
Text -- Hebrews 10:25 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Robertson: Heb 10:25 - -- Not forsaking ( mē egkataleipontes ).
"Not leaving behind, not leaving in the lurch"(2Ti 4:10).
Not forsaking (
"Not leaving behind, not leaving in the lurch"(2Ti 4:10).

Robertson: Heb 10:25 - -- The assembling of yourselves together ( tēn episunagōgēn heautōn ).
Late double compound from episunagō , to gather together (sun ) beside...

Robertson: Heb 10:25 - -- As the custom of some is ( kathōs ethos tisin ).
"As is custom to some."For ethos (custom) see Luk 22:39; Joh 19:40. Already some Christians had ...

Robertson: Heb 10:25 - -- So much the more as ( tosoutōi mallon hosōi ).
Instrumental case of measure or degree, "by so much the more as,"both with tosoutōi and hosō...
So much the more as (
Instrumental case of measure or degree, "by so much the more as,"both with
Vincent: Heb 10:25 - -- The assembling of ourselves together ( ἐπισυναφωγὴν ἑαυτῶν )
Επισυναγωγή only here and 2Th 2:1, see note....
The assembling of ourselves together (

Vincent: Heb 10:25 - -- As the manner of some is ( καθὼς ἔθος τισίν )
For manner rend. custom . Lit. as is custom unto some . Ἔθ...

Vincent: Heb 10:25 - -- Ye see the day approaching ( βλέπετε ἐγγίζουσαν τὴν ἡμέραν )
The day of Christ's second coming, bringing wi...
Ye see the day approaching (
The day of Christ's second coming, bringing with it the judgment of Israel. He could say " ye see," because they were familiar with Christ's prophecy concerning the destruction of the temple; and they would see this crisis approaching in the disturbances which heralded the Jewish war.
In public or private worship.

Wesley: Heb 10:25 - -- Either through fear of persecution, or from a vain imagination that they were above external ordinances.
Either through fear of persecution, or from a vain imagination that they were above external ordinances.

Wesley: Heb 10:25 - -- To faith, love, and good works. And so much the more, as ye see the day approaching - The great day is ever in your eye.
To faith, love, and good works. And so much the more, as ye see the day approaching - The great day is ever in your eye.
JFB: Heb 10:25 - -- The Greek, "episunagoge," is only found here and 2Th 2:1 (the gathering together of the elect to Christ at His coming, Mat 24:31). The assembling or g...
The Greek, "episunagoge," is only found here and 2Th 2:1 (the gathering together of the elect to Christ at His coming, Mat 24:31). The assembling or gathering of ourselves for Christian communion in private and public, is an earnest of our being gathered together to Him at His appearing. Union is strength; continual assemblings together beget and foster love, and give good opportunities for "provoking to good works," by "exhorting one another" (Heb 3:13). IGNATIUS says, "When ye frequently, and in numbers meet together, the powers of Satan are overthrown, and his mischief is neutralized by your likemindedness in the faith." To neglect such assemblings together might end in apostasy at last. He avoids the Greek term "sunagoge," as suggesting the Jewish synagogue meetings (compare Rev 2:9).

JFB: Heb 10:25 - -- "manner," that is, habit, custom. This gentle expression proves he is not here as yet speaking of apostasy.
"manner," that is, habit, custom. This gentle expression proves he is not here as yet speaking of apostasy.

JFB: Heb 10:25 - -- This, the shortest designation of the day of the Lord's coming, occurs elsewhere only in 1Co 3:13; a confirmation of the Pauline authorship of this Ep...
This, the shortest designation of the day of the Lord's coming, occurs elsewhere only in 1Co 3:13; a confirmation of the Pauline authorship of this Epistle. The Church being in all ages kept uncertain how soon Christ is coming, the day is, and has been, in each age, practically always near; whence, believers have been called on always to be watching for it as nigh at hand. The Hebrews were now living close upon One of those great types and foretastes of it, the destruction of Jerusalem (Mat 24:1-2), "the bloody and fiery dawn of the great day; that day is the day of days, the ending day of all days, the settling day of all days, the day of the promotion of time into eternity, the day which, for the Church, breaks through and breaks off the night of the present world" [DELITZSCH in ALFORD].
