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Text -- Hebrews 4:1-10 (NET)

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Context
God’s Promised Rest
4:1 Therefore we must be wary that, while the promise of entering his rest remains open, none of you may seem to have come short of it. 4:2 For we had good news proclaimed to us just as they did. But the message they heard did them no good, since they did not join in with those who heard it in faith. 4:3 For we who have believed enter that rest, as he has said, “As I swore in my anger, ‘They will never enter my rest!’” And yet God’s works were accomplished from the foundation of the world. 4:4 For he has spoken somewhere about the seventh day in this way: “And God rested on the seventh day from all his works,” 4:5 but to repeat the text cited earlier: “They will never enter my rest!” 4:6 Therefore it remains for some to enter it, yet those to whom it was previously proclaimed did not enter because of disobedience. 4:7 So God again ordains a certain day, “Today,” speaking through David after so long a time, as in the words quoted before, “O, that today you would listen as he speaks! Do not harden your hearts.” 4:8 For if Joshua had given them rest, God would not have spoken afterward about another day. 4:9 Consequently a Sabbath rest remains for the people of God. 4:10 For the one who enters God’s rest has also rested from his works, just as God did from his own works.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · David a son of Jesse of Judah; king of Israel,son of Jesse of Judah; king of Israel
 · Joshua a son of Eliezer; the father of Er; an ancestor of Jesus,the son of Nun and successor of Moses,son of Nun of Ephraim; successor to Moses,a man: owner of the field where the ark stopped,governor of Jerusalem under King Josiah,son of Jehozadak; high priest in the time of Zerubbabel


Dictionary Themes and Topics: TEMPER | Rest | Regeneration | RETRIBUTION | PSALMS, BOOK OF | LIMIT | Joshua | JOSHUA, BOOK OF | JOSHUA (2) | JESUS CHRIST, 2 | JESUS | HEBREWS, EPISTLE TO THE | HARDEN | HAP; HAPLY | Faith | FEAR | FAIL | Eternal life | DAVID | BAPTISMAL REGENERATION | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Robertson , Vincent , Wesley , JFB , Clarke , Calvin , Defender , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , PBC , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , Combined Bible , Maclaren , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Barclay , Constable , College

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Evidence

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Robertson: Heb 4:1 - -- Let us fear therefore ( phobēthōmen oun ). First aorist passive volitive subjunctive of phobeomai , to be afraid. There is no break in the argume...

Let us fear therefore ( phobēthōmen oun ).

First aorist passive volitive subjunctive of phobeomai , to be afraid. There is no break in the argument on Psa 95:1-11. This is a poor chapter division. The Israelites perished because of disbelief. We today face a real peril.

Robertson: Heb 4:1 - -- Lest haply ( mē pote ) Here with the present subjunctive (dokei ), but future indicative in Heb 3:12, after the verb of fearing. For the optative ...

Lest haply ( mē pote )

Here with the present subjunctive (dokei ), but future indicative in Heb 3:12, after the verb of fearing. For the optative see 2Ti 2:25.

Robertson: Heb 4:1 - -- A promise being left ( kataleipomenēs epaggelias ). Genitive absolute of the present passive participle of kataleipō , to leave behind. God’...

A promise being left ( kataleipomenēs epaggelias ).

Genitive absolute of the present passive participle of kataleipō , to leave behind. God’ s promise still holds good for us in spite of the failure of the Israelites.

Robertson: Heb 4:1 - -- Should seem to have come short of it ( dokei husterēkenai ). Perfect active infinitive of hustereō , old verb from husteros (comparative of roo...

Should seem to have come short of it ( dokei husterēkenai ).

Perfect active infinitive of hustereō , old verb from husteros (comparative of root ud like our out, outer, outermost), to be too late, to fail to reach the goal as here, common in the N.T. (Heb 11:37; Heb 12:15).

Robertson: Heb 4:2 - -- For indeed we have had good tidings preached unto us ( kai gar esmen euēggelismenoi esmen ). Periphrastic perfect passive indicative of euaggelizo...

For indeed we have had good tidings preached unto us ( kai gar esmen euēggelismenoi esmen ).

Periphrastic perfect passive indicative of euaggelizō (from euaggelion , good news, glad tidings) to bring good news, used here in its original sense as in Heb 4:6 of the Israelites (euaggelisthentes first aorist passive participle).

Robertson: Heb 4:2 - -- Even as also they ( kathaper kakeinoi ). See Heb 4:6. We have the promise of rest as the Israelites had. The parallel holds as to the promise, the pr...

Even as also they ( kathaper kakeinoi ).

See Heb 4:6. We have the promise of rest as the Israelites had. The parallel holds as to the promise, the privilege, the penalty.

Robertson: Heb 4:2 - -- The word of hearing ( ho logos tēs akoēs ). As in 1Th 2:13. Genitive akoēs describing logos , the word marked by hearing (the word heard).

The word of hearing ( ho logos tēs akoēs ).

As in 1Th 2:13. Genitive akoēs describing logos , the word marked by hearing (the word heard).

Robertson: Heb 4:2 - -- Because they were not united by faith with them that heard ( mē sunkekerasmenous tēi pistei tois akousasin ). Mē , the usual negative of the pa...

Because they were not united by faith with them that heard ( mē sunkekerasmenous tēi pistei tois akousasin ).

Mē , the usual negative of the participle. A very difficult phrase. The text is uncertain whether the participle (perfect passive of sunkerannumi , old verb to mix together) ends in -os agreeing with logos or -ous agreeing with ekeinous (them). Taking it in -ous the translation is correct. Pistei is in the instrumental case and tois akousasin in the associative instrumental after sun .

Robertson: Heb 4:3 - -- Do enter ( eiserchometha ). Emphatic futuristic present middle indicative of eiserchomai . We are sure to enter in, we who believe.

Do enter ( eiserchometha ).

Emphatic futuristic present middle indicative of eiserchomai . We are sure to enter in, we who believe.

Robertson: Heb 4:3 - -- He hath said ( eirēken ). Perfect active indicative for the permanent value of God’ s word as in Heb 1:13; Heb 4:4; Heb 10:9, Heb 10:13; Heb 1...

He hath said ( eirēken ).

Perfect active indicative for the permanent value of God’ s word as in Heb 1:13; Heb 4:4; Heb 10:9, Heb 10:13; Heb 13:5; Act 13:34. God has spoken. That is enough for us. So he quotes again what he has in Heb 4:11 from Psa 95:1-11.

Robertson: Heb 4:3 - -- Although the works were finished ( kaitoi tōn ergōn genēthentōn ). Genitive absolute with concessive use of the participle. Old particle, in ...

Although the works were finished ( kaitoi tōn ergōn genēthentōn ).

Genitive absolute with concessive use of the participle. Old particle, in N.T. only here and Act 14:17 (with verb).

Robertson: Heb 4:3 - -- From the foundation of the world ( apo katabolēs kosmou ). Katabolē , late word from kataballō , usually laying the foundation of a house in th...

From the foundation of the world ( apo katabolēs kosmou ).

Katabolē , late word from kataballō , usually laying the foundation of a house in the literal sense. In the N.T. usually with apo (Mat 25:44) or pro (Joh 17:24) about the foundation of the world.

Robertson: Heb 4:4 - -- Somewhere on this wise ( pou houtōs ). See Heb 2:6 for pou tis for a like indefinite allusion to an Old Testament quotation. Here it is Gen 2:2 (...

Somewhere on this wise ( pou houtōs ).

See Heb 2:6 for pou tis for a like indefinite allusion to an Old Testament quotation. Here it is Gen 2:2 (cf. Exo 20:11; Exo 31:17). Moffatt notes that Philo quotes Gen 2:2 with the same "literary mannerism."

Robertson: Heb 4:4 - -- Rested ( katepausen ). First aorist active indicative of katapauō , intransitive here, but transitive in Heb 4:8. It is not, of course, absolute re...

Rested ( katepausen ).

First aorist active indicative of katapauō , intransitive here, but transitive in Heb 4:8. It is not, of course, absolute rest from all creative activity as Jesus shows in Joh 5:17. But the seventh day of God’ s rest was still going on (clearly not a twenty-four hour day).

Robertson: Heb 4:5 - -- And in this place again ( kai en toutōi palin ). The passage already quoted in Heb 4:3; Heb 3:11.

And in this place again ( kai en toutōi palin ).

The passage already quoted in Heb 4:3; Heb 3:11.

Robertson: Heb 4:6 - -- It remaineth ( apoleipetai ). Present passive indicative of apoleipō , old verb to leave behind, to remain over. So again in Heb 4:9; Heb 10:26. He...

It remaineth ( apoleipetai ).

Present passive indicative of apoleipō , old verb to leave behind, to remain over. So again in Heb 4:9; Heb 10:26. Here the infinitive clause (tinas eiselthein eis autēn ) is the subject of apoleipetai . This left-over promise is not repeated, though not utilized by the Israelites under Moses nor in the highest sense by Joshua and David.

Robertson: Heb 4:6 - -- Failed to enter in ( ouk eisēlthon ). "Did not enter in"(second aorist active indicative of eiserchomai ). It is a rabbinical argument all along h...

Failed to enter in ( ouk eisēlthon ).

"Did not enter in"(second aorist active indicative of eiserchomai ). It is a rabbinical argument all along here, but the author is writing to Jews.

Robertson: Heb 4:7 - -- He again defineth a certain day ( palin tina horizei hēmeran ). Present active indicative of horizō , old verb to set a limit (horos , horizon) a...

He again defineth a certain day ( palin tina horizei hēmeran ).

Present active indicative of horizō , old verb to set a limit (horos , horizon) as in Act 17:26; Rom 1:4.

Robertson: Heb 4:7 - -- In David ( en Daueid ). Attributing the Psalm to David or in the Psalter at any rate.

In David ( en Daueid ).

Attributing the Psalm to David or in the Psalter at any rate.

Robertson: Heb 4:7 - -- Hath been before said ( proeirētai ). Perfect passive indicative referring to the quotation in Heb 3:7, Heb 3:15.

Hath been before said ( proeirētai ).

Perfect passive indicative referring to the quotation in Heb 3:7, Heb 3:15.

Robertson: Heb 4:7 - -- After so long a time ( meta tosouton chronon ). The time between Joshua and David.

After so long a time ( meta tosouton chronon ).

The time between Joshua and David.

Robertson: Heb 4:8 - -- Joshua ( Iēsous ). The Greek form is Jesus. Condition of the second class (determined as unfulfilled) with ei and aorist indicative in the condit...

Joshua ( Iēsous ).

The Greek form is Jesus. Condition of the second class (determined as unfulfilled) with ei and aorist indicative in the condition and an with the imperfect in the conclusion.

Robertson: Heb 4:8 - -- He would not have spoken ( ouk elalei ). Wrong translation, "he would not speak"(be speaking), in the passage in David. Imperfect tense, not aorist.

He would not have spoken ( ouk elalei ).

Wrong translation, "he would not speak"(be speaking), in the passage in David. Imperfect tense, not aorist.

Robertson: Heb 4:9 - -- A sabbath rest ( sabbatismos ). Late word from sabbatizō (Exo 16:30) to keep the Sabbath, apparently coined by the author (a doubtful passage in ...

A sabbath rest ( sabbatismos ).

Late word from sabbatizō (Exo 16:30) to keep the Sabbath, apparently coined by the author (a doubtful passage in Plutarch). Here it is parallel with katapausis (cf. Rev 14:13).

Robertson: Heb 4:9 - -- For the people of God ( tōi laōi tou theou ). Dative case of blessed personal interest to the true Israel (Gal 6:16).

For the people of God ( tōi laōi tou theou ).

Dative case of blessed personal interest to the true Israel (Gal 6:16).

Robertson: Heb 4:10 - -- As God did from his ( hōsper apo tōn idiōn ho theos ). It is not cessation of work, but rather of the weariness and pain in toil. The writer pi...

As God did from his ( hōsper apo tōn idiōn ho theos ).

It is not cessation of work, but rather of the weariness and pain in toil. The writer pictures salvation as God’ s rest which man is to share and God will have perfect satisfaction when man is in harmony with him (Dods).

Vincent: Heb 4:1 - -- Being left ( καταλειπομένης ) Still remaining: not being neglected . It is not a reason for fearing that is given, but a circu...

Being left ( καταλειπομένης )

Still remaining: not being neglected . It is not a reason for fearing that is given, but a circumstance connected with the thing to be avoided. As there is now left a promise, let us fear. Being left announces the thought which is afterward emphasized, and on which the whole treatment of the subject turns - that God's original promise of rest remains unchanged , and still holds good . Such being the case, he who doubts the promise itself, or thinks that it is too late for him to enjoy its fulfillment, runs a risk.

Vincent: Heb 4:1 - -- Should seem to come short ( δοκῇ ὑστερηκέναι ) According to this rendering, the meaning is that one must avoid the appe...

Should seem to come short ( δοκῇ ὑστερηκέναι )

According to this rendering, the meaning is that one must avoid the appearance of having failed to enter into the rest; the perfect tense (ὑστερηκέναι ) placing the reader at the parousia, when judgment will be pronounced. This is forced, tame, and irrelevant to the previous discussion. Rend. lest any one of you think he has come too late for it . This accords with the previous admonitions against unbelief. For one to think that he has come too late to inherit the promise is to disbelieve an immutable promise of God. Hence the writer may well say, " Since this promise remains , let us fear to distrust it." Ὑστερεῖν is to be behind ; to come late ; to come short ; hence, to suffer need , as Phi 4:12; of material deficiency, Luk 15:14; Joh 2:3; of moral and spiritual shortcoming, Rom 3:23; 1Co 8:8; Heb 12:15.

