (Heb 7:25).
3. What is to be our conduct when He has saved us? Jesus died to purchase to Himself a peculiar people zealous of good works. We must therefore obey Him, and that too as willingly in seasons of severe trial as in times of peace. We must be content to be conformed to the likeness of our Lord and Master. Let us be faithful unto death (Rev 2:10). (Theological Sketch-Book.)
Our sympathising High Priest
I. First, that we may see the suitability of our Lord to deal with us in our cares and sorrows, we shall view Him as A SUPPLIANT.
1. The text begins with a word which reveals His weakness: Who in the days of His flesh. Our blessed Lord was in such a condition that He pleaded out of weakness with the God who was able to save. When our Lord was compassed with the weakness of flesh He was much in prayer.
2. In the days of His flesh our Divine Lord felt His necessities. The words, He offered up prayers and supplications, proved that He had many needs. Men do not pray and supplicate unless they have greater need than this world can satisfy. The Saviour offered no petitions by way of mere form; His supplications arose out of an urgent sense of His need of heavenly aid.
3. Further, let us see how like the Son of God was to us in His intensity of prayer. The intensity of His prayer was such that our Lord expressed Himself in crying and tears. Since from His lips you hear strong crying, and from His eyes you see showers of tears, you may well feel that His is a sympathetic spirit, to whom you may run in the hour of danger, even as the chicks seek the wings of the hen.
4. We have seen our Lords needs and the intensity of His prayer; now note His understanding in prayer. He prayed unto Him that was able to save Him from death. The expression is startling; the Saviour prayed to be saved. In His direst woe He prayed thoughtfully, and with a clear apprehension of the character of Him to whom He prayed. It is a great help in devotion to pray intelligently, knowing well the character of God to whom you are speaking. Jesus was about to die, and therefore the aspect under which He viewed the great Father was as Him that was able to save Him from death. This passage may be read in two ways: it may mean that He would be saved from actually dying if it could be done consistently with the glorifying of the Father; or it may mean that He pleaded to be saved out of death, though He actually descended into it. The word may be rendered either from or out of. The Saviour viewed the great Father as able to preserve Him in death from the power of death, so that He should triumph on the Cross; and also as able to bring Him up again from among the dead.
5. It will further help you if I now call your attention to His fear. I believe our old Bibles give us a correct translation, much better than the Revised Version, although much can be said for the latter, With strong crying and tears unto Him that was able to save Him from death, and was heard in that He feared. That is to say, He had a fear, a natural and not a sinful fear; and from this fear He was delivered by the strength brought to Him from heaven by the angel. God has implanted in all of us the love of life, and we cannot part from it without a pang: our Lord felt a natural dread of death.
6. But then notice another thing in the text, namely, His success in prayer, which also brings Him near to us. He was heard in that He feared. O my soul! to think that it should be said of thy Lord that He was heard, even as thou a poor suppliant, art heard. Yet the cup did not pass from Him, neither was the bitterness thereof in the least abated.
II. Behold our Lord as A SON. His prayers and pleadings were those of a son with a father.
1. The Sonship of our Saviour is well attested. The Lord declared this in the second Psalm: Thou art My Son; this day have I begotten Thee. Thrice did the voice out of the excellent glory proclaim this truth, and He was declared to be the Son of God with power, according to the spirit of holiness, by the resurrection from the dead. So, when you are put to great grief, do not doubt your sonship.
2. Being a Son, the text goes on to tell us that He had to learn obedience. How near this brings our Lord to us, that He should be a Son and should have to learn! We go to school to Christ and with Christ, and so we feel His fitness to be our compassionate High Priest.
3. Jesus must needs learn by suffering. As swimming is only to be learned in the water, so is obedience only learned by actually doing and suffering the Divine will.
4. The Lord Jesus Christ learned this obedience to perfection.
5. Our Lord learned by suffering mixed with prayer and supplication. His was no unsanctified sorrow, His griefs were baptised in prayer. It cost Him cries and tears to learn the lesson of His sufferings. He never suffered without prayer, nor prayed without suffering.
III. Behold the Lord Jesus as A SAVIOUR.
1. As a Saviour He is perfect. Nothing is lacking in Him in any one point. However difficult your case may seem, He is equal to it. Made perfect by suffering, He is able to meet the intricacies of your trials, and to deliver you in the most complicated emergency.
2. Henceforth He is the author of salvation. Author! How expressive! He is the cause i,f salvation; the originator, the worker, the producer of salvation. Salvation begins with Christ; salvation is carried on by Christ; salvation is completed by Christ. He has finished it, and you cannot sad to it; it only remains for you to receive it.
3. Observe that it is eternal salvation: the author of eternal salvation. Jesus does not save us to-day and leave us to perish to-morrow; He knows what is in man, and so He has prepared nothing less than eternal salvation for man.
4. Furthermore, inasmuch as He has learned obedience and become a perfect High Priest, His salvation is wide in its range, for it is unto all them that obey Him.
5. Note, that He is all this for ever, for He is a priest for ever. If you could have seen Him when He came from Gethsemane, yon think you could have trusted Him. Oh! trust Him to-day, for He is called of God to be an High Priest after the order of Melchizedec, and that order of Melchizedec is an everlasting and perpetual priesthood. He is able today to plead for you, able to-day to put away your sins. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Christ in the infirmity of the flesh
I. THE LORD JESUS CHRIST HIMSELF HAD A TIME OF INFIRMITY IN THIS WORLD. It is true His infirmities were all sinless, but all troublesome and grievous. By them was He exposed unto all sorts of temptations and sufferings, which are the two springs of all that is evil and dolorous unto our nature. And thus it was with Him not a few days, nor a short season only, but during His whole course in this world.
1. It was out of infinite condescension and love unto our souls, that Christ took on Himself this condition (Php 2:6-8).
2. As He had other ends herein, for the-e things were indispensably required unto the discharge of the sacerdotal office, so He designed to set us an example, that we should not faint under our infirmities and sufferings on their account (Heb 12:2-3; 1Pe 4:1).
(1) His patience, unconquerable and unmovable in all things that befell Him in the days of His flesh (Isa 42:2). Whatever befell Him, He bore itquietly and patiently.
(2) His trust in God. By this testimony that it is said of Him, I wilt put My trust in God, doth our apostle prove that He had the same nature with us, subject to the same weakness and infirmities (Heb 2:13). And this we are taught thereby, that there is no management of our human nature, as now beset with infirmities, but by a constant trust in God.
(3) His earnest, fervent prayers and supplications, which are here expressed by our apostle, and accommodated unto the days of His flesh.
II. A LIFE OF GLORY MAY ENSUE AFTER A LIFE OF INFIRMITY. We see that it hath done so with Jesus Christ. His season of infirmity issued in eternal glory. And nothing but unbelief and sin can hinder ours from doing so also.
III. THE LORD CHRIST IS NO MORE NOW IN A STATE OF WEAKNESS AND TEMPTATION; THE DAYS OF HIS FLESH ARE PAST AND GONE. With His death, ended the days of His flesh. His revival or return unto life, was into absolute, eternal, unchangeable glory.
IV. THE LORD CHRIST FILLED UP EVERY SEASON WITH DUTY, WITH THE PROPER DUTY OF IT. The days of His flesh, were the only season wherein He could offer to God; and He missed it not, He did so accordingly. It is true, in His glorified state, He continually represents in heaven, the offering that He made of Himself on the earth, in an effectual application of it unto the advantage of the elect. But the offering itself was in the days of His flesh. Then was His body capable of pain, His soul of sorrow, His nature of dissolution, all which were necessary unto this duty.
V. THE LORD CHRIST, IN HIS OFFERING UP HIMSELF FOR US, LABOURED AND TRAVAILED IN SOUL, TO BRING THE WEEK UNTO A GOOD AND HOLY ISSUE. A hard labour it was, and as such, it is here expressed. He went through it with fears, sorrows, tears, outcries, prayers, and humble supplications.
1. All the holy, natural affections of His soul were filled, taken up, and extended to the utmost capacity, in acting and suffering.
2. All His graces, the gracious qualifications of His mind and affections were, in a like manner, in the height of their exercise. Both those whose immediate object was God Himself, and those which respected the Church, were all of them excited, drawn forth, arid engaged. As
(1) Faith and trust in God. These Himself expresseth, in His greatest trial, as those which He betook Himself unto (Isa 50:7-8; Psa 22:9, Heb 2:13). These graces in Him were now tried to the utmost. All their strength, all their efficacy was exercised and proved.
(2) Love to mankind. As this in His Divine nature was the peculiar spring of that infinite condescension, whereby He took our nature on Him, for the work of mediation (Php 2:6-8); so it wrought mightily and effectually in His human nature, in the whole course of His obedience, but especially in the offering of Himself unto God for us.
(3) Zeal to the glory of God. This was committed unto Him, and concerning this, He took care that it might not miscarry.
(4) He was now in the highest exercise of obedience unto God, and that in such a peculiar manner as before He had no occasion for.
3. He did so also with respect to that confluence of calamities, distresses, pains, and miseries, which was upon His whole nature. And that in these consisted no small part of His trials, wherein He underwent and suffered the utmost which human nature is capable to undergo, is evident from the description given of His dolorous sufferings both in prophecy (Psa 22:1-31.;
Isa 53:1-12.) and in the story of what befell Him in the evangelists. And in this manner of His death, there were sundry things concurring.
(1) A natural sign of His readiness to embrace all sinners that should come unto Him, His arms being, as it were, stretched out to receive them Isa 45:22; Isa 45:1).
(2) A moral token of His condition, being left as one rejected of all between heaven and earth for a season; but in Himself interposing between heaven and earth for the justice of God and sins of men, to make reconciliation and peace (Ephesians if. 16, 17).
(3) The accomplishment of sundry types; as
(a) Of that of him who was hanged on a tree, as cursed of the Lord Deu 21:22).
(b) Of the brazen serpent which was lifted up in the wilderness (Joh 2:14), with respect whereunto He says, that when He is lifted up, He would draw all men to Him (Joh 12:32).
(c) Of the wave-offering, which was moved, shaken, and turned several ways, to declare that the Lord Christ in this offering of Himself, should have respect unto all parts of the world, and all sorts of men (Exo 29:26).
(4) The conflict He had with Satan, and all the powers of darkness, was another part of His travail. And herein He laboured for that victory and success which in the issue He did obtain (Col 2:13-14; Heb 2:14; 1Jn 3:18).
(5) His inward conflict, in the making His soul an offering for sin, in His apprehensions, and undergoing of the wrath of God due unto sin, hath been already spoken unto, so far as is necessary unto our present purpose.
(6) In, and during all these things, there was in His eye continually that unspeakable glory that was set before Him, of being the repairer of the breaches of the creation, the rest,refer of mankind, the captain of salvation unto all that obey Him, the destruction of Satan, with his kingdom of sin and darkness, and in all the great restorer of Divine glory, to the eternal praise of God. Whilst all these things were in the height of their transaction, is it any wonder if the Lord Christ laboured and travailed in soul, according to the description here given of Him?
VI. THE LORD CHRIST, IN THE TIME OF HIS OFFERING AND SUFFERING, CONSIDERING GOD WITH WHOM HE HAD TO DO, AS THE SOVEREIGN LORD OF LIFE AND DEATH, AS THE SUPREME RECTOR AND JUDGE OF ALL, CASTS HIMSELF BEFORE HIM WITH MOST FERVENT PRAYERS FOR DELIVERANCE, FROM THE SENTENCE OF DEATH AND THE CURSE OF THE LAW.
1. HOW great a matter it was, to make peace with God for sinners, to make atonement and reconciliation for sin. This is the life and spirit of our religion, the centre wherein all the lines of it do meet (Php 3:8-10; 1 Corinthians if. 2; Gal 6:14).
2. A sight and sense of the wrath of God due unto sin, will be full of dread and terror for the souls of men, and will put them to a great conflict with wrestling for deliverance.
VII. IN ALL THE PRESSURES THAT WERE ON THE LORD JESUS CHRIST, IN ALL THE DISTRESSES HE HAD TO CONFLICT WITHAL IN HIS SUFFERING, HIS FAITH FOR DELIVERANCE AND SUCCESS WAS FIRM AND UNCONQUERABLE. This was the ground He stood upon in all His prayers and supplications.
VIII. THE SUCCESS OF OUR LORD JESUS CHRIST, IN HIS TRIALS, AS OUR HEAD AND SURETY, IS A PLEDGE AND ASSURANCE OF SUCCESS UNTO US IN ALL OUR SPIRITUAL CONFLICTS. (John Owen, D. D.)
Christs sufferings
In this one sentence there is more for us to learn than either eye hath seen or ear hath heart or all flesh in this life shall attain unto: it is the depth of the glorious gospel which the angels do desire to behold.
I. We have to learn by the example of our Saviour Christ in this place, THAT IN ALL TEMPTATIONS WE SHOULD APPROACH UNTO OUR GOD, and make our complaints unto Him, who is only able and ready for to help us. In all miseries we are not sunken so deep in sorrow as He that for our sakes made prayers end supplications, with strong cryings and with tears, and was delivered from His fear.
II. The second point that we have here to learn in this example of our Saviour Christ is, TO KNOW UNTO WHOM WE SHOULD MAKE OUR PRAYERS IN THE DAY OF TROUBLE, which the apostle testifieth in these words: that Christ made His prayers unto Him that was able to deliver Him from death. It followeth in the text: with great crying and with tears.
III. Here we have to NOTE, IN WHAT MEASURE OUR SAVIOUR CHRIST WAS AFFLICTED, even so far, that He cried out in the bitterness of His soul. Who hath been ever so full of woe, and who hath been brought so low into the dust of death? His virtues were unspeakable, and righteous above all measure, yet was He accounted among the wicked. And if these were the causes that Christ had to complain, then think not that His cryings were above His sorrow; to see so near unto His heart, even in His own person, innocence blamed, virtue defaced, righteousness trodden down, holiness profaned, love despised, glory contemned, honour reviled, all goodness ashamed, faith oppugned, and life wounded to death; how could He yet abstain from strong crying and tears, when the malice of Satan had gotten so great a conquest? His grief was exceeding to see all virtue and godliness so trodden under feet and Satan to prevail against man, to his everlasting condemnation. No creature could ever bear such a perfect image of a man of sorrow. But the height and depth of all miseries was yet behind: the sin that He hated He must take it upon His own body, and bear the wrath of His Father, that was poured out against it. This is the fulness of all pain that compassed Him round about, which no tongue is able to utter, and no heart can conceive.
IV. But let us now see what the apostle further teacheth us, and while our Saviour Christ is in these great extremities, WHAT FRUIT OF WELL-DOING HE HATH LEARNED BY IT. It followeth, and although He were the Son, yet learned He obedience by the things He suffered. Lo, this was no little profit of all His troubles; He learned thereby, how and what it was to obey His Father; He might have great boldness that His obedience was perfect. The shame of the world, the afflictions of the flesh, the vexations of the mind, the pains of hell, when these could make Him utter no other words but, Father, as Thou wilt, so let it be done, what hope, what faith did He surely build on, that His obedience was precious in the sight of His Father? This example is our instruction. We know then best how we love the Lord, when we feel by experience what we will suffer for His sake. So faint not in your mournings, but endure patiently; you know not the happiness of that which seemeth your misery; let this be the first cause why we should be glad of temptations. Lo, these are the healthful counsels of the Lord toward us, that we should be made like unto His Son Christ in many afflictions, that at the last we might be also like Him in eternal glory. Thus far we have heard two special causes why we ought to rejoice in all temptations: the one, that so we learn true obedience; the other, that by them we be made like unto Christ. The third cause at this time which I will touch, is this: God sendeth us sundry chastisements, and especially that which is most grievous of all other, the anguish of spirit, and affliction of the soul; for this purpose, that we should be warned in time how to turn unto Him and be free from the plague when it cometh. It followeth in the apostle: And being consecrate, He was made the author of salvation to all them that obey Him.
V. In these words we are taught, WHAT FRUIT AND COMMODITY WE HAVE THROUGH THESE BITTER SUFFERINGS OF OUR SAVIOUR CHRIST, AND ALSO BY WHAT MEANS WE ARE MADE PARTAKERS OF IT. The fruit is eternal salvation, the means to go unto it is obedience. In the first we learn that all promise and hope of life is in Christ alone; He hath alone the words of life, and he that dwelleth not in Him, shall see no life: but the wrath of God abideth on him. Take hold of Christ, and take hold of life; reach forth thine hand to any other thing, and thou reachest unto vanity which cannot help. (E. Deering, B. D.)
Distractions in prayer
Such is the pattern which He, who is our pattern, gives us of acceptable effectual prayer. What are our prayers? Heavy, for the most part, and earthly; often we are unwilling to begin them, readily falling in with some plea, why we should not pray now, readily ceasing. And well may we have no pleasure in prayers such as we too often offer. Or of those she really desire to pray, how many have their minds so little controlled at other times, or so thronged with the things of this life, that the thoughts of the world pour in upon them, when they would pray. Step by step, we sunk amid the distractions of the world, and step by step only may we hope that our Father will raise us out of the mire wherein we plunged ourselves. Rut our first step, the very beginning and condition of our restoration, is to unlearn the distractions whereby we have been beset. In seeking to remedy our distractions, our first labour must be to amend ourselves. Such as we are at other times, such will our prayers be. A person cannot be full of cares, and riches, and pleasures, and enjoyments, and vanities of this life, up to the very moment when he falls down at Gods footstool, and leave these companions of his other hours behind him, so that they will not thrust themselves in with him into the holy presence. We cannot keep our thoughts disengaged at prayer, if they are through the day engaged; we cannot keep out vain thoughts then, if at other times we yield to them. We must live more to God, if we would pray more to God; we must be less engrossed with the world, if we would not have the world thrust itself in upon our prayers and stifle them. But still further, even when we would serve God, or do our duty in this life, we must see that we do our very duties calmly. There is a religious, as well as a worldly, distraction. We may mix up self in doing duty, as well as when we make self our end. Religious excitement, or excitement about things of religion, may as effectually bar our praying as eagerness about worldly things. We may be engaged about the things of God, yet our mind may all the while centre in these things, not in God. Holy Scripture joins these two together, calmness or sobriety and prayer; Be ye therefore sober, and watch unto prayer. Peace is the beginning and end of prayer; its condition and its reward. Resign yourselves, that ye may pray, and God will guard your thoughts, and hold them to Himself. If, also, you would guard against wandering in prater, you must practise yourself in keeping a check upon your thoughts at other times. In this busy age, in which every one would know about everything, and, like the Athenians, our occupation seems to be to know some new thing, and what conveys news is thought the instrument of knowledge, and knowledge of every sort is thought a good, it is not a light matter, but one to which we must take great heed; what we hear, and admit into our minds. Our minds are holy things: they are the temples of God; and so, for His honors sake who has so hallowed them, we should be on our guard what we allow to enter there. Be not curious about things which concern you not: what happens in the street, or passes by you, or befalls a neighbour, unless charity requires it of you. These things waste the mind more than you can well think. Rather recollect that your concern is not with the world; your home, your hopes, your abiding-place, is not here, but in God; your citizenship is not on earth, but in the heavens; your places here shall shortly know you no more; the earth shall contain no more of you than the dust of your bodies, in keeping for you against the resurrection. Then, on the other hand, as we seek, during the day, to weaken the hold which the world has upon us and our thoughts, so must we by His grace to strengthen our own capacity of turning to God. Away from the world and to God! Commit to Him thoughts, words, and works, to be ordered by His governance, to do that is righteous in His sight; to be begun, continued, and ended in Him. So when you come to your fuller and more set devotions, you may hope that He, whom you serve continually, will keep you then also, and will vouchsafe Himself to visit you, and be in your thoughts, which you would fain make His, and will shut out the world by filling your thoughts with Himself. It is the infrequency of prayer which makes prayer so difficult. It is not a great effort now and then, which makes the things even of this life easy to us; it is their being the habit of our bodies or our minds. It was by continued exercise which we were not aware of, that our bodies, as children, were strengthened; it was by continued practice that we learnt anything. By continued gazing at far-off objects, the eye sees further than others; by continued practice the hand becomes steadied and obeys the motions of our mind. So and much more must the mind, by continual exercise, be steadied, to fix itself on Him whom it cannot grasp, and look up to Him whom it cannot see. Yea, so much the more exceedingly must it with strong effort fix itself by His grace on Him, because we cannot see Him or approach to Him, but by His revealing Himself and coming down to us, and giving us eyes to see and hearts to comprehend; and this He will do only to the earnest and persevering, and to us severally, as we are such. They then will pray best, who, praying truly, pray oftenest. This, also, is one great blessing of the practice of ejaculatory prayer, that is, prayer which is darted up from the mind in the little intervals which occur, whatever we are doing, Nothing goes on without breaks, to leave us space to turn to God. Amid conversation there is silence; in the busiest life there are moments, if we would mark them, when we must remain idle. We are kept waiting, or we must bear what is wearisome; let prayer take the place of impatience. In preparing for business, let prayer take the place of eagerness; in closing it, of self-satisfaction. Are we weary? be it our refreshment! Are we strong? let us hallow our strength by thanksgiving! The very preparation or close of any business brings with it of necessity a pause, teaching us by this very respite to begin and end with prayer; with prayer beforehand for His help, or at the end thanksgiving to Him who carried us through it, or for pardon for what has been amiss in it. Such are some of the more distant preparations for prayer, such as it should be, fixed and earnest; to strive to make God, not the world, the end of our lives; not to be taken up even with our duties in the world, but amid them to seek Him; to subdue self, and put a restraint upon our senses at other times, that we may have the control over them then; to lift our thoughts to Him at other times, so will they rise more readily then. These are, in their very nature, slowly learnt. Yet as, if wholly learnt, it were heaven itself, so is each step, a step heavenwards. Yet there are many more immediate helps, at the very time of prayer. Neglect nothing which can produce reverence. Pass not at once from the things of this world to prayer, but collect thyself. Think what thou art, what God is; thyself a child, and God thy Father; but also thyself dust and ashes, God, a consuming fire, before whom angels hide their faces: thyself unholy, God holy; thyself a sinner, God thy Judge. Then forget not that of thyself thou canst not pray. We come before Him, as helpless creatures, who need to be taught what to ask for, and knowing, to be enabled to ask, and a-king, to be enabled to persevere to ask. Then watch thyself, what helps or hinders thee to fix thy mind on God. Then as to the words of our prayer: we should beware how we pass hastily over any of our prayers. It is not how much we say, but what we pray, which is of real moment. Then, the best models of prayer consist of brief petitions, as suited to men in need; for when they really feel their need, they use not many words. Lord, save us, we perish, is the cry of need. And so the petitions of the pattern of all prayer, our Lords, are very short, but each containing manifold prayers. So are the Psalms in prayer or praise: Blot out all mine iniquities, Create in me a new heart, Cast me not away from Thy presence, Save me by Thy Name. In this way we may collect our strength and attention for each petition, and so pray on, step by step, through the whole, resting at each step on Him, who alone can carry us to the end, and if, by human frailty, we be distracted, sum up briefly with one strong concentrated effort what we have lost by wandering. In public prayer the case is different. For here, if we wander, the prayers meanwhile go on, and we find that we have lost a portion of our daily bread; that Gods Church on earth has been praising with angels and archangels and the Church in heaven, while we have been bringing our sheep and our oxen and our money-changing, the things of this life, into Gods presence and the court of heaven. Yet the remedies are the same, and we have even greater helps. The majesty of the place may well awe us with devotion, and will aid us to it, if we waste not its impressiveness by our negligence or frivolity. Come we then calmly to this holy place, not thinking or speaking, up to its very threshold, of things of earth, but as men bent on a great service, where much is at stake; coming to a holy presence, from whom depends our all. Pray we, as we enter it, that God would guard our thoughts and compose oar minds and fix them on Him. Employ we any leisure before the service b, gins, in thought or private prayer; guard we our eyes from straying to those around us; listen we reverently to His holy word; use the pause before each prayer to ask God to enable us to pray this prayer also; and so pray each separate prayer, as far as we can, relying on His gracious aid. Yet we are not to think that by these or any other remedies distraction is to be cured at once. We cannot undo at once the habit, it may be, of years. Distraction will come through weakness, ill-health, fatigue: only pray, guard, strive against it; humble yourselves under it, and for the past negligences, of which it is mostly the sad fruit; rely less upon yourself, cast yourself more upon God, hang more wholly upon Him, and long the more for that blessed time, when the redeemed of the Lord shall serve Him day and night without distraction. (E. B. Pusey, D. D.)
Begging prayers
A little boy, one of the Sunday-school children in Jamaica, called upon the missionary and stated that he had lately been very ill, and in his sickness often wished his minister had been present to pray with him. But Thomas, said the missionary, I hope you prayed. Oh yes, sir. Well, how did you pray? Why, sir, I begged. (Henry T. Williams.)
The grace of tears
Lord Jesus, give me the grace of tears. (Augustine.)
Tears a safety-valve
The safety-valve of the heart when too much pressure is laid on. (Albert Smith.)
Yet learned He obedience by the things which He suffered.
Suffering the school of obedience
I. GOD HAS LAID EVEN UPON SORROW THE DESTINY OF FULFILLING HIS PURPOSES OF MERCY. In the beginning, sorrow was the wages of sin, penal and working death; by the law of Christs redemption, it is become a discipline of cleansing and perfection. To the impenitent, and such as will not obey the truth, it is still, as ever, a dark and crushing penalty; to the contrite and obedient it is as the refiners fire, keen and searching, purging out the soils, and perfecting the renewal of our spiritual nature. It is the discipline of saints, and the safest, though the austerest, school of sanctity; and that because suffering, or, as we are wont to say, trial, turns our knowledge into reality. There is laid upon us a mighty hand, from whose shadow we cannot flee. All general truths teem with a particular meaning, and speak to us with a piercing emphasis. Equally true this is, also, of all bright and blessed truths: they also are quickened with a living energy. The promises of heaven, and the times of refreshing, and the rest of the saints, and the love of God, and the presence of Christ, which we have so long thought of, and talked about, and felt after, and yet never seemed to grasp–all these likewise become realities. They seem to gather round us, andshed sensible influences of peace upon our suffering hearts; and this is what we mean when we say, I have long known these things to be true, but now I feel them to be true.
II. And, in the next place, SUFFERINGS SO PUT OUR FAITH ON TRIAL AS TO STRENGTHEN AND CONFIRM IT. They develop what was lying hid in us, unknown even to ourselves. And therefore we often see persons, who have shown no very great tokens of high devotion, come out, under the pressure of trials, into a more elevated bearing. This is especially true of sickness and affliction. Not only are persons of a holy life made to shine with a more radiant brightness, but common Christians, of no note or visibleness, are changed to a saintly character. They wrestle with their trial, as the patriarch with his unknown companion, and will not let it go without a blessing; and thereby the gifts which lie enwrapped in a regenerate nature are unfolded into life and energy.
III. Once more: NOTHING SO LIKENS US TO THE EXAMPLE OF CHRIST AS SUFFERING. All that suffer are not therefore saints; alas! far from it, for many suffer without the fruits of sanctity; but all saints at some time, and in some way and measure, have entered into the mystery of suffering. And this throws light on a very perplexing thought in which we sometimes entangle ourselves; I mean, on the wonderful fact that oftentimes the same persons are as visibly marked by sorrows as by sanctity. They seem never to pass out of the shadow of affliction; they seem to be a mark for all the storms and arrows of adversity, the world esteems them to be stricken, smitten of God, and afflicted; even religious people are perplexed at their trials. When we see eminently holy persons suddenly bereaved, or suffering sharp bodily anguish, and their trials long drawn out, or multiplied by succession, we often say, How strange and dark is this dispensation! Who would have thought that one so poor, so patient, and resigned, should have been so visited and overwhelmed by strokes? And yet all this shows how shallow and blind our faith is, for we know little even of those we know best; we readily overrate their character, at all events they are far otherwise in the esteem of God than in our judgment; our thoughts are not His thoughts: we set up a poor, dim, depressed standard of perfection and we should miserably defraud even those we love most if it were in our power to mete out their trials by our measures; we little know what God is doing, and how can we know the way? And we often think that the sorrows of the saints are sent for their punishment, when they are sent for their perfection. We forget that Christ suffered, and why; and how He learned obedience, and what that obedience was. He was made perfect by sufferings, and that perfection, whatsoever it be, has an ineffable depth of meaning. It was not only a sacerdotal perfection by consecration to the priesthood of Melchisedec, but something of which that was the formal expression and manifestation of a great spiritual reality, a perfection of holiness, knowledge, obedience, sympathy, and will. And of this perfection, after the measures of a creature, and the proportions of our mere manhood, are the saints made to partake; they are purified, that they may be made perfect. (Archdeacon H. E. Manning.)
Learning obedience
Though He was a Son, He learned. Though a Son, i.e., though He was so exalted a being, not a mere servant like the angels, but One whom the angels worship. Not a servant like Moses or like Aaron, but the Son by whom God made the worlds, yet even He had something to learn, and learned it in the days of His flesh. There is a mystery here, yet if we are content to inquire instead of speculate we shall find sufficient answer. There is light in the word obedience. He learned not the art and wisdom of commanding, this belonged to His Eternal Nature. But obedience is an art which belongs of right to lower ranks of being. The Highest cannot, as the Highest, obey, for there is no authority above His own. Obedience may be taught from a throne, but it cannot be learned by one who occupies it. Thus, even the Son of God might learn obedience if He saw fit to empty Himself of Divine prerogative and take upon Him the form of a servant, wearing our human nature and accepting our duties and temptations. Therefore because obedience is so foreign to the Divine nature, it is a thing which the Son of God could learn by becoming incarnate, and could only learn by stooping to share our discipline and bear the Divine will as a yoke instead of wield it as a sceptre. Viewing the Sonship of Christ under another aspect, it might have been thought that a perfect Son would have needed no more teaching, and that when found in fashion as man, His filial spirit, His perfect readiness to obey would have sufficed. But this is denied. Having become a servant, having come down under the yoke of commandments, it is insisted that the Son went right through the actual course of human discipline, evading nothing, missing nothing, until He crowned His obedience by submission, even unto death. Though a Son He learnt obedience by suffering. Could He not learn it otherwise? We know that suffering is needful in our case because our spirits are so faulty, because we are so prone to err and go astray. But a Son, a perfect Son I surely such an One having no share in our defects might have learnt obedience without pain! Can we be wrong in such a view? Perhaps not. If a faultless Son began life in a faultless world; if He were born into a sinless family, or were created in a paradise where no fall had taken place, He might possibly have learned obedience by a painless and unfailing life of conformity to the Fathers will. But whatever might have been possible in heaven or in paradise, painless obedience was not possible in the moral wilderness. In a world where sin abounded Christ had constantly to choose between affliction and iniquity. Without using miraculous powers to screen Himself from the natural consequences of His actions, He was obliged to suffer. The suffering was at once the measure and test of His obedience, and thus it was He passed through pain to perfectness as a learner in the school of human life. This must be so, yet still our hearts cry out in pity for One so holy and true–surely it was not needful for Him to suffer so much! Could not the Father have spared His well-beloved Son such extreme agonies while obedience was being learned? The answer is clear. This might have been possible under some circumstances. An easier life might have been laid out for Jesus as it is laid out for most of us. He might have lived obediently in the midst of plenty. Why then should the Father be pleased to set His well-beloved Son such agonising tasks, why be pleased to bruise and put to grief the Son who always did His will? That is a question which admits of many answers. It is one which none but the Father Himself can answer altogether, yet part of His answer shines before us here. The Son of God came not to learn obedience for Himself, but for our sakes. He came not merely to become perfect As a man before God who reads the heart, but to be visibly perfect before men who can only read actions. He came to be made thus visibly perfect not only as a man, but as a Saviour and as the Author of obedience in us. Look at a few reasons why death, the death of the Cross, was needful to this end. Christ came to set us an example. He came to do much more than this, but that was one great object of His incarnation. But if He had stopped short of obedience unto death, He would have left no example how we ought to act when shut up to the dilemma of being obliged to either sin or die. Christ came to magnify Divine law, to make it venerable in our sight, and to declare the entire rightness of Gods will. While Gods will appoints us a path of flowers, and while duty brings honour and reward, gratitude and trust are easy. But when duty runs straight into a Red Sea! When it leads to a fiery furnace! When the soul, intent on doing right, finds itself alone, misunderstood, and persecuted, then is the time when the enemy finds a listening ear for his slander, God is careless, God is cruel, God is unfaithful to those who are most faithful to Himself. Where then would be the value of Christs testimony to the goodness of Gods will when most in danger of being doubted, if He Himself had been spared this terrible temptation? Be thou faithful unto death; we can hear that from Christ. Christ came to reveal the Divine sympathy with us in all our afflictions, but that revelation would have been very partial if destitute of any kindly light to shed on dying eyes. We are not all called to martyrdom, hut we have all to die. But where could we have seen the sympathy of Christ with ourselves as mortal, if He had left the world by a private door of rapture? Wherefore to be our sympathetic Friend in the dark valley, Jesus was obedient even unto death. Christ came to preach the forgiveness of sins, to declare the righteousness of God in the act of forgiveness, to commend the love of God to all men, including the very chief of sinners and the most malignant of His foes; and in all these things He must have failed had His obedience stopped short of death. Wherefore Jesus was obedient unto death. Christ came to bring life and immortality to light, and for this end it was needful He should die and rise again. The mere continuance of His life would have had no revelation of a future life to us. But an emptied grave visibly spoils death, breaks the bars of Hades, preaches resurrection to us, who have to die, and reveals Jesus as the first-fruits of them that slept. Wherefore that He might be the Author of an eternal salvation and bring life end immortality to light, the Son was obedient unto death. (T. V. Tymms.)