Clarke: Heb 10:25 - -- Not forsaking the assembling of ourselves - Επισυναγωγην ἑαυτων . Whether this means public or private worship is hard to say; ...
Not forsaking the assembling of ourselves -

Clarke: Heb 10:25 - -- The day approaching - Την ἡμεραν· That day - the time in which God would come and pour out his judgments on the Jewish nation. We may ...
The day approaching -
Calvin -> Heb 10:25
Calvin: Heb 10:25 - -- 25.=== Not forsaking the assembling of ourselves together, === etc. This confirms the view that has been given. The composition of the Greek word ou...
25.=== Not forsaking the assembling of ourselves together, === etc. This confirms the view that has been given. The composition of the Greek word ought to be noticed; for
We now understand the design of the apostle, and what was the necessity that constrained him to give this exhortation. We may at the same time gather from this passage a general doctrine:
It is an evil which prevails everywhere among mankind, that every one sets himself above others, and especially that those who seem in anything to excel cannot well endure their inferiors to be on an equality with themselves. And then there is so much morosity almost in all, that individuals would gladly make churches for themselves if they could; for they find it so difficult to accommodate themselves to the ways and habits of others. The rich envy one another; and hardly one in a hundred can be found among the rich, who allows to the poor the name and rank of brethren. Unless similarity of habits or some allurements or advantages draw us together, it is very difficult even to maintain a continual concord among ourselves. Extremely needed, therefore, by us all is the admonition to be stimulated to love and not to envy, and not to separate from those whom God has joined to us, but to embrace with brotherly kindness all those who are united to us in faith. And surely it behaves us the more earnestly to cultivate unity, as the more eagerly watchful Satan is, either to tear us by any means from the Church, or stealthily to seduce us from it. And such would be the happy effect, were no one to please himself too much, and were all of us to preserve this one object, mutually to provoke one another to love, and to allow no emulation among ourselves, but that of doing “good works”. For doubtless the contempt of the brethren, moroseness, envy, immoderate estimate of ourselves, and other sinful impulses, clearly show that our love is either very cold, or does not at all exist.
Having said, “Not forsaking the assembling together,” he adds, But exhorting one another; by which he intimates that all the godly ought by all means possible to exert themselves in the work of gathering together the Church on every side; for we are called by the Lord on this condition, that every one should afterwards strive to lead others to the truth, to restore the wandering to the right way, to extend a helping hand to the fallen, to win over those who are without. But if we ought to bestow so much labor on those who are yet aliens to the flock of Christ, how much more diligence is required in exhorting the brethren whom God has already joined to us?
===As the manner of some is, === etc. It hence appears that the origin of all schisms was, that proud men, despising others, pleased themselves too much. But when we hear that there were faithless men even in the age of the Apostles, who departed from the Church, we ought to be less shocked and disturbed by similar instances of defection which we may see in the present day. It is indeed no light offense when men who had given some evidence of piety and professed the same faith with us, fall away from the living God; but as it is no new thing, we ought, as I have already said, to be less disturbed by such an event. But the Apostle introduced this clause to show that he did not speak without a cause, but in order to apply a remedy to a disease that was making progress.
===And so much the more, === etc. Some think this passage to be of the same import with that of Paul,
“It is time to awake out of sleep, for now is our salvation nearer than when we believed.” (Rom 13:11.)
But I rather think that reference is here made to the last coming of Christ, the expectation of which ought especially to rouse us to the practice of a holy life as well as to careful and diligent efforts in the work of gathering together the Church. For to what end did Christ come except to collect us all into one body from that dispersion in which we are now wandering? Therefore, the nearer his coming is, the more we ought to labor that the scattered may be assembled and united together, that there may be one fold and one shepherd (Joh 10:16.)