Vincent: Heb 4:2 - -- For unto us was the gospel preached ( καὶ γὰρ ἐσμεν εὐηγγελισμένοι ) Lit. we have had good tidings ...

For unto us was the gospel preached ( καὶ γὰρ ἐσμεν εὐηγγελισμένοι )

Lit. we have had good tidings proclaimed to us . The translation of the A.V. is unfortunate, since it conveys the technical and conventional idea of preaching the gospel , which is entirely out of place here. The reference is to the special announcement of the rest of God; the glad tidings that God has provided a rest for his people. This announcement was made to the fathers, and signified to them the promise of the rest in Canaan. It has been proclaimed to us, and to us is the announcement of the heavenly rest. The emphasis is on the entire statement, " we have had the good tidings proclaimed to us," rather than on we as contrasted with they .

Vincent: Heb 4:2 - -- The word preached ( ὁ λόγος τῆς ἀκοῆς ) Lit. the word of the message . See on 1Th 2:13.

The word preached ( ὁ λόγος τῆς ἀκοῆς )

Lit. the word of the message . See on 1Th 2:13.

Vincent: Heb 4:2 - -- Not being mixed with faith in them that heard it ( μὴ συνκεκερασμένους τῇ πίστει τοῖς ἀκούσασι...

Not being mixed with faith in them that heard it ( μὴ συνκεκερασμένους τῇ πίστει τοῖς ἀκούσασιν )

Rend. because not incorporated by faith in them that heard . A body of obedient hearers with whom the erring Israelites were not incorporated would be an idea foreign to the discussion. Moreover, in Heb 3:16, the writer has declared that there were practically no believing hearers. He says that although the good tidings were announced to them, they did not profit them. The word did not profit them because it (the word) was not assimilated by faith in those that heard. They did not make the promise of rest their own. Their history was marked by continual renewals and rejections of the promise.

Vincent: Heb 4:3 - -- For we which have believed do enter into rest ( εἰσερχόμεθα γὰρ εἰς τὴν κατάπαυσιν οἱ πιστεύσ...

For we which have believed do enter into rest ( εἰσερχόμεθα γὰρ εἰς τὴν κατάπαυσιν οἱ πιστεύσαντες )

I say by faith, for , we believers, who embraced the Christian faith when it was offered to us (note the aorist participle), do enter into the rest. Ἐισερχόμεθα categorical; not are entering or are on the way to , but entering into the rest is a fact which characterizes us as believers.

Vincent: Heb 4:3 - -- As he said ( καθὼς εἴρηκεν ) We enter in accordance with the saying which follows.

As he said ( καθὼς εἴρηκεν )

We enter in accordance with the saying which follows.

Vincent: Heb 4:3 - -- As I have sworn - if they shall enter The statement is somewhat obscure. The meaning is, we (who believed) enter into rest in accordance with G...

As I have sworn - if they shall enter

The statement is somewhat obscure. The meaning is, we (who believed) enter into rest in accordance with God's declaration that they (who did not believe) should not enter. The point is faith as the condition of entering into the rest.

Vincent: Heb 4:3 - -- Although the works were finished ( καίτοι τῶν ἔργων γενηθέντων ) This is an awkward and indirect way of saying,...

Although the works were finished ( καίτοι τῶν ἔργων γενηθέντων )

This is an awkward and indirect way of saying, " these unbelievers did not enter into God's rest, although he had provided that rest into which they might have entered." The providing of the rest is implied in the completion of God's works. The writer assumes the readers' acquaintance with the narrative of the creation in Genesis.

Vincent: Heb 4:4 - -- What was implied in the preceding verse is now stated. Did rest from all his works ( κατέπαυσεν - ἀπὸ πάντων τῶν ε...

What was implied in the preceding verse is now stated.

Did rest from all his works ( κατέπαυσεν - ἀπὸ πάντων τῶν ἔργων αὐτοῦ )

The verb only in Hebrews and Act 14:18. Works , plural, following lxx. The Hebrew has work .

Vincent: Heb 4:5 - -- In this place ( ἐν τούτῳ ) The passage already cited, Heb 4:3. It is cited again to show that the rest was not entered into.

In this place ( ἐν τούτῳ )

The passage already cited, Heb 4:3. It is cited again to show that the rest was not entered into.

Vincent: Heb 4:6 - -- The rest was not appropriated by those under Moses, nor, in the full sense, by those under Joshua, nor in David's time. It remaineth that some must ...

The rest was not appropriated by those under Moses, nor, in the full sense, by those under Joshua, nor in David's time.

It remaineth that some must enter therein ( ἀπολείπεται τινὰς εἰσελθεῖν εἰς αὐτήν )

Ἀπολείπεται " remains over from past times." The promise has not been appropriated. It must be appropriated in accordance with God's provision. The rest was not provided for nothing. God's provision of a rest implies and involves that some enter into it. But the appropriation is yet in the future. It remains that some enter in.

Vincent: Heb 4:6 - -- They to whom it was first preached ( οἱ πρότερον εὐαγγελισθέντες ) Lit. they who were first the subje...

They to whom it was first preached ( οἱ πρότερον εὐαγγελισθέντες )

Lit. they who were first the subjects of the announcement of the glad tidings . It is desirable to avoid the word preached . See on Heb 4:2. The Israelites under Moses and Joshua are meant.

Vincent: Heb 4:6 - -- Because of unbelief ( δι ' ἀπείθειαν ) Rend. for unbelief , disobedience . Comp. Heb 3:18. Ἀπείθεια disobedience ...

Because of unbelief ( δι ' ἀπείθειαν )

Rend. for unbelief , disobedience . Comp. Heb 3:18. Ἀπείθεια disobedience is the active manifestation of ἀπιστία unbelief .

Vincent: Heb 4:7 - -- Again he limiteth a certain day ( πάλιν τινὰ ὁρίζει ἡμέραν ) For limiteth rend. defineth . For the verb see o...

Again he limiteth a certain day ( πάλιν τινὰ ὁρίζει ἡμέραν )

For limiteth rend. defineth . For the verb see on declared , Rom 1:4. The meaning is, he gives another opportunity of securing the rest, and calls the period in which the opportunity is offered today .

Vincent: Heb 4:7 - -- In David The date of the composition of Psa 95:1-11 is uncertain. In lxx (94) it is called a Psalm of David. In the words in David the writer...

In David

The date of the composition of Psa 95:1-11 is uncertain. In lxx (94) it is called a Psalm of David. In the words in David the writer may adopt the lxx title, or may mean simply in the Psalms . In the Hebrew the Psalm has no inscription.

Vincent: Heb 4:7 - -- After so long a time ( μετὰ τοσοῦτον χρόνον ) The time between Joshua and David. After this long interval he renews the p...

After so long a time ( μετὰ τοσοῦτον χρόνον )

The time between Joshua and David. After this long interval he renews the promise in the Psalm.

Vincent: Heb 4:7 - -- As it is said ( καθῶς προείρηται ) Rend. as it hath been before said ; referring to the citations, Heb 3:7, Heb 3:8...

As it is said ( καθῶς προείρηται )

Rend. as it hath been before said ; referring to the citations, Heb 3:7, Heb 3:8, Heb 3:15.

Vincent: Heb 4:8 - -- But it might be said that under Joshua the people did enter into the promised rest. He therefore shows that Israel's rest in Canaan did not fulfill t...

But it might be said that under Joshua the people did enter into the promised rest. He therefore shows that Israel's rest in Canaan did not fulfill the divine ideal of the rest.

Jesus ( Ἰησοῦς )

Rend. Joshua , and see on Mat 1:21.

Vincent: Heb 4:8 - -- After this ( μετὰ ταῦτα ) After the entrance into Canaan under Joshua.

After this ( μετὰ ταῦτα )

After the entrance into Canaan under Joshua.

Vincent: Heb 4:9 - -- There remaineth therefore a rest ( ἄρα ἀπολείπεται σαββατισμὸς ) Remaineth , since in the days of neither Mos...

There remaineth therefore a rest ( ἄρα ἀπολείπεται σαββατισμὸς )

Remaineth , since in the days of neither Moses, Joshua, or David was the rest appropriated. He passes over the fact that the rest had not been entered into at any later period of Israel's history. Man's portion in the divine rest inaugurated at creation has never been really appropriated: but it still remaineth . This statement is justified by the new word for " rest" which enters at this point, σαββατισμὸς instead of κατάπαυσις , N.T.o , o lxx, o Class., signifies a keeping Sabbath . The Sabbath rest points back to God's original rest, and marks the ideal rest - the rest of perfect adjustment of all things to God, such as ensued upon the completion of his creative work, when he pronounced all things good. This falls in with the ground-thought of the Epistle, the restoration of all things to God's archetype. The sin and unbelief of Israel were incompatible with that rest. It must remain unappropriated until harmony with God is restored. The Sabbath-rest is the consummation of the new creation in Christ, through whose priestly mediation reconciliation with God will come to pass.

Vincent: Heb 4:9 - -- For the people of God ( τῷ λαῷ τοῦ θεοῦ ) For the phrase see Rom 9:25; Rom 11:1; 1Pe 2:10. and comp. Israel of God ,...

For the people of God ( τῷ λαῷ τοῦ θεοῦ )

For the phrase see Rom 9:25; Rom 11:1; 1Pe 2:10. and comp. Israel of God , Gal 6:16. The true Israel, who inherit the promise by faith in Christ.

Vincent: Heb 4:10 - -- Only in such a Sabbath-rest is found the counterpart of God's rest on the seventh day. For he that is entered into his rest ( ὁ γὰρ εἰσ...

Only in such a Sabbath-rest is found the counterpart of God's rest on the seventh day.

For he that is entered into his rest ( ὁ γὰρ εἰσελθὼν εἱς τὴν κατάπαυσιν αὐτοῦ )

Whoever has once entered. His , God's. The aorist marks the completeness of the appropriation - once and for all.

Vincent: Heb 4:10 - -- He also hath ceased from his own works ( καὶ αὐτος κατέπαυσεν ἀπὸ τῶν ἔργων αὐτοῦ ) Omit o...

He also hath ceased from his own works ( καὶ αὐτος κατέπαυσεν ἀπὸ τῶν ἔργων αὐτοῦ )

Omit own . The statement is a general proposition: any one who has entered into God's rest has ceased from his works.

Vincent: Heb 4:10 - -- As God did from his ( ὤσπερ ἀπὸ τῶν ἰδίων ὁ θεός ) Rend. as God ( did ) from his own . Ἰδί...

As God did from his ( ὤσπερ ἀπὸ τῶν ἰδίων ὁ θεός )

Rend. as God ( did ) from his own . Ἰδίων own signifies more than mere possession. Rather, works peculiarly his own, thus hinting at the perfect nature of the original works of creation as corresponding with God's nature and bearing his impress. The blessing of the Sabbath-rest is thus put as a cessation from labors. The basis of the conception is Jewish, the rest of the Sabbath being conceived as mere abstinence from labor, and not according to Christ's conception of the Sabbath, as a season of refreshment and beneficent activity, Mar 2:27; Joh 5:17. Our writer's conception is not the rabbinical conception of cessation of work, but rather of the cessation of the weariness and pain which accompany human labor. Comp. Rev 14:13; Rev 21:4; Luk 11:7; Luk 18:5; Gal 6:17.

Wesley: Heb 4:2 - -- So far from it, that it increased their damnation. It is then only when it is mixed with faith, that it exerts its saving power.

So far from it, that it increased their damnation. It is then only when it is mixed with faith, that it exerts its saving power.

Wesley: Heb 4:3 - -- The proposition is, There remains a rest for us. This is proved, Heb 4:3-11, thus: That psalm mentions a rest: yet it does not mean, God's rest from c...

The proposition is, There remains a rest for us. This is proved, Heb 4:3-11, thus: That psalm mentions a rest: yet it does not mean, God's rest from creating; for this was long before the time of Moses. Therefore in his time another rest was expected, of which they who then heard fell short Nor is it, The rest which Israel obtained through Joshua; for the Psalmist wrote after him. Therefore it is, The eternal rest in heaven.

Wesley: Heb 4:3 - -- Clearly showing that there is a farther rest than that which followed the finishing of the creation.

Clearly showing that there is a farther rest than that which followed the finishing of the creation.

Wesley: Heb 4:3 - -- Before: whence it is plain, God did not speak of resting from them.

Before: whence it is plain, God did not speak of resting from them.

Wesley: Heb 4:4 - -- For, long after he had rested from his works, he speaks again. Gen 2:2.

For, long after he had rested from his works, he speaks again. Gen 2:2.

Wesley: Heb 4:5 - -- In this psalm, of a rest yet to come.

In this psalm, of a rest yet to come.

Wesley: Heb 4:7 - -- It was above four hundred years from the time of Moses and Joshua to David.

It was above four hundred years from the time of Moses and Joshua to David.

Wesley: Heb 4:7 - -- St. Paul here refers to the text he had just cited.

St. Paul here refers to the text he had just cited.

Wesley: Heb 4:8 - -- All the rest which God had promised.

All the rest which God had promised.

Wesley: Heb 4:9 - -- Since he still speaks of another day, there must remain a farther, even an eternal, rest for the people of God.

Since he still speaks of another day, there must remain a farther, even an eternal, rest for the people of God.

Wesley: Heb 4:10 - -- For they do not yet so rest. Therefore a fuller rest remains for them.

For they do not yet so rest. Therefore a fuller rest remains for them.

JFB: Heb 4:1 - -- Not with slavish terror, but godly "fear and trembling" (Phi 2:12). Since so many have fallen, we have cause to fear (Heb 3:17-19).

Not with slavish terror, but godly "fear and trembling" (Phi 2:12). Since so many have fallen, we have cause to fear (Heb 3:17-19).