Christ a learner
I. THE DIVINE EXALTATION OF THE CHARACTER OF HIM WHO IS THE REDEEMER OF MEN, A Son. Though He were a Son, The Son of God, as in the previous context. We understand this expression as in the first place presenting the Redeemer in the nature, and with the attributes of Deity.
II. His GRACIOUS CONDESCENSION. Though He were a Son, yet learned He obedience, &c. Here we behold the Son of God, He who was infinite in excellency and in working, condescending to become a learner, placing Himself in circumstances in which He might receive instruction. No doubt the Spirit of God that was in Him taught Him better than the scribe, or priest, or ruler, or parent could; but the child Jesus, growing up to manhood, learned, received the wisdom, the counsel, the instruction that is from God. But, though He were a Son, He learned something more than knowledge. He learned how to obey. What affections were involved in obedience! What satisfaction resulted to the obedient mind! What intimate and fervent communion existed between Him that was obeyed and Him that did obey! But the lowliest condescension that we mark is, that He learned obedience by suffering. There are many who are willing to obey, and who find pleasure in obedience, when there is only joy, when there is the reward of obedience; but to go through the deep flood, to pass under the dark cloud, to penetrate the fiery furnace, and to endure all that could be heaped in the shape of sorrows, and woes, and to do this that He might learn obedience–this was Christs condescension. Ah! but He suffered more than this. The contradiction of sinners against Himself He suffered. He learned obedience by suffering ingratitude from those to whom He showed mercy. He suffered contumely and reproach, He entered into our sorrows. He Himself took our griefs and carried our sorrows. Still farther, and even more painful, was His humiliation. We know what it is to be convinced of sin; we know what it is to be overwhelmed with shame for sin. I know that Jesus knew no sin; but oh, in this I see the poignancy of His grief, when all our sins were made to meet on Him. And He was made perfect–He condescended to be made perfect by the things which He suffered, that He should be a perfectly righteous person in the midst of the most trying circumstances–that He should love even unto death, though death was heaped upon Him for His love.
III. THE END TO BE ACCOMPLISHED BY HIS HUMILIATION. That He might become the author of eternal salvation unto all them that obey Him. How much there is in those words! There would have been no salvation for guilty men if Jesus had not come to die. It is in Christs excellencies originally; it is in Christ as the perfect Saviour that we can alone have confidence towards God. He is the author of salvation, inasmuch as He has taken away sin by the sacrifice of Himself; He is the author of salvation, inasmuch as He has endured the curse of the broken law, and delivered us from the sentence of condemnation; He is the author of salvation, inasmuch as He has received from His Father the promised Spirit, by which poor guilty sinners are regenerated, and faith wrought in them, to trust in Jesus and His finished work; He is the author of salvation, inasmuch as He has gone to heaven to carry on the work, and He ever lives to make intercession for His people, and is able to save to the very uttermost all that come unto God by Him. He is the author of salvation, for it is the gospel that produces the happy change, that translates from the kingdom of darkness into the kingdom of light and glory. But it is eternal salvation. It is a salvation that, having been begun, will never be interrupted; it is a salvation that will be unto the end; it is a salvation that will be found, in its consummation, in the presence of God, where there is fulness of joy, and at His right hand, where there are pleasures for evermore. Unto all them that obey Him. You will mark what the obedience is which Christ requires. If He be a Son, He has authority. In His character of Son He is set at the right hand of the Majesty on high. Now, to obey Christ is to fulfil that which He has enjoined: in the first place, to accept of Him as He is offered; in the next place, to come to Him as He invites; in the third place, to trust in Him as He warrants; in the fourth place, to plead His finished work, and to seek the enjoyment of forgiveness through His continual intercession. Bowing to His sceptre, taking up His cross, uniting ourselves to His people, giving ourselves, first to the Lord, and then to one another, according to His will. All those that thus obey Him have the assurance that He is the author of eternal salvation unto them. Not by works of righteousness that they have done, but they are saved for His sake, and the work is wrought in them for His glory, and they are obedient to Him, having been made willing in the day of His power. (J. W.Massie, D. D.)
The suffering Son
I. INFINITE LOVE PREVAILED WITH THE SON OF GOD, TO LAY ASIDE THE PRIVILEGE OF HIS INFINITE DIGNITY, THAT HE MIGHT SUFFER FOR US AND OUR REDEMPTION. Although He was a Son, yet He learned, &c.
1. The name of Son carrieth with it infinite dignity, as our apostle proves at large (Heb 1:3-4, &c.).
2. He voluntarily laid aside the consideration, advantage, and exercise of it, that He might suffer for us. This our apostle fully expresseth Php 2:5-8). Concerning which we must observe, that the Son of God could not absolutely and really part with His eternal glory. Whatever He did, He was the Son of God, and God still. But He is said to empty Himself of His Divine glory
(1) With respect to the infinite condescension of His person.
(2) With respect to the manifestations of it in this world.
II. IN HIS SUFFERINGS, AND NOTWITHSTANDING THEM ALL, THE LORD CHRIST WAS THE SON STILL, THE SON OF GOD. He was so both as to real relation and as to suitable affection. He had in them all the state of a Son, and the love of a Son.
III. A PRACTICAL EXPERIENCE OF OBEDIENCE TO GOD IN SOME CASES WILL COST US DEAR. We cannot learn it but through the suffering of those things which will assuredly befall us on the account thereof. So was it with the Lord Christ. I intend not here the difficulties we meet withal in mortifying the internal lusts and corruptions of nature, for these had no place in the example here proposed to us. Those only are respected which come on us from without. And it is an especial kind of obedience also, namely, that which holds some conformity to the obedience of Christ, that is intended. Wherefore
1. It must be singular; it must have somewhat in it, that may, in an especial manner, turn the eyes of others towards it.
2. It is required that this obedience be universal. Sufferings will attend it. They that live godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer persecution. For this kind of obedience will be observed in the world. It cannot escape observation, because it is singular and it provokes the world, because it will admit of no compliance with it. And where the world is first awakened and then enraged, suffering of one kind or another will ensue. If it do not bite and tear, it will bark and rage.
IV. SUFFERINGS UNDERGONE ACCORDING TO THE WILL OF GOD ARE HIGHLY INSTRUCTIVE. Even Christ Himself learned by the things which He suffered, and much more may we who have so much more to learn. God designs our sufferings to this end, and to this end He blesseth them.
V. IN ALL THESE THINGS, BOTH AS TO SUFFERING, AND LEARNING, OR PROFITING THEREBY, WE HAVE A GREAT EXAMPLE IN OUR LORD JESUS CHRIST. AS such is He proposed unto us in all His course of obedience, especially in His sufferings (1Pe 2:2). For He would leave nothing undone which was any way needful, that His great work of sanctifying and saving His church to the utmost might be perfect.
VI. THE LOVE OF GOD TOWARDS ANY, THE RELATION OF ANY UNTO GOD, HINDERS NOT BUT THAT THEY MAY UNDERGO GREAT SUFFERINGS AND TRIALS. The Lord Christ did so, although He were a Son. And this instance irrefragably confirms our position. For the love of God to Jesus Christ was singular and supereminent. And yet His sufferings and trials were singular also. And in the whole course of the Scripture we may observe that the nearer any have been unto God, the greater have been their trials. For
1. There is not in such trials and exercises an) thing that is absolutely evil, but they are all such as may be rendered good, useful, honourable to the sufferers.
2. The love of God and the gracious emanations of it can, and do, abundantly compensate the temporary evils which any do undergo according to His will.
3. The glory of God, which is the end designed unto, and which shall infallibly ensue upon all the sufferings of the people of God, and that so much the greater as any of them, on any account, are nearer than others unto Him, is such a good unto them which suffer, as that their sufferings neither are, nor are esteemed by them to be evil. (John Owen, D. D.)
The education of sons of God
I. SONSHIP DOES NOT EXEMPT FROM SUFFERING.
1. Not even Jesus, as a Son, escaped suffering.
2. No honour put upon sons of God will exempt them from suffering.
3. No holiness of character, nor completeness of obedience, can exempt the children of God from the school of suffering.
4. No prayer of Gods sons, however earnest, will remove every thorn in the flesh from them.
5. No love in Gods child, however fervent, will prevent his being tried.
II. SUFFERING DOES NOT MAR SONSHIP. The case of our Lord is set forth as a model for all the sons of God.
1. His poverty did not disprove His Sonship (Luk 2:12).
2. His temptations did not shake His Sonship (Mat 4:3).
3. His endurance of slander did not jeopardise it (Joh 10:36).
4. His fear and sorrow did not put it in dispute (Mt
26:39).
5. His desertion by men did not invalidate it (Joh 16:32).
6. His bring forsaken of God did not alter it (Luk 23:46).
7. His death cast no doubt thereon (Mar 15:39). He rose again, and thus proved His Fathers pleasure in Him (Joh 20:17).
III. OBEDIENCE HAS TO BE LEARNED EVEN BY SONS.
1. It must be learned experimentally.
2. It must be learned by suffering.
3. It must be learned for use in earth and in heaven.
(1) On earth by sympathy with others.
(2) In heaven by perfect praise to God growing out of experience.
IV. SUFFERING HAS A PECULIAR POWER TO TEACH TRUE SONS. It is a better tutor than all else, because
1. It touches the mans self; his hone, his flesh, his heart.
2. It tests his graces, and sweeps away those shams which are not proofs of obedience, but pretences of self-will.
3. It goes to the root, and tests the truth of our new nature. It shows whether repentance, faith, prayer, &c., are mere importations, or home-grown fruits.
4. It tests our endurance, and makes us see how far we are established in the obedience which we think we possess. Can we say, Though He slay me, yet will I trust in Him?
(1) The anxious question–Am I a son?
(2) The aspiring desire–Let me learn obedience.
(3) The accepted discipline–I submit to suffer. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Instructed by suffering
I bear my willing witness that I owe more to the fire, and the hammer, and the file, than to anything else in my Lords workshop. I sometimes question whether I have ever learned anything except through the rod. When my school-room is darkened, I see most. (C. H.Spurgeon.)
Suffering a good teacher of divinity
A minister was recovering from a danger, bus illness, when one of his friends addressed him thus, Sir, though God seems to be bringing you up from the gates of death, yet it will be a long time before you will sufficiently retrieve your strength, and regain vigour enough of mind to preach as usual. The good man answered, You are mistaken, my friend: for this six weeks illness has taught me more divinity than all my past studies and all my ten years ministry put together.
Christs experience of obedience
Obedience belongs to a servant, but accordance, concurrence, co-operation, are the characteristics of a son. In His eternal union with God there was no distinction of will and work between Him and His Father; as the Fathers life was the Sons life, and the Fathers glory the Sons also, so the Son was the very Word and Wisdom of the Father, His Power and Co-equal Minister in all things, the same and not the same as He Himself. But in the days of His flesh, when He had humbled Himself to the form of a servant, taking on Himself a separate will and a separate work, and the toil and sufferings incident to a creature, then what had been mere concurrence became obedience. This, then, is the force of the words, Though He was a Son, yet had He experience of obedience. He took on Him a lower nature, and wrought in it towards a Will higher and more perfect than it. Further, He learned obedience amid suffering, and therefore amid temptation. Before He came on earth He was infinitely above joy and grief, fear and anger, pain and heaviness; but afterwards all these properties and many more were His as fully as they are ours. Before He came on earth He had hut the perfections of God, but afterwards He had also the virtues of a creature, such as faith, meekness, self-denial. Before He came on earth He could not be tempted of evil, but afterwards He had a mans heart, a mans tears, and a mans wants and infirmities. His Divine nature indeed pervaded His manhood, so that every deed and word of His in the flesh savoured of eternity and infinity; but, on the other hand, from the time He was born of the Virgin Mary, He had a natural fear or danger, a natural shrinking from pain, though ever subject to the ruling influence of that Holy and Eternal Essence which was in Him. Thus He possessed at once a double assemblage of attributes, Divine and human. Still He was all-powerful, though in the form of a servant; still He was all-knowing, though seemingly ignorant; still incapable of temptation, though exposed to it. (J. H. Newman, D. D.)
Made perfect
The perfect Son
I. THE PERFECTION OF THE CHARACTER OF CHRIST. Of the manner of His life before He assumed the office of a public teacher we know almost nothing, except that He was not addicted to studious retirement, nor to the acquisition of human science, which have been employed by teachers of false religions to dazzle the ignorant; but that, living in the common intercourse of society. He laboured in the occupation of His reputed father, increasing in mind as in stature. When He appeared as the Messenger of Heaven He was already complete in the graces which His high character demanded, and that knowledge which was requisite for a teacher of righteousness. His pure life is the best illustration of His moral precepts. His doctrines were, literally, tidings of joy, for He disclosed the mercy and grace of the Divine nature towards penitent offenders, which all the efforts of the human understanding could never perfectly ascertain. He disclosed the high destination of man; He brought life and immortality clearly to light through His gospel. His precepts, also, were good tidings; He spake wholesome words, prescribing a doctrine according to godliness; His aim was to purify the heart and mind, and to teach us to live soberly, righteously, and godly, to qualify us for the glory and immortality which He had unfolded. In His temper and manners Christ exhibited a perfect model of all that can adorn and dignify human nature; He did no sin, nor was guile found in His mouth. But it was not innocence nor purity only that were found in His character; the highest virtues of our nature were peculiarly His; He exhibited a life, not only of strict justice, but of overflowing benignity and mercy, of the most tender compassion, and the most ardent piety. These virtues were so mingled, tempered, and contrasted, as to render the whole assemblage delightful, graceful, and perfect the whole life of Christ was a pattern of the sanctity and beauty which He portrayed in His discourses. Christ was perfect in His manner of communicating and enjoining His instructions; He spake with authority, yet with an admirable modesty and simplicity, beautifully calculated to inform and to impress the mind and the heart; He inculcates the most important lessons with simplicity and plainness adapted to human capacity; preferring use to the glare of ornament, no quaint play of words weakens the force of His emphatic language; all is chaste and pore alike–full of energy and of grace. Considered, then, even as a man, the character of Christ is perfect–nowhere can we find another so resplendent and so pleasing–so amiable and so venerable–one which presents so much for our admiration and our love; its beauties are peculiar, its awful greatness and dignity are relieved by the most concilating tenderness. Christ was made perfect. This expression, besides the meaning in which we have hitherto taken it, has a special reference to the subject which is described in this chapter; that subject is the priesthood and the sacrifice of Christ. Christ was made perfect by possessing the natural qualifications of the High Priest. He was able to have compassion on the ignorant, the sinning, the weak, and the afflicted, because He Himself was compassed with infirmity. In proof of this the apostle appeals to facts well known in the days of His flesh. He offered up prayers and supplications with strong crying and tears. If sympathy arises from the experience of suffering, and fellowship in affliction, we may well rely on the fellow feeling of the High Priest, who was made perfect through suffering whether, then, we view Christ as a teacher of righteousness, or as a High Priest of good things to come, the perfection of His nature is evident.
II. THE COMPLETE SALVATION OF WHICH HE IS THE AUTHOR.
III. THE CHARACTER OF THOSE TO WHOM THIS SALVATION IS IMPARTED. When we consider the high benefits procured for us by Christ, our hearts are naturally animated with the most grateful affection; and the natural expression of that affection is obedience to the will of our benefactor. That a good and ingenuous mind naturally dictates as our right conduct on such occasions is the very conduct which our Redeemer requires–that we may be made meet to be partakers of ,he blessings He hath purchased.
1. What you have heard now affords a most delightful subject of contemplation. What can be more pleasant to the human mind than to consider the mercy of our Heavenly Father, who hath sent His Son into the world to save us–the unsullied purity of the Redeemers character–the glorious privileges which He has conferred on this state of being, and the unfading joys He hath promised in the world to come?
2. It affords a subject of devout gratitude. What can warm the heart with lively and pious affection more than the display of that love of God, who sent His Son to die for us while we were yet sinners?
3. It affords a subject for watchful attention. While the pardon of sin has been purchased by Christ, and the hope of heaven offered to our view, we are not released from the obligations to duty. (L. Adamson, D. D.)
Jesus, the model of perfection
I. In the first place, we see the perfection of Jesus as our Saviour–in the PERFECT EXAMPLE He sets us. He is an example not of one point of character only, but of every point. And He is perfect in them all. He never failed in any of them. A young man had a situation as clerk in a mercantile house in one of our large cities. In writing home to his mother one day he said, I have been connected in business, at different times, with a number of merchants, all of them members of Christian churches; but I must say that Mr. Johnson, with whom I am now employed, is the best of them all, in the way in which be governs himself by his religion, in all his business affairs. I take great pleasure in watching how faithfully he does this. I must say of him that he is a Christian all over. It was a great honour to this good merchant that one of his clerks should feel obliged to speak thus of him. Now let us remember these last two illustrations; and let us all try to follow the example which Jesus sets us, in such a way that we may be Christians in little things–and Christians all over.
II. Jesus is a perfect Saviour, in the second place, because He gives us PERFECT HELP. There are three things about Jesus which make Him a perfect Helper.
1. He is–a near helper. Many persons, when they are in need of help, can think of their friends at home, who would be glad to help them. But they are far away, and it is impossible for them to do anything in the way of helping. But how different it is with Jesus! He is in every place. He is always near. He is a God–a helper–at hand, and not afar off. And this is one thing that makes Him a perfect Helper.
2. He is–able to help. It sometimes happens that though our friends are near us in our trouble, yet they are not able to help us. But it is not so with Jesus. Nothing is impressible with Him. His ability to help is perfect. St. Paul tells us that–He is able to save, and to helps unto the uttermost. He is able to do exceeding abundantly above all that we can ask or think.
3. He is willing to help. As one of our beautiful collects says, He is more ready to hear than we to pray, and is wont to give more than either we desire or deserve.
III. But, in the third place, He is a perfect Saviour, because He prepares for His people a PERFECT HOME in heaven. He will make their bodies perfect, after the pattern of His own glorious body, as it appeared on the Mount of Transfiguration. He will make their souls perfect. They will be entirely free from sin for ever. He will put them in a perfect home. (R. Newton, D. D.)
The author of eternal salvation
Eternal salvation in Christ
In what respects is He called the author of eternal salvation? I answer, He is ,he author of it, first in this sense, He rendered it possible for the justice, the holiness, and the truth of God, to bestow salvation on whom these attributes could not bestow it, and would not suffer it to be bestowed on other terms–that is, inconsistently with the glory and the honour of God. He could not save but by suffering; He could not ransom us at a less price than His death; and rather than see a world perish, He would not save Himself from being perfected by suffering, that we might be saved from irretrievable perdition. Again, He is the author of salvation in this sense, that He bestows it. He is exalted, a Prince and a Saviour to give repentance and remission of sins. Moreover, Christ is the sole author of eternal salvation to all them that obey Him. He says to you, Take all the benefit, and the only tribute I exact is a tribute which honours me and does not impoverish you–the tribute of praise and thanksgiving; in heart, in lip, in life. Having seen the exclusiveness of His work, and the exclusiveness of His jurisdiction and of His claims to the glory and honour, let us now inquire what salvation is, and what salvation means. He is the author of eternal salvation to all them that obey Him. His greatest glory is, not that He made the universe, nor yet that He rules the universe, but that He has redeemed a lost world; lost, not by His oversight, but by our sin; and by His Cross has brought it back to Himself a redeemed, a reinstated, and a renovated orb. What is this salvation which is so precious? It is a twofold thing, very easily explained and understood. Two great calamities have struck us from the Fall; namely, that we have lost a right to heaven by having justly forfeited it, and that if we had the right we have lost all fitness for it and desire for it by having become polluted, unholy, impure, corrupt. What will be to us salvation must be a provision that will put us right in both respects. The gospel does so, or rather our great High Priest does so. He gives us, first of all, by His sacrifice, His death, a recovery from the curse which we had earned; and by His obedience or righteousness, imputed to us, He entitles us to the inheritance which we had forfeited; and by the gift of His Holy Spirit, whom, He says, I will send unto you,! It regenerates our hearts, gives us new tastes, new sympathies, new thoughts, new life–in short, a new nature. And then one single epithet bestowed upon this salvation marks its character; it is eternal salvation. Now Adams standing was not eternal; it was liable to forfeiture. But our recovered standing in heaven is eternal, and never liable to any forfeiture. Having seen this, let me notice, in the next place, the character of them for whom it is provided. He became by His consecration the author of eternal salvation to all them that obey Him. First, I observe here there is no national monopoly. It is not said to the Jews, and not to the Gentiles, but it is to all them that obey Him. In other words, Christianity is not the peculiarity of an age, not the monopoly of a nation, nor the restriction of a sect; it is not only offered to the election, but it is for all them that obey Him. But, you ask, in the next place, and very justly, What do you mean by obeying? My answer is, that the word obey is not the just expression. The Greek word means, first, to listen, to hear, to hearken; secondly, to submit to, to acquiesce; and thirdly, not its strict meaning, but its intrinsic meaning, to obey, or render obedience to. Salvation is not like a gleam of sunshine that falls upon the evil and the good, but something that is given only to them that intelligently accept it, submit to it–receive it just as Christ reveals it to them. The patient only that takes the prescription makes a step towards recovery from his illness. In order to be benefited by the gospel you must take it just as it is offered, not upon your own terms, but upon the terms of the offerer, and thus alone do you receive eternal salvation. (J. Cumming, D. D.)
The Saviour you need
I. THE UNDOUBTED WILLINGNESS OF JESUS CHRIST TO SAVE. Being made perfect, He became the author of eternal salvation. Now, if we find that He was willing to undergo the process which made Him completely fit for the office of a Saviour, we may certainly conclude that He is willing enough to exercise the qualifications which He has obtained.
II. THE PERFECT FITNESS OF THE SAVIOUR FOR HIS WORK. We will view the fitness both Godward and manward.
1. View it Godward. Sinner, if any one is to deal with God for you so as to avail on your behalf, he must be one of Gods choosing, for no man taketh this honour upon himself, but he that was called of God, as was Aaron. So also Christ glorified not Himself to be made as high priest, but He that said unto Him, Thou art My Son, to-day have I begotten Thee. What God appoints it must be safe for us to accept. In order that Jesus Christ, being appointed, should be fit for His office, it was necessary that He should become man. Surely it is the sin of sins if we reject a Saviour who has made such a stoop in order to be perfectly qualified to save. Being found in fashion as a man, it was necessary towards God that Jesus should fulfil the law, and work out a perfect obedience. The High Priest who is to intercede for us must wear upon his forehead Holiness unto the Lord; and truly such a High Priest we have, for Jesus is holy, harmless, undefiled, and separate from sinners. Nor was this all towards God. The High Priest who should save us must be able to offer a sufficient sacrifice, efficacious to make atonement, so as to vindicate eternal justice and make an end of sin.
2. Christ Jesus, as our High Priest, needed to be perfected manward. O sinner, consider His perfections as they concern yourself. That He might save us He must have power to pardon, and to renew our hearts; these He has to the full, for all power is given unto Him in heaven and in earth; He both gives repentance and remission. There is one delightful thing in Christs perfect qualification to save, namely, that He ever liveth to make intercession for us. If Jesus Christ were dead and had left us the boon of salvation that we might freely help ourselves to it, we should have much to praise Him for; but He is not dead, He is alive. He left us a legacy, but many a legacy is left which never gets to the legatee: lo, the great Maker of the will is alive to carry out His own intentions. He died, and so made the legacy good; He rose again and lives to see that none shall rob any one of His beloved of the portion He has left. What think you of Christ pleading in heaven? Have you ever estimated the power of that plea?
III. THE HIGH POSITION WHICH OUR LORD JESUS TAKES IN REFERENCE TO SALVATION. According to the text, He became the author of eternal salvation. He is the designer, creator, worker, and cause of salvation.
IV. THE REMARKABLE CHARACTER OF THE SALVATION WHICH CHRIST HAS WROUGHT OUT. He is the author of eternal salvation. Oh, how I love that word eternal! Eternal salvation!
1. It is an eternal salvation as opposed to every other kind of deliverance.
2. It is eternal salvation in this sense, that it rescues from eternal condemnation and everlasting punishment.
3. It is eternal salvation as opposed to the risk of falling away and perishing.
4. It will ripen into eternal bliss.
V. THE PERSONS CONCERNED IN THIS SALVATION. TO all them that obey Him. The word obey signifies obedience upon hearing, and this indicates faith. To obey Christ is in its very essence to trust Him; and we might read our text as if it said, The author of eternal salvation to all them that believe in Him. If you would be saved your first act of obedience must be to trust Jesus wholly, simply, heartily, and alone. Recline your soul wholly on Jesus and you are saved now. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Jesus Christ the author of eternal salvation
I. THE OFFICE OF CHRIST, He is the author of eternal salvation. He has undertaken to give back to us a title to heaven and a fitness for it. He has undertaken to save us from the dominion of sin, from the power of the devil, from the pains of hell. He has undertaken to make us the children of God, and heirs of eternal glory.
II. His FITNESS FOR DISCHARGING THIS OFFICE.
1. He was appointed of God to be our High Priest. This appointment was absolutely necessary to make Him duly fitted for the discharge of His office. Without it we could have had no certainty that God would accept His mediation.
2. He had wherewith to offer for the sins of the people. He was able to make reconciliation for iniquity; to offer such a sacrifice for sin as would take it away; and to deliver sinners from the punishment due to them by taking it upon Himself. Thus was the Captain of our salvation made perfect through suffering.
3. Christ is able effectually to intercede for His people. First, in that He ever liveth to make intercession for us. Secondly, in that He has something available to plead in our behalf, even the infinite merits of His own sufferings.
4. He is not only a priest, but a king. The government is upon His shoulders. Whatever happens in nature and in providence is under His control. The gift of the Spirit itself is at His disposal. He is King of kings, and Lord of lords; and shall reign as Mediator, till He hath put all enemies under His feet.
III. THE PERSONS TO WHOM THE BENEFIT OF HIS MEDIATION WILL REACH. Christ died for all. He tasted death for every man. His mediation is sufficient for all. All are invited to share the benefits of it. Christ is the author of eternal salvation to all them, but to them only who obey Him. This obedience has respect to His whole mediatorial office. Those who would be saved by Him must obey Him as their Priest and as their King. As their Priest they must humbly trust in His sacrifice and intercession, and place all their spiritual concerns in His hands. As their King they must submit to His government, and keep His commandments. (E. Cooper, M. A.)
Christ the author, and obedience the condition, of salvation
I. How AND BY WHAT MEANS CHRIST IS THE AUTHOR OF OUR SALVATION; and this is contained in these words, Being made perfect, He became the author of eternal salvation; that is, having finished His course, which was accomplished in His last sufferings; and having received the reward of them, being exalted at the right hand of God, He became the author of eternal salvation to us; so that, by all He did and suffered for us, in the days of His flesh, and in the state of His humiliation, and by all that He still continues to do for us now that He is in heaven at the right hand of God; He hath effected and brought about the great work of our salvation.
1. By the holiness and purity of His doctrine, whereby we are perfectly instructed in the will of God and our duty, and powerfully excited and persuaded to the practice of it.
2. The example of our Saviours life is likewise another excellent means to this end. The law lays an obligation upon us; but a pattern gives life and encouragement, and renders our duty more easy, and practicable, and familiar to us; for here we see obedience to the Divine law practised in our own nature, and performed by a man like ourselves, in all things like unto us, sin only excepted.
3. He is the author of eternal salvation, as He hath purchased it for us, by the merit of His obedience and sufferings, by which He hath obtained eternal redemption for us; not only deliverance from the wrath to come, but eternal life and happiness.
4. Christ is said to be the author of our salvation, in respect of His powerful and perpetual intercession for us at the right hand of God. And this seems to be more especially intimated and intended, in that expression here in the text, that being made perfect He became the author of eternal salvation to them that obey Him.
II. WHAT OBEDIENCE THE GOSPEL REQUIRES AS A CONDITION, AND IS PLEASED TO ACCEPT AS A QUALIFICATION, IN THOSE WHO HOPE FOR ETERNAL SALVATION.
1. Negatively. It is not a mere outward profession of the Christian religion, and owning of Christ for our Lord and lawgiver, that will be accepted in this case.
2. Positively. That which God requires as a condition and will accept as a qualification, in those who hope for eternal life, is faith in Christ and a sincere and universal obedience to the precepts of His holy gospel.
1. There is a virtual and there is an actual obedience to the laws of God. By an actual obedience I mean the practice of the several graces of Christianity in the course of a holy life; when out of a good conversation men do show forth their works; and, by the outward actions of their lives, do give real testimony of their piety, justice, sobriety, humility, meekness, and charity, and all other Christian graces and virtues, as occasion is ministered for the exercise of them. By a virtual obedience I mean a sincere belief of the gospel, of the holiness and equity of its precepts, of the truth of its promises, and the terror of its threatenings, and a true repentance for all our sins. This is obedience in the root and principle; for he who sincerely believes the gospel, and does truly repent of the errors and miscarriages of his life, is firmly resolved to obey the commandments of God, and to walk before Him in holiness and righteousness all the days of his life; so that there is nothing that prevents or hinders this mans actual obedience to the laws of God, in the course of a holy and good life, but only the want of time and opportunity for it.
2. There is a perfect, and there is a sincere obedience. Perfect obedience consists in the exact conformity of our hearts and lives to the law of God, without the least imperfection, and without failing in any point or degree of our duty. And this obedience, as it is not consistent with the frailty of corrupt nature, and the imperfection of our present state, so neither doth God require it of us as a necessary condition of eternal life. We are, indeed, commanded to be perfect, as our Father which is in heaven is perfect. But the plain meaning of this precept is that we should imitate those Divine perfections of goodness, and mercy, and patience, and purity, and endeavour to be as like God in all these as we can, and be still aspiring after a nearer resemblance of Him, as may be evident to any one who considers the connection and occasion of these words. By a sincere obedience I mean such a conformity of our lives and actions to the law of God, as to the general course and tenor of them, that we do not live in the habitual practice of any known sin, or in the customary neglect of any material or considerable part of our known duty; and that we be not wilfully and deliberately guilty of the single act of notorious sins. And this obedience, even in the best of men, is mixed with great frailty and imperfection; but yet, because it is the utmost that we can do in this state of infirmity and imperfection, the terms of the gospel are so merciful and gracious, as that God is pleased, for the sake of the meritorious obedience and sufferings of our blessed Saviour, to accept this sincere though imperfect obedience, and to reward it with eternal life. (Archbishop Tillotson.)
Author of eternal salvation
1. By salvation is meant deliverance from sin and all the consequences thereof, so as the party saved is made ever happy. There be both bodily and spiritual, temporal and eternal dangers whereunto man by sin is liable; and this salvation is a deliverance from all. There is deliverance as from some evils, and not all; so deliverance only for a time, and not for ever, but this salvation is a total deliverance from all evil, and that for ever. Eternal peace, safety, felicity, is the issue and consequence thereof.
2. This salvation being so noble and glorious an effect, must have some cause, some author and efficient; and this efficient was Christ; yet Christ as perfected and consecrated. For by His blood and purest sacrifice of Himself
(1) He satisfied Divine justice and merited this salvation.
(2) Being upon His resurrection constituted and made an High Priest and King, and fit to minister and officiate as a priest and reign as king in heaven, He ascends into that glorious temple and palace, and is set at the right hand of God.
(3) Being there established, He begins as King to send down the Holy Ghost, reveal the gospel, and by both to work faith in the hearts of men, and qualify them for justification and salvation.
(4) When men are once qualified and prepared so as to sue for pardon in His name before the throne of God, He, as Priest, begins His intercession, and by the plea of His own blood for them procures their pardon and eternal salvation; so that, as consecrated and perfect, He becomes the great efficient cause of this salvation, by way of merit, intercession, and actual communication.
3. If it be communicated from and by Him, it must be received in some subject; and if in Him there be an eternal saving virtue, and He exercise it, there must be some subject and persons in whom this saving power shall produce this effect, so as that they shall be saved. And though this power be able to save all, yet only they and all who obey Him shall be saved: efficient causes work most effectually in subjects united and disposed aright. And so it is in this case; for though the mercies of God, merited by Christ, may be so far communicable to all, as that all may become savable, which is a great and universal benefit, yet they are not actually communicated to all, because all are not obedient. His laws require sincere submission and obedience in renouncing all others, and a total dependence upon Him, and Him alone, n repenting of our sins and believing upon Him. And this sincere faith is the fundamental virtue, and potentially all obedience. (G. Lawson.)
Salvation in Christ
Having Christ we have salvation also, while without receiving Christ Himself we cannot have the salvation. Having the fountain, we have its issuing streams. Cut off from the fountain the streams will not flow to us, Christ offers Himself to be the Bridegroom of the soul. He offers to endow His bride with all the riches of His own inheritance in the heirship of His Father. Taking Him as oar Bridegroom, and giving ourselves to Him as the bride espouses her husband, with Him we have all He has as well as all He is, while without Him we can have neither. The mistake is that of seeking the salvation instead of seeking the Saviour. Just the same mistake that the affianced would make if she should seek to have the possessions of him to whom she was engaged made over to her from him, without their union in wedlock, instead of accepting his offer of himself, and having the hymeneal bond completed by which he and all he has would become hers. (W. E. Boardman.)