Were any one to ask, how could the Apostle say that those who were as yet afar off from the manifestation of Christ, saw the day near and just at hand? I would answer, that from the beginning of the kingdom of Christ the Church was so constituted that the faithful ought to have considered the Judge as coming soon; nor were they indeed deceived by a false notion, when they were prepared to receive Christ almost every moment; for such was the condition of the Church from the time the Gospel was promulgated, that the whole of that period might truly and properly be called the last. They then who have been dead many ages ago lived in the last days no less than we. Laughed at is our simplicity in this respect by the worldlywise and scoffers, who deem as fabulous all that we believe respecting the resurrection of the flesh and the last judgment; but that our faith may not fail through their mockery, the Holy Spirit reminds us that a thousand years are before God as one day, (2Pe 3:8;) so that whenever we think of the eternity of the celestial kingdom no time ought to appear long to us. And further, since Christ, after having completed all things necessary for our salvation, has ascended into heaven, it is but reasonable that we who are continually looking for his second manifestation should regard every day as though it were the last. 179
TSK -> Heb 10:25
TSK: Heb 10:25 - -- forsaking : Mat 18:20; Joh 20:19-29; Act 1:13, Act 1:14, Act 2:1, Act 2:42, Act 16:16, Act 20:7; 1Co 5:4; 1Co 11:17, 1Co 11:18, 1Co 11:20, 1Co 14:23; ...
forsaking : Mat 18:20; Joh 20:19-29; Act 1:13, Act 1:14, Act 2:1, Act 2:42, Act 16:16, Act 20:7; 1Co 5:4; 1Co 11:17, 1Co 11:18, 1Co 11:20, 1Co 14:23; Jud 1:19
but : Heb 10:24, Heb 3:13; Rom 12:8; 1Co 14:3; 1Th 4:18, 1Th 5:11 *marg.
as ye : Mat 24:33, Mat 24:34; Mar 13:29, Mar 13:30; Rom 13:11-13; Phi 4:5; Jam 5:8; 1Pe 4:7; 2Pe 3:9, 2Pe 3:11, 2Pe 3:14

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Heb 10:25
Barnes: Heb 10:25 - -- Not forsaking the assembling of ourselves together - That is, for purposes of public worship. Some expositors have understood the word rendered...
Not forsaking the assembling of ourselves together - That is, for purposes of public worship. Some expositors have understood the word rendered here as "assembling"-
As the manner of some is - Why those here referred to neglected public worship, is not specified. It may have been from such causes as the following:
(1)\caps1 s\caps0 ome may have been deterred by the fear of persecution, as those who were thus assembled would be more exposed to danger than others.
(2)\caps1 s\caps0 ome may have neglected the duty because they felt no interest in it - as professing Christians now sometimes do.
(3)\caps1 i\caps0 t is possible that some may have had doubts about the necessity and propriety of this duty, and on that account may have neglected it.
(4)\caps1 o\caps0 r it may perhaps have been, though we can hardly suppose that this reason existed, that some may have neglected it from a cause which now sometimes operates - from dissatisfaction with a preacher, or with some member or members of the church, or with some measure in the church.
Whatever were the reasons, the apostle says that they should not be allowed to operate, but that Christians should regard it as a sacred duty to meet together for the worship of God. None of the causes above suggested should deter people from this duty. With all who bear the Christian name, with all who expect to make advances in piety and religious knowledge, it should be regarded as a sacred duty to assemble together for public worship. Religion is social; and our graces are to be strengthened and invigorated by waiting together on the Lord. There is an obvious propriety that people should assemble together for the worship of the Most High, and no Christian can hope that his graces will grow, or that he can perform his duty to his Maker, without uniting thus with those who love the service of God.
But exhorting one another - That is, in your assembling together a direction which proves that it is proper for Christians to exhort one another when they are gathered together for public worship. Indeed there is reason to believe that the preaching in the early Christian assemblies partook much of the character of mutual exhortation.
And so much the more as ye see the day approaching - The term "day"here refers to some event which was certainly anticipated, and which was so well understood by them that no particular explanation was necessary. It was also some event that was expected soon to occur, and in relation to which there were indications then of its speedily arriving. If it had not been something which was expected soon to happen, the apostle would have gone into a more full explanation of it, and would have stated at length what these indications were. There has been some diversity of opinion about what is here referred to, many commentators supposing that the reference is to the anticipated second coming of the Lord Jesus to set up a visible kingdom on the earth; and others to the fact that the period was approaching when Jerusalem was to be destroyed, and when the services of the temple were to cease. So far as the language is concerned, the reference might be to either event, for the word a "day"is applied to both in the New Testament. The word would properly be understood as referring to an expected period when something remarkable was to happen which ought to have an important influence on their character and conduct. In support of the opinion that it refers to the approaching destruction of Jerusalem, and not to the coming of the Lord Jesus to set up a visible kingdom, we may adduce the following considerations:
(1) The term used - "day"- will as properly refer to that event as to any other. It is a word which would be likely to suggest the idea of distress, calamity, or judgment of some kind, for so it is often used in the Scriptures; comp Psa 27:13; 1Sa 26:10; Jer 30:7; Eze 21:5; notes Isa 2:12.