JFB: Heb 4:1 - -- Still remaining to us after the others have, by neglect, lost it.

Still remaining to us after the others have, by neglect, lost it.

JFB: Heb 4:1 - -- God's heavenly rest, of which Canaan is the type. "To-day" still continues, during which there is the danger of failing to reach the rest. "To-day," r...

God's heavenly rest, of which Canaan is the type. "To-day" still continues, during which there is the danger of failing to reach the rest. "To-day," rightly used, terminates in the rest which, when once obtained, is never lost (Rev 3:12). A foretaste of the rest Is given in the inward rest which the believer's soul has in Christ.

JFB: Heb 4:1 - -- Greek, "to have come short of it"; should be found, when the great trial of all shall take place [ALFORD], to have fallen short of attaining the promi...

Greek, "to have come short of it"; should be found, when the great trial of all shall take place [ALFORD], to have fallen short of attaining the promise. The word "seem" is a mitigating mode of expression, though not lessening the reality. BENGEL and OWEN take it, Lest there should be any semblance or appearance of falling short.

JFB: Heb 4:2 - -- In type: the earthly Canaan, wherein they failed to realize perfect rest, suggesting to them that they should look beyond to the heavenly land of rest...

In type: the earthly Canaan, wherein they failed to realize perfect rest, suggesting to them that they should look beyond to the heavenly land of rest, to which faith is the avenue, and from which unbelief excludes, as it did from the earthly Canaan.

JFB: Heb 4:2 - -- Literally, "the word of hearing": the word heard by them.

Literally, "the word of hearing": the word heard by them.

JFB: Heb 4:2 - -- So the Syriac and the Old Latin Versions, older than any of our manuscripts, and LUCIFER, read, "As the world did not unite with the hearers in faith....

So the Syriac and the Old Latin Versions, older than any of our manuscripts, and LUCIFER, read, "As the world did not unite with the hearers in faith." The word heard being the food which, as the bread of life, must pass into flesh and blood through man's appropriating it to himself in faith. Hearing alone is of as little value as undigested food in a bad stomach [THOLUCK]. The whole of oldest extant manuscript authority supports a different reading, "unmingled as they were (Greek accusative case agreeing with 'them') in faith with its hearers," that is, with its believing, obedient hearers, as Caleb and Joshua. So "hear" is used for "obey" in the context, Heb 4:7, "To-day, if ye will hear His voice." The disobedient, instead of being blended in "the same body," separated themselves as Korah: a tacit reproof to like separatists from the Christian assembling together (Heb 10:25; Jud 1:19).

JFB: Heb 4:3 - -- Justifying his assertion of the need of "faith," Heb 4:2.

Justifying his assertion of the need of "faith," Heb 4:2.

JFB: Heb 4:3 - -- We who at Christ's coming shall be found to have believed.

We who at Christ's coming shall be found to have believed.

JFB: Heb 4:3 - -- That is, are to enter: so two of the oldest manuscripts and LUCIFER and the old Latin. Two other oldest manuscripts read, "Let us enter."

That is, are to enter: so two of the oldest manuscripts and LUCIFER and the old Latin. Two other oldest manuscripts read, "Let us enter."

JFB: Heb 4:3 - -- Greek, "into the rest" which is promised in the ninety-fifth Psalm.

Greek, "into the rest" which is promised in the ninety-fifth Psalm.

JFB: Heb 4:3 - -- God's saying that unbelief excludes from entrance implies that belief gains an entrance into the rest. What, however, Paul mainly here dwells on in th...

God's saying that unbelief excludes from entrance implies that belief gains an entrance into the rest. What, however, Paul mainly here dwells on in the quotation is that the promised "rest" has not yet been entered into. At Heb 4:11 he again, as in Heb 3:12-19 already, takes up faith as the indispensable qualification for entering it.

JFB: Heb 4:3 - -- Although God had finished His works of creation and entered on His rest from creation long before Moses' time, yet under that leader of Israel another...

Although God had finished His works of creation and entered on His rest from creation long before Moses' time, yet under that leader of Israel another rest was promised, which most fell short of through unbelief; and although the rest in Canaan was subsequently attained under Joshua, yet long after, in David's days, God, in the ninety-fifth Psalm, still speaks of the rest of God as not yet attained. THEREFORE, there must be meant a rest still future, namely, that which "remaineth for the people of God" in heaven, Heb 4:3-9, when they shall rest from their works, as God did from His, Heb 4:10. The argument is to show that by "My rest," God means a future rest, not for Himself, but for us.

JFB: Heb 4:3 - -- Greek, "brought into existence," "made."

Greek, "brought into existence," "made."

JFB: Heb 4:4 - -- God (Gen 2:2).

God (Gen 2:2).

JFB: Heb 4:4 - -- A rest not ending with the seventh day, but beginning then and still continuing, into which believers shall hereafter enter. God's rest is not a rest ...

A rest not ending with the seventh day, but beginning then and still continuing, into which believers shall hereafter enter. God's rest is not a rest necessitated by fatigue, nor consisting in idleness, but is that upholding and governing of which creation was the beginning [ALFORD]. Hence Moses records the end of each of the first six days, but not of the seventh.

JFB: Heb 4:4 - -- Hebrew, Gen 2:2, "from all His work." God's "work" was one, comprehending, however, many "works."

Hebrew, Gen 2:2, "from all His work." God's "work" was one, comprehending, however, many "works."

JFB: Heb 4:5 - -- In this passage of the Psalm again, it is implied that the rest was even then still future.

In this passage of the Psalm again, it is implied that the rest was even then still future.

JFB: Heb 4:6 - -- Still to be realized.

Still to be realized.

JFB: Heb 4:6 - -- The denial of entrance to unbelievers is a virtual promise of entrance to those that believe. God wishes not His rest to be empty, but furnished with ...

The denial of entrance to unbelievers is a virtual promise of entrance to those that believe. God wishes not His rest to be empty, but furnished with guests (Luk 14:23).

JFB: Heb 4:6 - -- Literally, "they who first (in the time of Moses) had the Gospel preached to them," namely, in type, see on Heb 4:2.

Literally, "they who first (in the time of Moses) had the Gospel preached to them," namely, in type, see on Heb 4:2.

JFB: Heb 4:6 - -- Greek, rather "disobedience" (see on Heb 3:18).

Greek, rather "disobedience" (see on Heb 3:18).

JFB: Heb 4:7 - -- Anew the promise recurs. Translate as the Greek order is, "He limited a certain day, 'To-day.'" Here Paul interrupts the quotation by, "In (the Psalm ...

Anew the promise recurs. Translate as the Greek order is, "He limited a certain day, 'To-day.'" Here Paul interrupts the quotation by, "In (the Psalm of) David saying after so long a time (after five hundred years' possession of Canaan)," and resumes it by, "as it has been said before (so the Greek oldest manuscript, before, namely, Heb 3:7, Heb 3:15), To-day if ye hear His voice," &c. [ALFORD].

JFB: Heb 4:8 - -- Answer to the objection which might be made to his reasoning, namely, that those brought into Canaan by Joshua (so "Jesus" here means, as in Act 7:45)...

Answer to the objection which might be made to his reasoning, namely, that those brought into Canaan by Joshua (so "Jesus" here means, as in Act 7:45) did enter the rest of God. If the rest of God meant Canaan, God would not after their entrance into that land, have spoken (or speak [ALFORD]) of another (future) day of entering the rest.

JFB: Heb 4:9 - -- Because God "speaks of another day" (see on Heb 4:8).

Because God "speaks of another day" (see on Heb 4:8).

JFB: Heb 4:9 - -- Still to be realized hereafter by the "some (who) must enter therein" (Heb 4:6), that is, "the people of God," the true Israel who shall enter into Go...

Still to be realized hereafter by the "some (who) must enter therein" (Heb 4:6), that is, "the people of God," the true Israel who shall enter into God's rest ("My rest," Heb 4:3). God's rest was a Sabbatism; so also will ours be.

JFB: Heb 4:9 - -- Greek, "Sabbatism." In time there are many Sabbaths, but then there shall be the enjoyment and keeping of a Sabbath-rest: one perfect and eternal. The...

Greek, "Sabbatism." In time there are many Sabbaths, but then there shall be the enjoyment and keeping of a Sabbath-rest: one perfect and eternal. The "rest" in Heb 4:8 is Greek, "catapausis;" Hebrew, "Noah"; rest from weariness, as the ark rested on Ararat after its tossings to and fro; and as Israel, under Joshua, enjoyed at last rest from war in Canaan. But the "rest" in this Heb 4:9 is the nobler and more exalted (Hebrew) "Sabbath" rest; literally, "cessation": rest from work when finished (Heb 4:4), as God rested (Rev 16:17). The two ideas of "rest" combined, give the perfect view of the heavenly Sabbath. Rest from weariness, sorrow, and sin; and rest in the completion of God's new creation (Rev 21:5). The whole renovated creation shall share in it; nothing will there be to break the Sabbath of eternity; and the Triune God shall rejoice in the work of His hands (Zep 3:17). Moses, the representative of the law, could not lead Israel into Canaan: the law leads us to Christ, and there its office ceases, as that of Moses on the borders of Canaan: it is Jesus, the antitype of Joshua, who leads us into the heavenly rest. This verse indirectly establishes the obligation of the Sabbath still; for the type continues until the antitype supersedes it: so legal sacrifices continued till the great antitypical Sacrifice superseded it, As then the antitypical heavenly Sabbath-rest will not be till Christ, our Gospel Joshua, comes, to usher us into it, the typical earthly Sabbath must continue till then. The Jews call the future rest "the day which is all Sabbath."

JFB: Heb 4:10 - -- Justifying and explaining the word "rest," or "Sabbatism," just used (see on Heb 4:9).

Justifying and explaining the word "rest," or "Sabbatism," just used (see on Heb 4:9).

JFB: Heb 4:10 - -- Whosoever once enters.

Whosoever once enters.

JFB: Heb 4:10 - -- God's rest: the rest prepared by God for His people [ESTIUS]. Rather, "His rest": the man's rest: that assigned to him by God as his. The Greek is the...

God's rest: the rest prepared by God for His people [ESTIUS]. Rather, "His rest": the man's rest: that assigned to him by God as his. The Greek is the same as that for "his own" immediately after.

JFB: Heb 4:10 - -- The Greek aorist is used of indefinite time, "is wont to cease," or rather, "rest": rests. The past tense implies at the same time the certainty of it...

The Greek aorist is used of indefinite time, "is wont to cease," or rather, "rest": rests. The past tense implies at the same time the certainty of it, as also that in this life a kind of foretaste in Christ is already given [GROTIUS] (Jer 6:16; Mat 11:28-29). Our highest happiness shall, according to this verse, consist in our being united in one with God, and moulded into conformity with Him as our archetype [CALVIN].

JFB: Heb 4:10 - -- Even from those that were good and suitable to the time of doing work. Labor was followed by rest even in Paradise (Gen 2:3, Gen 2:15). The work and s...

Even from those that were good and suitable to the time of doing work. Labor was followed by rest even in Paradise (Gen 2:3, Gen 2:15). The work and subsequent rest of God are the archetype to which we should be conformed. The argument is: He who once enters rest, rests from labors; but God's people have not yet rested from them, therefore they have not yet entered the rest, and so it must be still future. ALFORD translates, "He that entered into his (or else God's, but rather 'his'; Isa 11:10, 'His rest': 'the joy of the Lord,' Mat 25:21, Mat 25:23) rest (namely, Jesus, our Forerunner, Heb 4:14; Heb 6:20, 'The Son of God that is passed through the heavens': in contrast to Joshua the type, who did not bring God's people into the heavenly rest), he himself (emphatical) rested from his works (Heb 4:4), as God (did) from His own" (so the Greek, "works"). The argument, though generally applying to anyone who has entered his rest, probably alludes to Jesus in particular, the antitypical Joshua, who, having entered His rest at the Ascension, has ceased or rested from His work of the new creation, as God on the seventh day rested from the work of physical creation. Not that He has ceased to carry on the work of redemption, nay, He upholds it by His mediation; but He has ceased from those portions of the work which constitute the foundation; the sacrifice has been once for all accomplished. Compare as to God's creation rest, once for all completed, and rested from, but now still upheld (see on Heb 4:4).

Clarke: Heb 4:1 - -- Let us therefore fear - Seeing the Israelites lost the rest of Canaan, through obstinacy and unbelief, let us be afraid lest we come short of the he...

Let us therefore fear - Seeing the Israelites lost the rest of Canaan, through obstinacy and unbelief, let us be afraid lest we come short of the heavenly rest, through the same cause

Clarke: Heb 4:1 - -- Should seem to come short of it - Lest any of us should actually come short of it; i.e. miss it. See the note on the verb δοκειν, to seem, Lu...

Should seem to come short of it - Lest any of us should actually come short of it; i.e. miss it. See the note on the verb δοκειν, to seem, Luk 8:18 (note). What the apostle had said before, relative to the rest, might be considered as an allegory; here he explains and applies that allegory, showing that Canaan was a type of the grand privileges of the Gospel of Christ, and of the glorious eternity to which they lead

Clarke: Heb 4:1 - -- Come short - The verb ὑστερειν is applied here metaphorically; it is an allusion, of which there are many in this epistle, to the races ...

Come short - The verb ὑστερειν is applied here metaphorically; it is an allusion, of which there are many in this epistle, to the races in the Grecian games: he that came short was he who was any distance, no matter how small, behind the winner. Will it avail any of us how near we get to heaven, if the door be shut before we arrive? How dreadful the thought, to have only missed being eternally saved! To run well, and yet to permit the devil, the world, or the flesh, to hinder in the few last steps! Reader, watch and be sober.