Salvation, not compulsion
Well, then, said a sceptic to me on one occasion, why is the world not saved? My friend, said I, you misconceive the power required to convert souls. There was a little boy in the room; and I illustrated my meaning by saying, Suppose I will that that little boy leave the room. There are two ways in which I could give effect to that will. I could take him in my arms, and by superior muscular force remove him; or I could take him on my knee, speak lovingly and persuasively to him in order to induce him to leave the room himself. If I adopted the former, I should merely have removed his body: his volition would be against me, and he would feel that I had done him violence. If I succeed in the latter, I should have influenced his mind; and he himself would use his own limbs, and with a happy smile depart. (D. Thomas, D. D.)
Unto all them that obey Him
Obedience due to Christ
Let us examine our obedience. Christ wills us to avoid sins that cause His gospel to be ill spoken of, by good works to adorn it, to stop the mouths of the adversaries, &c. Do we so? Doth not drunkenness, covetousness, pride, malice, and uncleanness abound? As they said and promised to Joshua, so let us to Christ–Whatsoever Thou commandest us we will do, and whithersoever Thou sendest us we will go. How must we obey Him?
1. Fully. The young man in the gospel most proudly vaunted that he had kept all the commandments from his youth; let us endeavour that we may say so in truth and sincere heart, and as Zacharias and Elisabeth, let us walk in all the commandments and ordinances of the Lord, blameless.
2. Cheerfully. God loves a cheerful giver. I was glad, says the Psalm, when they said, Let us go up into the house of the Lord (Psa 122:1).
3. Constantly. A runner hath not the prize till he come to the goal. A tailor hath not his wages till the garment be finished. A traveller hath not his money till he come to his journeys end. Here we are as children (1Co 13:1-13.), growing higher and higher in knowledge, faith, love, obedience, &c. (W. Jones, D. D.)
The possibility and necessity of gospel obedience, and its consistence with free grace
I. THE POSSIBILITY OF OUR PERFORMING THIS CONDITION.
1. We are not sufficient of ourselves, and by any power in us, to perform the conditions of the gospel. The grace of God doth clearly appear in the whole business of our salvation: By grace ye are saved, says the apostle, and that not of yourselves, it is the gift of God. Faith is the gift of God, and so is repentance.
2. The grace of God is remedy to assist and enable us to the performance of these conditions; that is, to faith and repentance, and all the purposes of obedience and a holy life; if we be not wanting to ourselves, and do not reject or neglect to make use of that grace which God offers us, and is ready to afford us in a very plentiful manner.
3. What the grace of Go t is ready to enable us to do, if we be not wanting to ourselves, may properly be said to be possible to us, and in some sense in our power,
II. THE NECESSITY OF THIS OBEDIENCE IN ORDER TO OUR OBTAINING OF ETERNAL LIFE AND HAPPINESS. Christ is the author of eternal salvation to them that obey Him; that is, to such, and only to such, as live in obedience to the precepts of His holy gospel, to them who frame the general course of their lives according to His laws. Now the necessity of obedience, in order to eternal life and happiness, relies upon these three grounds:
1. The constitution and appointment of God.
2. The general reason of rewards.
3. The particular nature of that reward which God will confer upon us for our obedience.
III. THIS METHOD AND MEANS OF OUR SALVATION IS NO PREJUDICE TO THE LAW OF FAITH, AND TO THE FREE GRACE AND MERCY OF GOD DECLARED IN THE GOSPEL. For so long as these three things are but asserted and secured
1. That faith is the root and principle of obedience and a holy life, and that without it it is impossible to please God.
2. That we stand continually in need of the Divine grace and assistance to enable us to perform that obedience which the gospel requires of us, and is pleased to accept in order to eternal life. And
3. That the forgiveness of our sins, and the reward of eternal life, are founded in the free grace and mercy of God, conferring these blessings upon us, not for the merit of our obedience, but only for the merit and satisfaction of the obedience and sufferings of our blessed Saviour and Redeemer; I say, so long an we assert these things, we give all that the gospel anywhere ascribes to faith, and to the grace of God revealed in the gospel. Inferences:
1. To convince us that an empty profession of the Christian religion, how specious and glorious soever it be, if it be destitute of the fruits of obedience and a holy life, will by no means avail to bring us to heaven.
2. The consideration of what hath been said should stir us up to a thankful acknowledgment of what the author of our salvation hath done for us; and there is great reason for thankfulness whether we consider the greatness of the benefit conferred upon us, or the way and manner in which it was purchased, or the easy and reasonable terms upon which it may be obtained.
3. Here is abundant encouragement given to our obedience; we have the Divine assistance promised to us, to enable us to the performance of the most difficult parts of our duty; we have the Holy Spirit of God to help our infirmities, to excite us to that which is good, and to help and strengthen us in the doing of it. For our further encouragement we are assured of the Divine acceptance in case of our sincere obedience, notwithstanding the manifold failings and imperfections of it, for the sake of the perfect righteousness and obedience and the meritorious sufferings of our blessed Saviour.
4. The consideration of what hath been said upon this argument may serve severely to rebuke the groundless presumption of those who rely with so much confidence upon Christ for eternal salvation, without any conscience or care to keep His commandments; as if salvation lay upon His hands, and He knew not how to dispose of it, and were glad of any one that would come and take it off upon any terms. No, He came to save us from our sins, to redeem us from all iniquity, and to purify to Himself a peculiar people, zealous of good works. (Archbishop Tillotson.)
Gods obedience
It is reported of the old kings of Peru, that they were won t to use a tassel, or fringe, made of red wool, which they wore upon their heads, and when they sent any governor to rule as viceroy in any part of their country, they delivered unto him one of the threads of their tassel, and, for one of those simple threads, he was as much obeyed as if he had been the king himself–yea, it hath so happened that the king had sent a governor only with this thread to slay men and women of a whole province, without any further commission; for of such power and authority was the kings tassel with them, that they willingly submitted thereunto, even at the sight of one thread of it. Now, it is to be hoped that, if one thread shall be so forcible to draw heathen obedience, there will be no need of cart-ropes to houl on that which is Christian. Exemplary was that obedience of the Romans which was said to have come abroad to all men. And certainly gospel obedience is a grace of much worth, and of great force upon the whole man; for when it is once wrought in the heart, it worketh a conformity to all Gods will. Be it for life or death, one word from God will command the whole soul as soon as obedience hath fouled admittance into the heart. (J. Spencer.)
Faith and works
Twas an unhappy division that has been made between faith and works. Though in my intellect I may divide them, just as in the candle I know there is both light and heat, but yet put out the candle, and they are both gone; one remains not without the other; so it is betwixt faith and works. Nay, in a right conception tides eat opus: if I believe a thing because I am commanded, that is opus..(John Selden.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 7. Who in the days of his flesh] The time of his incarnation, during which he took all the infirmities of human nature upon him, and was afflicted in his body and human soul just as other men are, irregular and sinful passions excepted.
Offered up prayers and supplications] This is one of the most difficult places in this epistle, if not in the whole of the New Testament. The labours of learned men upon it have been prodigious; and even in their sayings it is hard to find the meaning.
I shall take a general view of this and the two following verses, and then examine the particular expressions.
It is probable that the apostle refers to something in the agony of our Lord, which the evangelists have not distinctly marked.
The Redeemer of the world appears here as simply man; but he is the representative of the whole human race. He must make expiation for sin by suffering, and he can suffer only as man. Suffering was as necessary as death; for man, because he has sinned, must suffer, and because he has broken the law, should die. Jesus took upon himself the nature of man, subject to all the trials and distresses of human nature. He is now making atonement; and he begins with sufferings, as sufferings commence with human life; and he terminates with death, as that is the end of human existence in this world. Though he was the Son of God, conceived and born without sin, or any thing that could render him liable to suffering or death, and only suffered and died through infinite condescension; yet, to constitute him a complete Saviour, he must submit to whatever the law required; and therefore he is stated to have learned OBEDIENCE by the things which he suffered, Heb 5:8, that is, subjection to all the requisitions of the law; and being made perfect, that is, having finished the whole by dying, he, by these means, became the author of eternal salvation to all them who obey him, Heb 5:9; to them who, according to his own command, repent and believe the Gospel, and, under the influence of his Spirit, walk in holiness of life. “But he appears to be under the most dreadful apprehension of death; for he offered up prayers and supplications, with strong crying and tears, unto him that was able to save him from death, Heb 5:7.” I shall consider this first in the common point of view, and refer to the subsequent notes. This fear of death was in Christ a widely different thing from what it is in men; they fear death because of what lies beyond the grave; they have sinned, and they are afraid to meet their Judge. Jesus could have no fear on these grounds: he was now suffering for man, and he felt as their expiatory victim; and God only can tell, and perhaps neither men nor angels can conceive, how great the suffering and agony must be which, in the sight of infinite Justice, was requisite to make this atonement. Death, temporal and eternal, was the portion of man; and now Christ is to destroy death by agonizing and dying! The tortures and torments necessary to effect this destruction Jesus Christ alone could feel, Jesus Christ alone could sustain, Jesus Christ alone can comprehend. We are referred to them in this most solemn verse; but the apostle himself only drops hints, he does not attempt to explain them: he prayed; he supplicated with strong crying and tears; and he was heard in reference to that which he feared. His prayers, as our Mediator, were answered; and his sufferings and death were complete and effectual as our sacrifice. This is the glorious sum of what the apostle here states; and it is enough. We may hear it with awful respect; and adore him with silence whose grief had nothing common in it to that of other men, and is not to be estimated according to the measures of human miseries. It was: –
A weight of wo, more than whole worlds could bear.
I shall now make some remarks on particular expressions, and endeavour to show that the words may be understood with a shade of difference from the common acceptation.
Prayers and supplications, c.] There may be an allusion here to the manner in which the Jews speak of prayer, c. “Rabbi Yehudah said: All human things depend on repentance and the prayers which men make to the holy blessed God especially if tears be poured out with the prayers. There is no gate which tears will not pass through.” Sohar, Exod., fol. 5.
“There are three degrees of prayer, each surpassing the other in sublimity prayer, crying, and tears: prayer is made in silence; crying, with a loud voice; but tears surpass all.” Synops. Sohar, p. 33.
The apostle shows that Christ made every species of prayer, and those especially by which they allowed a man must be successful with his Maker.
The word , which we translate supplications, exists in no other part of the New Testament. signifies a supplicant, from , I come or approach; it is used in this connection by the purest Greek writers. Nearly the same words are found in Isocrates, De Pace: . Making many supplications and prayers. , says Suidas, , – , , . “Hiketeria is a branch of olive, rolled round with wool – is what suppliants were accustomed to deposite in some place, or to carry in their hands.” And , hiketes, he defines to be, , . “He who, in the most humble and servile manner, entreats and begs any thing from another.” In reference to this custom the Latins used the phrase velamenta pratendere, “to hold forth these covered branches,” when they made supplication; and Herodian calls them , “branches of supplication.” Livy mentions the custom frequently; see lib. xxv. cap. 25: lib. xxix. c. 16; lib. xxxv. c. 34; lib. xxxvi. c. 20. The place in lib. xxix. c. 16, is much to the point, and shows us the full force of the word, and nature of the custom. “Decem legati Locrensium, obsiti squalore et sordibus, in comitio sedentibus consulibus velamenta supplicium, ramos oleae (ut Graecis mos est,) porrigentes, ante tribunal cum flebili vociferatione humi procubuerunt.” “Ten delegates from the Locrians, squalid and covered with rags, came into the hall where the consuls were sitting, holding out in their hands olive branches covered with wool, according to the custom of the Greeks; and prostrated themselves on the ground before the tribunal, with weeping and loud lamentation.” This is a remarkable case, and may well illustrate our Lord’s situation and conduct. The Locrians, pillaged, oppressed, and ruined by the consul, Q. Plemmius, send their delegates to the Roman government to implore protection and redress they, the better to represent their situation, and that of their oppressed fellow citizens, take the hiketeria, or olive branch wrapped round with wool, and present themselves before the consuls in open court, and with wailing and loud outcries make known their situation. The senate heard, arrested Plemmius, loaded him with chains, and he expired in a dungeon. Jesus Christ, the representative of and delegate from the whole human race, oppressed and ruined by Satan and sin, with the hiketeria, or ensign of a most distressed suppliant, presents himself before the throne of God, with strong crying and tears, and prays against death and his ravages, in behalf of those whose representative he was; and he was heard in that he feared-the evils were removed, and the oppressor cast down. Satan was bound, he was spoiled of his dominion, and is reserved in chains of darkness to the judgment of the great day.
Every scholar will see that the words of the Roman historian answer exactly to those of the apostle; and the allusion in both is to the same custom. I do not approve of allegorizing or spiritualizing; but the allusion and similarity of the expressions led me to make this application. Many others would make more of this circumstance, as the allusion in the text is so pointed to this custom. Should it appear to any of my readers that I should, after the example of great names, have gone into this house of Rimmon, and bowed myself there, they will pardon their servant in this thing.
To save him from death] I have already observed that Jesus Christ was the representative of the human race; and have made some observations on the peculiarity of his sufferings, following the common acceptation of the words in the text, which things are true, howsoever the text may be interpreted. But here we may consider the pronoun , him, as implying the collective body of mankind; the children who were partakers of flesh and blood, Heb 2:14; the seed of Abraham, Heb 2:16, who through fear of death were all their life subject to bondage. So he made supplication with strong crying and tears to him who was able to save THEM from death; for I consider the , them, of Heb 2:15, the same or implying the same thing as , him, in this verse; and, thus understood, all the difficulty vanishes away. On this interpretation I shall give a paraphrase of the whole verse: Jesus Christ, in the days of his flesh, (for he was incarnated that he might redeem the seed of Abraham, the fallen race of man,) and in his expiatory sufferings, when representing the whole human race, offered up prayers and supplications, with strong crying and tears, to him who was able to save THEM from death: the intercession was prevalent, the passion and sacrifice were accepted, the sting of death was extracted, and Satan was dethroned.
If it should be objected that this interpretation occasions a very unnatural change of person in these verses, I may reply that the change made by my construction is not greater than that made between verses 6 and 7; in the first of which the apostle speaks of Melchisedec, who at the conclusion of the verse appears to be antecedent to the relative who in Heb 5:7; and yet, from the nature of the subject, we must understand Christ to be meant. And I consider, Heb 5:8, Though he were a Son, yet learned he obedience by the things which he suffered, as belonging, not only to Christ considered in his human nature, but also to him in his collective capacity; i.e., belonging to all the sons and daughters of God, who, by means of suffering and various chastisements, learn submission, obedience and righteousness; and this very subject the apostle treats in considerable detail in Heb 12:2-11, to which the reader will do well to refer.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
Here Christ is paralleled in his nature, work, and compassions, to his types, and is set above them.
Who in the days of his flesh: he was taken out of men, as his type was, Heb 5:1. He was made flesh, and dwelt among us in the human nature, Joh 1:14. He had his days numbered, and his time set for his being and ministry beneath, doing and suffering the will of God here in a state of humiliation, frailty, and mortality; which infirmities attending his flesh, are now put off for ever, Heb 2:14.
When he had offered up prayers and supplications: he performed his service and offering to God, as his types, for the men for whom he was ordained, such as he delighted in; his prayers represented his inward desires to God for what he needed, and was necessary in our behalf to be obtained, a sacrifice fit to be offered by him, Heb 13:15; compare 1Pe 2:5. , a word but this once used in the New Testament; its root signifieth an olive branch, which petitioners carried in their hands; an emblem of the vehement desire of such supplicants of a peaceful answer or return to their prayers. These of Christ were the most fervent supplications, flowing from a deeply afflicted soul in a prostrate body, when he was preparing for the offering up his soul a sacrifice for sin, when he was in the garden, Luk 22:40,46, in his agony, and when actually offering it on the cross, Mat 27:46. These were the prayers of God-man, the gospel High Priest.
With strong crying and tears, put up by him unto God the Father, who is essentially good and powerful, willing and able to hear and answer his supplications, the fountain of all mercy, blessing, and help, who could deliver him from, and save him in, the greatest dangers, so as none of those which encompassed him should hurt him, no, not death; for he was delivered from the evils which were far more dreadful to him than death itself, and which were to exercise him both before and at the hour of death. Those deadly temptations which he underwent in his agony and on the cross, and from which he chargeth the disciples to pray, that both he and they might be kept, Mat 26:37,38. Those deadly stings in his soul, Mat 26:41; Mar 14:38; Luk 22:40,46; such conflicts as his Father supported him under, carried him through, and gave him the victory over all that curse and power that might do him or his mystical body hurt. It was this death of deaths that did terrify him. As for the other, he cheerfully underwent it, resigned his spirit to his Father, trusted his body in his treasury, and was so far from being swallowed up by it, that he was gloriously risen from it.
Unto him, that was able to save him from death; evident in his agony, in the mighty groans that his soul poured out then when he prayed more earnestly, Luk 22:44; that which made him sweat through his flesh congealed clots of blood, squeezed by his agony out of his body, which made him weep and cry loudly; his voice as well as his soul was stretched out in prayer: the like was exercised by him in his conflict on the cross, Mat 27:46. How bitter was his passion to him! How fervent, importunate, and loud his prayers! How did it break through the cloud wherewith God covered his face then! Psa 22:1-31, represents in prophecy what was now fulfilled, Mar 15:34,37; Lu 23:46; It was in making satisfaction to the justice of God for us that these were exercised, to show his inward compassions to us, and to secure sustentation for us in our sufferings by temptations, Heb 2:17,18; 4:15,16.
And was heard in that he feared; the efficacy of these mighty prayers and supplications is evident by their reaching Gods ear, and procuring his help for him. He was helped, delivered, saved; so the Septuagint use this word in the Old Testament, putting hearing for helping and saving, as in Psa 55:16-18; 2Ch 18:31; , this is the right acceptation strictly read; for as a thing is truly apprehended, it stirreth up fear. This word hath in Scripture use two senses:
1. From the thing feared, by a metonymy, fear being put for that which works it, which was not here death simply, for that he suffered, but what he was more afraid of than death, viz. from the fear of being by his temptations hurried into diffidence of his Father, impatience in his agony, or despair at the eclipse in his death, which the devil designed. As to this his Father did hear, answer, and help him; in his agony sent his angel to strengthen him, Luk 22:43; and which he derfected for him at the end of his passion, when he breathed out his soul triumphantly into his Fathers hands, Mat 27:46,50; Mr 15:37,39; Joh 19:28-30. Or,
2. From the fear, that godly fear and care in him not to displease God in any thing he did or suffered; this was a proper cause of his acceptance, and his prayer being heard, and his deliverance, which is becoming the Mediator. This is a truth, and may be admitted; but it seemeth especially to refer to the former by his prevalency, against which by prayer he defeated the devil, was made feelingly sensible of his temptations, showed himself compassed with infirmities, though not with sinful ones, and as our High Priest was rendered pitiful and compassionate to us under our temptations, so as to intercede for us above, as he did pray for himself on earth, and to procure for us succour under and deliverance from them.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
7. in the days of his flesh(Heb 2:14; Heb 10:20).Heb 5:7-10 statesummarily the subject about to be handled more fully in the seventhand eighth chapters.
when he had offeredrather,”in that He offered.” His crying and tearswere part of the experimental lesson of obedience which He submittedto learn from the Father (when God was qualifying Him for the highpriesthood). “Who” is to be construed with “learnedobedience” (or rather as Greek, “Hisobedience”; “the obedience” which we all knowabout). This all shows that “Christ glorified not Himself to bemade an High Priest” (Heb 5:5),but was appointed thereto by the Father.
prayers andsupplicationsGreek, “both prayers andsupplications.” In Gethsemane, where He prayed thrice,and on the cross, where He cried, My God, my God . . . probablyrepeating inwardly all the twenty-second Psalm. “Prayers”refer to the mind: “supplications” also to the body(namely, the suppliant attitude) (Mt26:39) [BENGEL].
with strong crying andtearsThe “tears” are an additional fact herecommunicated to us by the inspired apostle, not recorded in theGospels, though implied. Mt 26:37,”sorrowful and very heavy.” Mar 14:33;Luk 22:44, “in an agony Heprayed more earnestly . . . His sweat . . . great drops of bloodfalling down to the ground.” Ps22:1 (“roaring . . . cry”), Psa 22:2;Psa 22:19; Psa 22:21;Psa 22:24; Psa 69:3;Psa 69:10, “I wept.“
able to save him from deathMr 14:36, “All things arepossible unto Thee” (Joh12:27). His cry showed His entire participation of man’sinfirmity: His reference of His wish to the will of God, His sinlessfaith and obedience.
heard in that he fearedThereis no intimation in the twenty-second Psalm, or the Gospels thatChrist prayed to be saved from the mere act of dying. What He fearedwas the hiding of the Father’s countenance. His holy filial love mustrightly have shrunk from this strange and bitterest of trials withoutthe imputation of impatience. To have been passively content at theapproach of such a cloud would have been, not faith, but sin. The cupof death He prayed to be freed from was, not corporal, but spiritualdeath, that is, the (temporary) separation of His human soul from thelight of God’s countenance. His prayer was “heard” in HisFather’s strengthening Him so as to hold fast His unwavering faithunder the trial (My God, my God, was still His filialcry under it, still claiming God as His, though God hid His face),and soon removing it in answer to His cry during the darkness on thecross, “My God, my God,” c. But see below a furtherexplanation of how He was heard. The Greek literally, is, “Washeard from His fear,” that is, so as to be saved from Hisfear. Compare Ps 22:21, whichwell accords with this, “Save me from the lion’s mouth(His prayer): thou hast heard me from the horns of theunicorns.” Or what better accords with the strict meaning of theGreek noun, “in consequence of His REVERENTIALFEAR,” that is, in that He shrank from the horrorsof separation from the bright presence of the Father, yet wasreverentially cautious by no thought or word of impatience togive way to a shadow of distrust or want of perfect filial love. Inthe same sense Heb 12:28 usesthe noun, and Heb 11:7 theverb. ALFORD somewhatsimilarly translates, “By reason of His reverent submission.”I prefer “reverent fear.” The word in derivationmeans the cautious handling of some precious, yet delicatevessel, which with ruder handling might easily be broken [TRENCH].This fully agrees with Jesus’ spirit, “If it be possible . . .nevertheless not My will, but Thy will be done” and withthe context, Heb 5:5, “Glorifiednot Himself to be made an High Priest,” implying reverentfear: wherein it appears He had the requisite for the officespecified Heb 5:4, “No mantaketh this honor unto himself.” ALFORDwell says, What is true in the Christian’s life, that what we askfrom God, though He may not grant in the form we wish, yet He grantsin His own, and that a better form, does not hold good in Christ’scase; for Christ’s real prayer, “not My will, but Thine bedone,” in consistency with His reverent fear towards the Father,was granted in the very form in which it was expressed, not inanother.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
Who in the days of his flesh,…. Or “of his humanity”, as the Arabic version renders it; or “when he was clothed with flesh”, as the Syriac version; in the time of his humiliation, when he was attended with the sinless infirmities of the flesh, or human nature; it may take in the whole course of his life on earth, especially the latter part of it: it is not to be concluded from hence, that he has not flesh now, or is not in the flesh; for it is certain that he had flesh after his resurrection; only now he is free from all the infirmities of the flesh, the pains, and sorrows, and griefs of it, which he endured when here on earth:
when he had offered up prayers and supplications; as he often did in many parts of his life, particularly in the garden, and upon the cross, when he offered up himself: and as the days of Christ’s flesh were filled up with prayers and supplications, so should ours be also: the word for “supplications” signifies branches of olive trees, covered with wool d; which such as sued for peace carried in their hands, and so came to signify supplications for peace: the manner in which these were offered up by Christ was
with strong crying and tears; with a most vehement outcry, with a loud voice, as when on the cross; and though there is no mention of his tears at that time, or when in the garden, no doubt but he shed them: all that Christ did, and said, are not written; some things were received by tradition, and by inspiration; Christ wept at other times, and why not at these? and there are some circumstances in his prayers which intimate as much, Mt 26:38 which shows the weight of sin, of sorrow, and of punishment, that lay upon him, and the weakness of the human nature, considered in itself: and it may be observed to our comfort, that as Christ’s crying and tears were confined to the days of his flesh, or to the time of his life here on earth, so shall ours be also. Mention is made of
, “strong prayers” e, in Jewish writings. The person to whom Christ offered his prayers is described in the following words,
unto him that was able to save him from death; from a corporeal death, as he could, but that it was otherwise determined; or rather to raise him from the dead, to deliver him from the state of the dead, from the power of death, and the grave, as he did; and so the Syriac version renders it, “to quicken him from death”; to restore him from death to life:
and was heard in that he feared; or “by fear”; by God, who was the object of his fear, and who is called the fear of Isaac, Ge 31:42 he was always heard by him, and so he was in the garden, and on the cross; and was carried through his sufferings, and was delivered from the fear of death, and was saved from the dominion and power of it, being raised from the dead by his Father: or “he was heard because of his fear”, or “reverence”; either because of the dignity and reverence of his person, in which he was had by God; or because of his reverence of his Father.
d Harpocration. Lex. p. 152. Alex. ab Alex. Genial. Dier. sect. 5. c. 3. e Tzeror Hammor, fol. 37. 4.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
In the days of his flesh ( ). Here (verses 7-9) the author turns to the other requirement of a high priest (human sympathy). Since Jesus was “without sin” (4:15) he did not have to offer sacrifices “for himself,” yet in all other points he felt the sympathy of the human high priest, even more so by reason of his victory over sin.
Having offered up (). Second aorist active (– form) participle of (cf. verse 3). An allusion to the Agony of Christ in Gethsemane.
Supplications (). Socrates, Polybius, Job (Job 40:22) combine this word with (prayers) as here. The older form was . The word is an adjective from (a suppliant from , to come to one) and suggests one coming with an olive-branch (). Here only in the N.T.
With strong crying and tears ( ). See Lu 22:44f. for a picture of the scene in Gethsemane (anguish and pathos). No doubt the writer has in mind other times when Jesus shed tears (John 11:35; Luke 19:41), but Gethsemane chiefly.
To save him from death ( ). A reference to the cry of Jesus in Gethsemane (Mt 26:39).
Having been heard for his godly fear ( ). Old word from (taking hold well, Lu 2:25 from , , the verb in N.T. only in Heb 11:7), in N.T. only here and 12:28. Fine picture of Christ’s attitude toward the Father in the prayer in Gethsemane and in all his prayers. Jesus in Gethsemane at once surrendered his will to that of the Father who heard his plea and enabled him to acquiesce in the Father’s will.
Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament
He is now to show that Christ was under training for the priesthood, and describes the process of training.
Who [] . Nominative to emaqen learned, ver. 8, to which all the participles are preparatory.
In the days of his flesh [ ] . During his mortal life.
When he had offered up prayers and supplications [ ] . Dehseiv special, definite requests : iJkethriav, N. T. o, is properly an adjective, pertaining to or fit for suppliants, with rJabdouv staves or ejlaiav olive – branches understood. The olive – branch bound round with wool was held forth by a suppliant in token of his character as such. The phrase prosfrein N. T. o. 187 Unto him that was able to save him from death [ ] . Const. with prayers and supplications, not with offered. To save him from death may mean to deliver him from the fear of death, from the anguish of death, or from remaining a prey to death. In either case, the statement connects itself with the thought of Christ ‘s real humanity. He was under the pressure of a sore human need which required divine help, thus showing that he was like unto his brethren. He appealed to one who could answer his prayer. The purport of the prayer is not stated. It is at least suggested by Mt 26:39. And was heard in that he feared [ ] . Rend. was heard on account of his godly fear. jEulabeia only here and ch. 12 28. The verb eujlabeisqai to act cautiously, beware, fear, only ch. 11 7. The image in the word is that of a cautious taking hold [] and careful and respectful handling : hence piety of a devout and circumspect character, as that of Christ, who in his prayer took account of all things, not only his own desire, but his Father ‘s will. Eulabeia is ascribed to Christ as a human trait, see ch. Heb 12:28. He was heard, for his prayer was answered, whatever it may have been. God was able to save him from death altogether. He did not do this. He was able to sustain him under the anguish of death, and to give him strength to suffer the Father ‘s will : he was also able to deliver him from death by resurrection : both these he did. It is not impossible that both these may be combined in the statement he was heard. 188
Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament
1)“Who in the days of his flesh,” (hos en tais hermerais tes sarkos autou) “Who in the days (period of time that he lived) of his flesh,” the final test of his flesh while bearing our sins in his body on the tree, 1Pe 2:24; Joh 12:27-28.
2) “When he had offered up prayers and supplications,” (prosenegkkas deeseis te kai hiketerias) “Having offered both petitions and entreaties,” prayers and supplications to the Father regarding his suffering alone, Mat 26:39; Mat 26:42; Mat 26:44; Mar 14:36; Mar 14:39; Joh 17:1. These were the burdens of his heart in Gethsemane and on the cross.
3) “With strong crying and tears,” (meta krauges ischuras kai dakruon) “in association or along with strong crying and tears; Described in prophecy by David, Psa 22:1; Mat 27:46; Mat 27:50; Mar 15:34; Mar 15:37. He cried as one forsaken, then gave up the Spirit.
4) “Unto him that was able to save from death,” (pros ton dunamenon sozein auton ek thanatou) “To the one being (who existed) able to save or deliver him out of death,” the grasp of death, even God the Father with legions of angels, Mat 26:53; 2Ki 6:17; Dan 7:10; Mar 14:36.
5) “And was heard in that he feared,” (kai eisakoustheis apo tes evlabeiasj “And he (was) being heard for his devoutness,” as the importuning one of Luk 11:8; and as Cornelius was, Act 10:1-4; Act 10:7.
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
7. Who in the days, etc. As the form and beauty of Christ is especially disfigured by the cross, while men do not consider the end for which he humbled himself, the Apostle again teaches us what he had before briefly referred to, that his wonderful goodness shines forth especially in this respect, that he for our good subjected himself to our infirmities. It hence appears that our faith is thus confirmed, and that his honor is not diminished for having borne our evils.
He points out two causes why it behooved Christ to suffer, the proximate and the ultimate. The proximate was, that he might learn obedience; and the ultimate, that he might be thus consecrated a priest for our salutation.
The days of his flesh no doubt mean his life in this world. It hence follows, that the word flesh does not signify what is material, but a condition, according to what is said in 1Co 15:50, “Flesh and blood shall not inherit the kingdom of God.” Rave then do those fanatical men who dream that Christ is now divested of his flesh, because it is here intimated that he has outlived the days of his flesh for it is one thing to be a real man, though endued with a blessed immortality; it is another thing to be liable to those human sorrows and infirmities, which Christ sustained as long as he was in this world, but has now laid aside, having been received into heaven.
Let us now look into the subject. Christ who was a Son, who sought relief from the Father and was heard, yet suffered death, that thus he might be taught to obey. There is in every word a singular importance. By days of the flesh he intimates that the time of our miseries is limited, which brings no small alleviation. And doubtless hard were our condition, and by no means tolerable, if no end of suffering were set before us. The three things which follow bring us also no small consolations; Christ was a Son, whom his own dignity exempted from the common lot of men, and yet he subjected himself to that lot for our sakes: who now of us mortals can dare refuse the same condition? Another argument may be added, — though we may be pressed down by adversity, yet we are not excluded from the number of God’s children, since we see him going before us who was by nature his only Son; for that we are counted his children is owing only to the gift of adoption by which he admits us into a union with him, who alone lays claim to this honor in his own right.
When he had offered up prayers, etc. The second thing he mentions respecting Christ is, that he, as it became him, sought a remedy that he might be delivered from evils; and he said this that no one might think that Christ had an iron heart which felt nothing; for we ought always to consider why a thing is said. Had Christ been touched by no sorrow, no consolation could arise to us from his sufferings; but when we hear that he also endured the bitterest agonies of mind, the likeness becomes then evident to us. Christ, he says, did not undergo death and other evils because he disregarded them or was pressed down by no feeling of distress, but he prayed with tears, by which he testified the extreme anguish of his soul. (87) Then by tears and strong crying the Apostle meant to express the intensity of his grief, for it is usual to show it by outward symptoms; nor do I doubt but that he refers to that prayer which the Evangelists mention, “Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from me,” (Mat 26:42; Luk 22:42😉 and also to another, “My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?” (Mat 27:46.) For in the second instance mention is made by the evangelists of strong crying; and in the first it is not possible to believe that his eyes were dry, since drops of blood, through excessive grief, flowed from his body. It is indeed certain that he was reduced to great straits; and being overwhelmed with real sorrows, he earnestly prayed his Father to bring him help. (88)
And what application is to be made of this? Even this, that whenever our evils press upon us and overwhelm us, we may call to mind the Son of God who labored under the same; and since he has gone before us there is no reason for us to faint. We are at the same time reminded that deliverance from evils can be found from no other but from God alone, and what better guidance can we have as to prayer than the example of Christ? He betook himself immediately to the Father. And thus the Apostle indicates what ought to be done by us when he says that he offered prayers to him who was able to deliver him from death; for by these words he intimates that he rightly prayed, because he fled to God the only Deliverer. His tears and crying recommend to us ardor and earnestness in prayer, for we ought not to pray to God formally, but with ardent desires.