\caps1 (2) s\caps0 uch a period was distinctly predicted by the Saviour, and the indications which would precede it were clearly pointed out; see Matt. 24. That event was then so near that the Saviour said that "that generation would not pass"until the prediction had been fulfilled; Mat 24:34.(3) The destruction of Jerusalem was an event of great importance to the Hebrews, and to the Hebrew Christians to whom this Epistle was directed, and it might be reasonable to suppose that the apostle Paul would refer to it.
\caps1 (4) i\caps0 t is not improbable that at the time of writing this Epistle there were indications that that day was approaching. Those indications were of so marked a character that when the time approached they could not well be mistaken (see Mat 24:6-12, Mat 24:24, Mat 24:26), and it is probable that they had already begun to appear.
\caps1 (5) t\caps0 here were no such indications that the Lord Jesus was about to appear to set up a visible kingdom. It was not a fact that that was about to occur, as the result has shown; nor is there any positive proof that the mass of Christians were expecting it, and no reason to believe that the apostle Paul had any such expectation; see 2Th 2:1-5.
\caps1 (6) t\caps0 he expectation that the destruction of Jerusalem was referred to, and was about to occur, was just what might be expected to produce the effect on the minds of the Hebrew Christians which the apostle here refers to. It was to be a solemn and fearful event. It would be a remarkable manifestation of God. It would break up the civil and ecclesiastical polity of the nation, and would scatter them abroad. It would require all the exercise of their patience and faith in passing through these scenes. It might be expected to be a time when many would be tempted to apostatize, and it was proper, therefore, to exhort them to meet together, and to strengthen and encourage each other as they saw that that event was drawing near. The argument then would be this. The danger against which the apostle desired to guard those to whom he was writing was, that of apostasy from Christianity to Judaism. To preserve them from this, he urges the fact that the downfall of Judaism was near, and that every indication which they saw of its approach ought to be allowed to influence them, and to guard them from that danger.
It is for reasons such as these that I suppose the reference here is not to the "second advent"of the Redeemer, but to the approaching destruction of Jerusalem. At the same time, it is not improper to use this passage as an exhortation to Christians to fidelity when they shall see that the end of the world draws nigh, and when they shall perceive indications that the Lord Jesus is about to come. And so of death. We should be the more diligent when we see the indications that the great Messenger is about to come to summon us into the presence of our final Judge. And who does not know that he is approaching him with silent and steady footsteps, and that even now he may be very near? Who can fail to see in himself indications that the time approaches when he must lie down and die? Every pang that we suffer should remind us of this; and when the hair changes its hue, and time makes furrows in the cheek, and the limbs become feeble, we should regard them as premonitions that he is coming, and should be more diligent as we see that be is drawing near.
Poole -> Heb 10:25
Poole: Heb 10:25 - -- Helps to the performance of both the former duties, to God and fellow Christians, with their respective motives, are laid down in the following part...
Helps to the performance of both the former duties, to God and fellow Christians, with their respective motives, are laid down in the following part of the chapter. The first is couched in this verse; neither slighting in thought, nor vilifying in word, nor separating, nor leaving by dissociation.
Not forsaking:
The assembling of ourselves together:
As the manner of some is such desertion of those assemblies in the worshipping and serving of God, was the common custom among some of these Hebrews; a usual, frequent mode of them to do it; some idolizing their own nation; others, their own selves, thinking them holier than others, Gal 2:12-14 ; others, that valued honours, riches, and ease more than Christ or their souls; some for fear of persecution, as foretold, Luk 8:13,14 , fulfilled, Gal 6:12 .
