Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Hebrews 3:4
For every house is builded by some [man]; but he that built all things [is] God.
4. For every house is builded by some man ] The real meaning would perhaps be better expressed by “Every household is established by some one.” The establisher of the Old Dispensation as well as of the New was Christ, but yet, in some sense (as an instrument and minister) Moses might be regarded as the founder of the Old Covenant (Act 7:38), as Jesus of the New. The verb ( kataskeuazo) is rendered “prepare” in Heb 9:6, Heb 11:7; Luk 1:17.
he that built all things is God ] In His humanity Jesus was but “the Apostle” of God in building His house, the Church. “He ( the man whose name is the Branch) shall build the temple of the Lord,” Zec 6:12. God is the supreme, ultimate, and universal Founder.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
For every house is builded by some man – The words in this verse are plain, and the sentiment in it clear. The only difficulty is in seeing the connection, and in understanding how it is intended to bear on what precedes, or on what follows. It is clear that every house must have a builder, and equally clear that God is the Creator of all things. But what is the meaning of this passage in this connection? What is its bearing on the argument? If the verse was entirely omitted, and the fifth verse read in connection with the third, there would be apparently nothing wanting to complete the sense of the writer, or to finish the comparison which he had commenced. Various ways have been adopted to explain the difficulty. Perhaps the following observations may remove it, and express the true sense:
(1) Every family must have a founder; every dispensation an author; every house a builder. There must be someone, therefore, over all dispensations – the old and the new – the Jewish and the Christian.
(2) Paul assumes that the Lord Jesus was divine. He had demonstrated this in Heb 1:1-14; and he argues as if this were so, without now stopping to prove it, or even to affirm it expressly.
(3) God must be over all things. He is Creator of all, and he must, therefore, be over all. As the Lord Jesus, therefore, is divine, he must be over the Jewish dispensation as well as the Christian – or he must, as God, have been at the head of that – or over his own family or household.
(4) As such, he must have a glory and honor which could not belong to Moses. He, in his divine character, was the Author of both the Jewish and the Christian dispensations, and he must, therefore, have a rank far superior to that of Moses – which was the point which the apostle designed to illustrate. The meaning of the whole may be thus expressed. The Lord Jesus is worthy of more honor than Moses. He is so, as the maker of a house deserves more honor than the house. He is divine. In the beginning he laid the foundation of the earth, and was the agent in the creation of all things; Heb 1:2, Heb 1:10. He presides, therefore, over everything; and was over the Jewish and the Christian dispensations – for there must have been someone over them, or the author of them, as really as it must be true that every house is built by some person. Being, therefore, over all things, and at the head of all dispensations, he must be more exalted than Moses. This seems to me to be the argument – an argument which is based on the supposition that he is at the head of all things, and that he was the agent in the creation of all worlds. This view will make all consistent. The Lord Jesus will be seen to have a claim to a far higher honor than Moses, and Moses will be seen to have derived his honor, as a servant of the Mediator, in the economy which he had appointed.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Verse 4. For every house is builded by some man] The literal sense is plain enough: “Every structure plainly implies an, architect, and an end for which it was formed. The architect may be employed by him for whose use the house is intended; but the efficient cause of the erection is that which is here to he regarded.” The word house, here, is still taken in a metaphorical sense as above, it signifies family or Church. Now the general meaning of the words, taken in this sense, is: “Every family has an author, and a head or governor. Man may found families, civil and religious communities, and be the head of these; but God alone is the Head, Author, and Governor, of all the families of the earth; he is the Governor of the universe. But the apostle has a more restricted meaning in the words , all these things; and as he has been treating of the Jewish and Christian Churches, so he appears to have them in view here. Who could found the Jewish and Christian Church but God? Who could support, govern, influence, and defend them, but himself? Communities or societies, whether religious or civil, may be founded by man; but God alone can build his own Church. Now as all these things could be builded only by God, so he must be God who has built all these things. But as Jesus is the Founder of the Church, and the Head of it, the word GOD seems here to be applied to him; and several eminent scholars and critics bring this very text as a proof of the supreme Deity of Christ: and the apostle’s argument seems to require this; for, as he is proving that Christ is preferred before Moses because he built this house, which Moses could not do, where he to be understood as intimating that this house was built by another, viz. the Father, his whole argument would fall to the ground; and for all this, Moses might be equal, yea, superior to Christ. On this ground Dr. Owen properly concludes: “This then is that which the apostle intends to declare; namely, the ground and reason whence it is that the house was or could be, in that glorious manner, built by Christ, even because he is GOD, and so able to effect it; and by this effect of his power, he is manifested so to be.”
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
The excellency of this builder is evinced by his nature and preference beyond his building, as any man is beyond his.