And was heard, etc. Some render the following words, “on account of his reverence” or fears but I wholly differ from them. In the first place he puts the word alone ἐυλαθείας without the possessive “his”; and then there is the preposition ἀπὸ “from,” not ὑ πὲρ “on account of,” or any other signifying a cause or a reason. As, then, εὐλάθεια means for the most part fear or anxiety, I doubt not but that the Apostle means that Christ was heard from that which he feared, so that he was not overwhelmed by his evils or swallowed up by death. For in this contest the Son of God had to engage, not because he was tried by unbelief, the source of all our fears, but because he sustained as a man in our flesh the judgment of God, the terror of which could not have been overcome without an arduous effort. Chrysostom interprets it of Christ’s dignity, which the Father in a manner reverenced; but this cannot be admitted. Others render it “piety.” But the explanation I have given is much more suitable, and requires no long arguments in its favor. (89)
Now he added this third particular, lest we should think that Christ’s prayers were rejected, because he was not immediately delivered from his evils; for at no time was God’s mercy and aid wanting to him. And hence we may conclude that God often hears our prayers, even when that is in no way made evident. For though it belongs not to us to prescribe to him as it were a fixed rule, nor does it become him to grant whatsoever requests we may conceive in our minds or express with our tongues, yet he shows that he grants our players in everything necessary for our salvation. So when we seem apparently to be repulsed, we obtain far more than if he fully granted our requests.
But how was Christ heard from what he feared, as he underwent the death which he dreaded? To this I reply, that we must consider what it was that he feared; why was it that he dreaded death except that he saw in it the curse of God, and that he had to wrestle with the guilt of all iniquities, and also with hell itself? Hence was his trepidation and anxiety; for extremely terrible is God’s judgment. He then obtained what he prayed for, when he came forth a conqueror from the pains of death, when he was sustained by the saving hand of the Father, when after a short conflict he gained a glorious victory over Satan, sin, and hell. Thus it often happens that we ask this or that, but not for a right end; yet God, not granting what we ask, at the same time finds out himself a way to succor us.
(87) “Prayers and supplications” are nearly of the same meaning; the first word means a request, a petition, strictly a prayer; and the last an earnest or humble entreaty. The last word is found only here in the New Testament; once in the Septuagint, in Job 41:3; and once in the Apocrypha, 2Ma 9:18. Hesychius, as quoted by Schleusner, gives παράκλησις, request, entreaty, as its meaning: it comes from ἱκέτης, a suppliant. The word ἱκετηρία, which is here used means first an olive branch wrapped in wool, carried by suppliants as a symbol of entreaty and hence used often in the sense of entreaty and supplication. — Ed.
(88) Stuart on this passage very justly observes, “If Jesus died as a common virtuous suffered, and merely as a martyr to the truth, without any vicarious suffering laid upon him, then is his death a most unaccountable event in respect to the manner of his behavior while suffering it; and it must be admitted that multitudes of humble, sinful, meek and very imperfect disciples of Christianity have surpassed their Master in the fortitude, and collected firmness and calm complacency which are requisite to triumph over the pangs of a dying hour. But who can well believe this? Or who can regard Jesus as a simple sufferer in the ordinary way upon the cross, and explain the mysteries of his dreadful horror before and during the hours of crucifixion?”
What is referred to is certainly inexplicable, except we admit what is often and in various ways plainly taught us in God’s word, that Christ died for our sins. — Ed.
(89) The idea of the effect of hearing, that is deliverance, is no doubt included in εἰσακουσθεὶς, “having been heard,” as it is sometimes in the corresponding word in Hebrew; so that Stuart is justified in the rendering it delivered, — “and being delivered from that which he feared.” It is rendered the same by Macknight, “and being delivered from fear.” Both Beza and Grotius render the last word fear; and this is its meaning as used in the Septuagint. — Ed
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(7, 8) Who in the days of his flesh . . .It will be observed that, of the two essential conditions mentioned in Heb. 5:2 and Heb. 5:4, the latter is first taken up in its application to Christ (Heb. 5:5-6). This verse and the next correspond to the general thought of Heb. 5:1-2, so far as it is applicable to Him who knew no sin.
The following rendering will, it is believed, best show the meaning of these two important verses, and the connection of the several parts: Who, in the days of His flesh, having with a strong cry and tears offered up prayers and supplications unto Him that was able to save Him out of death, and having been heard for His reverent fear, though He was a son, yet learned obedience by the things which He suffered. The most noticeable change of rendering occurs at the close of the seventh verse; here the interpretation given by all the Greek Fathers, followed in most of our English versions (and in the margin of the Authorised itself), certainly deserves the preference over that which, through the influence of Calvin and Beza, found its way into the Genevan Testament, and hence into the Bishops Bible and the translation of 1611. The word rendered reverent fear occurs in but one other place in the New Testament (Heb. 12:28); but the kindred verb and adjective are found in Heb. 11:7; Luk. 2:25; Act. 2:5; Act. 8:2. It properly denotes, not terror, but a cautious foreseeing fear, opposed alike to rashness and to cowardice: the adjective, which is always rendered devout, is fully explained in the Notes on Act. 2:5. No word could be more suitable where the relation of the Son of Man to His God and Father is expressed and it would be very difficult to find any other word which should be suitable to this relation and yet contain no implication of sin to be acknowledged with humility and shame. The object of the prayers and supplications thus heard and answered is implied in the words unto Him that was able to save Him out of death. Not from death: the Greek words may have that meaning, but it is not their most natural sense, as a comparison of other passages would show. The prayer, we are persuaded, was not that death might be averted, but that there might be granted deliverance out of death. This prayer was answered: His death was the beginning of His glory (Heb. 2:9). It may indeed be asked, Could such a prayer be offered by One who knew the glory that should follow His sufferings? In a matter so far beyond our reasoning it is most reverent to point to the mystery of another prayer (Mat. 26:39) offered by Him who had often taught His disciples that He must be put to death (Mat. 16:21). Mark the striking correspondence between the petition thus understood and St. Peters quotation of Psa. 16:10 (Act. 2:24). Some of the expressions in this verse would lead us to believe that the writers thought is resting on the Agony in the Garden; but the strong cry brings before us the Crucifixion (Mat. 27:46; Mat. 27:50), and the words of Psa. 22:1 lie very near the thought of this verse. It does not seem necessary to decidewe may doubt whether it is possible, and whether both should not be included. The opening words, in the days of His flesh (comp. Heb. 2:14; Joh. 1:14; 1Pe. 3:18), would certainly seem to favour this latter view. The word offered must not be lightly passed over. Of frequent occurrence in this Epistle, in every case except one (which is not at all in point) it has a sacrificial sense; it seems certain, therefore, that these prayersa token of His suffering, an example of His reverent fearare included in the sacrifice which comprised His whole life and death.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
7. From the pinnacle of the Messiah’s exaltation our author now descends at once to the scene of his deepest agony in the garden of Gethsemane. He shows, with touches of deep pathos, that the woes there endured were a filial suffering undergone to give him a complete fitness for conferring salvation upon all obedient to him. His purpose is to show that this deep descent is the source and condition of his subsequent ascent as exalted giver of salvation to us.
In the days of his flesh As he is now in the days of his resurrection glory, on the throne of his divine royalty.
Prayers supplications crying tears As profound in the depths of his sorrows then as exalted in the heights of his glory now. Evidently the scene of Gethsemane is here depicted, not with verbal quotation from either of the evangelists, but with something of the freshness of an original. It is not Luke here quoting himself, but Paul quoting what his attendant Luke narrates, and more.
Heard in that he feared A phrase ambiguous both in the Greek and the English. It may mean that he was heard in regard to the point about which he feared; or that he was heard because he submissively and reverently feared as a Son. This last is the more probable meaning, inasmuch as the word is ordinarily used to signify a reverent and holy fear. But the statement that he was heard, indicates that the object for which he prayed was granted. It was not, indeed, granted if fear of physical death were the motive, and rescue from it the object for which he prayed. It was granted, if, as we think, he prayed for a divine support to buoy him up above a fearful breakdown under the forces bearing upon him, and which, but for that divine support, might have taken place. Then he was heard, and divine sustaining strength was granted him, impersonated in the consoling angel. See our notes, Mat 26:37-39. And by the death from which he was saved according to his prayer, we do not understand his mere bodily death, (from which, indeed, he was not saved,) but a fulness of woe at the depth and mystery of which his soul was “amazed.” And this, too, was the “cup” which he prayed might so “pass” from him as that not only he might not drink it, in which sense it did not pass from him, but that he might not drink it to its bottomless depths, in which sense it did pass from him. In the bottomless depths of that death and of that “cup” were destruction to himself and failure of his work and of his future. And his prayer and perfect submission were the means by which, through divine strength imparted, he was saved from failure and won immortal victory.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
‘Who in the days of his flesh, having offered up prayers and supplications with strong crying and tears to him who was able to save him from death, and having been (‘was’) heard for his godly fear.’
And yet He was also a human being, subject to all the trials of a human being. While in the flesh He feared death, and because of it He prayed and appealed to God, strongly and with tears, seeking the help of the One Who could save Him from death, and was heard for His godly fear (or ‘reverent submission’). For an angel came and strengthened Him (Luk 22:43). It was a reminder that He was not alone. The aim of these words is to demonstrate that He was truly a man among men, and that His trust was in God. He did not need to offer sacrifices for Himself, but He did need the means of prayer and supplication. The one would have been to admit to sin, and was unnecessary for One Who was without sin, the other was to admit to humanness, and was very necessary. It may well be that this example was as much for us as for Him, that we might learn the folly of standing alone without full reliance on God.
It is salutary that after the angel strengthened Him His suffering went even deeper, but the moment of crisis had passed. He was now ready to face it alone.
‘The days of His flesh’ may be intended to indicate His whole life’s ministry. He constantly prayed, and He constantly faced the threat of death almost from the beginning (Mar 2:20; Mar 3:6; Mar 8:31; Mar 9:33; Joh 5:18; Joh 7:1; Joh 7:44; Joh 8:40; Joh 8:59; Joh 10:31; Joh 11:50). But it is generally agreed that it most fits Jesus’ suffering in the Garden of Gethsemane and that that is especially in mind here with the remainder as a shadow behind it.
In the Garden he prayed earnestly with tears that the cup that He had to face might pass from Him. It was not so much death that He feared, but all that was involved in His own particular death. And yet He was also fearful of death itself, for it would be the very extinguishing of all that He was. It is impossible for us to begin to conceive what dying must have meant to One Who was the source of life itself, Who throbbed with life, Who knew life in its fullest sense. Death was thus foreign to His very nature, to all that He was, as it could never be to us. It was so alien that in His manhood He feared it. And on top of that it was a death for sin, not His own but the sin of the whole world. He was to die for the sins of men, and Himself take the full impact of God’s aversion to sin. No wonder He recoiled from it.
But He was constantly delivered from death during His ministry, and His prayer in Gethsemane was specifically subject to the will of God and was in the last analysis a prayer for strength to face what God willed. And in this His prayer was successful. He was heard for His godly fear, because of His reverent submission, and sustained through what lay ahead. He went into death, and through it, and emerged again as the Lord of life. He had been saved from death. Death had lost its sting.
Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett
Heb 5:7. In the days of his flesh, During the time he was in the flesh; made lower than the angels, as man, that through death he might destroy him that had the power of death, ch. Heb 2:14. The allusion in the next clause is to the prayers of our Saviour, which he made in the garden to God, to remove that cup from him. See on Mat 26:39. Luk 22:42. There is no mention any where of our Saviour’s tears but in this place, except upon his raising Lazarus from the dead, Joh 11:35 and on his last view of Jerusalem, Luk 19:41. See also Mat 27:50. The last clause has been variously interpreted. The words , mean not in that he feared, but, as it is in the Vulgate, pro reverentia; by reason of that reverence and submission which was paid by the Son to his Father. So our margin has it, for his piety. The sense is, “That Christ, when he prayed to his heavenly Fatherin the manner he did, by reason of that reverential regard he had to his Father in all his conduct, was heard.” Thus Sykes, with whom Heylin, Bishop Fell, and many others agree; and I agree with them. See ch. Heb 12:28. However, Whitby, whom Doddridge and others follow, understands it, that he was heard in being delivered from that which he particularly feared; and which threw him into such an agony in the garden, that he sweat drops of blood. There is another method of interpreting this, which is that followed by the Syriac version; namely, by joining the words ‘ with the 8th verse:and was heard [so as to have his request granted; Heb 5:8 though he was a Son, yet through his piety he learned obedience from what he suffered.
Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke
Heb 5:7 . ] refers back to the last main idea, thus to , Heb 5:5 . The tempus finitum belonging thereto is , Heb 5:8 , in that Heb 5:7-10 form a single period, resolving itself into two co-ordinate statements ( ). To connect the first with , Heb 5:9 (so Abresch, Dindorf, Heinrichs, Stengel, and others), is impossible, since Heb 5:8 cannot be taken as a parenthesis.
] in the days of His flesh , i.e. during the time of His earthly life. Theodoret: , . On the whole expression, comp. Heb 2:14 ; on , in the more general sense of , Heb 10:32 , Heb 12:10 . False, because opposed to the current linguistic use of ( Gal 2:20 ; 2Co 10:3 ; Phi 1:22 ; Php 1:24 ; 1Pe 4:2 , al .), and because obtains its opposition in , Heb 5:9 , whereby, in general, the period of Christ’s life of humiliation is contrasted with the period of His life of exaltation,
Schlichting: what is specially meant is “tempus infirmitatis Christi, et praesertim illud, quo infirmitas ejus maxime apparuit dies illi, quibus Christus est passus.” The note of time: , however, is to be construed with the main verb , not with the participles , which latter form a simply parenthetic clause.
As the occasion of this parenthetic clause , in connection with which we have neither, with Theophylact, Peirce, Bhme, Bleek, de Wette, Bisping, Maier, Kurtz, and others, to derive the colouring of the linguistic expression from the author’s having respect to certain utterances of the Psalms (as Psa 22:25 [24], ibid . Psa 5:3 [2], Psa 116:1 ff.), nor with Braun, Akersloot, Bhme, al. , to suppose a reference to the loud praying of the Jewish high priest on the great day of atonement; neither is there an underlying comparison, as Hofmann ( Schriftbew . II. 1, p. 399 f. 2 Aufl.) strangely supposes, of the supplication of Jesus, which He before (!) the learning of obedience offered for Himself as a sacrifice on account of weakness (!), with the sin-offering which, according to Heb 5:3 , the Levitical high priest had on this day to present for himself before he could yet offer on behalf of the people, the author has present to his mind, according to the prevailing and, beyond doubt, correct view, the prayer of Christ in Gethsemane, as this was made known to him by oral or written tradition. Comp. Mat 26:36 ff.; Mar 14:32 ff.; Luk 22:39 ff. It is true we do not read in our Gospels that Christ at that time prayed to God . But, considering the great emotion of mind on the part of the Saviour, which is also described in the account given by our evangelists (comp. in particular, Mat 26:37 : ; Mar 14:33 : ; Luk 22:44 : ), that fact has nothing improbable about it; comp. also Luk 19:41 ; Joh 11:35 . On account of the addition , others will have us understand the loud crying of Christ upon the cross (Mat 27:46 ; Mar 15:34 ), either, as Calvin, Cornelius a Lapide, Piscator, Owen, Limborch, Schulz, Stein, Stuart, Delitzsch, besides the prayer in Gethsemane , or, as Cajetan, Estius, Calov, Hammond, Kurtz, exclusively , or even, as Klee, the last cry, with which He departed (Mat 27:50 ; Mar 15:37 ; Luk 23:46 ). The supposition of such references we cannot, with de Wette (comp. also Hofmann, Schriftbew . II. 1, p. 70 f. 2 Aufl.), characterize as “entirely-unsuitable.” For de Wette’s objection, that the author “manifestly regarded the prayer as the preparation and condition of the ,” that it must “thus precede the suffering,” does not apply, since is not to be resolved into “after,” but into “in that,” or “inasmuch as.” Not as “preparation and condition of the ” is the prayer looked upon by the author, but rather is the historic fact of the fervent prayer of Christ mentioned by him as an evidence that Christ in reality submitted Himself to God, even in the severest sufferings. For that which Hofmann ( l.c. p. 67) objects hereto, that the author, if he had meant this, would have written: , is devoid of sense; because, by means of such a transposition, that which is merely a secondary statement would be made the main statement. Yet the supposing of such references is not necessary, since also the plural , to which appeal has been made, is sufficiently explained by the repetitions of the prayer in the garden of Gethsemane.
To , which conjoined with further occurs LXX. Job 40:22 [27], as also with the classic writers, or (not ) is originally to be supplemented, inasmuch as it denotes the olive branch which the supplicant pleading for protection bore in his hand. Later it acquired like signification with or . It implies thus the prostrate or urgent entreaty of one seeking refuge. As an intensifying of it is rightly placed after this.
] is most naturally referred to (so Calvin, Abresch, al .). To the connecting with (Bhme, Bleek, de Wette, Delitzsch, Alford, Maier, Moll) we are forced neither by the position before , nor by the fact of the combination of with the dative being chosen elsewhere in the epistle (Heb 9:14 , Heb 11:4 ), as it is also the more usual one with classical writers, since likewise the conjoining with is nothing out of the way. Comp. e.g. Polyb. iv. 51. 2 : (equivalent to ) . In the characteristic of God as the One who was able to deliver Christ from death, there lies, at the same time, the indication of that which Christ implored of God. , however, may denote one of two things, either: to save from death , in such wise that it needs not to be undergone, thus to preserve from death, or: to save out of the death to which one is exposed, so that one does not remain the prey of death, but is restored to life. In favour of the former interpretation seems to plead the fact that Christ, according to the account in the Gospels, in reality prayed that He might be spared the suffering of death. Nevertheless what decides against this, and in favour of the second, is the consideration, in the first place, that Christ in reality still suffered death, and then the addition in our verse that the prayer of Christ was answered. And then, finally, we have to take into account the fact that, according to our Gospels also, Christ does not pray absolutely to be preserved from death, but makes this His wish dependent upon the will of the Father, thus entirely subordinates Himself to the Father.
] and being heard by reason of His piety , or fear of God. In this sense is (cf. Heb 12:28 ) rightly taken by Chrysostom, Photius, Oecumenius, Theophylact, the Vulgate ( pro sua reverentia ), Vigil. Taps., Primasius, Lyra, Luther, Castellio, Camerarius, Estius, Casaubon, Calov, Seb. Schmidt, Calmet, Rambach; Heinrichs, Schulz, Bleek, Bisping, Delitzsch, Riehm ( Lehrbegr. des Hebrerbr . p. 327), Alford, Reuss, Maier, Moll, Kurtz, and others. [72] , as an indication of the occasioning cause , is also of very frequent occurrence elsewhere; cf. Mat 28:4 ; Luk 19:3 ; Luk 24:41 ; Joh 21:6 ; Act 12:14 ; Act 20:9 ; Act 22:11 ; Khner, Gramm . II. p. 270. Christ, however, was heard in His prayer, inasmuch as He was raised out of death, exalted to the right hand of God, and made partaker of the divine glory. To be rejected is the explanation of the word preferred by Ambrose, Calvin, Beza, Cameron, Scaliger, Schlichting, Grotius, Owen, Hammond, Limborch, “Wolf, Bengel, Wetstein, Whitby, Carpzov, Abresch, Bhme, Kuinoel, Paulus, Klee, Stuart, Stein, Ebrard, Bloomfield, Grimm (Theol. Literaturbl. to the Darmstadt A. K.-Z . 1857, No. 29, p. 665), Hofmann ( Schriftbew . II. 1, p. 69, 2 Aufl.), and many others, according to which a pregnancy of meaning is assumed for the same, and is interpreted in the sense of “metus:” “ heard (and delivered) from the fear .” There is then found expressed in it either the thought (and this is the common acceptation) that Christ was delivered from His agony of soul by the strengthening on the part of the angel, Luk 22:43 , or is understood by metonymy of the object of the fear, i.e. death , from which Christ was delivered by the resurrection. So, among others, Calvin: “exauditum fuisse Christum ex eo, quod timebat, ne scilicet malis obrutus succumberet, vel morte absorberetur;” and Schlichting: “a metu i. e. ab eo, quod metuebat, nimirum morte.” But against the first modification of this view pleads the fact that the being heard must refer to the same thing as that for which Christ had prayed, but from that which precedes it is evident that Christ had besought God not for deliverance from the agony of soul, but for deliverance from death. Against both modifications pleads the fact that the strong signification of fear is never expressed by . Only the mild signification of timidity or awe (whether reverential awe of the Godhead, i.e. piety, or shyness of earthly things), as well as the notion arising from that of timidity, namely heedfulness, discretion, circumspectness in arranging that which is adapted to the bringing about of a definite result, lies in the word; as accordingly also the Greeks themselves, particularly the Stoics, expressly distinguished from each other and , and pronounced to be worthy of reprobation; , on the other hand, to be a duty. See the instances in Bleek. Nor. do the passages anew adduced by Grimm, l.c. , Wis 17:8 , 2Ma 8:16 , Sir 41:3 , in which the word is supposed to be used in the sense of fear , and the demonstrative force of which is acknowledged by Delitzsch (p. 190, and Observer and Correctt.), Riehm ( l.c. ), and Moll, prove what they are thought to prove. For in the first-mentioned passage we have to understand by the perverted, idolatrous, and therefore ridiculous religious awe of the Egyptian magicians; the second passage is only a dissuasive against standing in any awe of the outward superiority in force of the hostile army; and the third, finally, against feeling any awe of death, since this is the common lot of all men. The notion of mere awe, however, is, on account of the preceding strong expressions, , unsuited to our passage. [73] In addition to this, the assumed constructio praegnans in connection with a verb like is, in any case, open to doubt, and is not yet at all justified by the alleged parallels which have been adduced, namely Psa 22:22 [21] ( , which, however, the LXX. did not understand, and reproduced without pregnancy); LXX. Job 35:12 ( [ ] , where, however, . . ., as in the Hebrew, refers back to the first verb); Psa 118:5 ( ); Heb 10:22 ( ).
The addition contains, for the rest, logically regarded, merely a parenthetic remark, called forth only by the contents of the foregoing participial clause.
[72] In this explanation Linden on Heb 5:7-9 ( Stud. u. Krit . 1860, H. 4, p. 753 ff.) likewise, concurs, only he would have separated by a comma from that which precedes, and taken in conjunction with that which follows. This construction, however, is not natural, inasmuch as already has a nearer definition before and after it, and the linguistic symmetry with the foregoing participial clause is destroyed by the standing alone.
[73] According to Tholuck, the author has before his mind the first petition of the Redeemer in prayer at Gethsemane, the petition with , in which is expressed a condition of “lingering hesitancy,” of “detrectatio” (!), which also according to him exactly indicates. From this hesitancy, which with the Redeemer continued just so long as He was absorbed in an abstract manner in the greatness of the impending suffering, He was delivered. Thus, it is true, the first prayer uttered in this condition remained unfulfilled, but it was certainly annulled in the second, wherein His own will had become perfectly harmonized with the divine will. So Tholuck. But neither does ever signify “lingering hesitancy” (not even in Plutarch, Fab. Max . c. 1, where it denotes nothing more than caution or wariness).
Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary
Heb 5:7-10 . Further proof accessory to the Scripture testimony, Heb 5:6 that Christ did not on His own authority usurp to Himself the high-priesthood, but was invested with the same by God. Far removed from all self-exaltation, He displayed in His earthly life the most perfect obedience towards God. In consequence thereof He became, after His consummation and glorification, the Procurer ( Vermittler ) of everlasting blessedness for all believers, and was appointed by God High Priest after the manner of Melchisedec.
We have to reject the explanation mainly called forth by the expression (compared with Heb 5:1 ; Heb 5:3 ) of Schlichting, Calov, Seb. Schmidt, Braun, Limborch, Akersloot, Cramer, Baumgarten, Heinrichs, Bhme, Klee, Bloomfield, and others, according to which the design in Heb 5:7-10 is to show that Christ already discharged the functions of the high-priestly office during His earthly life, in that He offered prayers as sacrifices to God. For evidently the main gist of Heb 5:7-10 lies in the words of Heb 5:8 : , to which the statements Heb 5:9-10 attach themselves only for the completion of the figure traced out Heb 5:7-8 , and for leading back to Heb 5:6 . But by the fact that Christ manifested obedience, it cannot by any means be shown that He was already executing the office of High Priest.
Quite mistaken also is the opinion of Kurtz, that, Heb 5:7-10 , a “third requirement of the Levitical high-priesthood, namely, obedience to the will of Him that founded it ” (?), is shown to be satisfied in Christ. For neither does the form of the grammatical annexing of Heb 5:7 to that which precedes point in any way to the conclusion that the author designed to string on to the two necessary qualifications of the earthly high priest yet a third one of equal value; nor, as regards the import, is anything else to be found in Heb 5:7-8 than a wider unfolding of the foregoing statement, , Heb 5:5 .
Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary
DISCOURSE: 2287
CHRIST BENEFITED BY HIS OWN SUFFERINGS
Heb 5:7-9. Who in the days of his flesh, when he had offered up prayers and supplications with strong crying and tears unto him that was able to save him from death, and was heard in that he feared; though he were a Son, yet learned he obedience by the things which he suffered; and being made perfect, he became the author of eternal salvation unto all them that obey him.
THE priestly office, as marked out by God, belonged exclusively to the tribe of Levi. Yet our Lord, though he was not of that tribe to which the priesthood appertained, was truly and properly a High-priest. He was constituted a priest of a different order from that of Aaron, and executed the duties of the priesthood in a far different manner than it was possible for any other person to perform them. He offered not the blood of bulls and of goats, but his own body, for the sins of the world. The Apostle describing the manner in which he ministered, sets before us,
I.
His conduct under his sufferings
Never were the sufferings of any creature comparable with those of Christ
[His bodily sufferings perhaps were less than many of his followers have been called to endure [Note: It is possible indeed that the perfect temperature of his body might give a more exquisite sensibility to the organs; but this is no where affirmed in Scripture.]; but those of his soul were infinitely beyond our conceptions [Note: Psa 22:14-15. with Mat 26:38.]: the assaults of Satan, and the wrath of God, combined to produce that bloody sweat in the garden of Gethsemane [Note: Luk 22:44.].]
Under them he poured out his heart in prayer unto his heavenly Father
[He never lost sight of God as his Father, but addressed him with the greater earnestness under that endearing title [Note: Mar 14:36.]: he knew that his Father was able to save him from death: he therefore repeatedly besought him to remove the bitter cup, and urged his petitions with strong cries and floods of tears; not that he repented of the work he had undertaken; but only desired such a mitigation of his sufferings as might consist with his Fathers glory, and the salvation of men [Note: Joh 12:27-28. As a man, he could not but feel, and as a good man, he could not but deprecate, the wrath of God: but he desired nothing that was inconsistent with the Divine will, Mat 26:39.].]
Nor did he desist from prayer till he had obtained his request
[Him the Father always heard, nor was an answer now denied him: he was delivered from that which he chiefly deprecated [Note: The learned differ about the sense of ; some translate it pro reverenti, others ex metu. See Beza on Heb 5:7.]. Though the cup was not removed, he was not suffered to faint in drinking it: he was strengthened by an angel in answer to his prayer [Note: Luk 22:43.], and clearly shewed what an answer he had received, by the dignified composure with which he immediately resigned himself into the hands of his enemies [Note: Joh 18:4-8; Joh 18:11.].]
His sufferings indeed could not be dispensed with; but they were amply recompensed by,
II.
The benefit he derived from them
The benefits accruing to our Lord from his own sufferings were,
1.
Personal
[It was necessary for him as our High-priest to experience every thing which his people are called to endure in their conflicts with sin and Satan [Note: Heb 2:17.]. Now the difficulty of abiding faithful to God in arduous circumstances is exceeding great: this is a trial which all his people are called to sustain, and under it they more particularly need his almighty succour; this therefore he submitted to learn. Though as the Son of God he knew all things in a speculative manner, yet he could not know this experimentally, but by being reduced to a suffering condition; this therefore was one benefit which he derived from his sufferings. He learned by them more tenderly to sympathize with his afflicted people, and more speedily to succour them when imploring his help with strong crying and tears [Note: Heb 2:18.].]
2.
Official
[As the priests were consecrated to their office by the blood of their sacrifices, so was Jesus by his own blood [Note: sometimes means consecrated: see Heb 7:28.]. From that time he had a right to impart salvation: from that time also he exercised that right. The persons indeed to whom alone he is the author of eternal salvation, are, those who obey him. Not that they possess this qualification before he vouchsafes his mercy to them; but he invariably transforms his people into his own image, and makes them, like himself, obedient unto death [Note: Php 2:8.].]
We may learn from hence,
1.
What we should do under sufferings, or a dread of Gods displeasure
[We should not hastily conclude that we are not his children [Note: Heb 12:6.]: we should rather go with humble boldness to God as our Father [Note: Luk 15:17-18.]; we should plead his gracious promises [Note: Psa 50:15.]; nor can we possibly be too earnest, provided we be content that his will should be done. (Alas! that there should be so little resemblance between our prayers and those of Christ!) We should however consider that as the best answer to prayer, which most enables us to glorify God.]
2.
Whither to go for salvation
[The Father was able to save his Son from death, and doubtless he can save us also; but he has exalted his Son to be a Prince and a Saviour [Note: Act 5:31.]. To Christ therefore we are to go, and to the Father through Christ [Note: Eph 2:18.]. In this way we shall find him to be the author of eternal salvation to us [Note: Heb 7:25.].]
3.
What is to be our conduct when he has saved us
[Jesus died to purchase to himself a peculiar people zealous of good works. We must therefore obey him, and that too as willingly in seasons of severe trial as in times of peace: we must be content to be conformed to the likeness of our Lord and Master. Let us be faithful unto death, and he will give us a crown of life [Note: Rev 2:10.].]
Fuente: Charles Simeon’s Horae Homileticae (Old and New Testaments)
(7) Who in the days of his flesh, when he had offered up prayers and supplications with strong crying and tears unto him that was able to save him from death, and was heard in that he feared; (8) Though he were a Son, yet learned he obedience by the things which he suffered;
In these verses we have a most interesting account of our Lord. It will be our mercy to consider what the Holy Ghost hath here said of Jesus. By the days of his flesh, must he understood, the different state to that of his glory. The expression is strong to this purpose. The days of his flesh; not the flesh that is his human nature itself, for that he hath the same still, but the time of his abode in our world, accomplishing the redemption of his people. During this period of the Son of God’s humiliation on earth, he was subject to all the feelings and infirmities of that nature, which he had assumed, and was in all points tempted like as we are, yet without sin, Heb 4:15 . And it is our mercy that he was so; because it proves the certainty of his having been made like to his brethren, that he might be a merciful and faithful High Priest, in things pertaining to God. Hence, under this consciousness, I can, and do, go to Jesus, because he knows what my nature is by his own. He not only knows it, as God, but he feels it as man. He, who in the days of his flesh offered up prayers and supplications with strong crying and tears, will assuredly now, in the day of his power, take part in his High Priestly Office with his people, when in their depth of sorrow they cry to the depth of divine mercy, Psa 130:1-3 .
I beg the Reader not to overlook what is said of Christ being heard, in that he feared. It is not said that Christ was fearful, but that he feared. There is a natural fear, which, no doubt, the Lord Jesus, by taking our nature, felt; for, without it, he could not be said to be in all things made like unto his brethren, Heb 2:17 . And, in confirmation, we read, that in his agony in the garden, he was sore amazed, Mar 14:33 . And beside this natural fear, there is a godly fear, which marks the Lord’s people, and is the gift of the Holy Spirit. The Lord promiseth this as a covenant blessing: Jer 32:40 . This the Lord Jesus himself possessed, when the Spirit of Jehovah rested upon him, Isa 11:2 . Such views will help us to understand, concerning those cries of Jesus which he offered up, in the days of his flesh, when it is said, he was heard in that he feared.
One word more on this interesting passage. The Son of God it is said, learned obedience by the things which he suffered. By which I presume is meant, that he learned, not as Son of God, but in his human nature, by personal feeling, in human sufferings, and human exercises. He acquired in that school, the full apprehension of suffering obedience, in suffering distresses; and, in a personal sense, of what we feel, he knew, what our exercises are. Sweet thought! In that he himself, hath suffered, being tempted; he knoweth how to succour them that are tempted!
Fuente: Hawker’s Poor Man’s Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
XXV
JESUS IN GETHSEMANE
Harmony, pages 183-186 and Mat 26:30
This section commences on page 183 of the Harmony, introducing us at once to the Gethsemane scene. It is of vital importance that the interpreter of the Bible should know what significance to attach to this scene in the garden. We have four accounts Matthew, Mark, Luke, and Paul. You will observe that while John touches the other historians on some things, he has nothing to say about this garden scene. His Gospel was written so much later than the others, and the others had so clearly set forth all the necessary facts about the garden of Gethsemane that he does not mention it at all. And when we confine ourselves to the accounts given by Matthew, Mark, Luke, and Paul, we get at results about which I will now speak in their order.
The word, “Gethsemane,” means an oil-press. The word, “place,” as Matthew calls it “He came to a place” means an “enclosed place.” In this were olive trees, other trees, and flowers. Just as you cross the brook Kidron, which separates that part of Jerusalem near the Temple from Mount Olivet, and right at the base of Mount Olivet, was this enclosed space. If you were there now you would see about an acre of ground with old olive trees in it, centuries old, but you are not to understand that this enclosure represents the enclosure of the text, or that these very trees were there when Christ spent this night of agony in that garden. We know from history, Josephus among others, that all of the trees of every kind for miles were cut down by the Romans when they were besieging Jerusalem about forty years after Christ’s entrance into the garden of Gethsemane.