But exhorting one another
And so much the more, as ye see the day approaching they have so much the more reason to do it, and intend the work, as they did not conjecture, but certainly know, that the day of their own death, and particular account to be given of themselves to God; the day of God’ s executing his judgments on Jerusalem, as Christ foretold, Mat 24:1-28 , prophesied by Daniel before, Dan 9:26,27 , when the temple should be burnt, the city destroyed, and the people dispersed through the world; or, the day of the general judgment, testified by the gospel to the world, Act 17:31 : all these were every day nearer to them than other, and they believed them to approach; therefore ought they to be more exercised in denying evil and doing good, not forsaking church communion, but keeping close to Christ and his assemblies, that they might better stand together in that day.
PBC -> Heb 10:25
PBC: Heb 10:25 - -- " Not forsaking the assembling of ourselves together, as the manner of some is; but exhorting one another: and so much the more, as ye see the day app...
" Not forsaking the assembling of ourselves together, as the manner of some is; but exhorting one another: and so much the more, as ye see the day approaching."
Hear following paragraph
We come near with a full heart of assurance. And, in that flow of language the writer says, "not forsaking the assembling of ourselves together, as the manner of some is; but exhorting one another: and so much the more, as ye see the day approaching." What day? The day of worship when you're supposed to assemble together. Your presence here is not to go to church and say "what's in it for me preacher?" "I went the last time and I didn't like the songs they sang,I didn't like the sermon he preached,I didn't get anything out of it." That's not what church is about. You go to be strengthened so you can strengthenthe brethren - if you're motivated by faith. 51
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" as the manner of some is"
Neglect of the public assembly didn’t begin in the high-tech Twentieth Century. First Century Christians found reason to grow cold and neglect public worship, too. Forsake comes from a Greek word which means to leave behind, to desert, as a soldier deserts his post. It carries the idea that you have walked away from a clear responsibility. In context, that responsibility calls on you faithfully to attend the public worship of the church in order to help those around you. How can you provoke them to love and good works if you are absent from the assembly? 51
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The gifts of God may lay on some members heavier duties than fall to the lot of most of the members, but these duties are not the result of just having membership. No one is obliged to preach because he is a member of the church. Nor must he take upon himself the work of the deacon just because he has become a member of the church. These duties are not laid on all the members, but only on those who have been called to them, as were those under the old dispensation called to wait especially on the tabernacle. When the church sees one whom she believes to be specially gifted to fill any office, it is her business to take the matter up and set the member over the business that God has qualified him to do. But there are duties that come with membership, and which are universal, and which are laid upon all the members alike. One does not have to have a special gift that he may attend the regular meetings of the church. This duty comes with church membership, and falls on all the members alike. We are not to forsake the assembling of ourselves together. True, there may be conditions that may excuse a member from attending the meetings of the church. If he is sick and unable to attend; if there is a real providential hindrance, which should only be made to include those matters which are beyond the control of the member, then it may be impossible to be at the place of meeting at the appointed time. But it would not be sufficient excuse to say that it required some sacrifice of time and money, for that sacrifice is conceded when one asks for membership. Members who desire to hold the confidence of their brethren should be careful not to offer excuses which are trivial. When brethren see that the excuses offered are trivial, and that proper interest in the church, and a little effort, would have removed the obstacle, they begin to think that this brother’s interest in the church is not what it ought to be. As for instance, if one should offer the excuse that he did not feel well; and then it is seen that when he feels no better than he did that day, he can go to town, or be about his work; it is reasoned that if he felt more interest in the church he would come if he did not feel the best. If there is a hindrance that could have been gotten out of the way by proper management during the week, it shows lack of interest, and this serves to break down the confidence that the church would like to feel in every member. A brother wrote us not long since, saying that one of the most serious menaces to the progress of the church now was the neglect of attendance among the members, because so much of it was for the reason that members let their worldly affairs keep them away from the church. Even when members stay away from the Sunday services it is because in many cases they have worked so hard during the week that they do not " feel like" making the effort to get to church. They had not taken into account that next Sunday was meeting day, and then determined to arrange to be there; but had let other affairs so engage them as to leave neither time nor life for the meeting. This is a grievous sin. When membership was asked in the church, it carried with it the obligation to make every effort to keep up the services of the church.