For every house is builded by some man; for every earthly artificial building, a material house built for habitation, though it may metaphorically and analogically be understood of a commonwealth, or political one, which is contrived, framed, and raised by some man; yet an effect cannot produce itself, nor a house raise itself; both must have a cause, both the house wherein Moses was faithful, and Christs house.
But he that built all things is God; but he who built his church in all ages, whether the Israelitish or Christian, and all things about it of which we speak, and all things else, Mat 16:18; Joh 1:1,3; Col 1:20; he is God essentially; and Christ, doing Gods work and building all things, is not by name only, but by nature, God. The whole world is his workmanship, but the church is the most rare, curious, and excellent piece of it. Christ is not part of the house, as Moses is, but the builder of it; he is the Creator and builder both of the church and him, and so infinitely above him.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
4. Someone must be theestablisher of every house; Moses was not the establisher of thehouse, but a portion of it (but He who established all things, andtherefore the spiritual house in question, is God). Christ, asbeing instrumentally the Establisher of all things, must be theEstablisher of the house, and so greater than Moses.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
For every house is built by some man,…. Or by some one; for a house does not build itself: this is true of houses properly taken, or improperly, as nations, tribes, families, and kindred, of the whole church in general, of particular congregations, and of individual believers; the greatest saints, even apostles and prophets, such an one as Moses, are built by and upon Christ; their persons are built on him; they receive all their gifts for edification from him, and their success is owing to him; though they are to be esteemed of in their proper places: the apostle’s design is to bring down the high esteem the Jews had of Moses, that they might rightly value Christ.
But he that built all things is God; Christ has built all things, and therefore he is God, and must be infinitely above Moses; for this is not to be understood of God and of the creation of the world, and of all things in it by him; but of Christ, and of his building the church, and of his ordering and managing of that, and all affairs relating to it; such as the constitution of it, settling the worship of God, and the ordinances in it, the redemption and salvation of the members of it, and its rule and government; all which prove him to be God, and above Moses.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
Is God (). God is the Creator of all things and so of his “house” which his Son, Jesus Christ, founded and supervises.
Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament
He that built all things is God [ ] . The verb includes not only erection, but furnishing with the entire equipment. See ch. Heb 9:2; 1Pe 2:10. The verb o P. The application of built or established to Christ (ver. 3) is guarded against possible misapprehension. Christ is the establisher, but not by any independent will or agency. As the Son he is he that built, but it is as one with God who built all things. The special foundership of Christ does not contradict or exclude the general foundership of God.
Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament
1) “For every house is builded by some man,” (pas gar oikos kataskeuazetai hupo tinos) “For every house is prepared by someone;” none originates without order, design, intelligence, and skillfully directed constructive energy. As surely as houses and men on earth exist by supernatural design and power for specific functions, so does the church, The New Covenant program of worship that Jesus established, 1Co 12:12-31; Mar 13:34-37; 1Ti 3:15.
2) “But he that built all things is God,” (ho de panta kataskeuasas theos) “Yet, God is (exists as) the one who constructed (or prepared) all existing things:” “From nothing came to be nothing,” but from nothing (a time when nothing completely existed) God (through Christ) created, made, built, or prepared all things, Joh 1:1-3; 1Co 8:6; Col 1:16-19.
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
4. He that built, etc. Though these words may be extended to the creation of the whole world, yet I confine them to the present subject. We are then to understand that nothing is done in the Church which ought not to he ascribed to Gods power; for he alone has founded it by his own hand, (Psa 87:5😉 and Paul says of Christ that he is the head, from whom the whole body, joined together and connected by every subservient juncture, makes an increase according to what is done proportionally by every member. (Eph 4:16.) Hence he often declares that the success of his ministry was God’s work. In a word, if we take a right view of things, it will appear that how much soever God may use the labors of men in building his Church, yet he himself performs everything — the instrument derogates nothing from the workman. (58)
(58) See Appendix L
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(4) For every house is builded by some man.Rather, by some one: the thought of the house leads at once to the thought of the builder of it. The meaning of the several parts of this verse is very simple; but it is not easy to follow the reasoning with certainty. The second clause seems to be a condensed expression of this thought: But He that built this house is He that built all things, God. Moses is possessed of lesser glory than the Apostle of our confession, as the house stands below its maker in honour. For this house, like every other, has its maker:it is He who made all things, even God.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
4. Every house And, therefore, this house has its special builder. And this divine house-building of the two dispensations is like all others, and pre-eminently so, under the divine all-builder, God. As apostles, neither is independent, both being under, as well as from, a divine Founder, by whom both are appointed. The whole structure is established by God supreme. This attribution of all to God, which perplexes Delitzsch, is in Paul’s style. See 2Co 1:21, with our note.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
‘For every house is built by some one; but he who built all things is God (or ‘divine’ – theos without the article).’