Right at the foot of the mountain three roads went over or around Mount Olivet. They centered in that garden, and Jesus was accustomed to stop there. Our record tells us that he was accustomed to stop in that garden, either going to Jerusalem from Bethany; or going to Bethany from Jerusalem; and Judas, we learn, was sure that there Jesus could be found, if he had left the upper room where the Lord’s Supper was celebrated. You will remember that just at the close of the Passover supper, Judas “went immediately out,” and gathered the crowd unto whom he wished to betray him. He knew he would find Jesus either where he left him, in that upper chamber, or in that garden on his way back to Bethany, which was his headquarters. So much, then, for the place.
The next item is that when he came to that garden he stopped eight of the apostles at the gate: “You stay here.” He took three with him Peter and the two sons of Zebedee, James and John, and with these three he entered deeper into the garden. Then he stationed the three, and went deeper still into the garden, as far as you can throw a stone say fifty paces. Those at the gate, and particularly these three, were commanded to watch and pray; to watch, because he wanted to be informed when his betrayer was coming; to pray, lest they should enter into temptation when they saw him openly captured by his enemies. He knew that it would greatly shake them, and that they ought to be praying.
It was very late in the night, and being in the time of the Passover, it was full moon, but they were weary and sleepy. As he said of them, “The flesh is weak; your spirit is ready, but your flesh is weak.” These three that entered with him are mentioned on two other special occasions in the Gospels. Peter, James, and John were selected from the twelve apostles to be witnesses of his power when he raised the daughter of Jairus from the dead, as we learn from Mar 5 . Peter, James, and John were selected to witness his glory on the Mount of Transfiguration, as we learn from Mat 17 , and now Peter, James, and John are selected to witness his agony in this garden. They became very important witnesses to all of these events.
We notice the next point. He said, as Matthew expresses it, “My soul is exceeding sorrowful, even unto death.” Mark says the same thing. This language evidently teaches that Jesus really had a human soul. There is an old heresy to the effect that he had only a human body, and that the Deity inhabited that body. But Jesus was a man in the true sense of the word. He took upon himself our nature, apart from any sin, but yet it was fully human nature, soul and body. Or, if you want to express it in a trichotomous way body, soul, and spirit. He was fully human. This sorrow proves that he was human in every true sense of the word. “My soul is exceeding sorrowful, even unto death.” The agony described here is mental and spiritual. The effect is shown in his body, in that he sweats, as it were, great drops of blood. This is the most thrilling description in literature of the intensity of spiritual suffering under the preparation of the coming evil, and how that suffering evidences itself in the body. The body and the soul are intimately connected. When Belshazzar saw the handwriting on the wall, his knees shook, the terror in his soul was connected with his body. Or, as a man in reading a letter, or receiving a telegram of awful news, becomes so transfixed with pain that he has a tendency to faint. That is the reaction of the inner man on the outer man.
The next thought is what caused that sorrow even unto death? A young preacher, and a very brilliant one, preached a sermon on this subject in which he took the position that the devil, as a person a visible, tangible person that night tried to kill Jesus, as he had first tried to have Jesus killed when he was a baby. So there was a wrestle between Christ and Satan, and that when Jesus prayed, “Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from me,” he meant, “If it be possible, don’t let the devil kill me before I go to the cross and expiate human sin.”
It was a very ingenious thing that young preacher preached, but it was very unscriptural. The sorrow that came over Jesus the trouble of his soul, of his spirit, was that he was very near the time of dying on the cross, not as a martyr for a martyr has no such sorrow as that; not as a guilty person in view of pending execution, for he was without sin; but it was a sorrow caused by the thought that in dying he was to die alienated in soul from God; to die as a sinner, though no sinner; to die the death of a felon, and, for the time being, pass under the power of Satan. He knew that when that sacrifice was made the Father would forsake him; that he would have to die the spiritual death, and the spiritual death is absence of the soul from God.
You get at a fine idea of the thought a very fine idea indeed when you consider the petition of Major John Andre to George Washington, commander-in-chief of the American armies. He prayed that he might be shot as a soldier, and not hanged as a spy. His agony was not the thought of death, for he was a very brave man, but the thought of a felon’s death. To die by a hangman that constituted the agony of Major Andre. He did not want to die that death.
The humanity of Jesus, not merely his body, but his soul and spirit, suffered vicariously the spiritual death. His soul shuddered unspeakably at the thought of passing away from God and going under the power of Satan, and to feel the stroke of the punitive sword of the divine law won him. That was his trouble.
Paul’s statement of the case is thus expressed: “Who in the days of his flesh, having offered up prayers and supplications with strong crying and tears unto him that was able to save him from death, and having been heard for his godly fear, though he was a Son, yet learned obedience by the things which he suffered” (Heb 5:7-8 ).
The next thought is this that in that agony of approaching separation from his Father, he prays to his Father, that if it be possible, to let this cup pass from him. That means this: “I came to the earth to save men; to do anything that is necessary to their salvation, and the means appointed for their salvation is that I should take the sinner’s place; die the sinner’s death; die under God’s judgment; die under the sword of the divine law.” Now when he says, “Father, if it be possible let this cup pass from me,” he means this: “If there is any other way to save men, then let this cup pass from me; it is so bitter.”
The theology involved in that prayer has a depth that has never yet been sounded. It is the strongest possible proof of the sinner’s destiny; of the enormity of the sinner’s death. It is the strongest proof that I know that the only available way to save men was by substitution.
In other words, the law of God, which is holy, just, and good, must be vindicated. That law says, “The soul that sinneth it shall die.” “Man has sinned. If I came to redeem man, and to take the place of man, I must pay man’s debt to the law. I must die the death of the sinner, or God can never be just in justifying man in forgiving man.” The claim of the law must be met, and if you just think a moment, when a man talks about your being saved without the expiation of sin by Jesus Christ upon the cross, remember that Jesus prayed: “If it be possible, i.e., if there be any other way under heaven among men whereby man can be saved, apart from vicarious and substitutionary death in his behalf, then let this cup pass from me.” And the cup was not allowed to pass.
Let us suppose that some one takes the position: “I believe in God; I believe in his love and in his mercy, but I reject this idea of Jesus Christ as a Saviour, and whenever I come to stand before the judgment bar of God my petition will be: ‘Lord have mercy on me and save me.’ ” The answer will be: “If it had been possible for man to have been saved in that way, then the petition of Jesus would have been answered.” The omniscience of God could see no other way; the omnipotence of God could work out no other way; the omnipresence of God could get in touch with no other way; the holiness and justice of God could find no other way. And, therefore, Peter, who witnesses this, says, “There is no other name given among men whereby we can be saved, but by the name of Jesus,” and the name of Jesus avails only as Jesus died in our behalf. “God made him to be sin, though he knew no sin, that we might be made the righteousness of God in him.” In the Old Testament we have his words, as given, not by these Gospel historians, but by prophetic historians, and one of his words is, “Save me from the sword,” not the sword of man, but the sword of divine justice. And the reply that came to that petition was: “Awake, O sword, and smite the shepherd.” Another one of his prayers, as given by the prophetic historian, is, “Lord, save me from the lion.” The lion is the devil. He is the one who goeth about like a roaring lion. He was not saved from the lion. In other words, he was to be the live goat; the goat laden with the sins of the people; the goat that was to be sent into the wilderness to meet Azazel; he was “set alive before Jehovah to make atonement for him, to send him away to Azazel into the wilderness.” So Jesus must meet the prince of evil and there fight out the battle in which Jesus would be bruised in the heel and Satan would be crushed in the head, and in which Jesus’ body would die, but his soul would be triumphant and Satan be cast out.
The devil knew that Christ was near the cross; he knew that if Christ got to the cross and died on the cross, what would be the effect of that death. And what he was trying to effect here (for this was a real temptation of Jesus), was not to bring about the physical death of Jesus, as that young preacher taught, but it was to get Jesus to so shrink back from this suffering that he would not undertake it. That was his point. And Jesus felt all of the agony, so deeply felt it that he prayed, “If it be possible, let this cup pass from me.” But he said, “Not my will, but thine be done.” It was the will of God that the sufferer for sinners must die for sinners.
It is noticeable in all cases of this kind, that the great internal fight is made before we get to the actual reality. I never undertook a great enterprise that I did not first pass through all of the agony before I started out. I had my battle then, and after I had fought the battle out, I never fought it the second time. And when Jesus fights it out here in Gethsemane, he is as serene and equable from this time on as he ever was in his earlier life, when this dark shadow was yet a long way off. Notice that while the Father does not remove the curse, and could not remove it and save man, that he does send an angel to strengthen Jesus to hold up his fainting head.
I ask the reader to notice in the next place that these prayers of Jesus were threefold. He prayed, and the hardest of the fight was in the first prayer; he prayed again, a prayer which was not such a terrible prayer as the first one; he prayed the third time, and in the last prayer peace came to him. He had asked these men to watch, and they slept; he had asked them to pray, not for him, but lest they enter into temptation when they saw their Captain taken, and their hopes, as they understood them, blasted, but they slept. And how pathetic were his words to Peter: “Simon, could not you have watched with me one hour? You have been up a good deal and it is now midnight; the flesh is weak, but your Lord is going through a death agony. Could you not hold out just one more hour?” What a great text! He felt the need of human sympathy. But he was alone in Gethsemane, as we will see him later alone on the cross.
I ask the reader to notice also three prayers of Jesus: First, the prayer that he taught his disciples to pray, commencing, “Our Father, who art in heaven, hallowed by thy name.” Next, the prayer that we discussed in our last chapter, in which he prayed for the disciples. And now this prayer in which he prays for himself. From these prayers we learn what he prayed for, and how he prayed for himself.
I also note in this connection, the three gardens: The garden of Eden, in which the first Adam was tempted and fell; the garden of Gethsemane, in which the Second Adam resisted all of the wiles of the devil, the weakness of the flesh, and the mental despondency that comes from the contemplation of the felon’s death, and, finally, the garden of Paradise, in the last chapter of the Bible that as Adam in the first garden of Paradise turned it into a desert of sin, Jesus in Gethsemane turned the desert into a garden of flowers; that by the preparation here for that which must be accomplished for man’s redemption, viz., to die on the cross, he made possible our entrance into the garden of Paradise. The last chapter in the Bible says, “Blessed are they that wash their robes, that they may have the right to come to the tree of life, and may enter in by the gates into the city.”
Please notice again in what the essence of prayer consists: “Not my will, but thine be done.” As it is expressed later: “If we ask anything according to his will,” and John got the thought right here, when witnessing that agony; so he afterward wrote, “If ye ask anything according to the will of God, he heareth us.” This shows the limit there is upon prayer. I could not pray that God would enable me to steal from a man, or kill a man. I could not rightfully pray for anything in order that I might consume it upon my lusts and passions. James says that is asking amiss; that is asking not according to the will of God. That is the limitation upon all prayer. And Jesus hedged upon that point, “Not my will, but thine be done.”
I heard Major Penn one hundred times, standing up before great crowds of people, when he had invited hundreds not to come and take -the mourner’s bench, but to come up as inquirers to investigate; and he would stand up, and pointing his finger at them, say, “Now have you come to this point: the will of the Lord be done? Have you come to the point that you can say, I want that to be undergone because it is the will of God?’ Are you willing for the will of God to prevail in regard to your conversion, whoever should be the instrument? Or, do you say, I will be converted if a certain preacher should come; or, if it be at home; or, if God shall convert me some night when they shout; or, when they do not shout?’ Are you ready for the will of God to be done?”
The next point is who were coming to capture him? A statement in John in the original Greek says, “These saw the band, and the chief captain.” “The band,” with the definite article is, in the Greek, “the cohort,” which was that special cohort of Roman soldiers quartered in the tower of Antonio, which sat over the Temple; and the chief captain there, in the Greek, chiliarch ( chiliarchos ), means “chief of the thousand.” The Roman legion usually, at this time, consisted of 6,000 men; there would be six chiliarchs, six men each over one thousand; and each chiliarch would have under him ten men, centurions, each over one hundred. The chiliarch was one who occupied an office similar to our colonel commander of a regiment; and the legion answered somewhat to our brigade, or division, more to a division than to a brigade. When it says, “the chief captain,” or chiliarch, was there, it means the most important Roman officer in the city a man of great dignity and power and while the legions were not always full, and therefore the band or number commanded by the chiliarch was not always full in number, yet it meant that hundreds of trained Roman soldiers had here come; the colonel of the regiment, and the captains of several companies. That shows that there was a strong realization, that even in the night people might wake up and that an attempt might be made to rescue him. For fear of that very thing the Sanhedrin would not arrest him in the day time. The chiliarch and the cohort came not to arrest, but merely to prevent a tumult of the people when the Temple officers arrested Jesus. It is quite important to note not only the presence of the cohort and the reasons therefore negatively and positively, and the fact that they did not arrest Jesus, nor carry him to Pilate, nor to anybody else, but were present to prevent possible disorder. Then the text also says that the officers of the Sanhedrin, and the partially armed rabbis that attended them, and their followers carrying staves, were there. The soldiers, of course, had their swords. The short sword of the Roman soldier was a very deadly weapon. So that at least, counting the representatives of the Sanhedrin and the rabbis, and that disciplined band of Roman soldiers, who could not have been sent without the consent of Pilate, at night were all apparently coming to arrest a man that never carried a weapon in his life; coming to arrest a man whose constant followers were twelve, or eleven in this case, unarmed men; coming by night to arrest a man who had taught every day openly in their Temple and in their city. Hence his question: “Do you bring out this army here as if you are going to capture a robber or a thief? Why do you come by night when you could have found me any time by day in the very heart of the city?”
And notice the traitor: Though it was full moon, this man brought lanterns and torches. They wanted to identify the Person, and while the lanterns were shining and their torches throwing out a lurid glare, Jesus says, “Whom do you seek?” And as he stepped out and said, “Whom do you seek?” they fell, just as if they were shot. That was a supernatural event. It showed how easily he could have blotted the whole band out of existence. And when they got up he repeated his question, “Whom do you seek?” They answered him, “Jesus of Nazareth.” Jesus answers them, “I am he: you have not said you have come seeking these followers of mine. Let them go; do not arrest them.”
QUESTIONS 1. Who are the historians of the Gethsemane scene and why, in all probability, was it omitted by John?
2. What is the meaning of the word “Gethsemane,” what is the meaning of the word “place” as used by Matthew in his account and how is Gethsemane described as to location, its contents, etc.?
3. What was the access to this garden and what made it easy for Judas to find our Lord here on the night of his betrayal?
4. Upon entering this garden on the night of his betrayal how did our Lord station the disciples, what command did he give them; why watch and why pray?
5. What hour of the night, who were with him and on what occasions were they admitted to special privileges with Jesus?
6. What does the expression, “My soul is exceeding sorrowful, etc.,” teach, what heresy mentioned, was Jesus dichotomous or trichotomous, what proof, what was the nature of the agony which Christ suffered, and what is the reaction of the inner man on the outer man? Illustrate.
7. What was the young preacher’s theory as to the sorrow of Christ in. Gethsemane, what was the real cause of the sorrow, how does the case of Major Andre illustrate this? what was the nature of Christ’s death and how does Paul express this Gethsemane suffering?
8. What is the meaning of Christ’s prayer in Gethsemane and of what is it a proof?
9. What is the judgment test of this idea of our salvation, what is the answer from the standpoint of God’s omniscience, omnipotence, omnipresence, holiness, and justice? What was Peter’s testimony? Paul’s? the prophetic historian’s? What Old Testament type of this vicarious work of our Lord?
10. What was the devil’s real temptation of our Lord in Gethsemane”
11. What notable fact about this Gethsemane conflict of our Lord?
12. What relief did the Father send to our Lord in this very intense agony?
13. How is Christ’s need of human sympathy revealed in this scene, what three prayers of Jesus cited and what do they teach?
14. What 3 gardens are mentioned here, what were the points of correspondence and what was the condition of entrance into the garden of Paradise?
15. In what does the essence of prayer consist, what was John’s testimony on this point, what does this show, what was James’s testimony, and what practical illustration of the application of this principle given?
16. Who arrested Jesus, why this great band of Roman soldiers, and in what consists the ridiculousness of their course?
17. Why did Judas carry lanterns and torches, what supernatural event happened at this arrest, what does it show and what request did he make for his disciples?
Fuente: B.H. Carroll’s An Interpretation of the English Bible
7 Who in the days of his flesh, when he had offered up prayers and supplications with strong crying and tears unto him that was able to save him from death, and was heard in that he feared;
Ver. 7. Prayers and supplications ] Gr. , deprecations, and most ardent requests, uttered with deep sighs, hands lifted up, and manifold moans, in a most submissive manner.
With strong crying and tears ] Be our hearts so hard (saith one) that we cannot pray for ourselves or others? cry, Conqueror tibi lachrimis Iesu Christi, I cry to thee with Christ’s tears.
Unto him that was able to save him, &c. ] Neither let any here object that many martyrs suffered with less ado, nay, with great joy and triumph. For, 1. What were all their sufferings to his? 2. He therefore suffered the worst, that they might the better suffer. 3. They were lifted up with the sense of God’s love, which he for present felt not. 4. Their bodily pains were miraculously mitigated; as Rose Allen, being asked by a friend how she could abide the painful burning of her hand held over a candle, so long till the very sinews cracked asunder? She said, at the first it was some grief to her; but afterward, the longer she burned the less she felt, or well near none at all. Sabina, a Roman martyr, crying out in her travail, and being asked by her keeper how she would endure the fire next day; Oh, well enough, said she, for now I suffer in child birth for my sins,Gen 3:16Gen 3:16 , but then Christ shall suffer in me and support me.
And was heard in that he feared ] , or, He was heard (that is, delivered) from his fear. For no sooner had he prayed, but he met his enemies in the face, and asked them, “Whom seek ye?” I am he.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
7 ff .] The sufferings of Christ are now adduced, as a portion of his to be made High Priest. They were all in subjection to the will of the Father: they were all parts of his , by virtue of which He is now, in the fullest and most glorious sense, our High Priest. So that these verses are no digression, but stand directly in the course of the argument, as proving the proposition, . Part of this connexion is recognized by Bleek, but not all. He regards the verses as introduced to shew that Christ was never, not even in his deepest humiliation, severed from the Father, whose Son He was, and who subsequently, at his resurrection, appointed Him to his High Priesthood: thus missing the one link which binds this passage into the argument, viz. that this obedience and these sufferings were all a part of His being glorified for his High Priestly office: a part of that office itself , performed before He was perfected by entrance, through the veil of His flesh by death, into the most holy place. This mistake about the time of commencement of the High Priesthood of Christ has misled several of the Commentators throughout this part of the Epistle.
. . .] It will be best to mark at once what I believe to be the connexion of this much-disputed sentence, and then to justify each portion in detail afterwards. Who in the days of his flesh, in that he offered up prayers and supplications with strong crying and tears to Him that was able to save him from death, and was heard by reason of his reverent submission, though He was a son, learned, from the things which He suffered, his obedience, and being made perfect, became the cause of eternal salvation to all who obey Him, being addressed by God as High Priest after the order of Melchisedek . That is, being paraphrased, ‘who had a course of glorifying for the High Priest’s office to go through, not of his own choice, but appointed for Him by the Father, as is shewn by that sharp lesson of obedience (not as contrasted with disobedience, but as indicating a glorious degree of perfect obedience, .), familiar to us all, which He, though God’s own Son, learned during the days of his flesh: when He cried to God with tears for deliverance from death, and was heard on account of His resignation to the Father’s will (“Not my will, but Thine be done”),’ &c. Then as to details: I understand as a general wide date for the incident which is about to be brought in, as contrasted with His present days of glorification in the Spirit.
is found in Achil. Tat. vii. 1 (Bl.), . , and Longin. Pastoral. ii. 23: Jos., B. J. iii. 8. 3, has .
is properly an adjective used of , , &c. held out by the . So Philo, Legat. ad Caium, 36, vol. ii. p. 586, , . But it also was used as = or : so, joined as here with , by Isocr. de Pace 46, : see reff. and more instances in Bleek.
. is to be taken with the substantives ., not with the verb , in which case the words would most probably be placed after . . . ., next the verb.
is by Estius, Schulz, al. understood to mean, not as generally, to rescue Him from death , but “ ut celeriter eriperetur a morte quam erat passurus : quod,” Estius adds, “factum est, quando a morte ad vitam immortalem resurrexit tertia die.” So also more recently Ebrard. But this is not only against the usage of : cf. reff., and the examples given in Bl.: e. g. Od. . 755, : Aristid. Plat. i. p. 90, ( ) . . , but still more decidedly against the truth of the sacred narrative: “Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from me :” for we must of course assume, that in such a designation of the Father, the contents of the prayer made to Him are also indicated.
The is not distinctly asserted in the sacred narrative: but is a most obvious inference from what is there: cf. Mat 26:37 [29] . Bl. has noticed that from the juxtaposition of and , it is probable that the Writer may have had before his mind such passages from the Psalms as Psa 21:2 , , : ib. Psa 21:24, ( . ) : Psa 114:1 ( Psa 116:1 ). I may remark, that there seems no reason for understanding the and of any other time than the agony at Gethsemane, as some have done. This is adduced as the most illustrious instance of that learning obedience from suffering. Epiphanius reports that this weeping of the Lord in His agony was once related in some texts of St. Luke: see note on Luk 22:43-44 .
[29] When, in the Gospels, and in the Evangelic statement, 1Co 11:23-25 , the sign () occurs in a reference, it is signified that the word occurs in the parallel place in the other Gospels, which will always be found indicated at the head of the note on the paragraph. When the sign () is qualified , thus, ‘ Mk.,’ or ‘ Mt. Mk.,’ &c., it is signified that the word occurs in the parallel place in that Gospel or Gospels, but not in the other or others .
is rendered in three different ways. 1. “ He was heard on account of His pious resignation .” 2. “ He was heard, and so delivered, from that which He feared .” 3. “ He was heard by Him who was His fear .” Of these, (3) may shortly be discussed. It is cited by Wolf, Cur in loc., as the view of Albert Ehlers, and is justified by God being called “ the Fear of Isaac ,” Gen 31:42 ; Gen 31:53 . See also Isa 8:13 . But as Wolf answers, “Si Deum indicare voluisset Apostolus, procul dubio scripsisset, , vel , cum antea , i. e. Dei facta fuisset mentio.” And usage would be wholly against such a sense of . (2) has found a formidable phalanx of supporters. The old Latin versions, “exauditus a metu:” Ambrose on Psa 61 . p. 957, “exauditus ab illo metu:” Calv., Beza, Schlichting, Grot., Gerhard, Erasm. Schmid, Jac. Cappell., Hammond, Limborch, Schttgen, Wolf, Bengel, Wetst., Storr, Ernesti, Bretschn., Kuinoel, De Wette, Stuart, Tholuck, Ebrard, and many others. Of these, most understand of His own fear (abstr.), from which, by strengthening Him, God delivered Him: some, as Calv., Schlicht., Hamm., take it (concr.) of the thing itself which He feared, viz. death: “ex eo quod timebat,” Calv. But neither can this be maintained. Bleek has most elaborately discussed the meanings of , and shewn, that however near it may seem to approach in some Greek sentences, to fear , yet it is always the fear of caution or modesty, not of terror: and even could it be thus taken (which Delitzsch, though interpreting the passage as I have done below, yet maintains it may be, on the strength of such examples as Sir 41:3 , ), it would not be agreeable either to the propriety of the passage to express that Christ was delivered from death in such a phrase, when has immediately preceded, nor to its purpose, to predicate such a deliverance from death of Him at all, seeing that He did actually undergo that death which He feared. This would apply to the concrete acceptation of : and the abstract is precluded by the usage of the word. Besides which, the expression would be, if not altogether unprecedented, yet so harsh as to be exceedingly improbable. None of the precedents alleged for it apply. In Psa 22:22 , “Thou hast heard me from among the horns of the unicorns,” the LXX (Psa 21:21) have . , which is no example: in Job 35:12 , (om. ) , the belongs to the former verb . The only case of a pregnant construction at all similar, seems to be, Ps. 117:5, ( ): but as Bl. remarks, it surely is no reason, because a translator reproduces a Hebrew pregnancy, that a writer should have a far harsher construction of the same kind attributed to him when there is no such justifying reason. The other instances, from our Epistle, ch. Heb 10:22 , , Heb 6:1 , are to no purpose, as the verbs there carry in them the idea of being cleansed, or of turning, from something, and the prep. therefore naturally follows. It remains then to examine (1), against which it is urged by Beza, and even by Tholuck (but not in his last edn.), that will not bear the meaning ‘ on account of .’ It is surprising that a scholar should ever have made such an objection, in the face of the instances in the reff., to which many more might be added out of the classics from those given by Bleek. The objection which Tholuck still brings, that such an interpretation would require after ., is equally futile, the unusual expression of the art. after a preposition carrying the full force of a possessive. On the other hand it must be urged, that this meaning, ‘ He was heard on account of His pious resignation ,’ as it is that given by all the Greek expositors, so is the only one which will satisfy the usage of . The account of the word, which I take mainly from Bleek, is this: it is derived from , and that from and , denoting one who lays hold of any thing well, i. e. carefully, so as not to break or injure it; and is used of a man proceeding cautiously in his design, so as to avoid injury to himself or another. As such, it is opposed to by Demosth. 517. 21, . . . Thus again in Plut. Marc. 9, p. 252, . . . . And Polyb. iii. 105. 8, , . And hence the meaning sometimes approaches very near to fear : but, as above observed, always the fear of great caution or great modesty, not that of terror in any case. So Liban. iv. 265 a, . : Jos. Antt. vi. 9. 2, , . And in Antt. xi. 6. 9, Esther is said to have come in to the king , but he laid the sceptre on her neck, . So far is the word from representing the fear of terror, that it is expressly opposed to it: as e. g. by Demosth. 405. 19, . , ; . Diog. Laert. says of Zen [30] , ( ) , . See also in Bleek a remarkable extract from Plutarch, where he mentions being used by the Stoics as an euphemism for . From these meanings the transition was very easy to that cautious reverence with which the pious man approaches a Divine Being. So Plut. Camill., . : l, : Philo, Quis Rer. Div. Hr. 6, vol. i. p. 476, . “ ( Gen 15:2 );” “ ,” : cf. also reff., especially ch. Heb 12:28 , the only other place where it is found in the N. T. And this religious sense certainly suits remarkably well in our passage. No term could more exactly express the reverent submission to His Heavenly Father’s will which is shewn in those words, “Not my will, but thine be done:” none the constant humbling of himself in comparison with the Father, and exalting Him in word and deed, of which our Saviour’s life is full. I have no hesitation therefore in adopting this rendering, and feeling entirely satisfied with it. Besides fulfilling the requisites of philology and of fact, it admirably suits the context here, where the appointment of Christ by the Father to his High Priesthood and the various steps by which that High Priesthood was perfected, are in question. As the ancient schol. says, , , , , , .
[30] Zeno, Bp. of Verona , 362 380
The matter of fact represented by may require some explanation. He was heard , not in the sense of the cup passing away from Him, which indeed was not the prayer of his , but in strength being ministered to Him to do and to suffer that will of his Father, to fulfil which was the prayer of his “Not my will, but thine be done.” And I have little doubt that the word immediately refers to the “angel from heaven, strengthening Him,” of Luk 22:43 . Calvin’s remarks (“Ita spe fit, ut hoc vel illud petamus, sed in alium finem: ipse vero Deus quod petieramus, eo modo quo petieramus, non concedens, interea modum invenit, quo nobis succurrat”), however true in the Christian life, do not apply here, because the real prayer of our Lord, as , was granted in the very form in which it was expressed, not in another.
] This clause, according to all analogy of the use of with a participle, is to be taken by itself, not with what follows. So , Od. . 224; , sch. Sept. c. Theb. 714: &c. Bleek, who adduces many more examples, doubts whether any authentic instance of the use of with a finite verb can be produced (not Rev 17:8 ; see text there): see also reff. Thus much being certain, the next question is, to what these words are to be applied. A threefold connexion is mentioned by Photius (in c.). The first alternative involves an inversion which would be unnatural in the last degree: . . . ., , . . . The second is to take the words with the clause immediately preceding: , , , . . And so Thl. (Chrys. in one place, but see also below; Phot. prefers it among the three), al. And this doubtless is possible, both grammatically and contextually. For the would thus come in as an exceptional clause, not to , in which light Bleek, Lnem., al. object to it, seeing that his being a Son would be rather the reason why He should than why He should not be heard, but to the whole clause . , though He was a Son, yet not this, but his , was the ground of his being heard: which gives an undoubted good sense. Not much dissimilar will be the sense given by the other and more general way: viz. to take the words with the following clause, : although He was a Son, He learned his obedience, not from this relation, but from his sufferings. So Chrys. ( ; ; ; , , ; but see also above), Ambrose (Ep. 63. vol. iii. p. 1033: “et ex iis qu passus est, quamvis esset filius Dei, discere videretur obedientiam:” and alibi), and almost all the moderns. And there can be little doubt that this yields the better sense, and points to the deeper truth. Christ was a Son: as a Son, He was ever obedient, and ever in union with his Father’s will; but , His special obedience, that course of submission by which He became perfected as our High Priest, was gone through in Time , and matter of acquirement for Him, and practice , by suffering.
The expression, , brings to mind a number of Greek sayings founded on the proverb, , . So Herod. i. 207, of Crsus, , , : schyl. Agam. 177, , and a very long list of examples in Wetstein and Bleek. The ancients found this assertion startling, attributing too narrow a sense to our Lord’s : so Thdrt., , , . And Chrys., , ; This indeed would be a difficulty, were the Writer speaking of the Passion only, in its stricter sense; but he is speaking, I take it, of that continuous course of new obedience entered on by new suffering, of which the prayer in Gethsemane furnishes indeed the most notable instance, but of which also almost every act of His life on earth was an example. Thl. is so scandalized by the whole passage as applied to Christ that he says, , .
Two mistakes must be avoided: 1. though He was the Son, which I find in Craik’s new translation of the Epistle: cf. ch. Heb 3:5-6 , , , : and consider besides, that if we take from the simple predicative force of , as a well-known relative, we take from the at the same time, by diminishing the general appreciation of the exceptional : and, 2. that of Whitby, that here means “ taught ( us ).” If such a meaning ever could be admitted, least of all could it, from the context, here, where the subject treated is entirely Christ Himself, in his completion as our High Priest, and not till this is finished does that which He became to others come into question.
, see note on ch. Heb 2:10 , perfected , completed, brought to his goal of learning and suffering, through death: the time to which the word would apply is that of the Resurrection, when his triumph began: so our Lord Himself on the way to Emmaus, , ( would come in here) ; Thdrt., . .
, by means of that course which ended in His . In there is probably an allusion to the above. As He obeyed the Father, so must we obey Him, if we would be brought to that into which He has led the way. The expression is strictly parallel with , ch. Heb 4:3 , and , ch. Heb 7:25 . Some have thought that in , the Writer hints to his Jewish readers, that such salvation was not confined to them alone. But it hardly seems likely that such a by-purpose should lie in the word. This unlikelihood is increased if (as it must do) begins, instead of closing the clause as in rec. is of course Christ.
is good Greek, and often found: see examples in Bleek, e. g. Xen. Cyr. viii. 5. 2, . : Diod. Sic. iv. 82, : and the same expression in Jos. Antt. iii. 3. 1; vii. 1. 1: Philo de Agric. 22, vol. i. p. 315:De Vita Contempl. 11, vol. ii. p. 485. See reff. also on .
The next clause, . . ., depends closely upon . . . above, and belongs to the time of Christ’s exaltation, indicated by : and therefore must not be divided by a colon, as done by Griesbach, Bengel, Matthi, al., from the foregoing, nor supposed to refer to the whole from Heb 5:7 . As to the word itself, it refers to the passage of the Psalm above, and carries with it a slight causal force, ‘ being ,’ or ‘ inasmuch as He is , named.’ in this connexion has a force of solemnity and formal appellation: so, Xen. Cyr. vii. 2. 4, Crsus says to Cyrus, . , : Diod. Sic. i. 4, , . See reff. 2 Macc., and many more examples in Bleek. So that it here implies, not ‘ appointed ’ or ‘ inaugurated ,’ but ‘ addressed as ,’ ‘ named ,’ it being of course implied that He was both appointed and inaugurated.
Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament
Hebrews
GETHSEMANE
Heb 5:7
WE may take these great and solemn words as a commentary on the gospel narrative of Gethsemane. It is remarkable that there should be here preserved a detail of that agony which is not found in our Gospels. The strong crying and tears find no record in our evangelists, and so it would appear as though the writer of the Epistle to the Hebrews was not altogether dependent upon them for his knowledge of Christ’s life. In any case here we have independent witness to the story of Christ’s passion, and a very instructive hint as to the widespread and familiar knowledge of the story of our Lord’s suffering, which existed at the very early date of this Epistle in the churches, so that it could be referred to in this far-off allusive way with the certainty that hearers would distinctly understand what the writer was speaking about. So we get a confirmation of the historical veracity of the narrative that is preserved in our Gospel. But the value of such words as these is their bearing upon far deeper things than that. They point to Gethsemane as showing us Christ, as the companion of our sorrows and supplications, as a pattern of our submissive, devout resignation, and as a lesson for us all how prayer is most truly answered. First, then, take that great thought of my text, the Christ as being our companion in sorrow and in supplication. ‘In the days of His flesh – when He bore what I bear – in the days of His flesh He offered prayer and supplications with strong crying and tears unto Him that was able to save Him from death.’ Now I do not dwell at any length upon the additional contribution to the vividness and solemnity of the picture given us in the detail of the text before us, but I want to refer for one moment, and I will do it as reverently as I can, to the unapproachable narrative, and to make this one remark about it, that all the three evangelists who are our source of knowledge of that scene in the garden of Gethsemane employ strange, and all but unexampled, words in order to express the condition of our Saviour’s spirit then. Matthew, for instance, uses a word which, in our Bible, is translated ‘He began to be very heavy.’ Only once besides, as far as I know, is it employed in scripture, and it seems to mean something like ‘On the very verge of despair.’ And then Mark gives us the same singular expression, adding to it another one which is translated, ‘sore amazed.’ It has been suggested that a more adequate rendering would be ‘began to be appalled,’ and another suggestion has been, that it might be adequately rendered with the phrase ‘that He began to be out of Himself.’ Then comes Luke, with his word, which we have translated into English as ‘agony.’ And then there come Christ’s own strange words, ‘My soul is encompassed with sorrow almost up to the point of death.’ That is not a proverb; I take that to be a literal fact that one more pang and the physical frame would have given way. Now, I do not point to these things in any spirit of curious investigation. I feel, I hope, ‘Put off thy shoes from off thy feet, for the place whereon thou standest is holy ground.’ And yet I cannot help feeling that there is a tendency nowadays to say too little about the Gospel story of Christ’s sufferings; it is a reaction, no doubt, and prompted by good motives; it is a reaction from the preaching of a former time, when men used these sacred narratives of our Lord’s last days in the coarsest possible manner, and the climax of it is that horrible kind of preaching that Roman Catholic preachers used to indulge in – Passion sermons. And yet I cannot but feel that we are in danger of going to the other extreme and losing much by not sufficiently dwelling on the facts. Then there is another point.. What is the meaning of that-what is the explanation of all the passion, and paroxysm of agony, and fear. and bloody sweat, and horror-stricken appeal? Is it not a very, very unheroic picture that? Is it not strangely unlike the spirit in which many men and women, who drew all courage from Christ, have gone to their death? Is not the servant above his master here, if you will think of a Latimer at the stake, or of many a poor unknown martyr that went to his death as to his bed, and set that side by side with the shrinking of Christ? Well, dear brethren, I know the attempt to explain the flood of sorrow, of dread, and horror of great darkness that wrapt the soul of Jesus Christ in these last moments, on psychological principles, and say it is a pure and lofty end, shrinking from death; but it seems to me the only explanation of it all is the good old one:
‘The Lord hath made to meet upon Him the iniquity of us all.’
And so with the weight of the sins and the sorrows of the world, He began to be sorrowful and very heavy. And then, passing on, let me deal with the matter from another point of view, and remind you that, whatsoever there may be all His own and beyond that reach of common humanity, experienced in the solemn and awful hour, yet it is also the revelation of a companionship that never fails us in all our struggles, tears, and prayers. Oh, how different that makes our passage through the lonely experience of our human life! There are times in every life when all human affection and all human voices fail in the presence of a great sorrow, and when you feel that you must tread this path alone. Although loving hands are stretched out to me through the darkness, and have grasped my own and helped me to stand, yet nothing will still the aching of the solitary heart except the thought of a Christ who has suffered it all already, and who, in the days of His flesh, offered up, with strong crying and tears, His prayer unto Him that was able to save. You remember the old Roman story – grand in its heroic simplicity – of the husband and the wife resolved to escape from the miseries of a tyrant-ridden world by suicide – which to them was less criminal than it is to us – and the wife first of all struck the dagger into her own heart, and drawing it out, embrued with her own blood, hands it to her husband, with the dying words ‘Paetus! it is not painful.’ The sharp edge that strikes into your heart, brethren, has cut into Christ’s first, and the blade tinctured with His blood inflicts only healing wounds upon us. He is our priest because He has gone before us on every road of sorrow and loss, and is ready to sustain us when it comes to our turn to tread it. And so turn for a moment to the other conception that is here, viz., that the same solemn scene shows us Christ as being, not only our companion in sorrow and supplication, but our pattern of submissive reverence. The language of my text needs just one word of explanation in order to show where this lies. You observe it reads, ‘And was heard in that He feared.’ Now, these last words, ‘in that He feared,’ have always received two varying expositions, and, I suppose, always will receive them. The text fairly allows one or the other. They may either mean, ‘He was heard or delivered from the thing He dreaded’ – which you know is not true – or they may mean that He was heard by reason of His reverence and submission, or, if we may use such a word – a word that is not Scriptural and very modern – was heard because of His piety. And I suppose the latter was distinctly the meaning in the writer’s mind. Christ’s prayer was, ‘If it be possible,’ and His second prayer was, ‘If this cup may not pass from Me Thy will be done.’ He felt the reluctance of the flesh to enter upon the path of suffering, the perfectly natural human shrinking from all that lay before Him. But that shrinking never made His purpose falter, nor made Him lose His son-like dependence upon the Father’s will and submission to the Father’s will. And so there come out of that, large lessons that I can only just touch for a moment. And the first of them is this: let us learn and be thankful for the teaching, that resignation, submission to all the burdens and pains and struggles and sorrows which life brings to us, does not demand the suppression of the natural emotions and affections of the flesh. Christ recoiled from the cup, but Christ’s submission was perfect. And so for us there are two ways. Inclination and duty will often draw us two different ways. Tastes and weaknesses will often suggest one thing, and the high sense of the path we ought to travel upon will suggest another. But the inclination must never be allowed to mount up into the region of the will and to make our purpose falter, or make us abandon that which we feel will be the rough path-Then there will be no sin in the fact that the flesh shrinks, as shrink it must, from the thing which duty demands we should do. Christ, the example of a perfect resignation, is an example of a will that mastered flesh. That is full of encouragement and strength to us in our time of need and conflict. And then there is the other side of the same thought Not only does there often come into our life the struggle of duty and inclination, but there comes into our life sometimes the other straggle between submission and sorrow. In like manner there is no sin in the tear, there is no sin in the strong crying. It is meet that when His hand is laid heavy upon my heart, my heart should feel the pressure; it is meet that I should take into my consciousness and into my feeling the pain; and then it is meet that if I cannot do anything more – and I don’t think we can – I should at least try through my tears to say, ‘Not my will, but Thine’; and if I cannot do anything more, at least, ‘I was dumb, I opened not my mouth because Thou didst it.’
And the last point I touch upon is this, that according to the teaching of this commentary upon that solemn scene, our Lord in it sets before us the lesson of what the true answer to prayer is. ‘He prayed unto Him that was able to save Him from death,’ and says my text: ‘He was heard.’ Was He? How was He heard? He was heard in this. There appeared unto Him an angel from heaven strengthening Him. He was heard in this because His prayer was not ‘Let this cup pass,’ but His prayer was, ‘Thy will be done,’ and God’s will was done. And so there comes out the true heart of all true prayer, ‘Thy will be done.’ And the true answer that We get is, not the lifting away of the burden, but the breathing into our hearts strength to bear it, so that it ceases to be a burden. Let us make our prayers not petulant wishes to get our own way, but lowly efforts to enter into God’s way and make His will ours, so shall come to us peace and strength, and a power adequate to Our need. The cup will be sweetened, and our lips made willing to drink it. Christ was heard, and Christ was crucified. Learn the lesson that if, in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving, we make. our requests known unto God, whatsoever other answer may be sent, or not sent, the real and highest answer will surely’ be sent, and the peace of God, which passeth understanding, shall keep our hearts and minds in Christ Jesus.
Fuente: Expositions Of Holy Scripture by Alexander MacLaren
when He had = having.
prayers = both prayers. Greek. deesis. App-134.
supplications. Greek. hiketeria. Only here. In classical Greek the olive branch in the hand of a suppliant, implying need and claim.
with. Greek. meta. App-104.
crying. Greek. krauge. See Act 23:9.
death. Not from death, for the Greek word is ek, not apo. He went down into death, but was saved out of (Greek. ek) it by resurrection.
in that, &c = for (Greek. apo. Compare Act 12:14) His piety, or godly fear (Greek. eulabeia. Here and Heb 12:28). This verse is a Divine supplement to the Gospel records.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
7 ff.] The sufferings of Christ are now adduced, as a portion of his to be made High Priest. They were all in subjection to the will of the Father: they were all parts of his , by virtue of which He is now, in the fullest and most glorious sense, our High Priest. So that these verses are no digression, but stand directly in the course of the argument, as proving the proposition, . Part of this connexion is recognized by Bleek, but not all. He regards the verses as introduced to shew that Christ was never, not even in his deepest humiliation, severed from the Father, whose Son He was, and who subsequently, at his resurrection, appointed Him to his High Priesthood: thus missing the one link which binds this passage into the argument, viz. that this obedience and these sufferings were all a part of His being glorified for his High Priestly office: a part of that office itself, performed before He was perfected by entrance, through the veil of His flesh by death, into the most holy place. This mistake about the time of commencement of the High Priesthood of Christ has misled several of the Commentators throughout this part of the Epistle.
…] It will be best to mark at once what I believe to be the connexion of this much-disputed sentence, and then to justify each portion in detail afterwards. Who in the days of his flesh, in that he offered up prayers and supplications with strong crying and tears to Him that was able to save him from death, and was heard by reason of his reverent submission, though He was a son, learned, from the things which He suffered, his obedience, and being made perfect, became the cause of eternal salvation to all who obey Him, being addressed by God as High Priest after the order of Melchisedek. That is, being paraphrased,-who had a course of glorifying for the High Priests office to go through, not of his own choice, but appointed for Him by the Father, as is shewn by that sharp lesson of obedience (not as contrasted with disobedience, but as indicating a glorious degree of perfect obedience, .), familiar to us all, which He, though Gods own Son, learned during the days of his flesh: when He cried to God with tears for deliverance from death, and was heard on account of His resignation to the Fathers will (Not my will, but Thine be done), &c. Then as to details: I understand as a general wide date for the incident which is about to be brought in,-as contrasted with His present days of glorification in the Spirit.
is found in Achil. Tat. vii. 1 (Bl.), . , and Longin. Pastoral. ii. 23: Jos., B. J. iii. 8. 3, has .
is properly an adjective used of , , &c. held out by the . So Philo, Legat. ad Caium, 36, vol. ii. p. 586, , . But it also was used as = or : so, joined as here with , by Isocr. de Pace 46, : see reff. and more instances in Bleek.
. is to be taken with the substantives ., not with the verb , in which case the words would most probably be placed after . . . ., next the verb.
is by Estius, Schulz, al. understood to mean, not as generally, to rescue Him from death, but ut celeriter eriperetur a morte quam erat passurus: quod, Estius adds, factum est, quando a morte ad vitam immortalem resurrexit tertia die. So also more recently Ebrard. But this is not only against the usage of : cf. reff., and the examples given in Bl.: e. g. Od. . 755, : Aristid. Plat. i. p. 90, ( ) . . ,-but still more decidedly against the truth of the sacred narrative: Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from me: for we must of course assume, that in such a designation of the Father, the contents of the prayer made to Him are also indicated.
The is not distinctly asserted in the sacred narrative: but is a most obvious inference from what is there: cf. Mat 26:37 [29]. Bl. has noticed that from the juxtaposition of and , it is probable that the Writer may have had before his mind such passages from the Psalms as Psa 21:2, , : ib. Psa 21:24, (. ) : Psa 114:1 (Psa 116:1). I may remark, that there seems no reason for understanding the and of any other time than the agony at Gethsemane, as some have done. This is adduced as the most illustrious instance of that learning obedience from suffering. Epiphanius reports that this weeping of the Lord in His agony was once related in some texts of St. Luke: see note on Luk 22:43-44.
[29] When, in the Gospels, and in the Evangelic statement, 1Co 11:23-25, the sign () occurs in a reference, it is signified that the word occurs in the parallel place in the other Gospels, which will always be found indicated at the head of the note on the paragraph. When the sign () is qualified, thus, Mk., or Mt. Mk., &c., it is signified that the word occurs in the parallel place in that Gospel or Gospels, but not in the other or others.
is rendered in three different ways. 1. He was heard on account of His pious resignation. 2. He was heard, and so delivered, from that which He feared. 3. He was heard by Him who was His fear. Of these, (3) may shortly be discussed. It is cited by Wolf, Cur in loc., as the view of Albert Ehlers, and is justified by God being called the Fear of Isaac, Gen 31:42; Gen 31:53. See also Isa 8:13. But as Wolf answers, Si Deum indicare voluisset Apostolus, procul dubio scripsisset, , vel , cum antea , i. e. Dei facta fuisset mentio. And usage would be wholly against such a sense of . (2) has found a formidable phalanx of supporters. The old Latin versions, exauditus a metu: Ambrose on Psalms 61. p. 957, exauditus ab illo metu: Calv., Beza, Schlichting, Grot., Gerhard, Erasm. Schmid, Jac. Cappell., Hammond, Limborch, Schttgen, Wolf, Bengel, Wetst., Storr, Ernesti, Bretschn., Kuinoel, De Wette, Stuart, Tholuck, Ebrard, and many others. Of these, most understand of His own fear (abstr.), from which, by strengthening Him, God delivered Him: some, as Calv., Schlicht., Hamm., take it (concr.) of the thing itself which He feared, viz. death: ex eo quod timebat, Calv. But neither can this be maintained. Bleek has most elaborately discussed the meanings of , and shewn, that however near it may seem to approach in some Greek sentences, to fear, yet it is always the fear of caution or modesty, not of terror: and even could it be thus taken (which Delitzsch, though interpreting the passage as I have done below, yet maintains it may be, on the strength of such examples as Sir 41:3, ), it would not be agreeable either to the propriety of the passage to express that Christ was delivered from death in such a phrase, when has immediately preceded,-nor to its purpose, to predicate such a deliverance from death of Him at all, seeing that He did actually undergo that death which He feared. This would apply to the concrete acceptation of : and the abstract is precluded by the usage of the word. Besides which, the expression would be, if not altogether unprecedented, yet so harsh as to be exceedingly improbable. None of the precedents alleged for it apply. In Psa 22:22, Thou hast heard me from among the horns of the unicorns, the LXX (Psa 21:21) have . , which is no example: in Job 35:12, (om. ) , the belongs to the former verb . The only case of a pregnant construction at all similar, seems to be, Ps. 117:5, (): but as Bl. remarks, it surely is no reason, because a translator reproduces a Hebrew pregnancy, that a writer should have a far harsher construction of the same kind attributed to him when there is no such justifying reason. The other instances, from our Epistle, ch. Heb 10:22, , Heb 6:1, are to no purpose, as the verbs there carry in them the idea of being cleansed, or of turning, from something, and the prep. therefore naturally follows. It remains then to examine (1), against which it is urged by Beza, and even by Tholuck (but not in his last edn.), that will not bear the meaning on account of. It is surprising that a scholar should ever have made such an objection, in the face of the instances in the reff., to which many more might be added out of the classics from those given by Bleek. The objection which Tholuck still brings, that such an interpretation would require after ., is equally futile, the unusual expression of the art. after a preposition carrying the full force of a possessive. On the other hand it must be urged, that this meaning, He was heard on account of His pious resignation, as it is that given by all the Greek expositors, so is the only one which will satisfy the usage of . The account of the word, which I take mainly from Bleek, is this: it is derived from , and that from and , denoting one who lays hold of any thing well, i. e. carefully, so as not to break or injure it; and is used of a man proceeding cautiously in his design, so as to avoid injury to himself or another. As such, it is opposed to by Demosth. 517. 21, . . . Thus again in Plut. Marc. 9, p. 252, . . . . And Polyb. iii. 105. 8, , . And hence the meaning sometimes approaches very near to fear: but, as above observed, always the fear of great caution or great modesty, not that of terror in any case. So Liban. iv. 265 a, . : Jos. Antt. vi. 9. 2, , . And in Antt. xi. 6. 9, Esther is said to have come in to the king , but he laid the sceptre on her neck, . So far is the word from representing the fear of terror, that it is expressly opposed to it: as e. g. by Demosth. 405. 19, . , ; . Diog. Laert. says of Zen[30], ( ) , . See also in Bleek a remarkable extract from Plutarch, where he mentions being used by the Stoics as an euphemism for . From these meanings the transition was very easy to that cautious reverence with which the pious man approaches a Divine Being. So Plut. Camill., . : l, : Philo, Quis Rer. Div. Hr. 6, vol. i. p. 476, . (Gen 15:2); , : cf. also reff., especially ch. Heb 12:28, the only other place where it is found in the N. T. And this religious sense certainly suits remarkably well in our passage. No term could more exactly express the reverent submission to His Heavenly Fathers will which is shewn in those words, Not my will, but thine be done: none the constant humbling of himself in comparison with the Father, and exalting Him in word and deed, of which our Saviours life is full. I have no hesitation therefore in adopting this rendering, and feeling entirely satisfied with it. Besides fulfilling the requisites of philology and of fact, it admirably suits the context here, where the appointment of Christ by the Father to his High Priesthood and the various steps by which that High Priesthood was perfected, are in question. As the ancient schol. says, , , , , , .
[30] Zeno, Bp. of Verona, 362-380
The matter of fact represented by may require some explanation. He was heard, not in the sense of the cup passing away from Him, which indeed was not the prayer of his ,-but in strength being ministered to Him to do and to suffer that will of his Father, to fulfil which was the prayer of his -Not my will, but thine be done. And I have little doubt that the word immediately refers to the angel from heaven, strengthening Him, of Luk 22:43. Calvins remarks (Ita spe fit, ut hoc vel illud petamus, sed in alium finem: ipse vero Deus quod petieramus, eo modo quo petieramus, non concedens, interea modum invenit, quo nobis succurrat), however true in the Christian life, do not apply here, because the real prayer of our Lord, as , was granted in the very form in which it was expressed, not in another.
] This clause, according to all analogy of the use of with a participle, is to be taken by itself, not with what follows. So , Od. . 224; , sch. Sept. c. Theb. 714: &c. Bleek, who adduces many more examples, doubts whether any authentic instance of the use of with a finite verb can be produced (not Rev 17:8; see text there): see also reff. Thus much being certain, the next question is, to what these words are to be applied. A threefold connexion is mentioned by Photius (in c.). The first alternative involves an inversion which would be unnatural in the last degree: . . . ., , . . . The second is to take the words with the clause immediately preceding: , , , . . And so Thl. (Chrys. in one place, but see also below; Phot. prefers it among the three), al. And this doubtless is possible, both grammatically and contextually. For the would thus come in as an exceptional clause, not to , in which light Bleek, Lnem., al. object to it, seeing that his being a Son would be rather the reason why He should than why He should not be heard,-but to the whole clause . ,-though He was a Son, yet not this, but his , was the ground of his being heard: which gives an undoubted good sense. Not much dissimilar will be the sense given by the other and more general way: viz. to take the words with the following clause, : although He was a Son, He learned his obedience, not from this relation, but from his sufferings. So Chrys. ( ; ; ; , , ; but see also above), Ambrose (Ep. 63. vol. iii. p. 1033: et ex iis qu passus est, quamvis esset filius Dei, discere videretur obedientiam: and alibi), and almost all the moderns. And there can be little doubt that this yields the better sense, and points to the deeper truth. Christ was a Son: as a Son, He was ever obedient, and ever in union with his Fathers will; but , His special obedience, that course of submission by which He became perfected as our High Priest, was gone through in Time, and matter of acquirement for Him, and practice, by suffering.
The expression, , brings to mind a number of Greek sayings founded on the proverb, , . So Herod. i. 207, of Crsus, , , : schyl. Agam. 177, , and a very long list of examples in Wetstein and Bleek. The ancients found this assertion startling, attributing too narrow a sense to our Lords : so Thdrt., , , . And Chrys., , ; This indeed would be a difficulty, were the Writer speaking of the Passion only, in its stricter sense; but he is speaking, I take it, of that continuous course of new obedience entered on by new suffering, of which the prayer in Gethsemane furnishes indeed the most notable instance, but of which also almost every act of His life on earth was an example. Thl. is so scandalized by the whole passage as applied to Christ that he says, , .
Two mistakes must be avoided: 1. though He was the Son, which I find in Craiks new translation of the Epistle: cf. ch. Heb 3:5-6, , , : and consider besides, that if we take from the simple predicative force of , as a well-known relative, we take from the at the same time, by diminishing the general appreciation of the exceptional : and, 2. that of Whitby, that here means taught (us). If such a meaning ever could be admitted, least of all could it, from the context, here, where the subject treated is entirely Christ Himself, in his completion as our High Priest, and not till this is finished does that which He became to others come into question.
, see note on ch. Heb 2:10, perfected, completed, brought to his goal of learning and suffering, through death: the time to which the word would apply is that of the Resurrection, when his triumph began: so our Lord Himself on the way to Emmaus, , ( would come in here) ; Thdrt., . .
, by means of that course which ended in His . In there is probably an allusion to the above. As He obeyed the Father, so must we obey Him, if we would be brought to that into which He has led the way. The expression is strictly parallel with , ch. Heb 4:3, and , ch. Heb 7:25. Some have thought that in , the Writer hints to his Jewish readers, that such salvation was not confined to them alone. But it hardly seems likely that such a by-purpose should lie in the word. This unlikelihood is increased if (as it must do) begins, instead of closing the clause as in rec. is of course Christ.
is good Greek, and often found: see examples in Bleek, e. g. Xen. Cyr. viii. 5. 2, . : Diod. Sic. iv. 82, : and the same expression in Jos. Antt. iii. 3. 1; vii. 1. 1: Philo de Agric. 22, vol. i. p. 315:De Vita Contempl. 11, vol. ii. p. 485. See reff. also on .
The next clause, …, depends closely upon … above, and belongs to the time of Christs exaltation, indicated by : and therefore must not be divided by a colon, as done by Griesbach, Bengel, Matthi, al., from the foregoing, nor supposed to refer to the whole from Heb 5:7. As to the word itself, it refers to the passage of the Psalm above, and carries with it a slight causal force, being, or inasmuch as He is, named. in this connexion has a force of solemnity and formal appellation: so, Xen. Cyr. vii. 2. 4, Crsus says to Cyrus, . , : Diod. Sic. i. 4, , . See reff. 2 Macc., and many more examples in Bleek. So that it here implies, not appointed or inaugurated, but addressed as, named, it being of course implied that He was both appointed and inaugurated.
Fuente: The Greek Testament
Heb 5:7. , who) namely Christ, the Son of God, the Priest. This is not said, but who, with great significancy in the relative pronoun; for the subsequent discourse corresponds to the names given in Heb 5:5-6. A summary of those things, which are to be discussed in ch. 7. and the following chapters, is contained in Heb 5:7-10, and introduced with a remarkable anticipatory caution[30] and preparation, Heb 5:11-12. And there is most exquisitely comprehended in this summary the onward progress of His passion, with its most secret (inmost) causes, from Gethsemane even to Golgotha, and the expressions used here are the same as those used by the evangelists: comp. also Psa 22:3; Psa 22:20, etc., Psa 22:25, Psa 69:4; Psa 69:11, Psa 109:22.- , in the days of His flesh) in those days, the two especially, during which He suffered those things, and in order to suffer them, He assumed flesh like to that, which was sinful and mortal: ch. Heb 2:14, Heb 10:20; Mat 26:41, at the end: when by reason of weakness He seemed to be a mere man, Joh 19:5.- , both prayers and also supplications) plural; for in Gethsemane He prayed thrice. The particle , both, indicates that the words are not mere synonyms in this passage: prayers refer to the mind; supplications, also to the body, as the origin of the word, , I supplicate shows, in Eustathius. Regarding both see Mat 26:39.- , to Him that was able to save Him from death) Abba Father, says He, all things are POSSIBLE to Thee; let this cup pass from Me. Mar 14:36 : comp. Joh 12:27. This possibility of all things to God is opposed to the weakness of Christs flesh.-, to save) , and presently , are conjugates, to save, salvation.-) Presently; afterwards . The two words, in other respects, equivalent, agree here with the difference of the subject: out of death, from terror. He, however, in obedience to the will of the Father underwent the death, out of () which the Father might have delivered Him, so that He should not have died: He was altogether delivered from () its horror, in that He was heard.- , with strong crying and tears) On the cross, He is said to have cried, not to have shed tears. Both of these particulars, as the series of the events shows, refer to Gethsemane. and in the LXX. correspond to the verbs , and , and , and denote a cry from the depths of the soul, or vehement desire; , more earnestly, Luk 22:44; with a most willing spirit, Mat 26:41, whatever may be the words uttered; these occur very often in the Psalms, as , to speak, to say, signifies also thought. Indeed, the cry of the mind, while the lips are closed, is more suitable to tears and sorrow; and yet there is no doubt, that Jesus added to His prayers in Gethsemane an incitement by uttering at intervals short cries, as well as to His supplications by tears (observe the Chiasmus) which were drawn forth not only from the eyes, but from the whole face and body, during that extreme heat [agony]. See Luke as quoted above: comp. with Rev 7:17; Rev 7:16. , , heat, tears. The sweat and blood of Christ were poured out like water. During the whole of His passion He alternately cried and was silent. Mat 26:37, etc.; Psa 22:2-3; Psa 22:15; Psa 69:2, etc., Psa 109:21, etc., where silence is an intimation of a wounded heart.- , and being heard) LXX. , Psa 55:17; in like manner, 2Ch 18:31 : therefore in this passage and , to save, and to hearken to, are very nearly the same. The agony and its issue are here referred to, , He began to be sorrowful and very heavy.- , unto death, Mat 26:37-38.-, Mar 14:33 : Luk 22:44 mentions the agony and sweat. When the cup was presented, there was also presented to the soul of the Saviour the horrible image of death, which was joined with sorrow, ignominy, and cursing, and was of a lingering nature, and He was moved to pray for the removal of the cup. But the purity of filial affection in the Saviour with the exercise of holy reason and moderation instantly softened that horror, and subsequently absorbed it completely, as the serenity of His mind returned. And He was heard, not that He should not drink the cup, but that He should now drink it without any horror; whence also He was strengthened by an angel. The fear was a something more horrible than death itself; when the feeling of horror was taken away before the coming of His enemies, He lays it down as a fixed principle, that the cup which he had wished conditionally not to drink, now cannot but be drunk. Joh 18:11.-) An abbreviated expression, , as , ch. Heb 10:22. So Psalms 118 (117):5, .- [not as Eng. Ver. in that He feared] from horror). The Greek word here has singular elegance and denotes something wore subtle than if one were to say fear. No Latin word more suitable than horror occurs to us. Comp. , ch. Heb 11:7. He had lately used , without the article; now he has with the article, of which the relative power indicates that the signification of is included in the mention made of death, which was horrible in its assault.
[30] See Append. on .
Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament
In this verse two instances of the qualifications of a high priest are accommodated unto our Lord Jesus Christ, and that in the retrograde order before proposed. For the last thing expressed concerning a high priest according to the law was, that he was compassed with infirmity, Heb 5:3.
And this, in the First place, is applied unto Christ; for it was so with him when he entered upon the discharge of his office. And therein the apostle gives a double demonstration:
1. From the time and season wherein he did execute his office; it was in the days of his flesh. So openly do they contradict the Scripture who contend that he entered not directly on his priestly office until these days of his flesh were finished and ended. Now, in the days of his flesh he was compassed with infirmities, and that because he was in the flesh.
2. From the manner of his deportment in this discharge of his office, he did it with cries and tears. And these also are from the infirmity of our nature.
Secondly, The acting of the high priest, as so qualified, in the discharge of his office, is accommodated unto him. For a high priest was appointed
, verse 1; that he might offer gifts and sacrifices for sins. So it is here affirmed of our Savior that he also offered to God; which is expressive of a sacerdotal act, as shall be declared. And this is further described,
1. By an especial adjunct of the sacrifice he offered, namely, prayers and tears;
2. By the immediate object of them, and his sacrifice which they accompanied, Him that was able to save him from death;
3. By the effect and issue of the whole, He was heard in that which he feared.
Heb 5:7. , , . . Syr., also when he was clothed with flesh. Arab., in the days of his humanity. . Syr., with a vehement outcry. . This is wholly omitted in the Syriae; only in the next verse mention of is introduced, as , fear, or dread: which is evidently transferred from this place, the interpreter, it seems, not understanding the meaning of it in its present construction. [4]
[4] EXPOSITION. Chrys., Phot., Theophyl., Vulg., Luther, Calov, Olshausen, Bleek, and some others, understand . in the sense of fear of God; Jesus was heard on account of his piety. The Peschito, Itala, Ambrose, Calvin, Beza, Grotius, Gerhard, Cappellus, Limborch, Carpzor, Bengei, Morus, Storr, Kuinoel, Paulus, De Wette, Tholuck, and a whole host of critics besides, render . by fear, anxiety; which signification has been vindicated on philological grounds by Casaubon, Wetstein, and Krebs. Ebrard proceeds to argue, that though the prayer of Christ was to be saved from death, it was not unheard, inasmuch as he was divested of the fear of death. Others understand the fear to be simply that horror of soul under which he was exceeding sorrowful. Ed.
Heb 5:7. Who in the days of his flesh offered up prayers and supplications, with a strong cry [or vehement outcry] and tears, unto him that was able to save him from death, and was heard [or delivered] from [his] fear.
The person here spoken of is expressed by the relative , who; that is, , mentioned Heb 5:5, to whose priesthood thenceforward testimony is given. Who, that is Christ, not absolutely, but as a high priest.
The First thing mentioned of him is an intimation of the infirmity wherewith he was attended in the discharge of his office, by a description of the time and season wherein he was exercised in it; it was , in the days of his flesh. That these infirmities were in themselves perfectly sinless, and absolutely necessary unto him in this office, was before declared. And we may here inquire,
1. What is meant by the flesh of Christ?
2. What were the days of his flesh?
1. The flesh of Christ, or wherein he was, is in the Scripture taken two ways:
(1.) Naturally, by a synecdoche, for his whole human nature: Joh 1:14, The Word was made flesh. 1Ti 3:16, God was manifest in the flesh. Rom 9:5, Of whom was Christ according to the flesh. Heb 2:14, He partook of flesh and blood. 1Pe 3:18; Rom 1:3. See our exposition of Heb 2:9-14. In this flesh, or in the flesh in this sense, as to the substance of it, Christ still continues. The body wherein he suffered and rose from the dead was altered, upon his resurrection and ascension, as to its qualities, but not as to its substance; it consisted still of flesh and bones, Luk 24:39. And the same spirit which, when he died, he resigned into the hands of God, was returned unto him again when he was quickened by the Spirit, 1Pe 3:18; when God showed him again the path of life, according to his promise, Psa 16:11. This flesh he carried entire with him into heaven, where it still continueth, though inwardly and outwardly exalted and glorified beyond our apprehension, Act 1:11; and in this flesh shall he come again unto judgment, Act 1:11; Act 3:21; Act 17:31; Rev 1:7 : for the union of this flesh with the divine nature in the person of the Son of God, is eternally indissoluble. And they overthrow the foundation of faith, who fancy the Lord Christ to have any other body in heaven than what he had on the earth; as they also do who make him to have such flesh as they can eat every day. It is not, therefore, the flesh of Christ in this sense, as absolutely considered, which is here intended; for the days of this flesh abide always, they shall never expire to eternity.
(2.) Flesh, as applied unto Christ, signifies the frailties, weaknesses, and infirmities of our nature; or our nature as it is weak and infirm during this mortal life. So is the word often used: Psa 78:39, He remembereth , that they are but flesh; that is, poor, weak, mortal, frail creatures. Psa 65:2, Unto thee shall all flesh come; poor, helpless, creatures standing in need of aid and assistance. So flesh and blood is taken for that principle of corruption, which must be done away before we enter into heaven, 1Co 15:50. And this is that which is meant by the flesh of Christ in this place, human nature not yet glorified, with all its infirmities, wherein he was exposed unto hunger, thirst, weariness, labor, sorrow, grief, fear, pain, wounding, death itself. Hereby doth the apostle express what he had before laid down in the person of the high priest according to the law, he was compassed with infirmity.
2. What were the days of his flesh intended? It is evident that in general his whole course and walk in this world may be comprised herein. From his cradle to the grave he bare all the infirmities of our nature, with all the dolorous and grievous effects of them. Hence all his days he was , Isa 53:3; a man of sorrows, filled with them, never free from them; and familiarly acquainted with grief, as a companion that never departed from him. But yet respect is not had here unto this whole space of time, only the subject-matter treated of is limited unto that season; it fell out neither before nor after, but in and during the days of his flesh. But the season peculiarly intended is the close of those days, in his last suffering, when all his sorrows, trials, and temptations came unto a head. The sole design of the expression is to show that when he offered up his sacrifice he was encompassed with infirmities; which hath an especial influence into our faith and consolation.
Secondly, An account is given of what he did in those days of his flesh, as a high priest, being called of God unto that office. And this in general was his acting as a priest, wherein many things are to be considered:
1. The act of his oblation, in that word . is accedo, appropinquo, or accedere facio, when applied unto things in common use, or unto persons in the common occasions of life. So doth signify in the Hebrew. But when it doth so, the LXX. constantly render it by and ; that is, to draw near. But when it is applied to things sacred, they render it by ; that is, offero, or to offer. And although this word is sometimes used in the New Testament in the common sense before mentioned, yet it alone, and no other, is made use of to express an access with gifts and sacrifices, or offerings, to the altar. See Mat 2:11; Mat 5:23-24; Mat 8:4; Mar 1:44; Luk 5:14. , Lev 1:2; that is, , offer a gift;that is, at the altar. And in this epistle it constantly expresseth a sacerdotal act, Heb 5:1; Heb 5:3; Heb 8:3-4; Heb 9:7; Heb 9:9; Heb 9:14; Heb 9:25; Heb 9:28; Heb 10:1-2; Heb 10:8; Heb 10:11-12; Heb 11:4; Heb 11:17. And is a sacred oblation, or a sacrifice, Heb 10:5; Heb 10:8; Heb 10:10; Heb 10:14; Heb 10:18. Nor is the word otherwise used in this epistle. And the end why we observe it, is to manifest that it is a priestly, sacerdotal offering that is here intended. He offered as a priest.