And they ought not to wait to be asked to join in this work. The church belongs to them as much as it does to other members; and its obligations, as much as it privileges, belong to them. They ought to be making it their business to know how this expense is to be met, instead of the deacon having to come to them, and ask if they do not feel like they can help some. It is his business to receive and disburse the funds of the church under its direction, but it is not his business to beg, nor to put the expenses of the church on the charity list. Instead of wondering, " how they are getting along, meeting expenses," they should ask, " how are we getting along meeting our obligations?" Then there are those members who do not attend the meetings regularly; some of them possibly because they cannot get to the church from justifiable causes, but who are as well able as other members to assist in meeting the expenses of the church. We are glad to say, that some of these are careful to pay in a fair share toward keeping the church up but there are others who never send anything for that purpose. If they were to be at a meeting they would help, but if they are not there they seem to feel that their absence absolves them from all obligation. How they can feel this way, if they really do, is a mystery! They must know that the expenses of the church go on whether they are there or not, and that those who are keeping up the meetings by making the necessary sacrifice to be there, and another sacrifice to meet the expenses, are making sacrifices that they are not. To meet the members of our church as brethren indeed, we ought not to be willing to let them carry what we ought to carry.
Members of the church who are situated so that they cannot attend the meetings should find out by writing to the deacons if they are bearing their part of the expenses. They should not wait for the deacon, or anyone else, to write to them about it; they should manifest an interest by keeping themselves informed about the church. With the expenses of the church should be reckoned what the church is able to do for the pastor. They who do not attend the meetings are under obligation to help keep up the ministration of the gospel in the church. There is no plainer duty laid out in the New Testament than this. They should not only contribute in this direction, but they should interest themselves with the other members in knowing what is done, that they may come to a conclusion whether they are doing their duty or not, and whether the whole church is doing what is reasonable and right.
Let no one say, " Well, that cuts me out, for I am too poor to give." We have not said one word that can be rightly construed to mean that they who are not able should do what they are not able to do. If you know that the Lord knows you are not able to help, and that there are plenty of those who are able to keep the church up, there will be no one harder on you than your own conscience if you will let it speak. But if you are able to do but little, as compared to what others are able to do, then you are as much under obligation to do that little as the more able ones are to do what they are able to do. But it is not so much a matter of ability as it is of willingness, and that of being really interested in the welfare of the church. We cannot close without asking all who read this to consider well these questions: If you are a church member, do you realize that this means obligation? as well as privilege? Are you considering these obligations, and trying to discharge them with a thankful heart for the mercies and blessings that have been bestowed upon you?
Excerpts from an article by: Elder Walter Cash
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" But exhorting one another: and so much the more, as ye see the day approaching."
How can you exhort someone in the church? If you faithfully attend the church’s public assembly, how can you not exhort them? In Col 3:16 Paul taught us to teach and admonish one another in our song worship. Did you ever think that your selection of a particular hymn in the song worship served as instruction and admonition to someone in the audience? Every act of worship contains a vertical and a horizontal purpose. The vertical relates to you and God, enhancing your fellowship with and worship of him. For the most part, it is private and personal. The horizontal relates to you and your brother or sister. Both our study lesson and this verse from Colossians deal primarily with the horizontal value of public worship. Your presence in church may become a powerful encouragement to someone else who was tempted to neglect the assembly. They may never say a word to you, but your presence encouraged them. Your mere selection of a particular hymn may touch their heart with conviction or encouragement. Your warm sincere greeting, that brief, but loving, conversation may have given them the strength they needed to resist temptation or warm up to their personal joy in the service of God. 51
" As Ye see the day approaching."
What approaching day does the verse intend? Is it not the very day of worship, the day the church assembles for its public worship? Last minute happenings become a common hindrance to faithful attendance. Relatives arrived unexpectedly, the week was so hectic, we just must take some time to catch up on chores around the house. The verse rejects all of these issues. As the day of worship draws near, our plans should focus more than ever on adjusting schedules, bringing unexpected relatives with us, or whatever it takes to assure that we will be present with the church as it gathers. Notice the very next verse. " If we sin willfully..." That lesson continues the importance of faithful assembly, among other things. What activity do most believers willfully neglect? Public assembly! May we see the day approaching and prepare to join those who assemble in church. 399
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Sinning Against Knowledge Heb 10:25-31
As he continues to apply his argument, the writer now balances the encouragement of Heb 10:19-24 with a very sobering warning. {Heb 10:25-31} The Jewish Christians to whom the letter was written needed both encouragement to " draw near"{Heb 10:19} and warning against " drawing back" .{Heb 10:38-39} To draw back to the Levitical system of worship, he urges, is a willful sin- a sin against the light of knowledge.