Clarke: Heb 4:2 - -- For unto us was the Gospel preached - Και γαρ εσμεν ευηγγελισμενοι· For we also have received good tidings as well as th...

For unto us was the Gospel preached - Και γαρ εσμεν ευηγγελισμενοι· For we also have received good tidings as well as they. They had a gracious promise of entering into an earthly rest; we have a gracious promise of entering into a heavenly rest. God gave them every requisite advantage; he has done the same to us. Moses and the elders spoke the word of God plainly and forcibly to them: Christ and his apostles have done the same to us. They might have persevered; so may we: they disbelieved, disobeyed, and fell: and so may we

Clarke: Heb 4:2 - -- But the word preached did not profit them - Αλλ ουκ ωφελησεν ὁ λογος της ακοης εκεινους· But the word of he...

But the word preached did not profit them - Αλλ ουκ ωφελησεν ὁ λογος της ακοης εκεινους· But the word of hearing did not profit them. The word and promise to which the apostle most probably refers is that in Deu 1:20, Deu 1:21 : Ye are come unto to the mountain of the Amorites, which the Lord our God doth give unto to us. Behold, the Lord thy God hath set the land before thee; go up and possess it, as the Lord God of thy fathers hath said unto thee: fear not. Many exhortations they had to the following effect: Arise, that we may go up against them; for we have seen the land, and, behold, it is very good: and are ye still? Be not slothful to go, and to enter to possess the land; for God hath given it into your hands; a place where there is no want of any thing that is in the earth; Jdg 18:9, Jdg 18:10. But instead of attending to the word of the Lord by Moses, the whole congregation murmured against him and Aaron, and said one to another, Let us make a captain, and let us return into Egypt; Num 14:2, Num 14:4. But they were dastardly through all their generations. They spoke evil of the pleasant land, and did not give credence to his word. Their minds had been debased by their Egyptian bondage, and they scarcely ever arose to a state of mental nobility

Clarke: Heb 4:2 - -- Not being mixed with faith in them that heard - There are several various readings in this verse, and some of them important. The principal are on t...

Not being mixed with faith in them that heard - There are several various readings in this verse, and some of them important. The principal are on the word συγκεκραμενος, mixed; which in the common text refers to ὁ λογος, the word mixed; but, in ABCD and several others, it is συγκεκραμενους, referring to, and agreeing with, εκεινους, and may be thus translated: The word of hearing did not profit them, they not being mixed with those who heard it by faith. That is, they were not of the same spirit with Joshua and Caleb. There are other variations, but of less importance; but the common text seems best

The word συγκεκραμενος, mixed, is peculiarly expressive; it is a metaphor taken from the nutrition of the human body by mixing the aliment taken into the stomach with the saliva and gastric juice, in consequence of which it is concocted, digested, reduced into chyle, which, absorbed by the lacteal vessels, and thrown into the blood, becomes the means of increasing and supporting the body, all the solids and fluids being thus generated; so that on this process, properly performed, depend (under God) strength, health, and life itself. Should the most nutritive aliment be received into the stomach, if not mixed with the above juices, it would be rather the means of death than of life; or, in the words of the apostle, it would not profit, because not thus mixed. Faith in the word preached, in reference to that God who sent it, is the grand means of its becoming the power of God to the salvation of the soul. It is not likely that he who does not credit a threatening, when he comes to hear it, will be deterred by it from repeating the sin against which it is levelled; nor can he derive comfort from a promise who does not believe it as a pledge of God’ s veracity and goodness. Faith, therefore, must be mixed with all that we hear, in order to make the word of God effectual to our salvation

This very use of the word, and its explanation, we may find in Maximus Tyrius, in his description of health, Dissert. x., page 101. "Health,"says he, it is a certain disposition ὑγρων και ξηρων και ψυχρων και θερμων δυναμεων, η ὑπο τεχνης συγκραθεισων καλως, η ὑπο φυσεως ἁρμοσθεισων τεχνικως, which consists in a proper mixture together of the wet and the dry, the cold and the hot, either by an artificial process, or by the skillful economy of nature."

Clarke: Heb 4:3 - -- For we which have believed do enter into rest - The great spiritual blessings, the forerunners of eternal glory, which were all typified by that ear...

For we which have believed do enter into rest - The great spiritual blessings, the forerunners of eternal glory, which were all typified by that earthly rest or felicity promised to the ancient Israelites, we Christians do, by believing in Christ Jesus, actually possess. We have peace of conscience, and joy in the Holy Ghost; are saved from the guilt and power of sin; and thus enjoy an inward rest

But this is a rest differing from the seventh day’ s rest, or Sabbath, which was the original type of Canaan, the blessings of the Gospel, and eternal glory; seeing God said, concerning the unbelieving Israelites in the wilderness, I have sworn in my wrath that they shall not enter into my rest, notwithstanding the works of creation were finished, and the seventh day’ s rest was instituted from the foundation of the world; consequently the Israelites had entered into that rest before the oath was sworn. See Macknight

We who believe, Οἱ πιστευσαντες, is omitted by Chrysostom, and some few MSS. And instead of εισερχομεθα γαρ, for we do enter, AC, several others, with the Vulgate and Coptic, read εισερχωμεθα ουν, therefore let us enter; and thus it answers to φωβηθωμεν ουν, therefore let us fear, Heb 4:1; but this reading cannot well stand unless οι πιστευσαντες be omitted, which is acknowledged to be genuine by every MS. and version of note and importance. The meaning appears to be this: We Jews, who have believed in Christ, do actually possess that rest-state of happiness in God, produced by peace of conscience and joy in the Holy Ghost - which was typified by the happiness and comfort to be enjoyed by the believing Hebrews, in the possession of the promised land. See before

Clarke: Heb 4:3 - -- From the foundation of the world - The foundation of the world, καταβολη κοσμου, means the completion of the work of creation in six ...

From the foundation of the world - The foundation of the world, καταβολη κοσμου, means the completion of the work of creation in six days. In those days was the world, i.e. the whole system of mundane things, begun and perfected; and this appears to be the sense of the expression in this place.

Clarke: Heb 4:4 - -- For he spake in a certain place - This certain place or somewhere, που, is probably Gen 2:2; and refers to the completion of the work of creatio...

For he spake in a certain place - This certain place or somewhere, που, is probably Gen 2:2; and refers to the completion of the work of creation, and the setting apart the seventh day as a day of rest for man, and a type of everlasting felicity. See the notes on Gen 2:1, etc., and See here Heb 2:6 (note).

Clarke: Heb 4:5 - -- And in this place again - In the ninety-fifth Psalm, already quoted, Psa 95:3. This was a second rest which the Lord promised to the believing, obed...

And in this place again - In the ninety-fifth Psalm, already quoted, Psa 95:3. This was a second rest which the Lord promised to the believing, obedient seed of Abraham; and as it was spoken of in the days of David, when the Jews actually possessed this long promised Canaan, therefore it is evident that that was not the rest which God intended, as the next verse shows.

Clarke: Heb 4:6 - -- It remaineth that some must enter therein - Why our translators put in the word must here I cannot even conjecture. I hope it was not to serve a sys...

It remaineth that some must enter therein - Why our translators put in the word must here I cannot even conjecture. I hope it was not to serve a system, as some have since used it: "Some must go to heaven, for so is the doctrine of the decree; and there must be certain persons infallibly brought thither as a reward to Christ for his sufferings; and in this the will of man and free agency can have no part,"etc, etc. Now, supposing that even all this was true, yet it does not exist either positively or by implication in the text. The words επει ουν απολειπεται τινας εισελθειν εις αυτην, literally translated, are as follows: Seeing then it remaineth for some to enter into it; or, Whereas therefore it remaineth that some enter into it, which is Dr. Owen’ s translation, and they to whom it was first preached ( οἱ προτερον ευαγγελισθεντες, they to whom the promise was given; they who first received the good tidings; i.e., the Israelites, to whom was given the promise of entering into the rest of Canaan) did not enter in because of their unbelief; and the promise still continued to be repeated even in the days of David; therefore, some other rest must be intended.

Clarke: Heb 4:7 - -- He limiteth a certain day - The term day signifies not only time in general, but also present time, and a particular space. Day here seems to have t...

He limiteth a certain day - The term day signifies not only time in general, but also present time, and a particular space. Day here seems to have the same meaning as rest in some other parts of this verse. The day or time of rest relative to the ancient Jews being over and past, and a long time having elapsed between God’ s displeasure shown to the disobedient Jews in the wilderness and the days of David, and the true rest not having been enjoyed, God in his mercy has instituted another day - has given another dispensation of mercy and goodness by Christ Jesus; and now it may be said, as formerly, To-day, if ye will hear his voice, harden not your hearts. God speaks now as he spoke before; his voice is in the Gospel as it was in the law. Believe, love, obey, and ye shall enter into this rest.

Clarke: Heb 4:8 - -- For if Jesus had given them rest - It is truly surprising that our translators should have rendered the Ιησους of the text Jesus, and not Jo...

For if Jesus had given them rest - It is truly surprising that our translators should have rendered the Ιησους of the text Jesus, and not Joshua, who is most clearly intended. They must have known that the יהושע Yehoshua of the Hebrew, which we write Joshua, is everywhere rendered Ιησους, Jesus, by the Septuagint; and it is their reading which the apostle follows. It is true the Septuagint generally write Ιησους Ναυη, or Υἱος Ναυη, Jesus Nave, or Jesus, son of Nave, for it is thus they translate יהושע בן נון Yehoshua ben Nun , Joshua the son of Nun; and this is sufficient to distinguish it from Jesus, son of David. But as Joshua, the captain general of Israel, is above intended, the word should have been written Joshua, and not Jesus. One MS., merely to prevent the wrong application of the name, has Ιησους ὁ του Ναυη, Jesus the son of Nave. Theodoret has the same in his comment, and one Syriac version has it in the text. It is Joshua in Coverdale’ s Testament, 1535; in Tindal’ s 1548; in that edited by Edmund Becke, 1549; in Richard Cardmarden’ s, Rouen, 1565; several modern translators, Wesley, Macknight, Wakefield, etc., read Joshua, as does our own in the margin. What a pity it had not been in the text, as all the smaller Bibles have no marginal readings, and many simple people are bewildered with the expression

The apostle shows that, although Joshua did bring the children of Israel into the promised land, yet this could not be the intended rest, because long after this time the Holy Spirit, by David, speaks of this rest; the apostle, therefore, concludes,

Clarke: Heb 4:9 - -- There, remaineth therefore a rest to the people of God - It was not 1.    The rest of the Sabbath; it was not 2.    Th...

There, remaineth therefore a rest to the people of God - It was not

1.    The rest of the Sabbath; it was not

2.    The rest in the promised land

for the psalmist wrote long after the days of Joshua; therefore there is another rest, a state of blessedness, for the people of God; and this is the Gospel, the blessings it procures and communicates, and the eternal glory which it prepares for, and has promised to, genuine believers

There are two words in this chapter which we indifferently translate rest, καταπαυσις and σαββατισμος· he first signifying a cessation from labor, so that the weary body is rested and refreshed; the second meaning, not only a rest from labor, but a religious rest; sabbatismus , a rest of a sacred kind, of which both soul and body partake. This is true, whether we understand the rest as referring to Gospel blessings, or to eternal felicity, or to both.

Clarke: Heb 4:10 - -- For he that is entered into his rest - The man who has believed in Christ Jesus has entered into his rest; the state of happiness which he has provi...

For he that is entered into his rest - The man who has believed in Christ Jesus has entered into his rest; the state of happiness which he has provided, and which is the forerunner of eternal glory

Clarke: Heb 4:10 - -- Hath ceased from his own works - No longer depends on the observance of Mosaic rites and ceremonies for his justification and final happiness. He re...

Hath ceased from his own works - No longer depends on the observance of Mosaic rites and ceremonies for his justification and final happiness. He rests from all these works of the law as fully as God has rested from his works of creation

Those who restrain the word rest to the signification of eternal glory, say, that ceasing from our own works relates to the sufferings, tribulations, afflictions, etc., of this life; as in Rev 14:13. I understand it as including both

In speaking of the Sabbath, as typifying a state of blessedness in the other world, the apostle follows the opinions of the Jews of his own and after times. The phrase שבת עלאה ושבת התאה shabbath illaah , veshabbath tethaah , the sabbath above, and the sabbath below, is common among the Jewish writers; and they think that where the plural number is used, as in Lev 19:30 : Ye shall keep my Sabbaths, that the lower and higher sabbaths are intended, and that the one is prefigured by the other. See many examples in Schoettgen.

Calvin: Heb 4:1 - -- 1.=== Let us therefore fear, === etc. He concludes that there was reason to fear lest the Jews to whom he was writing should be deprived of the bles...

1.=== Let us therefore fear, === etc. He concludes that there was reason to fear lest the Jews to whom he was writing should be deprived of the blessing offered to them; and then he says, lest anyone, intimating that it was his anxious desire to lead them, one and all, to God; for it is the duty of a good shepherd, in watching over the whole flock so to care for every sheep that no one may be lost; nay, we ought also so to feel for one another that every one should fear for his neighbors as well as for himself

But the fear which is here recommended is not that which shakes the confidence of faith but such as fills us with such concern that we grow not torpid with indifference. Let us then fear, not that we ought to tremble or to entertain distrust as though uncertain as to the issue, but lest we be unfaithful to God’s grace.

By saying Lest we be disappointed of the promise left us, he intimates that no one comes short of it except he who by rejecting grace has first renounced the promise; for God is so far from repenting to do us good that he ceases not to bestow his gifts except when we despise his calling. The illative therefore, or then means that by the fall of others we are taught humility and watchfulness according to what Paul also says,

“These through unbelief have fallen; be not thou then high ­ minded, but fear.” 67
(Rom 11:20.)