These words may indicate the writer’s extreme awareness that he is writing to men who were prickly about anything that might in any way diminish God. He recognises how quickly their hackles might rise because God has not been brought into the situation, and thus he adds these words. Although it was Jesus Who built the house, he assures them that he acknowledges that it is through God, for ‘He Who built all things is God.’ He wants them to see that he sets God as over all, that he does not separate Jesus in His working from God, and he then leaves them to think through how this connects with Jesus being the builder of the house, and the One described in Heb 1:1-3, drawing it out by a reference to His Sonship in the following verses. This necessary tact helps to confirm that he is writing to people with a Jewish background who are sensitive to anything that might somehow diminish Yahweh.
Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett
Heb 3:4 . The author has spoken, Heb 3:2 , of the house of God , and yet, Heb 3:3 , has ascribed the founding and preparing of the same to Christ . For the justification of this apparent contradiction does the remark, Heb 3:4 , serve. Although every house has its special preparer, yet this notwithstanding, it is God who has prepared all things. That special foundership of Christ does not exclude the universal higher foundership of God. The proposition Heb 3:4 is incidental to the main argument. It is not, however, to be enclosed in a parenthesis, because , Heb 3:5 , refers back to , Heb 3:4 .
In the second clause, is subject, and predicate. Wrongly has been ordinarily taken by others as predicate, and as subject either or merely , since was taken as a defining adjunct. The second member of the proposition was then referred to Christ , and the statement found therein that Christ is God. So Theodoret, Oecumenius, Theophylact, Clarius, Beza, Estius, Jac. Cappellus, Cornelius a Lapide, Cameron, Piscator, Owen, Seb. Schmidt, Wittich, Braun, Akersloot, Calmet, Bengel, Cramer, Whitby, Stuart, Baumgarten, and many others; also still Woerner. But with this thought the sequel is not in keeping. For not of Christ’s being God, but of His exalted relation to the house of God as the , while Moses was only a , does the author speak, Heb 3:5-6 .
] denotes not the universality of all created things, thought of as a unity , but in general: each and all , that exists.
Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary
4 For every house is builded by some man ; but he that built all things is God.
Ver. 4. He that built all things ] Moses and all.
Is God ] That is, Christ, whom he had proved to be God by many arguments, Heb 1:1-14 . Messiah therefore is to be preferred before Moses.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
4 .] For (expansion and justification of ) every house is established by some one (i. e. it belongs to the idea of a house that some one should have built and fitted it up: arrangement implies an arranger, design a designer): but (contrast as passing from the individual to the general) He which established all things is, God (= God is he which established all things; being the subject, and ., the predicate. Before treating of the misunderstanding of this verse by the Fathers, and by many of the moderns, let us endeavour to grasp its true meaning. The last verse brings before us Christ as the of the house of God. And this He is, in whatever sense be taken: whether on the narrower sense which best suits this present comparison, or in the wider sense implied by the faithful centurion in Mat 8:9 , in which all natural powers are His . But He is this not by independent will or agency. , is our Writer’s own language of the creation by Christ: and it is in accord with that of St. John, where he says . He, as the Son , is the house of God the Church, or the world, or the universe; but, apparently (cf. Heb 3:6 ), the former of these: but it is as one with, by virtue of his Sonship, Him who is , viz. God. And thus the , twice repeated in Heb 3:5-6 , falls into its own place as belonging both times to God: Moses is His servant, part and portion of His household: Christ is His Son, over His household. And by this reference to God as the , is the expression above, , illustrated and justified. So that this verse is not quasiparenthetic, as almost all the recent expositors make it e. g. Tholuck, Bleek, Ebrard, Lnemann, but distinctly part of the argument.
The ancient expositors, almost without exception, take as predicate, and ( ) as a designation of Christ “ now He that founded all things, is (must be) God :” thus making the passage a proof of the deity of Christ. The short-hand writer has apparently here blundered over Chrysostom’s exposition, for it is meagre and confused to the last degree; but Thdrt., c., and Thl., so explain it, regarding Heb 3:2 as an assertion of Christ’s superiority to Moses quoad His human nature, and this verse as regards His divinity. , , . And so also Beza, Estius, Cappellus, a-Lapide, Cameron, Seb. Schmidt, Calmet, Bengel (who however as well as Cappellus, takes as the personal pronoun referring to Christ, and ( ) as in apposition; but He, who &c., is God), al. But, apart from the extreme harshness and forcing of the construction to bring out this meaning, the sentiment itself is entirely irrelevant here. If the Writer was proving Christ to be greater than Moses inasmuch as He is God, the founder of all things, then clearly the mere assertion of this fact would have sufficed for the proof, without entering on another consideration: nay, after such an assertion, all minor considerations would have been not only superfluous, but preposterous. He does however, after this, distinctly go into the consideration of Christ being faithful not as a servant but as a son: so that he cannot be here speaking of His Deity as a ground of superiority).
Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament
Heb 3:4 . . “For every house is built by someone, but he that built all is God.” Over and above the right conduct of the house there is a builder. No house, no religious system, grows of itself; it has a cause in the will of one who is greater than it. There is a “someone” at the root of all that appears in history. And He who planned and brought into being , “all,” whether old or new, is God. The present development of this divine house as well as its past condition and equipment is of God. And Christ, the Son, naturally and perfectly representing God or the builder, and by whose agency God created all things (Heb 1:2 ) is therefore worthy of more honour than Moses. The argument is not so much elliptical as incomplete, waiting to be supplemented by the following verses in which the relation of Jesus to God and the relation of Moses to the house are exhibited. “It is argued that a household must be established by a householder; now God established the universe, and therefore he is the supreme householder of the universal household or Church of God, and in that household Jesus, as His perfect representative, is entitled to receive glory corresponding” (Rendall).
Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson
some man = some one. Greek. tis. App-123.
God. App-98.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
4.] For (expansion and justification of ) every house is established by some one (i. e. it belongs to the idea of a house that some one should have built and fitted it up: arrangement implies an arranger, design a designer): but (contrast as passing from the individual to the general) He which established all things is, God (= God is he which established all things; being the subject, and ., the predicate. Before treating of the misunderstanding of this verse by the Fathers, and by many of the moderns, let us endeavour to grasp its true meaning. The last verse brings before us Christ as the of the house of God. And this He is, in whatever sense be taken: whether on the narrower sense which best suits this present comparison, or in the wider sense implied by the faithful centurion in Mat 8:9, in which all natural powers are His . But He is this not by independent will or agency. , is our Writers own language of the creation by Christ: and it is in accord with that of St. John, where he says . He, as the Son, is the house of God-the Church, or the world, or the universe; but, apparently (cf. Heb 3:6), the former of these: but it is as one with,-by virtue of his Sonship,-Him who is , viz. God. And thus the , twice repeated in Heb 3:5-6, falls into its own place as belonging both times to God: Moses is His servant, part and portion of His household: Christ is His Son, over His household. And by this reference to God as the , is the expression above, , illustrated and justified. So that this verse is not quasiparenthetic, as almost all the recent expositors make it-e. g. Tholuck, Bleek, Ebrard, Lnemann,-but distinctly part of the argument.
The ancient expositors, almost without exception, take as predicate, and () as a designation of Christ-now He that founded all things, is (must be) God: thus making the passage a proof of the deity of Christ. The short-hand writer has apparently here blundered over Chrysostoms exposition, for it is meagre and confused to the last degree; but Thdrt., c., and Thl., so explain it, regarding Heb 3:2 as an assertion of Christs superiority to Moses quoad His human nature, and this verse as regards His divinity. , , . And so also Beza, Estius, Cappellus, a-Lapide, Cameron, Seb. Schmidt, Calmet, Bengel (who however as well as Cappellus, takes as the personal pronoun referring to Christ, and () as in apposition; but He, who &c., is God), al. But, apart from the extreme harshness and forcing of the construction to bring out this meaning, the sentiment itself is entirely irrelevant here. If the Writer was proving Christ to be greater than Moses inasmuch as He is God, the founder of all things, then clearly the mere assertion of this fact would have sufficed for the proof, without entering on another consideration: nay, after such an assertion, all minor considerations would have been not only superfluous, but preposterous. He does however, after this, distinctly go into the consideration of Christ being faithful not as a servant but as a son: so that he cannot be here speaking of His Deity as a ground of superiority).
Fuente: The Greek Testament
Heb 3:4. , but He) Christ. The article points out the subject, and also possesses in this passage a relative meaning, as in ch. Heb 7:6. , GOD, is the predicate.-, GOD) absolutely. Moses was a god to Aaron, but he was not GOD absolutely.
Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament
but: Heb 3:3, Heb 1:2, Est 2:10, Est 3:9
Reciprocal: Gen 1:1 – God Psa 102:25 – General Zec 6:12 – he shall build Mat 16:18 – I will Joh 1:3 – General Act 17:24 – that made 1Co 3:9 – ye are God’s building Eph 2:21 – all Eph 3:9 – created Col 1:16 – by him were Heb 1:8 – O God Heb 11:10 – whose
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Heb 3:4. The word man is not in the original and some is an indefinite pronoun. The idea is that as a rule, each house has its own particular builder whose activities are limited to the one house. On the other hand, God is the Master builder whose architectural powers include everything in the universe.
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
Verse 4
The language of this statement seems sufficiently clear, but its connection with the apostle’s train of argument is considered very difficult to be explained.