2. The matter of his offering is expressed by prayers and supplications. Both these words have the same general signification. And they also agree in this, that they respect an especial kind of prayer, which is for the averting or turning away of impendent evils, or such as are deserved and justly feared. For whereas all sorts of prayers may be referred unto two heads,
(1.) Such as are petitory, for the impetration of that which is good;
(2.) Such as are deprecatory, for the keeping off or turning away that which is evil; the latter sort only are here intended. are everywhere preces deprecatoriae; and we render it supplications, 1Ti 2:1. And supplicationes are the same with supplicia, which signifies both punishments, and prayers for the averting of them; as in the Hebrew, is both sin and a sacrifice for the expiation of it. is nowhere used in the Scripture but in this place only. In other authors it originally signifies a bough, or olive-branch, wrapped about with wool or bays, or something of the like nature; which they carried in their hands, and lifted up, who were supplicants unto others for the obtaining of peace from them, or to avert their displeasure. Hence is the phrase of velamenta pretendere, to hold forth such covered branches. So Liv. de Bell. Punic. lib. 24. cap. 30.:
Ramos oleae ac velamenta alia supplicum porrigentes, orare, ut reciperent sese;
Holding forth olive branches, and other covered tokens used by supplicants, they prayed that they might be received into grace and favor.
And Virgil, of his AEneas, to Evander, AEn. lib. 8:127:
Optime Grajugenm, cui me fortuna precari, Et vitt comptos voluit pretendere ramos.
And Herodian calls them , branches of supplication. Hence the word came to denote a supplicatory prayer; the same with . And it is in this sense usually joined with , as here by our apostle. So Isoc. de Pace, cap. xlvi.: , Using many deprecatory entreaties and supplications. So constantly the heathen called those prayers which they made solemnly to their gods, for the averting of impendent evils, supplicia, and supplicationes. Liv. lib. 10. cap. 23:
Eo anno prodigia multa fuerunt: quorum averruncandorum caus supplicationes in biduum senatus decrevit; that is, Irae dem averruncandae,
as he speaks lib. 8. cap. 6: to turn away the wrath of their gods. And such a kind of prayer is that whose form is given in Cato de re Rustic. cap. 14:
Mars pater, te precor, quaesoque, ut calamitates intemperiasque prohibessis, defendas, averrunces.
Hesychius explains by , a word of a much larger signification; but , a word of the same original and force, by , , expiations and purgations, from guilt deserving punishment. , Gloss. Vet., Oratio, precatio supplicum; the prayer of suppliants. The word being used only in this place in the Scripture, it was not unnecessary to inquire after the signification of it in other authors. It is a humble supplication for peace, or deprecation of evil, with the turning away of anger. And this sense singularly suits the scope of the place; for respect is had in it to the sufferings of Christ, and the fear which befell him in the apprehension of them as they were penal, as we shall see afterwards.
But it must also be here further observed, that however this word might be used to express the naked supplication of some men in distress unto others, yet whenever it is used in heathen authors, with respect unto their gods, it is always accompanied with expiatory sacrifices, or was the peculiar name of those prayers and supplications which they made with those sacrifices. And I have showed before that the solemn expiatory sacrifice of the high priest among the Jews was accompanied with deprecatory supplications; a form whereof, according to the apprehensions of their masters, I gave out of the Mishna. And so he was appointed, in the great sacrifice of expiation, to confess over the head of the scape-goat
all the iniquities of the children of Israel, and all their transgressions in all their sins, Lev 16:21;
which he did not without prayers for the expiation of them, and deliverance from the curse of the law due to them. And they are not the mere supplications of our blessed Savior that are here intended, but as they accompanied and were a necessary adjunct of the offering up of himself, his soul and body, a real propitiatory sacrifice to God. And therefore, wherever our apostle elsewhere speaks of the offering of Christ, he calls it the offering of himself, or of his body, Eph 5:2, Heb 9:14; Heb 9:25; Heb 9:28; Heb 10:10. Here, therefore, he expresseth the whole sacrifice of Christ by the prayers and supplications wherewith it was accompanied; and therefore makes use of that word which peculiarly denotes such supplications. And he describes the sacrifice or offering of Christ by this adjunct for the reasons ensuing:
1. To evince what he before declared, that in the days of his flesh, when he offered up himself unto God, he was encompassed with the weakness of our nature, which made prayers and supplications needful for him, as at all seasons, so especially in straits and distresses, when he cried from the lions mouth, and the horns of the unicorns, Psa 22:21. He was in earnest, and pressed to the utmost in the work that was before him. And this expression is used,
2. That we might seriously consider how great a work it was to expiate sin. As it was not to be done without suffering, so a mere and bare suffering would not effect it. Not only death, and that a bloody death, was required thereunto, but such as was to be accompanied with prayers and supplications, that it might be effectual unto the end designed, and that he who suffered it might not be overborne in his undertaking. The redemption of souls was precious, and must have ceased for ever, had not every thing been set on work which is acceptable and prevalent with God. And,
3. To show that the Lord Christ had now made this business his own. He had taken the whole work and the whole debt of sin upon himself. He was now, therefore, to manage it, as if be alone were the person concerned. And this rendered his prayers and supplications necessary in and unto his sacrifice. And,
4. That we might be instructed how to make use of and plead his sacrifice in our stead. If it was not, if it could not be, offered by him but with prayers and supplications, and those for the averting of divine wrath, and making peace with God, we may not think to be interested therein whilst under the power of lazy and slothful unbelief. Let him that would go to Christ, consider well how Christ went to God for him; which is yet further declared,
Thirdly, In the manner of his offering these prayers and supplications unto God, whereby he offered up himself also unto him. He did it , with strong crying (or a strong cry) and tears. Chrysostom on the place observes, that the story makes no mention of these thugs. And, indeed, of his tears in particular it doth not; which from this place alone we know to have accompanied his sacerdotal prayers. But his strong crying is expressly related. To acquaint ourselves fully with what is intended herein, we may consider,
1. How it was expressed in prophecy;
2. How it is related in the story;
3. How reposed here by our apostle:
1. In prophecy the supplications here intended are called his roaring:
Psa 22:1-3, My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me? why art thou so far from helping me, and from , the words of my roaring? Rugitus, the proper cry of a lion, is , clamor validus, a strong and vehement outcry. And it is used to express such a vehemency in supplications as cannot be compressed or confined, but will ordinarily break out into a loud expression of itself; at least such an intension of mind and affection as cannot be outwardly expressed without fervent outcries. Psa 32:3, When I kept silence, that is, whilst he was under his perplexities from the guilt of sin, before he came off to a full and clear acknowledgment of it as verse 5, my bones waxed old through my roaring all the day long. The vehemency of his complainings consumed his natural strength. So Job 3:24, My sighing cometh before I eat, , and my roarings are poured out like waters, namely, that break out of any place with great noise and abundance. So is a sense of extreme pressures and distresses signified: I have roared by rein of the disquietness of my heart, Psa 28:8. This is , a strong cry. And if we well consider his prayer, as recorded Psalms 22, especially from verse 9 to verse 21, we shall find that every word almost, and sentence, hath in it the spirit of roaring and a strong cry, however it were uttered. For it is not merely the outward noise, but the inward earnest intension and engagement of heart and soul, with the greatness and depth of the occasion of them, that is principally intended.
2. We may consider the same matter as related in story by the evangelists. The prayers intended are those which he offered to God during his passion, both in the garden and on the cross. The first are declared Luk 22:44, And being in an agony, he prayed more earnestly, and his sweat was as drops of blood falling on the earth. The inward frame is here declared, which our apostle shadows out by the external expressions and signs of it, in strong cries and tears. , constitutus in agonia. He was in, under the power of, wholly pressed by an agony; that is, a strong and vehement conflict of mind, in and about things dreadful and terrible. is , saith Nemes. de Natur. Hom.; a dread of utter ruin. Timor extrinsecus advenientis mall, Aquin.; a dread of evil to come upon us from without. It signifies, ita vehementi discriminis objecti metu angi ut quodam-modo exanimis et attonitus sis, saith Maldonat on Mat 26:37. He prayed , with more vehement intension of mind, spirit, and body. For the word denotes not a degree of the acting of grace in Christ, as some have imagined, but the highest degree of earnestness in the actings of his mind, soul, and body; another token of that wonderful conflict wherein he was engaged, which no heart can conceive nor tongue express. This produced that preternatural sweat wherein , thick drops of blood ran from him to the ground. Concerning this he says, , Psa 22:15, I am poured out like water; that is, my blood is so, by an emanation from all parts of my body, descending to the ground.And they consult not the honor of Jesus Christ, but the maintenance of their own false suppositions, who assign any ordinary cause of this agony, with these consequents of it, or such as other men may have experience of. And this way go many of the expositors of the Roman church. So Lapid. in loc.:
Nota secundo hunc Christi angorem lacrymas et sudorem sanguineum, testem infirmitatis a Christo assumptae, provenisse ex vivaci imaginatione, fiagellationis, coronationis, mortis dolorumque omnium quos mox subiturus erat; inde enim naturaliter manabat eorundem horror et angor.
He would place the whole cause of this agony in those previous fancies, imaginations, or apprehensions, which he had of those corporeal sufferings which were to come upon him. Where, then, is the glory of his spiritual strength and fortitude? where the beauty of the example which herein he set before us? His outward sufferings were indeed grievous; but yet, considered merely as such, they were, as to mere sense of pain, beneath what sundry of his martyrs have been called to undergo for his names sake. And yet we know that many, yea, through the power of his grace in them, the most of them who have so suffered for him in all ages, have cheerfully, joyfully, and without the least consternation of spirit, undergone the exquisite tortures whereby they have given up themselves unto death for him. And shall we imagine that the Son of God, who had advantages for his supportment and consolation infinitely above what they had any interest in, should be given up to this dreadful, trembling conflict, wherein his whole nature was almost dissolved, out of a mere apprehension of those corporeal sufferings which were coming on him? Was it the forethought of them only, and that as such, which dispelled the present sense of divine love and satisfaction from the indissoluble union of his person, that they should not influence his mind with refreshments and consolation? God forbid we should have such mean thoughts of what he was, of what he did, of what he suffered. There were other causes of these things, as we shall see immediately.
Again; on the cross itself it is said, , Mat 27:46; that is plainly, He prayed , He cried with a great outcry, or loud voice, with a strong cry. This was the manner of the sacerdotal prayers of Christ which concerned his oblation, or the offering himself as a sacrifice, as is reported in the evangelist. The other part of his sacerdotal prayer, which expressed his intercession on a supposition of his oblation, he performed and offered with all calmness, quietness, and sedateness of mind, with all assurance and joyful glory, as if he were actually already in heaven; as we may see, John 17. But it was otherwise with him when he was to offer himself a sin-offering in our stead. If, therefore, we do compare the 22d psalm, as applied and explained by the evangelists and our apostle, with the 17th of John, we shall find a double mediatory or sacerdotal prayer of our Savior in behalf of the whole church. The first was that which accompanied his oblation, or the offering of himself an expiatory sacrifice for sin. And this having respect unto the justice of God, the curse of the law, and the punishment due to sin, was made in an agony, distress, and conflict, with wrestlings, expressed by cries, tears, and most vehement intensions of soul. The other, which though in order of time antecedent, yet in order of nature was built on the former, and a supposition of the work perfected therein, as is evident, Joh 17:11, represents his intercession in heaven. The first was , the other .
3. These are the things which are thus expressed by our apostle, He offered up prayers and supplications, with strong cries and tears. Such was the frame of his soul, such was his prayer and deportment in his sacrifice of himself. His tears, indeed, are not expressly mentioned in the story, but weeping was one of those infirmities of our nature which he was subject unto: Joh 11:35, Jesus wept. He expressed his sorrow thereby. And being now in the greatest distress, conflict, and sorrow, which reached unto the soul, until that was sorrowful unto death, as we may well judge that in his dealing with God he poured out tears with his prayers, so it is here directly mentioned. So did he here offer up himself through the eternal Spirit.
Fourthly, The object of this offering of Christ, he to whom he offered up prayers and supplications, is expressed and described. And this was , he that was able to save him from death, that had power so to do. It is God who is intended, whom the apostle describes by this periphrasis, for the reasons that shall be mentioned. He calls him neither God, nor the Father of Christ, although the Lord Jesus, in the prayers intended, calls upon him by both these names. So in the garden he calls him Father: O my Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from me, Mat 26:39. And on the cross he called him God: My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me, Mat 27:46; and Father again, in the resignation of his life and soul into his hands, Luk 23:46. But in the reporting of these things our apostle waiveth these expressions, and only describeth God as Him who was able to save him from death. Now this he doth to manifest the consideration that the Lord Christ at that time had of God, of death, and of the causes, consequents, and effects of it. For his design is, to declare what was the reason of the frame of the soul of Christ in his suffering and offering before described, and what were the causes thereof.
In general, God is proposed as the object of the actings of Christs soul in this offering of himself, as he who had all power in his hand to order all his present concernments: To him who was able. Ability or power is either natural or moral. Natural power is strength and active efficiency; in God omnipotency. Moral power is right and authority; in God absolute sovereignty. And the Lord Christ had respect unto the ability or power of God in both these senses: in the first, as that which he relied upon for deliverance; in the latter, as that which he submitted himself unto. The former was the object of his faith, namely, that God, by the greatness of his power, could support and deliver him in and under his trial. The latter was the object of his fear, as to the dreadful work which he had undertaken Now, because our apostle is upon the description of that frame of heart, and those actings of soul, wherewith our high priest offered himself for us unto God, which was with prayers and supplications, accompanied with strong cries and tears, I shall consider from these words three things, considering the power or ability of God principally in the latter way:
1. What were the general causes of the state and condition wherein the Lord Christ is here described by our apostle, and of the actings ascribed unto him therein.
2. What were the immediate effects of the sufferings of the Lord Christ in and upon his own soul.
3. What limitations are to be assigned unto them.
From all which it will appear why and wherefore he offered up his prayers and supplications unto him who was able to save him from death; wherein a fear of it is included, on the account of the righteous authority of God, as well as a faith of deliverance from it, on the account of his omnipotent power.
1. The general causes of his state and condition, with his actings therein, were included in that consideration and prospect which he then had of God, death, and himself, or the effects of death upon him.
(1.) He considered God at that instant as the supreme rector and judge of all, the author of the law and the avenger of it, who had power of life and death, as the one was to be destroyed and the other inflicted, according to the curse and sentence of the law. Under this notion he now considered God, and that as actually putting the law in execution, having power and authority to give up unto the sting of it, or to save from it. God represented himself unto him first as armed and attended with infinite holiness, righteousness, and severity, as one that would not pass by sin nor acquit the guilty; and then as accompanied with supreme or sovereign authority over him, the law, life, and death. And it is of great importance under what notion we consider God when we make our approaches unto him. The whole frame of our souls, as to fear or confidence, will be regulated thereby.
(2.) He considered death not naturally, as a separation of soul and body; nor yet merely as a painful separation of them, such as was that death which in particular he was to undergo; but he looked on it as the curse of the law due to sin, inflicted by God as a just and righteous judge. Hence, in and under it, he himself is said to be made a curse, Gal 3:13. This curse was now coming on him, as the sponsor or surety of the new covenant. For although he considered himself, and the effects of things upon himself, yet he offered up these prayers as our sponsor, that the work of mediation which he had undertaken might have a good and blessed issue.
From hence may we take a view of that frame of soul which our Lord Jesus Christ was in when he offered up prayers and supplications, with strong cries and tears, considering God as him who had authority over the law, and the sentence of it that was to be inflicted on him. Some have thought, that upon the confidence of the indissolubleness of his person, and the actual assurance which they suppose he had always of the love of God, his sufferings could have no effect of fear, sorrow, trouble, or perplexity on his soul, but only what respected the natural enduring of pain and shame, which he was exposed unto. But the Scripture gives us another account of these things. It informs us, that he began to be afraid, and sore amazed; that his soul was heavy, and sorrowful unto death; that he was in an agony, and afterwards cried out, My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me? under a sense of divine dereliction.
There was, indeed, a mighty acting of love in God toward us, in the giving of his Son to death for us, as to his gracious ends and purposes thereby to be accomplished; and his so doing is constantly in the Scripture reckoned on the score of love. And there was always in him a great love to the person of his Son, and an ineffable complacency in the obedience of Christ, especially that which he exercised in his suffering; but yet the curse and punishment which he underwent was an effect of vindictive justice, and as such did he look upon it and conflict with it. I shall not enter into the debates of those expressions which have been controverted about the sufferings of Christ, as whether he underwent the death of the soul, the second death, the pains of hell. For it would cause a prolix digression to show distinctly what is essential unto these things, or purely penal in them, which alone he was subject unto; and what necessarily follows a state and condition of personal sin and guilt in them who undergo them, which he was absolutely free from. But this alone I shall say, which I have proved elsewhere, whatever was due to us from the justice of God and sentence of the law, that he underwent and suffered. This, then, was the cause in general of the state and condition of Christ here described, and of his actings therein, here expressed.
2. In the second place, the effects of his sufferings in himself, or his sufferings themselves, on this account, may be reduced in general unto these two heads:
(1.) His dereliction. He was under a suspension of the comforting influences of his relation unto God. His relation unto God, as his God and Father, was the fountain of all his comforts and joys, The sense hereof was now suspended. Hence was that part of his cry, My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me? The supporting influences of this relation were continued, but the comforting influences of it were suspended. See Psa 22:1-3, etc. And from hence he was filled with heaviness and sorrow. This the evangelists fully express. He says of himself, that his soul was exceeding sorrowful, even unto death, Mat 26:38; which expressions are emphatical, and declare a sorrow that is absolutely inexpressible. And this sorrow was the effect of his penal desertion; for sorrow is that which was the life of the curse of the law. So when God declared the nature of that curse unto Adam and Eve, he tells them that he will give them sorrow, and multiply their sorrow, Gen 3:16-17. With this sorrow was Christ now filled, which put him on those strong cries and tears for relief. And this dereliction was possible, and proceeded from hence, in that all communications from the divine nature unto the human, beyond subsistence, were voluntary.
(2.) He had an intimate sense of the wrath and displeasure of God against the sin that was then imputed unto him. All our sins were then caused, by an act of divine and supreme authority, to meet on him, or the LORD laid on him the iniquity of us all, Isa 53:6. Even all our guilt was imputed unto him, or none of the punishment due unto our sins could have been justly inflicted on him. In this state of things, in that great hour, and wonderful transaction of divine wisdom, grace, and righteousness, whereon the glory of God, the recovery of fallen man, with the utter condemnation of Satan, depended, God was pleased for a while, as it were, to hold the scales of justice in aequilibrio, that the turning of them might be more conspicuous, eminent, and glorious. In the one scale, as it were, there was the weight of the first sin and apostasy from God, with all the consequents of it, covered with the sentence and curse of the law, with the exigence of vindictive justice, a weight that all the angels of heaven could not stand under one moment. In the other were the obedience, holiness, righteousness, and penal sufferings, of the Son of God, all having weight and worth given unto them by the dignity and worth of his divine person. Infinite justice kept these things for a season, as it were, at a poise, until the Son of God, by his prayers, tears, and supplications, prevailed unto a glorious success, in the delivery of himself and us.
3. Wherefore, as to the limitation of the effects of Christs sufferings in and upon himself, we may conclude, in general,
(1.) That they were such only as are consistent with absolute purity, holiness, and freedom from the least appearance of sin;
(2.) Not such as did in the least impeach the glorious union of his natures in the same person;
(3.) Nor such as took off from the dignity of his obedience and merit of his suffering, but were all necessary thereunto: but then,
(4.) As he underwent whatever is or can be grievous, dolorous, afflictive, and penal, in the wrath of God, and sentence of the law executed; so these things really wrought in him sorrow, amazement, anguish, fear, dread, with the like penal effects of the pains of hell; from whence it was that he offered up prayers and supplications, with strong cries and tears, unto him that was able to save him from death, the event whereof is described in the last clause of the verse.
, and was heard in that which he feared. To be heard in Scripture signifies two things:
1. To be accepted in our request, though the thing requested be not granted unto us. God will hear me, is as much as, God will accept of me, is pleased with my supplication, Psa 55:17; Psa 22:21.
2. To be answered in our request. To be heard, is to be delivered. So is this expressed, Psa 22:25. In the first way there is no doubt but that the Father always heard the Son, Joh 11:42, always in all things accepted him, and was well pleased in him; but our inquiry is here, how far the Lord Christ was heard in the latter way, so heard as to be delivered from what he prayed against.
Concerning this observe, that the prayers of Christ in this matter were of two sorts:
1. Hypothetical or conditional; such was that prayer for the passing of the cup from him, Luk 22:42, Father, if thou wilt, remove this cup from me. And this prayer was nothing but what was absolutely necessary unto the verity of human nature in that state and condition. Christ could not have been a man and not have had an extreme aversation to the things that were coming upon him. Nor had it been otherwise with him, could he properly have been said to suffer; for nothing is suffering, nor can be penal unto us, but what is grievous unto our nature, and what it is abhorrent of. This acting of the inclination of nature, both in his mind, will, and affections, which in him were purely holy, our Savior expresseth in that conditional prayer. And in this prayer he was thus answered, his mind was fortified against the dread and terror of nature, so as to come unto a perfect composure in the will of God: Nevertheless, not my will, but thine, be done. He was heard herein so far as he desired to be heard; for although he could not but desire deliverance from the whole, as he was a man, yet he desired it not absolutely, as he was wholly subjected to the will of God.
2. Absolute. The chief and principal supplications which he offered up to him who was able to save him from death were absolute; andin them he was absolutely heard and delivered. For upon the presentation of death unto him, as attended with the wrath and curse of God, he had deep and dreadful apprehensions of it; and how unable the human nature was to undergo it, and prevail against it, if not mightily supported and carried through by the power of God. In this condition it was part of his obedience, it was his duty, to pray that he might be delivered from the absolute prevalency of it, that he might not be cast in his trial, that he might not be confounded nor condemned. This he hoped, trusted, and believed; and therefore prayed absolutely for it, Isa 1:7-8. And herein he was heard absolutely; for so it is said, He was heard .
The word here used is in a singular construction of speech, and is itself of various significations. Sometimes it is used for a religious reverence, but such as hath fear joined with it; that is, the fear of evil. Frequently it signifies fear itself, but such a fear as is accompanied with a reverential care and holy circumspection. The word itself is but once more used in the New Testament, and that by our apostle, Heb 12:28, where we well render it, godly fear. , the adjective, is used three times, Luk 2:25, Act 2:5; Act 8:2; everywhere denoting a religious fear. Heb 11:7, we render the verb, , by moved with fear; that is, a reverence of God mixed with a dreadful apprehension of an approaching judgment. And the use of the preposition added to is also singular, auditus ex metu, heard from his fear. Therefore is this passage variously interpreted by all sorts of expositors. Some read it, He was heard because of his reverence. And in the exposition hereof they are again divided. Some take reverence actively, for the reverence he had of God; that is, his reverential obedience: He was heard because of his reverence, or reverential obedience unto God. Some would have the reverence intended to relate to God, the reverential respect that God had unto him; God heard him, from that holy respect and regard which he had of him. But these things are fond, and suit not the design of the place; neither the coherence of the words, nor their construction, nor their signification, nor the scope of the apostle, will bear this sense. Others render it, pro metu; from fear, or out of fear. And this also is two ways interpreted:
1. Because heard from fear is somewhat a harsh expression, they explain auditus by liberatus, delivered from fear; and this is not improper. So Grotius: Cure mortem vehementer perhorresceret,…… in hoc exauditus fuit utab isto metu liberaretur. In this sense fear internal and subjective is intended. God relieved him against his fear, removing it and taking it away, by strengthening and comforting of him. Others by fear intend the thing feared; which sense our translators follow, and are therefore plentifully reviled and railed at by the Rhemists: He was heard; that is, delivered from the things which he feared as coming upon him. And for the vindication of this sense and exposition, there is so much already offered by many learned expositors as that I see not what can be added thereunto, and I shall not unnecessarily enlarge myself. And the opposition that is made hereunto is managed rather with clamours and outcries, than Scripture reasons or testimonies. Suppose the object of the fear of Christ here to have been what he was delivered from, and then it must be his fainting, sinking, and perishing under the wrath of God, in the work he had undertaken; yet,
1. The same thing is expressed elsewhere unto a higher degree and more emphatically; as where in this state he is said , and , Mat 26:37, Mar 14:33, to be sorrowful, perplexed, and amazed.
2. All this argues no more but that the Lord Christ underwent an exercise in the opposition that was made unto his faith, and the mighty conflict he had with that opposition. That his faith and trust in God were either overthrown or weakened by them, they prove not, nor do any plead them unto that purpose. And to deny that the soul of Christ was engaged in an ineffable conflict with the wrath of God in the curse of the law, that his faith and trust in God were pressed and tried to the utmost by the opposition made unto them, by fear, dread, and a terrible apprehension of divine displeasure due to our sins, is to renounce the benefit of his passion and turn the whole of it into a show, fit to be represented by pictures and images, or acted over in ludicrous scenes, as it is by the Papists.
It remains that we consider the observations which these words afford us for our instruction, wherein also their sense and importance will be further explained. And the first thing that offers itself unto us is, that,
Obs. 1. The Lord Jesus Christ himself had a time of infirmity in this world.
A season he had wherein he was beset and compassed with infirmities. So it was with him in the days of his flesh. It is true, his infirmities were all sinless, but all troublesome and grievous. By them was he exposed unto all sorts of temptations and sufferings; which are the two springs of all that is evil and dolorous unto our nature. And thus it was with him, not for a few days, or a short season only, but during his whole course in this world. This the story of the gospel gives us an account of, and the instance of his offering up prayers with strong cries and tears, puts out of all question. These things were real, and not acted to make an appearance or representation of them. And hereof himself expresseth his sense: Psa 22:6-7, I am a worm, and no man; a reproach of men, and despised of the people. All that see me, laugh me to scorn. So verses 14, 15. How can the infirmities of our nature, and a sense of them, be more emphatically expressed? So Psa 69:20,
Reproach hath broken my heart; and I am full of heaviness: and I looked for some to take pity, but there was none; and for comforters, but I found none.
Psa 40:12, Innumerable evils have compassed me about. He had not only our infirmities, but he felt them, and was deeply sensible both of them and of the evils and troubles which through them he was exposed unto. Hence is that description of him, Isa 53:3.
Two things are herein by us duly to be considered:
First, That it was out of infinite condescension and love unto our souls that the Lord Christ took on himself this condition, Php 2:6-8. This state was neither natural nor necessary unto him upon his own account. In himself he was in the form of God, and thought it not robbery to be equal with God; but this mind was in him, that for our sakes he would take on himself all these infirmities of our nature, and through them expose himself unto evils innumerable. It was voluntary love, and not defect or necessity of nature, which brought him into this condition.
Secondly, As he had other ends herein, for these things were indispensably required unto the discharge of his sacerdotal office, so he designed to set us an example, that we should not faint under our infirmities and sufferings on their account, Heb 12:2-3, 1Pe 4:1. And God knows such an example we stood in need of, both as a pattern to conform ourselves unto under our infirmities, and to encourage us in the expectation of a good issue unto our present deplorable condition.
Let us not, then, think strange, if we have our season of weakness and infirmity in this world, whereby we are exposed unto temptation and suffering. Apt we are, indeed, to complain hereof; the whole nation of professors is full of complaints; one is in want, straits, and poverty; another in pain, under sickness, and variety of troubles; some are in distress for their relations, some from and by them; some are persecuted, some are tempted, some pressed with private, some with public concerns; some are sick, and some are weak, and some are fallen asleep. And these things are apt to make us faint, to despond, and be weary. I know not how others bear up their hearts and spirits. For my part, I have much ado to keep from continual longing after the embraces of the dust and shades of the grave, as a curtain drawn over the rest in another world. In the meantime, every momentary gourd that interposeth between the vehemency of wind and sun, or our frail, fainting natures and spirits, is too much valued by us.
But what would we have? Do we consider who, and what, and where we are, when we think strange of these things? These are the days of our flesh, wherein these things are due to us, and unavoidable. Man is born unto trouble, as the sparks fly upward, Job 5:7, necessarily and abundantly. All complaints, and all contrivances whereby we endeavor to extricate ourselves from those innumerable evils which attend our weak, frail, infirm condition, will be altogether vain. And if any, through the flatteries of youth, and health, and strength, and wealth, with other satisfactions of their affections, are not sensible of these things, they are but in a pleasant dream, which will quickly pass away.
Our only relief in this condition is a due regard unto our great example, and what he did, how he behaved himself in the days of his flesh, when he had more difficulties and miseries to conflict with than we all. And in him we may do well to consider three things:
1. His patience, unconquerable and unmovable in all things that befell him in the days of his flesh.
He did not cry, nor lift up, nor cause his voice to be heard in the street, Isa 42:2.
Whatever befell him, he bore it quietly and patiently. Being buffeted, he threatened not; being reviled, he reviled not again. As a sheep before her shearers is dumb, so he opened not his mouth.
2. His trust in God. By this testimony, that it is said of him, I will put nay trust in God, doth our apostle prove that he had the same nature with us, subject to the same weakness and infirmities, Heb 2:13. And this we are taught thereby, that there is no management of our human nature, as now beset with infirmities, but by a constant trust in God. The whole life of Christ therein was a life of submission, trust, and dependence on God; so that when he came to his last suffering, his enemies fixed on that to reproach him withal, as knowing how constant he was in the profession thereof, Psa 22:8, Mat 27:43.
3. His earnest, fervent prayers and supplications, which are here expressed by our apostle, and accommodated unto the days of his flesh. Other instances of his holy, gracious deportment of himself, in that condition wherein he set us an example, might be insisted on, but these may give us an entrance into the whole of our duty. Patience, faith, and prayer, will carry us comfortably and safely through the whole course of our frail and infirm lives in this world.
Obs. 2. A life of glory may ensue after a life of infirmity.
If, saith our apostle, in this life only we have hope, we are of all men most miserable. For besides that we are obnoxious to the same common infirmities within and calamities without with all other men, there is, and ever will be, a peculiar sort of distress that they are exposed unto who will live godly in Christ Jesus. But there is nothing can befall us but what may issue in eternal glory. We see that it hath done so with Jesus Christ. His season of infirmity is issued in eternal glory; and nothing but unbelief and sin can hinder ours from doing so also.
Obs. 3. The Lord Christ is no more now in a state of weakness and temptation; the days of his flesh are past and gone.
As such the apostle here makes mention of them, and the Scripture signally in sundry places takes notice of it. This account he gives of himself, Rev 1:18, I am he that liveth, and was dead; and, behold, I am alive for evermore. The state of infirmity and weakness, wherein he was obnoxious unto death, is now past; he now lives for evermore. Henceforth he dieth no more, death hath no more power over him; nor anything else that can reach the least trouble unto him. With his death ended the days of his flesh. His revival, or return unto life, was into absolute, eternal, unchangeable glory. And this advancement is expressed by his sitting at the right hand of the Majesty on high; which we have before declared. He is therefore now no more, on any account, obnoxious,
1. Unto the law, the sentence, or curse of it. As he was made of a woman, he was made under the law; and so he continued all the days of his flesh. Therein did he fulfill all the righteousness it required, and answered the whole penalty for sin that it exacted. But with the days of his flesh ended the right of the law towards him, either as to require obedience of him or exact suffering from him: hence, a little before his expiration on the cross, he said concerning it, It is finished. And hereon doth our freedom from the curse of the law depend. The law can claim no more dominion over a believer than it can over Christ himself. He lives now out of the reach of all the power of the law, to plead his own obedience unto it, satisfaction of it, and triumph over it, in the behalf of them that believe on him. Nor,
2. Unto temptations. These were his constant attendants and companions during the days of his flesh. What they were, and of what sorts, we have in part before discoursed. He is now freed from them and above them; yet not so but that they have left a compassionate sense upon his holy soul of the straits and distresses which his disciples and servants are daily brought into by them, which is the spring and foundation of the relief he communicates unto them. Nor,
3. Unto troubles, persecutions, or sufferings of any kind. He is not so in his own person. He is far above, out of the reach of all his enemies; above them in power, in glory, in authority and rule. There is none of them but he can crush at his pleasure, and dash them in pieces like a potters vessel. He is, indeed, still hated as much as ever, maligned as much as in the days of his flesh, and exposed unto the utmost power of hell and the world in all his concerns on the earth. But he laughs all his enemies to scorn, he hath them in derision; and, in the midst of their wise counsels and mighty designs, disposes of them and all their undertakings unto his ends and purposes, not their own. He is pleased, indeed, as yet, to suffer and to be persecuted in his saints and servants; but that is from a gracious condescension, by virtue of a spiritual union, not from any necessity of state or condition. And some may hence learn how to fear him, as others may and do to put their trust in him.
Obs. 4. The Lord Christ filled up every season with duty, with the proper duty of it.