Calvin: Heb 4:2 - -- 2.=== For to us, === etc. He reminds us that the doctrine by which God invites us to himself at this day is the same with that which he formerly del...

2.=== For to us, === etc. He reminds us that the doctrine by which God invites us to himself at this day is the same with that which he formerly delivered to the fathers; and why did he say this? That we may know that the calling of God will in no degree be more profitable to us than it was to them, except we make it sure by faith. This, then, he concedes, that the Gospel is indeed preached to us; 68 but lest we should vainly glory, he immediately adds that the unbelieving whom God had formerly favored with the participation of so great blessings, yet received from them no fruit, and that therefore we also shall be destitute of his blessing unless we receive it by faith. He repeats the word hear for this end, that we may know that hearing is useless except the word addressed to us be by faith received.

But we must here observe the connection between the word and faith. It is such that faith is not to be separated from the word, and that the word separated from faith can confer no good; not indeed that the efficacy or power of the word depends on us; for were the whole world false, he who cannot lie would still never cease to be true, but the word never puts forth its power in us except when faith gives it an entrance. It is indeed the power of God unto salvation, but only to those who believe. (Rom 1:16.) There is in it revealed the righteousness of God, but it is from faith to faith. Thus it is that the word of God is always efficacious and saving to men, when viewed in itself or in its own nature; but no fruit will be found except by those who believe.

As to a former statement, when I said that there is no faith where the word is wanting, and that those who make such a divorce wholly extinguish faith and reduce it to nothing, the subject is worthy of special notice. For it hence appears evident that faith cannot exist in any but in the children of God, to whom alone the promise of adoption is offered. For what sort of faith have devils, to whom no salvation is promised? And what sort of faith have all the ungodly who are ignorant of the word? The hearing must ever precede faith, and that indeed that we may know that God speaks and not men.

Calvin: Heb 4:3 - -- He now begins to embellish the passage which he had quoted from David. He has hitherto taken it, as they say, according to the letter, that is, in it...

He now begins to embellish the passage which he had quoted from David. He has hitherto taken it, as they say, according to the letter, that is, in its literal sense; but he now amplifies and decorates it; and thus he rather alludes to than explains the words of David. This sort of decoration Paul employed in Rom 10:6, in referring to these words of Moses, “Say not, who shall ascend into heaven!” etc. Nor is it indeed anything unsuitable, in accommodating Scripture to a subject in hand, to illustrate by figurative terms what is more simply delivered. However, the sum of the whole is this, that what God threatens in the Psalm as to the loss of his rest, applies also to us, inasmuch as he invites us also at this day to a rest.

The chief difficulty of this passage arises from this, that it is perverted by many. The Apostle had no other thing in view by declaring that there is a rest for us, than to rouse us to desire it, and also to make us to fear, lest we should be shut out of it through unbelief He however teaches us at the same time, that the rest into which an entrance is now open to us, is far more valuable than that in the land of Canaan. But let us now come to particulars.

3.For we which have believed do enter into rest, or, for we enter into the rest after we have believed, etc. It is an argument from what is contrary. Unbelief alone shuts us out; then faith alone opens an entrance. We must indeed bear in mind what he has already stated, that God being angry with the unbelieving, had sworn that they should not partake of that blessing. Then they enter in where unbelief does not hinder, provided only that God invites them. But by speaking in the first person he allures them with greater sweetness, separating them from aliens.

===Although the works, === etc. To define what our rest is, he reminds us of what Moses relates, that God having finished the creation of the world, immediately rested from his works and he finally concludes, that the true rest of the faithful, which is to continue forever, will be when they shall rest as God did. 69 And doubtless as the highest happiness of man is to be united to his God, so ought to be his ultimate end to which he ought to refer all his thoughts and actions. This he proves, because God who is said to have rested, declared a long time after that he would not give his rest to the unbelieving; he would have so declared to no purpose, had he not intended that the faithful should rest after his own example. Hence he says, It remaineth that some must enter in: for if not to enter in is the punishment of unbelief, then an entrance, as it has been said, is open to believers.

Calvin: Heb 4:7 - -- 7. But there is some more difficulty in what he immediately subjoins, that there is another today appointed for us in the Psalm, because the former ...

7. But there is some more difficulty in what he immediately subjoins, that there is another today appointed for us in the Psalm, because the former people had been excluded; but the words of David (as it may be said) seem to express no such thing, and mean only this, that God punished the unbelief of the people by refusing to them the possession of the land. To this I answer, that the inference is correct, that to us is offered what was denied to them; for the Holy Spirit reminds and warns us, that we may not do the same thing so as to incur the same punishment. For how does the matter stand? Were nothing at this day promised, how could this warning be suitable, “Take heed lest the same thing happen to you as to the fathers.” Rightly then does the Apostle say, that as the fathers’ unbelief deprived them of the promised possession, the promise is renewed to their children, so that they may possess what had been neglected by their fathers.

Calvin: Heb 4:8 - -- 8.For if Jesus had given them rest, or, had obtained rest for them, etc. He meant not to deny but that David understood by rest the land of Canaan,...

8.For if Jesus had given them rest, or, had obtained rest for them, etc. He meant not to deny but that David understood by rest the land of Canaan, into which Joshua conducted the people; but he denies this to be the final rest to which the faithful aspire, and which we have also in common with the faithful of that age; for it is certain that they looked higher than to that land; nay, the land of Canaan was not otherwise so much valued except for this reason, because it was an image and a symbol of the spiritual inheritance. When, therefore, they obtained possession of it, they ought not to have rested as though they had attained to the summit of their wishes, but on the contrary to meditate on what was spiritual as by it suggested. They to whom David addressed the Psalm were in possession of that land, but they were reminded of the duty of seeking a better rest.

We then see how the land of Canaan was a rest; it was indeed but evanescent, beyond which it was the duty of the faithful to advance. In this sense the Apostle denies that that rest was given by Joshua; for the people under his guidance entered the promised land for this end, that they might with greater alacrity advance forward towards heaven.

And we may hence easily learn the difference between us and them; for though the same end is designed for both, yet they had, as added to them, external types to guide them; not so have we, nor have we indeed any need of them, for the naked truth itself is set before our eyes. Though our salvation is as yet in hope, yet as to the truth, it leads directly to heaven; nor does Christ extend his hand to us, that he may conduct us by the circuitous course of types and figures, but that he may withdraw us from the world and raise us up to heaven. Now that the Apostle separates the shadow from the substance, he did so for this reason, — because he had to do with the Jews, who were too much attached to external things.

He draws the conclusion, that there is a sabbathizing reserved for Gods people, that is, a spiritual rest; to which God daily invites us.

Calvin: Heb 4:10 - -- 10.For he that is entered into his rest, or, For he who has rested, etc. This is a definition of that perpetual Sabbath in which there is the highe...

10.For he that is entered into his rest, or, For he who has rested, etc. This is a definition of that perpetual Sabbath in which there is the highest felicity, when there will be a likeness between men and God, to whom they will be united. For whatever the philosophers may have ever said of the chief good, it was nothing but cold and vain, for they confined man to himself, while it is necessary for us to go out of ourselves to find happiness. The chief good of man is nothing else but union with God; this is attained when we are formed according to him as our exemplar.

Now this conformation the Apostle teaches us takes place when we rest from our works. It hence at length follows, that man becomes happy by self­denial. For what else is to cease from our works, but to mortify our flesh, when a man renounces himself that he may live to God? For here we must always begin, when we speak of a godly and holy life, that man being in a manner dead to himself, should allow God to live in him, that he should abstain from his own works, so as to give place to God to work. We must indeed confess, that then only is our life rightly formed when it becomes subject to God. But through inbred corruption this is never the case, until we rest from our own works; nay, such is the opposition between God’s government and our corrupt affections, that he cannot work in us until we rest. But though the completion of this rest cannot be attained in this life, yet we ought ever to strive for it. 70 Thus believers enter it but on this condition, — that by running they may continually go forward.

But I doubt not but that the Apostle designedly alluded to the Sabbath in order to reclaim the Jews from its external observances; for in no other way could its abrogation be understood, except by the knowledge of its spiritual design. He then treats of two things together; for by extolling the excellency of grace, he stimulates us to receive it by faith, and in the meantime he shows us in passing what is the true design of the Sabbath, lest the Jews should be foolishly attached to the outward rite. Of its abrogation indeed he does expressly speak, for this is not his subject, but by teaching them that the rite had a reference to something else, he gradually withdraws them from their superstitious notions. For he who understands that the main object of the precept was not external rest or earthly worship, immediately perceives, by looking on Christ, that the external rite was abolished by his coming; for when the body appears, the shadows immediately vanish away. Then our first business always is, to teach that Christ is the end of the Law.

Defender: Heb 4:2 - -- The "gospel" is not just a New Testament revelation, for it was preached to the children of Israel in the wilderness, in types and prophecies, at leas...

The "gospel" is not just a New Testament revelation, for it was preached to the children of Israel in the wilderness, in types and prophecies, at least. In fact, it is "the everlasting gospel" (Rev 14:6, Rev 14:7), and the first promise of redemption (Gen 3:15) is commonly known as the protevangel (first gospel). In its essence, the gospel (good news) is the message that the Creator is also our Redeemer and coming King, and that true faith in Him - faith which produces salvation - will also produce loving obedience to His Word.

Defender: Heb 4:2 - -- It is vital to "hear" the Word, but then it is necessary to "believe" it as well. (Joh 5:24; Jam 1:22)."

It is vital to "hear" the Word, but then it is necessary to "believe" it as well. (Joh 5:24; Jam 1:22)."

Defender: Heb 4:3 - -- The sense of "if they shall" is "they shall not."

The sense of "if they shall" is "they shall not."

Defender: Heb 4:3 - -- God's works of creation were finished at the end of the six days of creation week (Gen 2:1-3). He is not still creating, as the theistic evolutionist ...

God's works of creation were finished at the end of the six days of creation week (Gen 2:1-3). He is not still creating, as the theistic evolutionist must allege. Thus, the natural processes we can study in operation today are not processes of creation, rather, they are processes of conservation and disintegration, as enunciated in the universally applicable First and Second Laws of Thermodynmics. Furthermore, the works of creation "were finished from the foundation of the world," not several billion years later after the supposed geological ages took place. In effect, these completed works of creation actually constituted the foundation of the world. The idea of evolution, if regarded as God's method of creation, is a totally false doctrine and a destructive heresy."

Defender: Heb 4:4 - -- This truth is not only quoted from Gen 2:2, but also is emphasized in Exo 20:11 as the basis of the fourth commandment. It is clear in all these passa...

This truth is not only quoted from Gen 2:2, but also is emphasized in Exo 20:11 as the basis of the fourth commandment. It is clear in all these passages that the days of creation week were literal days, not vague ages of indefinite duration and termination. On the seventh day, God rested from His works of creation, though not from His ongoing work of conservation (Heb 1:3; Col 1:17), and later, His work of redemption, which He undertook when sin and death entered the world. Of these, Jesus said: "My Father worketh hitherto, and I work" (Joh 5:17). The work of redemption - at least the work of paying the price of redemption - was then completed on the cross when Christ cried out: "It is finished" (Joh 19:30). He also rested from this work when He "sat down on the right hand of the Majesty on high" (Heb 1:3)."

Defender: Heb 4:8 - -- Most expositors understand this to mean "Joshua," since "Jesus" is a Greek form of "Joshua," who is otherwise never mentioned by name in the New Testa...

Most expositors understand this to mean "Joshua," since "Jesus" is a Greek form of "Joshua," who is otherwise never mentioned by name in the New Testament. It is also possible to understand this as actually referring to the Lord Jesus Christ, who, before His incarnation, may have been revealed as "the angel of his presence" (Isa 63:9) who "in his love and in his pity, he redeemed them," as He led them into the promised land under Joshua. In any case, this was not the ultimate "rest" God had promised His people, as the next verses show."

Defender: Heb 4:9 - -- The "rest" in this verse is not the rest mentioned so frequently in this section. Rather, it is "sabbath rest" from the Greek sabbatismos, occurring o...

The "rest" in this verse is not the rest mentioned so frequently in this section. Rather, it is "sabbath rest" from the Greek sabbatismos, occurring only this once in the New Testament. Thus, the people of God not only may enjoy the spiritual rest promised by Christ in this life (Mat 11:28), but also may look forward to the eternal rest in the new earth which was typified by a weekly Sabbath rest in Israel. The latter not only commemorated the completed work of creation but also anticipated the completed work of redemption and reconciliation. That coming rest will not be one of inaction, of course, for "his servants shall serve him" there (Rev 22:3), but rather, one of perfect fellowship with God and freedom from the presence of sin. Our present weekly "rest" on the Lord's Day continues this observance even more effectively than the sabbatismos of Israel, for it commemorates both His creation and His resurrection, the two finished works of Christ, until He comes again."

Defender: Heb 4:10 - -- Note again that God "ceased from his own works" of creation, and thus creation is no longer taking place, save in occasional special miracles. In anal...

Note again that God "ceased from his own works" of creation, and thus creation is no longer taking place, save in occasional special miracles. In analogous fashion, the believer now enters into rest (not the sabbatismos rest which still "remaineth"), but the immediate spiritual rest (Greek katapausis) received right now when we cease trying to work for our salvation and receive the finished work of Christ by faith."

TSK: Heb 4:1 - -- us therefore : Heb 4:11, Heb 2:1-3, Heb 12:15, Heb 12:25, Heb 13:7; Pro 14:16, Pro 28:14; Jer 32:40; Rom 11:20; 1Co 10:12 a promise : Heb 4:9; Num 14:...