This particular passage, the fourth of five " warning" passages in Hebrews, closely parallels the message in Heb 6:4-8. Together, they form a dual caution against a cavalier attitude toward one’s commitment to Christ. Leon Morris says this about the frightening passage in Heb 6:1-20:
" The writer is envisaging people who have been numbered among the followers of Christ but now leave that company. Such cannot be brought back to repentance. Notice that he does not say ‘cannot be forgiven’ or ‘cannot be restored to salvation’ or the like. It is repentance that is in mind, and the writer says that it is impossible for these people to repent- The reference is to a repentance that means leaving the backsliding into which the person has fallen. He cannot bring himself to this repentance."
The Heb 10:1-39 passage is every bit as severe. Neither it, nor the Heb 6:1-20 warning, however, support the notion that one of God’s children can lose eternal life. The issue is discipleship, not sonship- fellowship, not relationship.
This, again, is a warning against apostasy. Don’t severe your connections with the Christian assembly, the writer urges, for unconcern for fellow believers suggests an unconcern for the Lord Jesus Christ himself.
1. A Sign of Apostasy- Heb 10:25 -Evidently, some of the Hebrew Christians were slack to attend the Christian assembly, and were attending the temple or the synagogue instead, renewing association with their former acquaintances. In so doing, they demonstrated the first signs of a total apostasy. Some wit once said, " Church members are like old cars; they generally start missing before they quit." Delinquency in church attendance discourages other Christians and robs both parties of the opportunity to provoke one another to love and to good works. {Heb 10:24} Though few people would categorize habitual absence as a sin, the author does just that in the next verse: " For if we sin willfully, there remaineth no more sacrifice for sin" .{Heb 10:25}
2. The Seriousness of Apostasy -Heb 10:26 -To " sin willfully" means to sin against the light of truth. {Heb 10:26} It is in distinction to those mentioned in Heb 5:2 " the ignorant and wayward," whose sinning was inadvertent. Under the Old Covenant, sin through ignorance was distinguished from sin ‘committed with a high hand.’ {Nu 15:27-31 -marginal reading} The latter was a presumptuous sin- an " I-can-do-what-I-please" attitude of defiance and rebellion against the light of knowledge. {cf. Ps 19:12-13} Those who use the grace of God for a license to disobey the word are sinning willfully. If these Hebrew Christians returned to the Law, they would, by that act, place themselves into the position of God’s " adversaries." {Heb 10:27} That’s serious! Furthermore, such presuming upon God’s grace " despises" Christ’s person, Christ’s sacrificial work, and the Holy Spirit of grace who enlightened them to the truth. {Heb 10:29} Just as under the Law, there was no provision made for the forgiveness of deliberate sin, so if they turn their back on the blood of Christ, they abandoned the benefits of Christ’s sacrifice- the only remedy for their sin. Granted, their loss is restricted to the context of life now, but what an inestimable loss it is! Such have only to expect the severity of the living God. {Heb 10:30-31} 400
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Haydock -> Heb 10:25
Haydock: Heb 10:25 - -- Not forsaking our assembly. [6] St. John Chrysostom understands the assemblies of Christians, where they met to celebrate the divine mysteries. Othe...
Not forsaking our assembly. [6] St. John Chrysostom understands the assemblies of Christians, where they met to celebrate the divine mysteries. Others expound it of not leaving the faith and communion of the Catholic Church by turning apostates: this is confirmed by the following words: for if we sin wilfully,...there is now left no sacrifice for sins. The Novatian heretics understood no pardon for sins after baptism. St. John Chrysostom and others understood no second baptism, wherewith to be cleansed in the same manner as before; but the most probable interpretation, and most agreeable to the text and doctrine of St. Paul, seems to be, that now remained no sacrifice for sins, i.e. no other sacrifice but that of Christ, which the apostate renouncing, by quitting and abandoning his faith, thereby cuts himself off from the very groundwork and foundation of salvation, as long as he continues in his apostacy. So that nothing remains for him but a dreadful expectation[7] of God's just and severe judgments. (Witham)
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[BIBLIOGRAPHY]
Non deserentes collectionem nostram, Greek: me egkataleipontes ten episunagogen eauton, collectionem, congregationem.