The days of his flesh were the only season wherein he could offer to God; and he missed it not, he did so accordingly. Some would not have Christ offer himself until he came to heaven. But then the season of offering was past. Christ was to use no strong cries and tears in heaven, which yet were necessary concomitants of his oblation. It is true, in his glorified state, he continually represents in heaven the offering that he made of himself on the earth, in an effectual application of it unto the advantage of the elect; but the offering itself was in the days of his flesh. This was the only season for that duty; for therein only was he meet unto this work, and had provision for it. Then was his body capable of pain, his soul of sorrow, his nature of dissolution; all which were necessary unto this duty. Then was he in a condition wherein faith, and trust, and prayers, and tears, were as necessary unto himself as unto his offering. This was his season, and he missed it not. Neither did he so on any other occasion during the days of his flesh, especially those of his public ministry; wherein we ought to make him our example.
Obs. 5. The Lord Christ, in his offering up himself for us, labored and travailed in soul to bring the work unto a good and holy issue.
A hard labor it was, and as such it is here expressed. He went through it with fears, sorrows, tears, outcries, prayers, and humble supplications. This is called , the pressing, wearying, laborious travail of his soul, Isa 53:11. He labored, was straitened and pained, to bring forth this glorious birth. And we may take a little prospect of this travail of the soul of Christ as it is represented unto us.
1. All the holy, natural affections of his soul were filled, taken up, and extended to the utmost capacity, in acting and suffering. The travail of our souls lies much in the engagement and actings of our affections. Who is there who hath been acquainted with great fears, great sorrows, great desires, great and ardent love, who knows it not? All and every one of these had now their sails filled in Christ, and that about the highest, noblest, and most glorious objects that they are capable of. The sorrows of his holy mother, Luk 2:35; the danger of his disciples, Zec 13:7; the scandal of the cross, the shame of his suffering, Heb 12:2; the ruin of his people according to the flesh for their sin, Luk 23:28-30; with sundry other the like objects and considerations, filled and exercised all his natural affections. This put his soul into travail, and had an influence into the conflict wherein he was engaged.
2. All his graces, the gracious qualifications of his mind and affections, were in a like manner in the height of their exercise. Both those whose immediate object was God himself, and those which respected the church, were all of them excited, drawn forth, and engaged: as,
(1.) Faith and trust in God. These himself expresseth in his greatest trial, as those which he betook himself unto, Isa 1:7-8; Psa 22:9-10; Heb 2:13. These graces in him were now tried to the utmost. All their strength, all their efficacy, was exercised and proved; for he was to give in them an instance of an excellency in faith, rising up above the instance of the provocation that was in the unbelief of our first parents, whereby they fell off from God. There is no object about which faith can be exercised, no duty which it worketh in and by, but what it was now applied unto, and in, by Jesus Christ.
(2.) Love to mankind. As this in his divine nature was the peculiar spring of that infinite condescension whereby he took our nature on him, for the work of mediation, Php 2:6-8; so it wrought mightily and effectually in his human nature, in the whole course of his obedience, but especially in the offering of himself unto God for us. Hence where there is mention made of his giving himself for us, which was in the sacrifice of himself, commonly the cause of it is expressed to have been his love: The Son of God loved me, and gave himself for me,Gal 2:20; Christ loved the church, and gave himself for it, Eph 5:25-26; He loved us, and washed us from our sins in his own blood, Rev 1:5. With this love his soul now travailed, and labored to bring forth the blessed fruits of it. The workings of this love in the heart of Christ, during the trial insisted on, whereby he balanced the sorrow and distress of his sufferings, no heart can conceive nor tongue express.
(3.) Zeal for the glory of God. Zeal is the height of careful, solicitous love. The love of Christ was great to the souls of men; but the life of it lay in his love to God, and zeal for his glory. This he now labored in, namely, that God might be glorified in the salvation of the elect. This was committed unto him, and concerning this he took care that it might not miscarry.
(4.) He was now in the highest exercise of obedience unto God, and that in such a peculiar manner as before he had no occasion for. It is observed as the height of his condescension, that he was obedient unto death, the death of the cross, Php 2:8. This was the highest instance of obedience that God ever had from a creature, because performed by him who was God also. And if the obedience of Abraham was so acceptable to God, and was so celebrated, when he was ready to offer up his son, how glorious was that of the Son of God, who actually offered up himself, and that in such a way and manner as Isaac was not capable of being offered! And there was an eminent specialty in this part of his obedience; hence, Heb 5:8, it is said that he learned obedience by the things which he suffered; which we shall speak to afterwards. And in the exercise of this obedience, that it might be full, acceptable, meritorious, every way answering the terms of the covenant between God and him about the redemption of mankind, he labored and travailed in soul. And by this his obedience was a compensation made for the disobedience of Adam, Rom 5:19. So did he travail in the exercise of grace.
3. He did so also with respect unto that confluence of calamities, distresses, pains, and miseries, which was upon his whole nature. And that in these consisted no small part of his trials, wherein he underwent and suffered the utmost which human nature is capable to undergo, is evident from the description given of his dolorous sufferings both in prophecy, Psalms 22, Isaiah 53, and in the story of what befell him in the evangelists. In that death of the body which he underwent, in the means and manner of it, much of the curse of the law was executed. Hence our apostle proves that he was made a curse for us, from that of Moses, Cursed is every one that hangeth on a tree, Gal 3:13, Deu 21:22-23. For that ignominy of being hanged on a tree was peculiarly appointed to represent the execution of the curse of the law on Jesus Christ, who his own self bare our sins on the tree, 1Pe 2:24. And herein lies no small mystery of the wisdom of God. He would have a resemblance, among them who suffered under the sentence of the law, of the suffering of Christ; but in the whole law there was no appointment that any one should be put to death by being hanged; but whereas God foreknew that at the time of the suffering of Christ the nation would be under the power of the Romans, and that the sentence of death would be inflicted after their manner, which was by being nailed unto and hanged on a cross, he ordered, for a prefiguration thereof, that some great transgressors, as blasphemers and open idolaters, after they were stoned, should be hanged upon a tree, to make a declaration of the curse of the law inflicted on them. Hence it is peculiarly said of such a one, He that is hanged on the tree is the curse of God; because God did therein represent the suffering of Him who underwent the whole curse of the law for us. And in this manner of his death there were sundry things concurring:
(1.) A natural sign of his readiness to embrace all sinners that should come unto him, his arms being, as it were, stretched out to receive them, Isa 45:22; Isa 65:1.
(2.) A moral token of his condition, being left as one rejected of all between heaven and earth for a season; but in himself interposing between heaven and earth, the justice of God and sins of men, to make reconciliation and peace, Eph 2:16-17.
(3.) The accomplishment of sundry types; as,
[1.] Of that of him who was hanged on a tree, as cursed of the Lord, Deu 21:22.
[2.] Of the brazen serpent which was lifted up in the wilderness, Joh 3:14; with respect whereunto he says, that when he is lifted up he would draw all men unto him, Joh 12:32.
[3.] Of the wave-offering, which was moved, shaken, and turned several ways; to declare that the Lord Christ, in his offering of himself, should have respect unto all parts of the world, and all sorts of men, Exo 29:26. And in all the concerns of this death, all the means of it, especially as it was an effect of the curse of the law, or penal, immediately from God himself, (for he that is hanged on a tree is accursed of God,) did he labor and travail in the work that lay before him.
4. The conflict he had with Satan and all the powers of darkness was another part of his travail. This was the hour of men, and power of darkness, Luk 22:53, the time when the prince of this world came, John 14, to try the utmost of his skill, interest, horror, rage, and power, for his destruction. Then were all infernal principalities and powers engaged in a conflict with him, Col 2:14-15. Whatever malice, poison, darkness, dread, may be infused into diabolical suggestions, or be mixed with external representations of things to the sight, or imagination, he was now contending with. And herein he labored for that victory and success which, in the issue, he did obtain, Col 2:13-15; Heb 2:14;1Jn 3:8.
5. His inward conflict, in the making his soul an offering for sin, in his apprehensions, and undergoing of the wrath of God due unto sin, hath been already spoken unto, so far as is necessary unto our present purpose. 6. In and during all these things there was in his eye continually that unspeakable glory that was set before him, of being the repairer of the breaches of the creation, the recoverer of mankind, the captain of salvation unto all that obey him, the destruction of Satan, with his kingdom of sin and darkness; and in all, the great restorer of divine glow, to the eternal praise of God. Whilst all these things were in the height of their transaction, is it any wonder if the Lord Christ labored and travailed in soul, according to the description here given of him?
Obs. 6. The Lord Christ, in the time of his offering and suffering, considering God, with whom he had to do, as the sovereign Lord of life and death, as the supreme Rector and Judge of all, casts himself before him, with most fervent prayers for deliverance from the sentence of death and the curse of the law.
This gives the true account of the deportment of our Savior in his trial, here described. There are two great mistakes about the sufferings of Christ and the condition of his soul therein. Some place him in that security, in that sense and enjoyment of divine love, that they leave neither room nor reason for the fears, cries, and wrestlings here mentioned; indeed, so as that there should be nothing real in all this transaction, but rather that all things were done for ostentation and show. For if the Lord Christ was always in a full comprehension of divine love, and that in the light of the beatific vision, what can these conflicts and complaints signify? Others grant that he was in real distress and anguish; but they say it was merely on the account of those outward sufferings which were coming on him; which, as we observed before, is an intolerable impeachment of his holy fortitude and constancy of mind. For the like outward things have been undergone by others without any tokens of such consternation of spirit. Wherefore, to discern aright the true frame of the spirit of Christ, with the intension of his cries and supplications (the things before insisted on), are duly to be considered,
1. How great a matter it was to make peace with God for sinners, to make atonement and reconciliation for sin. This is the life and spirit of our religion, the center wherein all the lines of it do meet, Php 3:8-10;1Co 2:2; Gal 6:14. And those by whom a due and constant consideration of it is neglected, are strangers unto the animating spirit of that religion which they outwardly profess; and therefore Satan doth employ all his artifices to divert the minds of men from a due meditation hereon, and the exercise of faith about it. Much of the devotion of the Romanists is taken up in dumb shows and painted representations of the sufferings of Christ. But as many of their scenical fancies are childishly ridiculous, and unworthy of men who have the least apprehension of the greatness and holiness of God, or that he is a spirit, and will be worshipped in spirit and in truth; so they are none of them of any other use but to draw off the mind, not only from a spiritual contemplation of the excellency of the offering of Christ, and the glorious effects thereof, but also from the rational comprehension of the truth of the doctrine concerning what he did and suffered. For he that is instructed in and by the taking, shutting up, and setting forth of a crucifix, with painted thorns, and nails, and blood, with Jews, and thieves, and I know not what other company, about it, is obliged to believe that he hath, if not all, yet the principal part at least, of the obedience of Christ in his suffering represented unto him. And by this means is his mind taken off from inquiring into the great transactions between God and the soul of Christ, about the finishing of sin, and the bringing in of everlasting righteousness; without which those other things, which by carnal means they represent unto the carnal minds and imaginations of men, are of no value or use. On the other hand, the Socinians please themselves, and deceive others, with a vain imagination that there was no such work to be done now with God as we have declared. If we may believe them, there was no atonement to be made for sin, no expiatory sacrifice to be offered, no peace thereby to be made with God, no compensation to his justice, by answering the sentence and curse of the law due to sin. But certainly if this sort of men had not an unparalleled mixture of confidence and dexterity, they could not find out evasions unto so many express divine testimonies as lie directly opposite to their fond imagination, unto any tolerable satisfaction in their own minds; or suppose that any men can with patience bear the account they must give of the agony, prayers, cries, tears, fears, wrestlings, and travail, of the soul of Christ, on this supposition. But we may pass them over at present, as express enemies of the cross of Christ; that is, of that cross whereby he made peace with God for sinners, as Eph 2:14-16. Others there are who by no means approve of any diligent inquiry into these mysteries. The whole business and duty of ministers and others is, in their mind, to be conversant in and about morality. As for this fountain and spring of grace, this basis of eternal glory; this evidence and demonstration of divine wisdom, holiness, righteousness, and love; this great discovery of the purity of the law and vileness of sin; this first, great, principal subject of the gospel, and motive of faith and obedience; this root and cause of all peace with God, all sincere and incorrupted love towards him, of all joy and consolation from him, they think it scarcely deserves a place in the objects of their contemplation, and are ready to guess that what men write and talk about it is but phrases, canting, and fanatical. But such as are admitted into the fellowship of the sufferings of Christ will not so easily part with their immortal interest and concern herein. Yea, I fear not to say, that he is likely to be the best, the most humble, the most holy and fruitful Christian, who is most sedulous and diligent in spiritual inquiries into this great mystery of the reconciliation of God unto sinners by the blood of the cross, and in the exercise of faith about it. Nor is there any such powerful means of preserving the soul in a constant abhorrency of sin, and watchfulness against it, as a due apprehension of what it cost to make atonement for it. And we may also learn hence,
2. That a sight and sense of the wrath of God due unto sin will be full of dread and terror for the souls of men, and will put them to a great conflict, with wrestling, for deliverance. We find how it was with the Lord Christ in that condition; and such a view of the wrath of God all men will be brought unto sooner or later. There is a view to be had of it in the curse of the law for the present; there will be a more terrible expression of it in the execution of that curse at the last day; and no way is there to obtain a deliverance from the distress and misery wherewith this prospect of wrath due to sin is attended, but by obtaining a spiritual view of it in the cross of Christ, and acquiescing by faith in that atonement.
Obs. 7. In all the pressures that were on the Lord Jesus Christ, in all the distresses he had to conflict withal in his suffering, his faith for deliverance and success was firm and unconquerable. This was the ground he stood upon in all his prayers and supplications.
Obs. 8. The success of our Lord Jesus Christ, in his trials, as our head and surety, is a pledge and assurance of success unto us in all our spiritual conflicts.
Fuente: An Exposition of the Epistle to the Hebrews
feared
(See Scofield “Psa 19:9”).
Fuente: Scofield Reference Bible Notes
the: Heb 2:14, Joh 1:14, Rom 8:3, Gal 4:4, 1Ti 3:16, 1Jo 4:3, 2Jo 1:7
when: Psa 22:1-21, Psa 69:1, Psa 88:1, Mat 26:28-44, Mar 14:32-39, Lev 2:2, Lev 4:4-14, Joh 17:1
with: Mat 27:46, Mat 27:50, Mar 15:34, Mar 15:37
tears: Isa 53:3, Isa 53:11, Joh 11:35
unto: Mat 26:52, Mat 26:53, Mar 14:36
and: Heb 13:20, Psa 18:19, Psa 18:20, Psa 22:21, Psa 22:24, Psa 40:1-3, Psa 69:13-16, Isa 49:8, Joh 11:42, Joh 17:4, Joh 17:5
in that he feared: or, for his piety, Heb 12:28, Mat 26:37, Mat 26:38, Mar 14:33, Mar 14:34, Luk 22:42-44, Joh 12:27, Joh 12:28
Reciprocal: Gen 3:15 – thou Gen 32:24 – wrestled Gen 32:26 – I will not Exo 37:29 – incense Lev 2:16 – General Lev 16:18 – General 1Sa 1:10 – prayed 2Sa 22:7 – my distress 2Ki 20:3 – wept sore Est 8:3 – besought him with tears Job 16:20 – poureth Psa 6:8 – for Psa 20:1 – hear Psa 22:11 – Be not Psa 31:22 – nevertheless Psa 34:4 – sought Psa 39:12 – hold Psa 40:11 – let thy Psa 55:4 – terrors Psa 55:17 – cry Psa 59:16 – day Psa 66:19 – General Psa 69:3 – I am Psa 77:2 – In the Psa 86:7 – General Psa 91:15 – He shall Psa 102:1 – overwhelmed Psa 109:26 – Help Psa 116:3 – sorrows Psa 120:1 – my distress Psa 130:1 – Out of Psa 142:2 – I showed Isa 38:3 – wept Jer 31:9 – come Eze 46:2 – he shall worship Hos 12:4 – made Jon 2:2 – I cried Mat 26:36 – while Mat 26:39 – and prayed Mat 26:42 – the second Mar 1:35 – General Mar 9:24 – with Mar 10:48 – but Mar 14:35 – and fell Luk 6:12 – that Luk 9:28 – into Luk 11:1 – that Luk 22:44 – being Joh 11:33 – he groaned Joh 14:31 – that the Act 16:25 – prayed Rom 12:12 – continuing 2Co 12:8 – I besought 2Co 13:4 – he was Gal 4:19 – of Eph 6:18 – supplication Col 2:1 – what Col 4:12 – always 1Th 2:14 – even Heb 2:18 – suffered Heb 7:25 – he is Heb 11:7 – moved with fear Jam 5:13 – any among
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
IN THE DAYS OF HIS FLESH
Who in the days of his flesh and being made perfect, He became the Author of eternal salvation unto all them that obey Him.
Heb 5:7-9
The first Adam and the second Adam alike went through their great deciding conflict in a garden. The threefold temptation which Adamthe first Adamendured was sufficient to shake his faith and to divert his will and make him disobedient to his Creator. Thrice over in the garden of Gethsemane the Blessed Lord Jesus Christ fought the same adversary and overcame, and His faith in the Father was firm, and His will was steadfast in its resolution to bear and to do whatever the Father willed.
I. The Humanity of Jesus.There are times when nothing helps us so much as to see how truly and entirely our Blessed Lord Jesus Christ was human with our own humanity. Where can we see it to better advantage than in the garden? How human, how wholly and truly human, was that shrinking from death which the Blessed Saviour vouchsafed to show! We can see how human He was by contrasting the behaviour of the Lord Jesus Christ with that of some of the noblest of His disciples and martyrs in aftertimes. It was by the power of the Lord Jesus Christs conflict in Gethsemane and on Calvary that they were able to show to the world that death and its power were conquered, that death to them was not a thing to be feared but to be glad of; to be met with joy. But when the Lord Jesus Christ went through his conflict in the garden the sting of death had still to be taken away, and it was his duty to take it away, and it was impossible for Him to go to His death with the joy of a martyr of later times. He is indeed truly human. We can see it in the very prayer He utters. He prays again and again, entreating God by everything that He can think of, entreating His Father by the special tie that binds the Son to Him, Abba, Father! imploring Him by the almighty power of God, All things are possible unto Thee, and finding no words in which to go further, the evangelists tell us how He went again and again, repeating the old words. Finding, with all His wonderful powers of eloquence, no words in which to express His thought but those which He had used before, He went and prayed again, using the same words!
II. Submission to the Divine Will.Then in the conflict between the higher and the lower will we see how truly human the Lord Jesus Christ was. In the garden of Gethsemane the thing that comes to our minds is the conflict between two human wills, the higher and the lower will, the will of inclination and the will of resolution. To the Lord Jesus Christ, as to us, the easier course was the pleasanter, the more natural to take. To the Lord Jesus Christ, as to us, it was pleasant to taste the sweet and to do that which presented no difficulty, and to leave the hard task untried. But He like us, and we like Him, have the power to overrule the will of inclination by the will of determination, and the Lord Jesus Christ did it in the garden. Not My will, but Thine, be done. The higher will in the humanity of the Lord Jesus attached itself firmly to the will of the eternal Father, and chose that that will should be done rather than that which He called His own.
III. And that prayer in Gethsemane is not the type of a prayer which is unheeded by Him to Whom it is addressed. It is not the type of prayer which is unanswered. It was heard, says the Apostle to the Hebrews; it was heard in that He feared; because of His reverence He was heard. The Lords prayer was heard. Not, Let this cup pass from Me, but that which was the hinge of His prayer, upon which it turned, Not My will, but Thine, be done. There is the strength for humanity; there is the hope for us in struggles and difficulties. There is the hope for us when the way of right is hard and the way of wrong is easy, to cast ourself, as the Lord did, upon the heart which is the heart of a Father, and of a Father to Whom all things are possible, leaving to Him the decision how that prayer shall be fulfilled.
Illustration
This is not the moment, Gethsemane is not the place, for us to study with a critical eye, and to dissect and analyse. We know the words in which a great poet has spoken scornfully of the man who can peep and botanise upon his mothers grave; much less should we desire to peep and to analyse in Gethsemane and on Calvary. But men have done it and they have seen the proof of our Lords twofold willthe Divine will and the humanin the garden of Gethsemane. For my part I know not whether I could discern what they would have us to discern. That the Lord Jesus Christ had the power and will as God, and that He had also the power and will as man, is a thing as certain as any fact that we know.
Fuente: Church Pulpit Commentary
Heb 5:7. Days of his flesh means while Jesus lived on the earth before his crucifixion. He often prayed to his Father, but we are not always told what was the subject of the prayers. The one in the garden (Luk 22:41-44) is an instance of supplications with strong crying and tears. Our present verse indicates one subject of His prayers was to be saved from death. This could not mean that when He prayed in the garden he was asking God to shield him from death on the cross. Peter was rebuked for trying to shield his Master from death (Mat 26:51-54; John:18 10, 11). But the prayer of our verse received a favorable answer, for it says He was heard. Save is from the Greek word sozo which Thayer defines. “To bring safe forth from.” Jesus was saved from death in the sense that He was brought “safe forth from” the grave, hence the conclusion is established that He prayed for that favor from his Father, intensifying the prayers with the supplications and tears.
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
Heb 5:7. In the days of his flesh (of His humanity, Arabic), i.e during His earthly life, especially in the closing part of it, as contrasted with the glorified state on which He entered when His high-priesthood began.
When he had offered up, etc.; rather, in that He offered up … . was heard, and though He was a Son . . . learned; or, having offered up and being heard . . . He learned obedience, etc. All the tenses refer to one and the same process of discipline; they describe His life not in distinct and successive portions, but as a whole, though no doubt the description is specially true of His final agony.
Having offered up is the regular sacrificial word used throughout this Epistle, and it probably implies that while all the sufferings these words describe were fitting our Lord for His priestly office, they were also part of what He had to suffer as the bearer of our sin.
Prayers and supplications. The word for prayers expresses a deep feeling of need; the word supplications is a term taken from the olive branch wrapped with wool which was held out of old as an earnest entreaty for protection and help, and is a stronger word than the former. Prayers and entreaties may represent, therefore, the general sense. Each may involve the other, but they differ in this way: St. Luke (who of the Evangelists dwells most on this human side of Christs life) tells us often that Christ prayed, and then again that being in an agony he prayed more earnestly (Luk 22:44).
With strong crying and tears; with a most vehement outcry, an outcry of intensest feeling. Such was His first great cry on the cross: My God, why hast Thou forsaken me? (Mat 27:46); and such was the cry that accompanied His last utterance (Luk 23:46). His tears are also once named at least (Luk 19:41), and seem implied in such passages as Mat 26:38; Mat 27:46. The very agony of the final struggle has its prelude at an earlier stage (Joh 12:27), and was not without its parallel even in the wilderness. These prayers and entreaties were addressed unto him that was able to save from death, and he was heard in that he feared. This clause has been variously interpreted. One guide to its meaning is, that whatever it was He prayed for, the Father heard and gave (literally, or by a better equivalent) what he asked. A second guide to its meaning is that the last clause, in that He feared, is rightly translated in the English Version. Was heard, and so delivered from that which He fearedeither from His own fear, or from the thing He feared, though largely supported, is inadmissible.The word fear is used only of the fear of caution, of reverence, of devoted submission, never of the fear of terror. The interpretation of the Authorised Version, adopted by all the Greek expositors, is accepted, after a full examination of passages in ancient writers by Bleek and Alford, and is required in Heb 12:28, the only other place where it is found in the New Testament. The adjective, moreover, which is found only in Luke, means always devout (Luk 2:25, and Acts). Does it mean, then, that Christ prayed to Him who was able to save from death that He Himself might not die? ImpossibleHe came to give Himself a ransom for many. He knew that He was to be betrayed into the hands of the Gentiles, and was to be scourged and crucified.With ever-increasing clearness He had announced the fact to His disciples; and if now He prayed for such deliverance, His prayer was not heard. Does it mean that He prayed God to deliver Him from death after having dieda prayer that was fulfilled when the God of Peace, God reconciled to the world through the death of His Son, brought again from the dead our Lord Jesus Christ? So Ebrard, Brown, and others interpret it. But neither is this exactly the meaning. What He prayed to be delivered from was not the mere dying, nor was it the grave into which, when dead, He was to enter. His prayer had rather reference to the agony of the final struggle. As Mediator He saw in death all it involved; the curse of the broken law, the penalty due to sin, the wrath of God, not primarily against Himself as the Holy One, but against the guilty, in whose room He stood, and against Him as He had taken their place. The weight of the Fathers wrath, and the need in that dread hour of continued love to man, and of continued trust in God; the fear lest by one moment of passionate impatience, in forgetfulness of the force of His temptation, through a natural recoil against the injustice and cruelty of His murderers, through possible distrust of Him who now seemed to have left Him to His own unassisted powerthese were among the elements of His agony. And He could bear and resist them only through the cautious handling of the solemnities of His position, and by the reverent submission of His entire nature unto God. And God heard Him, not by delivering Him from the necessity of dying, not even by raising Him from the dead, but by strengthening Him to bear all (Luk 22:43), and by making the pangs of death the birth-throes of an endless life for him, and for all who were to believe. Had there been any impatience or distrust. His prayer must have remained unanswered, and His whole work have been frustrated. On the cross was there the deepest prostration of human weakness, and the utmost willingness to bear the burden whereby we are disburdened; as there was also the perfecting of the work and of the discipline which fitted Him to be a Priest, both in relation to God and in relation to ourselves.
Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament
Observe here, 1. A special act of Christ’s priesthood or priestly office. He offered up.
2. The subject-matter of his offering, supplications and prayers.
3. The intense manner of his offering, with strong cries and tears.
4. The person to whom he offered unto god, who was able to save him from death.
5. The time of his offering in the days of his flesh; that is, in the time of this mortal life, when clothed with our frail nature.
6. The issue and success of all this, he was heard in that he feared.
Learn hence, 1. That the holy Jesus did not only take upon him our human nature, but the infirmities of our nature also. Christ had in this world a time of infirmities as well as ourselves.. True, his infirmities were sinless, but sorrowful and grievous, which exposed him to all sorts of temptations and sufferings.
Learn, 2. That the Lord Jesus Christ, our great High Priest, offered up most ardent prayers and supplications to Almighty God, in the days of his flesh, upon its own and our behalf. The text mentions prayers and supplications, with strong cries.
Learn, 3. That Christ shed tears as well as blood for a lost world: He offered up strong cries and tears: by this he showed the truth of his humanity, and that he did not accept only the human nature, but did also assume human affections.
Learn, 4. That Christ’s prayers were always heard, either in kind or in equivalency: He was not specifically heard as to the passing of the cup from him, when he prayed in the garden; but he was equivalently heard as to the support of his spirit, and as to supplies of strength, to enable him to drink the bitter cup with silence and submission; he was heard in that he feared, by being delivered, not from death, but out of death, as his followers must expect to be delivered.
Fuente: Expository Notes with Practical Observations on the New Testament
Jesus Learned the Cost of Obedience
At Calvary, Jesus submitted completely to God’s will ( Php 2:8 ). He passed through an hour in which He suffered the deepest possible human suffering and learned the cost of obeying God’s command. Those sufferings made Him our perfect Savior and qualified Him to offer the sacrifice for sins that would lead to man’s salvation. Such salvation is at once eternal and available to all who will obey His commands ( Joh 3:16-17 ; Joh 14:15 ). W. E. Vine says the word “author” points to Christ as “the concrete and active cause of it” (our salvation). The writer then quoted Psa 110:4 again to prove God appointed Christ to be a High Priest after the order of Melchizedek. He was appointed by God and satisfied all of the requirements of this position ( Heb 5:8-10 ).
Fuente: Gary Hampton Commentary on Selected Books
Heb 5:7. Who, &c. The sum of the things treated of in the 7th and following chapters, is contained in this paragraph, from Heb 5:7-10, and in this sum is admirably comprised the process of his passion with its inmost causes, in the very terms used by the evangelists. Who in the days of his flesh Those two days in particular wherein his sufferings were at the height; when he had offered up prayers and supplications thrice; with strong crying and tears In the garden; to him (his heavenly Father) that was able to save him from death Which yet he endured in obedience to his Fathers will. The reader will easily understand what is here said concerning the fear and sorrow, the strong crying and tears of the Son of God, if he remember that He, who was perfect God, and possessed of all possible perfections as the eternal Word of the Father, was also perfect man, of a reasonable soul and human flesh subsisting: in other words, that in his mysterious person, the perfect human nature, consisting of soul and body, was indeed united indissolubly to the divine, but was not while he was on earth, (and is not even now,) absorbed by it. The union was such as gave an infinite dignity to the person of the Redeemer, and infinite merit to his sufferings, but not such as made him incapable of suffering, or rendered his sufferings of no efficacy, which would have been the case if they had not been felt. Only let this be kept in remembrance, and Christs humiliation and sorrow will not be a stone of stumbling to us, or rock of offence, any more than his exaltation and glory. And was heard in that he feared To be heard, signifies, in Scripture, to be accepted in our requests, or to be answered in them. There is no doubt but the Father heard the Son always in the former sense, Joh 11:42 : but how far was he heard in the latter, so as to be delivered from what he prayed against? In answer to this it must be observed, the prayers of Christ on this occasion were, 1st, Conditional; namely, that the cup might pass from him if it were agreeable to his Fathers will; Father, if thou be willing, remove this cup from me, Luk 22:42. He could not have been man, and not have had an extreme aversion to the sufferings that were coming upon him in that hour and power of darkness: when it is certain that Satan and his angels, who had departed from him for a season, (Luk 4:13,) were again permitted to oppress his soul with inexpressible horror. Nothing, in fact, is suffering, or can be penal to us, but what is grievous to our nature. But the mind of Christ, amidst these assaults of hell, and the view given him of the sufferings which awaited him, was so supported and fortified, as to come to a perfect acquiescence in his Fathers will, saying, Nevertheless, not my will, but thine be done. But, 2d, His prayers were also absolute, and were absolutely heard. He had conceived a deep and dreadful apprehension of death, upon its being presented to him as attended with the wrath and curse of God, due to those sins of mankind, for which he was to make atonement. And he well knew how unable the human nature was to undergo it, (so as to remove that wrath and curse, and make way for the justification of such as should believe in him,) if not mightily supported and carried through the trial by the power of God. And while his faith and trust in God were terribly assaulted by the temptations of Satan suggesting fear, dread, and terrible apprehensions of the divine displeasure due to our sins, it was his duty, and a part of the obedience he owed to his heavenly Father, to pray that he might be supported and delivered, , in that he particularly feared Or rather; from his fear, namely, the fear of that weight of infinite justice and wrath, which our sins had provoked; or, the being bruised and put to grief by the hand of God himself. Compared with this, every thing else was as nothing. And yet so greatly did he thirst to be obedient even unto this dreadful death, and to lay down his life for his sheep, under this dreadful load of anguish and sorrow, that he vehemently longed to be baptized with this baptism, Luk 12:50. The consideration of its being the will of God that he should thus suffer, first tempered his fear, and afterward swallowed it up. And he was heard Not so that the cup should pass away, but so that he was enabled to drink it without any fear. Thus the prophet represents him as saying, The Lord God hath opened mine ear, and I was not rebellious, neither turned away back: I gave my back to the smiters, &c., for the Lord God will help me, therefore shall I not be confounded; therefore have I set my face like a flint, I know that I shall not be ashamed, &c, Isa 50:5-8. Add to this, that he was actually delivered from the power of death itself by a glorious resurrection, of which the prophet intimates his having an assured expectation, representing him as adding, He is near that justifieth me; namely, that acquits me from the charge of being an imposter and blasphemer, by raising me from the dead, exalting me to his own right hand, and investing me with all power in heaven and on earth, and especially by authorizing me to confer the Holy Ghost in his extraordinary gifts upon my disciples, and thereby to give demonstration of my being the true Messiah. In this sense the apostle seems to have understood the passage when he said, that he, who was put to death in the flesh; namely, as a blasphemer; was justified in, or by, the Spirit, conferred by him after his ascension.
Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Verse 7
Who; that is, Christ.–In the days of his flesh; of his life upon the earth.–Heard, in that he feared; in respect to that which he feared. (Luke 22:41-43.)
Fuente: Abbott’s Illustrated New Testament
5:7 {4} Who in the days of his flesh, when he had offered up prayers and supplications with strong crying and tears unto him that was able to {h} save him from death, and was heard in that he feared;
(4) The other part of the second comparison: Christ being exceedingly afflicted and exceedingly merciful did not pray because of his sins, for he had none, but for his fear, and obtained his request, and offered himself for all who are his.
(h) To deliver him from death.
Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes
The phrase "days of his flesh [Gr. sarx]" draws attention to the weakness that characterized Jesus’ life during His earthly sojourn. Jesus’ offerings to God (cf. Heb 5:1) included His prayers and petitions. Specifically, Jesus’ prayers from Gethsemane and the cross that were part of His offering of worship and expiation to God illustrate this (cf. Psa 22:22-24; Heb 2:12). However, Jesus’ entire passion ministry is probably in view here. [Note: Lane, p. 120.] God heard and granted Jesus’ prayers, the evidence of which is Jesus’ resurrection (cf. Psa 22:22-31). "Piety" means reverent submission, godly fear, and trust. Jesus’ prayers show His ability to sympathize with those He represents (Heb 5:2-3; cf. John 17). The writer of Hebrews said more about Jesus’ priestly ministry than any other New Testament writer. [Note: See Manson, pp. 109-10.]