TSK: Heb 4:2 - -- unto us : Act 3:26, Act 13:46; Gal 3:8, Gal 4:13; 1Pe 1:12 preached : Gr. of hearing, Rom 10:16, Rom 10:17 *marg. did : Rom 2:25; 1Co 13:3; 1Ti 4:8 no...

unto us : Act 3:26, Act 13:46; Gal 3:8, Gal 4:13; 1Pe 1:12

preached : Gr. of hearing, Rom 10:16, Rom 10:17 *marg.

did : Rom 2:25; 1Co 13:3; 1Ti 4:8

not being : etc. or because they were not united by faith to, Heb 4:6, Heb 3:12, Heb 3:18, Heb 3:19, Heb 11:6; 1Th 1:5, 1Th 2:13; 2Th 2:12, 2Th 2:13; Jam 1:21

TSK: Heb 4:3 - -- we : Heb 3:14; Isa 28:12; Jer 6:16; Mat 11:28, Mat 11:29; Rom 5:1, Rom 5:2 As I : Heb 3:11; Psa 95:11 the works : Gen 1:31; Exo 20:11 from : Heb 9:26;...

TSK: Heb 4:4 - -- in : Heb 2:6 God : Gen 2:1, Gen 2:2; Exo 20:11, Exo 31:17

TSK: Heb 4:5 - -- Heb 4:3, Heb 3:11

TSK: Heb 4:6 - -- it remaineth : Heb 4:9; 1Co 7:29 some : Num 14:12, Num 14:31; Isa 65:15; Mat 21:43, Mat 22:9, Mat 22:10; Luk 14:21-24; Act 13:46, Act 13:47; Act 28:28...

it remaineth : Heb 4:9; 1Co 7:29

some : Num 14:12, Num 14:31; Isa 65:15; Mat 21:43, Mat 22:9, Mat 22:10; Luk 14:21-24; Act 13:46, Act 13:47; Act 28:28

they : Heb 4:2, Heb 3:19; Gal 3:8

it was : or, the gospel was

entered : Heb 3:18, Heb 3:19

TSK: Heb 4:7 - -- saying : Heb 3:7, Heb 3:8; 2Sa 23:1, 2Sa 23:2; Mat 22:43; Mar 12:36; Luk 20:42; Act 2:29, Act 2:31, Act 28:25 To day : Heb 3:7, Heb 3:15; Psa 95:7 aft...

TSK: Heb 4:8 - -- Jesus : that is, Joshua, Act 7:45 had : Heb 11:13-15; Deu 12:9, Deu 25:19; Jos 1:15, Jos 22:4, Jos 23:1; Psa 78:55, Psa 105:44

TSK: Heb 4:9 - -- remaineth : Heb 4:1, Heb 4:3, Heb 3:11; Isa 11:10, Isa 57:2, Isa 60:19, Isa 60:20; Rev 7:14-17, Rev 21:4 rest : or, keeping of a sabbath people : Heb ...

remaineth : Heb 4:1, Heb 4:3, Heb 3:11; Isa 11:10, Isa 57:2, Isa 60:19, Isa 60:20; Rev 7:14-17, Rev 21:4

rest : or, keeping of a sabbath

people : Heb 11:25; Psa 47:9; Mat 1:21; Tit 2:14; 1Pe 2:10

TSK: Heb 4:10 - -- he that : Heb 1:3, Heb 10:12; Rev 14:13 hath : Joh 19:30; 1Pe 4:1, 1Pe 4:2 as : Heb 4:3, Heb 4:4

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Heb 4:1 - -- Let us therefore fear - Let us be apprehensive that we may possibly fall of that rest. The kind of "fear"which is recommended here is what lead...

Let us therefore fear - Let us be apprehensive that we may possibly fall of that rest. The kind of "fear"which is recommended here is what leads to caution and care. A man who is in danger of losing his life or health should be watchful; a seaman that is in danger of running on a lee-shore should be on his guard. So we who have the offer of heaven, and who yet are in danger of losing it, should take all possible precautions lest we fail of it.

Lest a promise being left us - Paul assumes here that there is such a promise. In the subsequent part of the chapter, he goes more into the subject, and proves from the Old Testament that there is such a promise made to us. It is to be remembered that Paul had not the New Testament then to appeal to, as we have, which is perfectly clear on the subject, but that he was obliged to appeal to the Old Testament. This he did not only because the New Testament was not then written, but because he was reasoning with those who had been Hebrews, and who regarded the authority of the Old Testament as decisive. If his reasoning to us appears somewhat obscure, we should put ourselves in his place, and should remember that the converts then had not the full light which we have now in the New Testament.

Of entering into his rest - The rest of God - the rest of the world where he dwells. It is called "his"rest, because it is what he enjoys, and which he alone can confer. There can be no doubt that Paul refers here to heaven, and means to say that there is a promise left to Christians of being admitted to the enjoyment of that blessed world where God dwells.

Any of you should seem to come short of it - The word "seem"here is used as a form of gentle and mild address, implying the possibility of thus coming short. The word here - δοκέω dokeō - is often used so as to appear to give no essential addition to the sense of a passage, though it is probable that it always gave a shading to the meaning. Thus, the phrase "esse videatur"is often used by Cicero at the end of a period, to denote merely that a thing "was"- though he expressed it as though it merely "seemed"to be. Such language is often used in argument or in conversation as a "modest"expression, as when we say a thing "seems"to be so and so, instead of saying "it is."In some such sense Paul probably used the phrase here - perhaps as expressing what we would by this language - "lest it should appear at last that any of you had come short of it."The phrase "come short of it"is probably used with reference to the journey to the promised land, where they who came out of Egypt "came short"of that land, and fell in the wilderness. They did not reach it. This verse teaches the important truth that, though heaven is offered to us, and that a "rest"is promised to us if we seek it, yet that there is reason to think that many may fail of reaching it who had expected to obtain it. Among those will be the following classes:

(1)    Those who are professors of religion but who have never known anything of true piety.

(2)\caps1     t\caps0 hose who are expecting to be saved by their own works, and are looking forward to a world of rest on the ground of what their own hands can do.

(3)\caps1     t\caps0 hose who defer attention to the subject from time to time until it becomes too late. They expect to reach heaven, but they are not ready to give their hearts to God "now,"and the subject is deferred from one period to another, until death arrests them unprepared.

(4)\caps1     t\caps0 hose who have been awakened to see their guilt and danger, and who have been almost but not quite ready to give up their hearts to God. Such were Agrippa, Felix, the young ruler Mar 10:21, and such are all those who are "almost"but not "quite"prepared to give up the world and to devote themselves to the Redeemer. To all these the promise of "rest"is made, if they will accept of salvation as it is offered in the gospel; all of them cherish a hope that they will be saved; and all of them are destined alike to be disappointed. With what earnestness, therefore, should we strive that we may not fail of the grace of God!

Barnes: Heb 4:2 - -- For unto us was the gospel preached as well as unto them - This translation by no means conveys the sense of the original. According to this it...

For unto us was the gospel preached as well as unto them - This translation by no means conveys the sense of the original. According to this it would seem that the "gospel,"as we understand it, or the whole plan of salvation, was communicated to "them,"as well as to "us."But this is by no means the idea. The discussion has reference only to "the promise of rest,"and the assertion of the apostle is that this "good news"of a promise of rest is made to us as really as it was made to "them.""Rest"was promised to them in the land of Canaan - an emblem of the eternal rest of the people of God. That was unquestioned, and Paul took it for granted. His object now is, to show that a promise of "rest"is as really made to us as it was to them, and that there is the same danger of failing to secure it as there was then. It was important for him to show that there was such a promise made to the people of God in his time, and as he was discoursing of those who were Hebrews, he of course made his appeal to the Old Testament. The literal translation would be, "For we are evangelized - ἐσμεν εὐηγγελισμένοι esmen euēngelismenoi - as well as they."The word "evangelize"means to communicate good news, or glad tidings; and the idea here is, that the good news, or glad tidings of "rest"is announced to us as really as it was to them. This the apostle proves in the following verses.

But the word preached - Margin, "Of hearing."The word "preach"we also use now in a technical sense as denoting a formal proclamation of the gospel by the ministers of religion. But this is not the idea here. It means, simply, the word which "they heard;"and refers particularly to the promise of "rest"which was made to them. That message was communicated to them by Moses.

Did not profit them - They derived no advantage from it. They rejected and despised it, and were, therefore, excluded from the promised land. It exerted no influence over their hearts and lives, and they lived and died as though no such promise had been made. Thus, many persons live and die now. The offer of salvation is made to them. They are invited to come and be saved. They are assured that God is willing to save them, and that the Redeemer stands with open arms to welcome them to heaven. They are trained up under the gospel; are led early in life to the sanctuary; are in the habit of attending on the preaching of the gospel all their days, but still what they hear exerts no saving influence on their hearts. At the close of life all that could be truly said of them is, that they have not been "profited;"it has been no real advantage to them in regard to their final destiny that they have enjoyed so many privileges.

Not being mixed with faith in them that heard it - Margin, "Or, because they were not united by faith to."There are some various readings on this text, and one of these has given occasion to the version in the margin. Many mss. instead of the common reading - συγκεκερασμένος sugkekerasmenos - by which the word "mixed"would be united to ὁ λόγος ho logos - "the word,"have another reading - sugkekrame&noujsungkekramenous - according to which the word "mixed"would refer to "them,"and would mean that they who heard the Word and rejected it were not "mixed,"or united with those who believed it. The former reading makes the best sense, and is the best sustained; and the idea is, that the message which was preached was not received into the heart by faith. They were destitute of faith, and the message did not profit them. The word "mixed"is supposed by many of the best critics to refer to the process by which "food"is made nutritive, by being properly "mixed"with the saliva and the gastric juice, and thus converted into chyme, and chyle, and then changed into blood.

If suitably "mixed"in this manner, it contributes to the life and health of the physical frame; if not, it is the means of disease and death. So it is supposed the apostle meant to say of the message which God sends to man. If properly received; if mixed or united with faith, it becomes the means of spiritual support and life. If not, it furnishes no aliment to the soul, and will be of no advantage. As food when properly digested incorporates itself with the body, and gives it support, so those critics suppose it to be of the Word of God, that it incorporates itself with the internal and spiritual man, and gives it support and life. It may be doubted, however, whether the apostle had any such allusion as this, and whether it is not rather a refinement of the critics than of Paul. The word used here properly denotes a mixing or mingling together, like water and wine, 2 Macc. 15:39; a uniting together in proper proportions and order, as of the body, 1Co 12:24; and it may refer here merely to a proper "union"of faith with the word, in order that it might be profitable. The idea is, that merely to "hear"the message of life with the outward ear will be of no advantage. It must be "believed,"or it will be of no benefit. The message is sent to mankind at large. God declares his readiness to save all. But this message is of no advantage to multitudes - for such reasons as these.

(1) Many do not attend to it at all. They do not even "listen"respectfully to it. Multitudes go not near the place where the gospel is proclaimed; and many, when there, and when they "seem"to attend, have their minds and hearts on other things.

\caps1 (2) m\caps0 any do not "believe"it. They have doubts about the whole subject of religion, or about the particular doctrines of the gospel - and while they do not believe it, how can they be benefitted by it? How can a man be profited by the records of "history"if he does not believe them? How can one be benefited by the truths of "science"if he does not believe them? And if a man was assured that by going to a certain place he might close a bargain that would be a great advantage to him, of what use would this information be to him if he did not believe a word of it? So of the knowledge of salvation; the facts of the history recorded in the Bible; the offer of eternal life.

\caps1 (3) m\caps0 en do not allow the message of life to influence their conduct, and of course it is of no advantage to them. Of what use can it be if they steadily resist all the influence which it would have, and ought to have, on their lives? They live as though it were ascertained that there is no truth in the Bible; no reason for being influenced by the offered hope of eternal life, or alarmed by the threatened danger of eternal death. Resolved to pursue a course of life that is at variance with the commands of God, they cannot be profited by the message of salvation. Having no faith which influences and controls the heart, they are not in the least benefited by the offer of heaven. When they die, their condition is in no wise made better by the fact that they were trained up in a pious family; that they were instructed in the Sunday School; that they had the Bible in their dwellings, and that they sat regularly under a preached gospel. For any "advantage"to be derived from all this in the future world, they might as well have never heard the message of life. Nay it would have been better for them. The only effect of these privileges is to harden them in guilt, and to sink them deeper in hell; see the notes, 2Co 2:16.

Barnes: Heb 4:3 - -- For we which have believed do enter into rest - That is, it is a certain fact that believers "will"enter into rest. That promise is made to "be...

For we which have believed do enter into rest - That is, it is a certain fact that believers "will"enter into rest. That promise is made to "believers;"and as we have evidence that "we"come under the denomination of believers, it will follow that we have the offer of rest as well as they. That this is so, the apostle proceeds to prove; that is, he proceeds to show from the Old Testament that there was a promise to "believers"that they would enter into rest. Since there was such a promise, and since there was danger that by unbelief that "rest"might be lost, he proceeds to show them the danger, and to warn them of it.

As he said ... - see Heb 3:11. The meaning of this passage is this. "God made a promise of rest to those who believe. They to whom the offer was first made failed, and did not enter in. It must follow, therefore, that the offer extended to others, since God designed that some should enter in, or that it should not he provided in vain. To them it was a solemn declaration that unbelievers should not enter in, and this implied that believers would. "As we now,"says he, "sustain the character of "believers,"it follows that to us the promise of rest is now made and we may partake of it."