Gill -> Heb 10:25
Gill: Heb 10:25 - -- Not forsaking the assembling of ourselves together,.... Or the episynagogue of one another; which word is used to distinguish Christian assemblies fro...
Not forsaking the assembling of ourselves together,.... Or the episynagogue of one another; which word is used to distinguish Christian assemblies from Jewish synagogues, and to denote the coalition of Jews and Gentiles in one church state, and to express the saints' gathering together to Christ; see 2Th 2:1 and their act of meeting together in some one place to attend his worship, word, and ordinances. Now to "forsake" such assembling, signifies a great infrequency in attending with the saints, a rambling from place to place, and takes in an entire apostasy. It is the duty of saints to assemble together for public worship, on the account of God, who has appointed it, who approves of it, and whose glory is concerned in it; and on the account of the saints themselves, that they may be delighted, refreshed, comforted, instructed, edified, and perfected; and on account of others, that they may be convinced, converted, and brought to the knowledge and faith of Christ; and in imitation of the primitive saints. And an assembling together ought not to be forsaken; for it is a forsaking God, and their own mercies, and such are like to be forsaken of God; nor is it known what is lost hereby; and it is the first outward visible step to apostasy, and often issues in it.
As the manner of some is; or custom; and this prevailing custom among these Jews might arise from contempt of the Gentiles, or from fear of reproach and persecution: and in our day, this evil practice arises sometimes from a vain conceit of being in no need of ordinances, and from an over love of the world, and from a great declension in the exercise of grace; the consequence of it is very bad. The Jews a reckon among those that go down to hell, and perish, and have no part in the world to come,
but exhorting one another; to prayer, to attend public worship, to regard all the duties of religion, to adhere to Christ, and a profession of him, and to consider him, and walk on in him: or "comforting one another"; by meeting privately together, and conferring about experience, and the doctrines of grace; and by observing to one another the promises of God, relating to public worship; and by putting each other in mind of the bright day of the Lord, that is coming on:
and so much the more, as ye see the day approaching; either of death, or the last judgment, or rather of Jerusalem's destruction; which at the writing of this epistle was near at hand; and was an affair that greatly concerned these Hebrews; and by various symptoms might be observed by them, as approaching; and which was no inconsiderable argument to engage them to a diligent discharge of their duty; unless the day of darkness, infidelity, and blasphemy in the last days of the world, should be intended, after which will succeed the latter day glory.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Heb 10:25 This paragraph (vv. 19-25) is actually a single, skillfully composed sentence in Greek, but it must be broken into shorter segments for English idiom....
Geneva Bible -> Heb 10:25
Geneva Bible: Heb 10:25 Not forsaking the assembling of ourselves together, as the manner of some [is]; but exhorting [one another]: ( 8 ) and so much the more, as ye see the...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Heb 10:1-39
TSK Synopsis: Heb 10:1-39 - --1 The weakness of the law sacrifices.10 The sacrifice of Christ's body once offered,14 for ever hath taken away sins.19 An exhortation to hold fast th...
Combined Bible -> Heb 10:25-27
Combined Bible: Heb 10:25-27 - --
(Hebrews 10:25-27)
We have now reached one of the most solemn and fear-inspiring passages to be found not only in this ep...
MHCC -> Heb 10:19-25
MHCC: Heb 10:19-25 - --The apostle having closed the first part of the epistle, the doctrine is applied to practical purposes. As believers had an open way to the presence o...
Matthew Henry -> Heb 10:19-39
Matthew Henry: Heb 10:19-39 - -- I. Here the apostle sets forth the dignities of the gospel state. It is fit that believers should know the honours and privileges that Christ has pr...
Barclay -> Heb 10:19-25
Barclay: Heb 10:19-25 - --The writer to the Hebrews now comes to the practical implication of all that he has been saying. From theology he turns to practical exhortation. He...
Constable: Heb 5:11--11:1 - --III. The High Priestly Office of the Son 5:11--10:39
The transition from exposition (4:15-5:10) to exhortation (...

Constable: Heb 10:19-39 - --D. The Danger of Willful Sinning (The Fourth Warning) 10:19-39
From this point on in the epistle the wri...