If they shall enter ... - That is, they shall "not"enter in; see Heb 3:11. The "rest"here spoken of as reserved for Christians must be different from that of the promised land. It is something that pertains to Christians now, and it must, therefore, refer to the "rest"that remains in heaven.

Although the works were finished ... - This is a difficult expression. What works are referred to? it may be asked. How does this bear on the subject under discussion? How can it be a proof that there remains a "rest"to those who believe now? This was the point to be demonstrated; and this passage was designed clearly to bear on that point. As it is in our translation, the passage seems to make no sense whatever. Tyndale renders it, "And that spake he verily long after that the works were made from the foundation of the world laid;"which makes much better sense than our translation. Doddridge explains it as meaning, "And this may lead us further to reflect on what is said elsewhere concerning his works as they were finished from the foundation of the world."But it is difficult to see why they should reflect on his works just then, and how this would bear on the case in hand. Prof. Stuart supposes that the word "rest"must be understood here before "works,"and translates it, "Shall not enter into my rest, to wit, rest from the works which were performed when the world was founded."Prof. Robinson (Lexicon) explains it as meaning, "The rest here spoken of, ‘ my rest,’ could not have been God’ s resting from his works Gen 2:2, for this rest, the Sabbath, had already existed from the creation of the world."Dr. John P. Wilson (ms. notes) renders it, "For we who have believed, do enter into rest (or a cessation) indeed ( καίτοι kaitoi ) of the works done (among people) from the beginning of the world."Amidst this variety of interpretation it is difficult to determine the true sense. But perhaps the main thought may be collected from the following remarks:

(1)    The Jews as the people of God had a rest promised them in the land of Canaan. Of that they failed by their unbelief.

(2)\caps1     t\caps0 he purpose of the apostle was to prove that there was a similar promise made to the people of God long subsequent to that, and to which "all"his people were invited.

(3)\caps1     t\caps0 hat rest was not that of the promised land, it was such as "God had himself"when he had finished the work of creation. That was especially "his rest"- the rest of God, without toil, or weariness, and after his whole "work"was finished.

(4)\caps1     h\caps0 is people were invited to the same "rest"- the rest of God - to partake of his felicity; to enter into that bliss which "he"enjoyed when he had finished the work of creation. The happiness of the saints was to be "like"that. It was to be "in their case"also a rest from toil - to be enjoyed at the end of all that "they"had to do.

To prove that Christians were to attain to "such"a rest, was the purpose which the apostle had in view - showing that it was a general doctrine pertaining to believers in every age, that there was a promise of rest for them. I would then regard the middle clause of this verse as a parenthesis, and render the whole, "For we who are believers shall enter into rest - (the rest) indeed which occurred when the works were finished at the foundation of the world - as he said (in one place) as I have sworn in my wrath they shall not enter into my rest."That was the true rest - such rest or repose as "God"had when he finished the work of creation - such as he has now in heaven. This gives the highest possible idea of the dignity and desirableness of that "rest"to which we look forward - for it is to be such as God enjoys, and is to elevate us more and more to him. What more exalted idea can there be of happiness than to participate in the calmness, the peace, the repose, the freedom from raging passions, from wearisome toil, and from agitating cares, which God enjoys? Who, torn with conflicting passions here, wearied with toil, and distracted with care, ought not to feel it a privilege to look forward to that rest? Of this rest the Sabbath and the promised land were emblems. They to whom the promise was made did not enter in, but some "shall"enter in, and the promise therefore pertains to us.

Barnes: Heb 4:4 - -- For he spake - Gen 2:2. "And God did rest.""At the close of the work of creation he rested. The work was done. "That"was the rest of God. He wa...

For he spake - Gen 2:2. "And God did rest.""At the close of the work of creation he rested. The work was done. "That"was the rest of God. He was happy in the contemplation of his own works; and he instituted that day to be observed as a memorial of "his"resting from his works, and as a "type"of the eternal rest which remained for man."The idea is this, that the notion of "rest"of some kind runs through all dispensations. It was seen in the finishing of the work of creation; seen in the appointment of the Sabbath; seen in the offer of the promised land, and is seen now in the promise of heaven. All dispensations contemplate "rest,"and there must be such a prospect before man now. When it is said that "God did rest,"of course it does not mean that he was wearied with his toil, but merely that he "ceased"from the stupendous work of creation. He no more put forth creative energy, but calmly contemplated his own works in their beauty and grandeur; Gen 1:31. In carrying forward the great affairs of the universe, he always has been. actively employed Joh 5:17, but he is not employed in the work of "creation"properly so called. That is done; and the sublime cessation from that constitutes the "rest of God."

Barnes: Heb 4:5 - -- And in this place again - Psa 95:11. If they shall enter - That is, they shall not enter; see the notes at Heb 3:11. The object of quotin...

And in this place again - Psa 95:11.

If they shall enter - That is, they shall not enter; see the notes at Heb 3:11. The object of quoting this here seems to be two-fold:

(1)    To show that even in this Psalm God spoke of "his"rest, and said that they should not enter into it; and,

(2)\caps1     i\caps0 t is connected with Heb 4:6, and is designed to show that it was implied that a rest yet remained. "That which deserves to be called "the divine rest"is spoken of in the Scriptures, and as "they"did not enter into it, it follows that it must be in reserve for some others, and that the promise must still remain."

Barnes: Heb 4:6 - -- Seeing therefore it remaineth that some must enter therein - That is, "Since there is a rest spoken of in the Scriptures, implying that it is t...

Seeing therefore it remaineth that some must enter therein - That is, "Since there is a rest spoken of in the Scriptures, implying that it is to be enjoyed by some, and since they to whom it was first promised did not inherit it, it follows that it must still be in reserve."This is the conclusion which the apostle draws from the argument in the previous verses, and is connected with Heb 4:9, where he says that "there remaineth a rest to the people of God"- the point to which the whole argument tended. The statement in Heb 4:7, Heb 4:8, is to be regarded as an "interruption"in stating the conclusion, or as the suggestion of a new thought or a new argument bearing on the subject, which he sets down even while stating the conclusion from his argument. It has the appearance of being "suggested"to him as a new thought of importance, and which he preferred to place even in the midst of the summing up of the argument rather than omit it altogether. It denotes a state of mind full of the subject, and where one idea came hastening after another, and which it was deemed important to notice, even though it should seem to be out of place. The "position"in this Heb 4:6 is, that it was a settled or indisputable matter that some would enter into rest. The implied argument to prove this is:

(1)\caps1     t\caps0 hat there was a "rest"spoken of which deserved to be called a "divine rest,"or the "rest of God;"

(2)\caps1     i\caps0 t could not be supposed that God would prepare such a rest in vain, for it would follow that if he had suited up a world of rest, he designed that it should be occupied. As he knew, therefore, that they to whom it was first offered would not enter in, it must be that he designed it for some others, and that it "remained"to be occupied by us now.

And they to whom it was first preached - Margin, "The Gospel."Greek "Evangelized;"that is, to where the good news of the rest was first announced - the Israelites. "Entered not in because of unbelief;"see the notes at Heb 3:19.

Barnes: Heb 4:7 - -- Again, he limiteth - He designates, or definitely mentions. The word rendered "limiteth"- ὁρίζει horizei - means to "bound,"to ...

Again, he limiteth - He designates, or definitely mentions. The word rendered "limiteth"- ὁρίζει horizei - means to "bound,"to set a boundary - as of a field or farm; and then to determine or fix definitely, to designate, appoint. Here it means, that he specifies particularly, or mentions expressly.

A certain day - A particular time; he mentions today particularly. That is, in the time of David, he uses the word "today,"as if time was "then"an offer of rest, and as if it were then possible to enter into it. The object of the additional thought was to show that the offer of rest was not confined to the Israelites to whom it was first made; that David regarded it as existing in his day; and that man might even then be invited to come and partake of the rest that was promised. "Nearly five hundred years after the time when the Israelites were going to the promised land, and when the offer of rest was made to them, we hear David speaking of "rest"still; rest which Was offered in his time, and which might then be lost by hardening the heart. It could not be, therefore, that the offer of rest pertained merely to the promised land. It must be something in advance of that. It must be something existing in the time of David. It must be an offer of heaven."A Jew might feel the force of this argument more than we do; still it is conclusive to prove the point under consideration, that there was a rest spoken of long after the offer of the promised land, and that all the promises could not have pertained to that.

Saying in David - In a Psalm composed by David, or rather perhaps, saying "by"David; that is, God spake by him.

Today - Now - that is, even in the time of David.

After so long a time - That is, so long after the first promise was made; to wit, about 500 years. These are the words of Paul calling attention to the fact that so long a time after the entrance into the promised land there was still a speaking of "today,"as if even then they were called to partake of the rest.

As it is said - To quote it exactly; or to bring the express authority of the Scriptures. It is expressly said even after that long time, "today - or now, if you will hear his voice."All this is to prove that even in that time there was an offer of rest.

Barnes: Heb 4:8 - -- For if Jesus - Margin, "That is, Joshua."The Syriac renders it, "Joshua the son of Nun.""Jesus"is the Greek mode of writing "Joshua,"and there ...

For if Jesus - Margin, "That is, Joshua."The Syriac renders it, "Joshua the son of Nun.""Jesus"is the Greek mode of writing "Joshua,"and there can be no doubt that Joshua is here intended. The object is to prove that Joshua did"not"give the people of God such a rest as to make it improper to speak of a "rest"after that time. "If Joshua had given them a complete and final rest; if by his conducting them to the promised land all had been done which had been contemplated by the promise, then it would not have been alluded to again, as it was in the time of David."Joshua "did"give them a rest in the promised land; but it was not all which was intended, and it did not exclude the promise of another and more important rest.

Then would he not - Then "God"would not have spoken of another time when that rest could be obtained. The "other day"here referred to is that which is mentioned before by the phrase "today,"and refers to the time in which it is spoken of long after Joshua, to wit, in the time of David.

Barnes: Heb 4:9 - -- There remaineth, therefore, a rest - This is the conclusion to which the apostle comes. The meaning is this, that according to the Scriptures t...

There remaineth, therefore, a rest - This is the conclusion to which the apostle comes. The meaning is this, that according to the Scriptures there is "now"a promise of rest made to the people of God. It did not pertain merely to those who were called to go to the promised land, nor to those who lived in the time of David, but it is "still"true that the promise of rest pertains to "all"the people of God of every generation. The "reasoning"by which the apostle comes to this conclusion is briefly this:

(1)    That there was a "rest"- called "the rest of God"- spoken of in the earliest period of the world - implying that God meant that it should be enjoyed.

(2)\caps1     t\caps0 hat the Israelites, to whom the promise was made, failed of obtaining what was promised by their unbelief.

(3)\caps1     t\caps0 hat God intended that "some"should enter into his rest - since it would not be provided in vain.

(4)\caps1     t\caps0 hat long after the Israelites had fallen in the wilderness, we find the same reference to a rest which David in his time exhorts those whom he addressed to endeavor to obtain.

(5)\caps1     t\caps0 hat if all that had been meant by the word "rest,"and by the promise, had been accomplished when Joshua conducted the Israelites to the land of Canaan, we should not have heard another day spoken of when it was possible to forfeit that rest by unbelief.

It followed, therefore, that there was something besides that; something that pertained to all the people of God to which the name rest might still be given, and which they were exhorted still to obtain. The word "rest"in this verse - σαββατισμὸς sabbatismos - "Sabbatism,"in the margin is rendered "keeping of a Sabbath."It is a different word from σάββατον sabbaton - "the Sabbath;"and it occurs nowhere else in the New Testament, and is not found in the Septuagint. It properly means "a keeping Sabbath"from σαββατίζω sabbatizō - "to keep Sabbath."This word, not used in the New Testament, occurs frequently in the Septuagint; Exo 16:30; Lev 23:32; Lev 26:35; 2Ch 36:21; and in 3 Esdr. 1:58; 2 Macc. 6:6. It differs from the word "Sabbath."That denotes "the time - the day;"this, "the keeping,"or "observance"of it; "the festival."It means here "a resting,"or an observance of sacred repose - and refers undoubtedly to heaven, as a place of eternal rest with God. It cannot mean the rest in the land of Canaan - for the drift of the writer is to prove that that is "not"intended. It cannot mean the "Sabbath,"properly so called - for then the writer would have employed the usual word σάββατον sabbaton - "Sabbath."It cannot mean the Christian Sabbath - for the object is not to prove that there is such a day to be observed, and his reasoning about being excluded from it by unbelief and by hardening the heart would be irrelevant. It must mean, therefore, "heaven"- the world of spiritual and eternal rest; and the assertion is, that there "is"such a "resting,"or "keeping of a Sabbath"in heaven for the people of God. Hence, learn:

\caps1 (1) t\caps0 hat heaven is a place of cessation from wearisome toil. It is to be like the "rest"which God had after the work of creation (Heb 4:4, note), and of which that was the type and emblem. There will be "employment"there, but it will be without fatigue; there will be the occupation of the mind, and of whatever powers we may possess, but without weariness. Here we are often worn down and exhausted. The body sinks under continued toil, and fails into the grave. There the slave will rest from his toil; the man here oppressed and broken down by anxious care will cease from his labors. We know but little of heaven; but we know that a large part of what now oppresses and crushes the frame will not exist there. Slavery will be unknown; the anxious care for support will be unknown, and all the exhaustion which proceeds from the love of gain, and from ambition, will be unknown. In the wearisome toils of life, then, let us look forward to the "rest"that remains in heaven, and as the laborer looks to the shades of the evening, or to the Sabbath as a period of rest, so let us look to heaven as the place of eternal repose.

\caps1 (2) h\caps0 eaven will be like a Sabbath. The best description of it is to say it is "an eternal Sabbath."Take the Sabbath on earth when best observed, and extend the idea to eternity, and let there be separated all idea of imperfection from its observance, and that would be heaven. The Sabbath is holy; so is heaven. It is a period of worship; so is heaven. It is for praise and for the contemplation of heavenly truth; so is heaven. The Sabbath is appointed that we may lay aside worldly cares and anxieties for a little season here; heaven that we may lay them aside forever.

\caps1 (3) t\caps0 he Sabbath here should be like heaven. It is designed to be its type and emblem. So far as the circumstances of the case will allow, it should be just like heaven. There should be the same employments; the same joys; the same communion with God. One of the best rules for employing the Sabbath aright is, to think what heaven will be, and then to endeavor to spend it in the same way. One day in seven at least should remind us of what heaven is to be; and that day may be, and should be, the most happy of the seven.

\caps1 (4) t\caps0 hey who do not love the Sabbath on earth, are not prepared for heaven. If it is to them a day of tediousness; if its hours move heavily; if they have no delight in its sacred employments, what would an eternity of such days be? How would they be passed? Nothing can be clearer than that if we have no such happiness in a season of holy rest, and in holy employments here, we are wholly unprepared for heaven. To the Christian it is the subject of the highest joy in anticipation that heaven is to be "one long unbroken"sabbath - an eternity of successive Sabbath hours. But what to a sinner could be a more repulsive and gloomy prospect than such an eternal Sabbath?

\caps1 (5) i\caps0 f this be so, then what a melancholy view is furnished as to the actual preparation of the great mass of people for heaven! How is the Sabbath now spent? In idleness; in business; in traveling; in hunting and fishing; in light reading and conversation; in sleep; in visiting; in riding, walking, lounging, "ennui;"- in revelry and dissipation; in any and every way "except the right way;"in every way except in holy communion with God. What would the race be if once transported to heaven as they are! What a prospect would it be to this multitude to have to spend "an eternity"which would be but a prolongation of the Sabbath of holiness!

\caps1 (6) l\caps0 et those who love the Sabbath rejoice in the prospect of eternal rest in heaven. In our labor let us look to that world where wearisome toil is unknown; in our afflictions, let us look to that world where tears never fall; and when our hearts are pained by the violation of the Sabbath all around us, let us look to that blessed world where such violation will cease forever. It is not far distant. A few steps will bring us there. Of any Christian it may be said that perhaps his next Sabbath will be spent in heaven - near the throne of God.

Barnes: Heb 4:10 - -- For he that is entered into rest - That is, the man who is so happy as to reach heaven, will enjoy a rest similar to what God had when he finis...

For he that is entered into rest - That is, the man who is so happy as to reach heaven, will enjoy a rest similar to what God had when he finished the work of creation. It will be:

(1)\caps1     a\caps0 cessation from toil; and,

(2)\caps1     i\caps0 t will be a rest similar to that of God - the same kind of enjoyment, the same freedom from care, anxiety, and labor.

How happy then are they who have entered into heaven! Their toils are over. Their labors are done. Never again will they know fatigue. Never more will they feel anxious care. Let us learn then:

\caps1 (1) n\caps0 ot to mourn improperly for those who have left us and gone to heaven. Happy in the rest of God, why should not we rejoice? Why wish them back again in a world of toil!

\caps1 (2) l\caps0 et us in our toils look forward to the world of rest. Our labors will all be over. The weary man will lay down his burden; the exhausted frame will know fatigue no more. Rest is sweet at night after the toils of day; how much more sweet will it be in heaven after the toils of life! Let us.

\caps1 (3) l\caps0 abor while is is called today. Soon we shall cease from our work. All that we have to do is to be done soon. We shall soon cease from "our"work as God did from his. What we have to do for the salvation of children, brothers, sisters, friends, and for the world, is to be done soon. From the abodes of bliss we shall not be sent forth to speak to our kindred of the blessedness of that world, or to admonish our friends to escape from the place of despair. The pastor will not come again to warn and invite his people; the parent will not come again to tell his children of the Saviour and of heaven; the neighbor will not come to admonish his neighbor; compare Luk 16:24-29. We shall all have ceased from our work as God did from his; and never again shall we speak to a living friend to invite him to heaven.

Poole: Heb 4:1 - -- Heb 4:1-11 The rest of Christians to be attained by faith. Heb 4:12,13 The power of God’ s word. Heb 4:14-16 Having Jesus the Son of God for ...

Heb 4:1-11 The rest of Christians to be attained by faith.

Heb 4:12,13 The power of God’ s word.

Heb 4:14-16 Having Jesus the Son of God for our High Priest, we

must hold fast our profession, and come boldly unto

the throne of grace.

Let us therefore fear: the Spirit draws this counsel from the former sad event of unbelief in the progenitors of these Hebrews, who were shut out of an earthly Canaan by it, which was promised to them: hereon he adviseth them to avoid that sin which will have now as fearful a punishment, viz. the shutting them out of the heavenly Canaan, tendered and promised to believers in thee gospel. Fear is that affection of the soul, by which it avoideth and shunneth what is hurtful to it, and here carrieth it in a gracious and child-like care and jealousy of slighting the Father’ s promise, and coming short of heaven; it is a fear issuing from faith, Phi 2:12 .

Lest, a promise being left us lest the promise of God to men, who sware some should not enter, but promised others should, as Num 14:23,24,30,31 ; a promise of the most excellent, glorious, and heavenly rest made to believers, Isa 11:10 . This was graciously left or made to them by God; but kataleipomenhv here is an act of sin, lest we by sin should leave or reject God’ s promise of the better, as the Hebrews did of the literal, rest, by their unbelief and disobedience to God’ s law; and so is the proper object of fear, and therefore ought to have been read, lest the promise being left behind.

Of entering into his rest of a free entrance into heaven, and enjoying a glorious rest with God there.

Any of you should seem to come short of it: he would have it the fear of all, that not one soul tnight be endangered by it; so as not in any measure to slight such a promise, nor as much as to seem so, flying from the very appearance of evil, 1Th 5:22 ; usterhkenai , a metaphor taken from racers, where any are outrun and left behind; noting the miserable state of such Christians who profess to run to heaven, but never do so as to obtain it, 1Co 9:24-26 . Alas, he that falleth short of heaven, reacheth home to hell!

Poole: Heb 4:2 - -- For unto us was the gospel preached, as well as unto them: the reason enforcing the former counsel is, their having mutually the same means, the one ...

For unto us was the gospel preached, as well as unto them: the reason enforcing the former counsel is, their having mutually the same means, the one as the other, and if they fear not, may be guilty of the same sin; for the Hebrews and the whole church were evangelized by the outward publishing to them, and their professed reception of, the glad tidings of salvation by God the Son incarnate, who was to lead them in the way to God’ s eternal rest; which if they had been truly evangelized and transformed by, they could never have been shut out of God’ s rest; the same gospel being preached to both their forefathers and them, though more gloriously revealed to the latter, 2Co 3:10,11 . For the gospel was preached to Abraham and to his offspring, that in his eminent Seed, the Lord Jesus Christ all nations should be blessed, Gen 22:18 ; compare Joh 8:56 . He was the Angel of the covenant that was Lord of God’ s hosts, and was to lead them into the literal and heavenly Canaan, Exo 23:20 Jos 5:13-15 Isa 11:10 . So that none entered into either of God’ s rests but by him alone, who so testifieth by himself, Joh 5:39,46 , and by his Spirit, Act 15:11 .

But the word preached did not profit them: the gospel was so preached to them, that they did or might hear it, Rom 10:14,15 ; compare Psa 92:4 Isa 52:7 ; yet did it not prove effectual to many of those Hebrews, to bring them either into the literal or heavenly Canaan, but they came short of God’ s rest in both; they not performing what he required, he by an irreversible sentence excluded them: see Heb 3:17,19 .

Not being mixed with faith in them that heard it sugkekramenov a metaphor taking from mixing things in the stomach, as meat and drink, without the concoction of which there can be no nourishing the body; setting forth the sin of these Hebrews, who never received nor mixed this gospel which they heard with a sincere faith in their souls, so as, being digested thereby, it might be united with it. Thus that which was the mighty power and wisdom of God to salvation to those who believed, was a word of condemnation and eternal death to unbelievers, 1Co 1:18 1Pe 2:2,3 .

Poole: Heb 4:3 - -- For we which have believed do enter into rest: a further reason setting home this counsel, was the certain benefit of our care in believing; for that...

For we which have believed do enter into rest: a further reason setting home this counsel, was the certain benefit of our care in believing; for that the community of real Christians, partakers and exercisers of the same precious faith, as Paul himself, 2Pe 1:1 , have the same privilege as believing Caleb and Joshua had, Num 14:24,30 , to enter into God’ s rest; initially having peace with God now, and his love shed abroad in their hearts by the Holy Ghost, witnessing their reconciliation, justification, renovation, adoption, so as they rejoice in hope of the glory of God, Rom 5:1,2,5 ; and are by believing and obedience making out to the attainment of the final and complete rest of God in heaven, of which they are afraid to fall short.

As he said, As I have sworn in my wrath: God himself confirms this by his oath, Heb 3:11,18 Ps 95:11 . At the same time that he excludeth all unbelievers from entering in, he inclusively and by consequence sweareth that all believers do and shall enter in.

If they shall enter into my rest: that rest which David there speaks of was not God’ s rest on the seventh day from the creation after the finishing of God’ s works, nor the temporal rest in the land of Canaan which the Jews had, and were past, as these Hebrews might suggest; but another rest to come, either in the world to come, Heb 2:5 , or in the heavenly rest in glory, which he takes occasion further to explain to them.

Although the works were finished from the foundation of the world: kai toi some render as a particle of exception, although, as if it intended, although God’ s rest is some where meant of his rest after the finishing of the works of creation, yet here God speaks of the rest of Canaan, a type of the heavenly one: others, that God swore they should not enter into his rest, although God’ s works were done, and the rest were ready, because of their unbelief. Others render it, and indeed he said and spake of the same heavenly rest, long before he spake of the rest of Canaan, even upon the finishing of his works from the foundation of the world: which seems most agreeable to the Spirit’ s design here.

Poole: Heb 4:4 - -- For he spake in a certain place of the seventh day on this wise the Spirit proves, that the rest mentioned by David, Psa 95:11 , is not meant the sev...

For he spake in a certain place of the seventh day on this wise the Spirit proves, that the rest mentioned by David, Psa 95:11 , is not meant the seventh day’ s rest, because spoken three thousand years after that rest was past; but this rest of which he speaks was to come, though spoken of and known then: for Moses had spoken of it in a well known place to them, Gen 2:1-3 , and this when he wrote of the seventh day, which was eminently noting the sabbath, and a type of God’ s most excellent rest which he sware unto believers.

And God did rest the seventh day from all his works: God doth not here rest as if he were weary, Isa 40:28 , but ceased from the creation of all kind of things he purposed to make, but not from their propagation and his providence about them, Act 17:25 . And this he did on the seventh day, which he instituted a sabbath for his people, Gen 2:3 ; which resting day may type out the eternal rest of angels and men, when their work of obedience is finished: and yet was not God’ s rest spoken of in the Psalm, nor promised in the gospel to believers, for this was yet to come; whereas the seventh day’ s rest was entered into from the foundation of the world.

Poole: Heb 4:5 - -- And in this place again: kai here is not so much copularive, connecting an instance of David to the same purpose of that of Moses about the seventh ...

And in this place again: kai here is not so much copularive, connecting an instance of David to the same purpose of that of Moses about the seventh day’ s rest from the creation; but discretive, joining an instance of another rest of God different from the seventh day’ s rest. Moses spake of this, but David here of a further rest; for in Psa 95:11 , David spake not of the seventh day, but of God’ s last and eternal rest.

If they shall enter into my restei here is affirmative, as appears by comparing Heb 4:3 and Heb 4:6 , that these shall have a real and full possession in the future after David’ s time of this rest, and therefore different from Moses’ s rest so long past before. The word rest in the Hebrew is not the same in the text of Moses and David; Gen 2:2,3 , it is tbv in Psa 95:11 , ythwnm this of David noting the full, eternal, comfortable rest of souls in glory, sworn by God to believers in the gospel.

Poole: Heb 4:6 - -- The Spirit having demonstrated, that God’ s rest sworn to believers in the gospel, and mentioned by David, could not be the seventh day’ s...

The Spirit having demonstrated, that God’ s rest sworn to believers in the gospel, and mentioned by David, could not be the seventh day’ s rest; proceeds to prove likewise, that it could not be the rest of Israel in the land of Canaan, since that was entered into four hundred years before he wrote by the Spirit of this better rest, since those unbelieving Israel that entered into Canaan never entered into this rest.

Seeing therefore it remaineth that some must enter therein forasmuch then as a rest to come is spoken of, and that some believers must have a real and full possession of the glorious rest offered to them in the gospel, as David foretold: see Heb 4:9-11 .

And they to whom it was first preached entered not in because of unbelief the unbelieving Israel, who had the glad tidings of this rest preached unto them by Moses and by David, &c., yet entered not into it, though they entered into and lived in Canaan, because of their disobedience and unbelief. Then it follows Canaan’ s rest and this cannot be all one, and the latter only is intended by David here.

Poole: Heb 4:7 - -- Again, he limiteth a certain day, saying in David: this is a further proof, that David did not mean or intend the rest of the Jews in Canaan, in the ...

Again, he limiteth a certain day, saying in David: this is a further proof, that David did not mean or intend the rest of the Jews in Canaan, in the Psa 95:1-11 , from the determined time of it; as if the Spirit had said: Besides what I have proved, take another argument; Again I argue. God by the prophet setteth out, and severeth from all other time, a certain stated day, from which the rest spoken of is cleared, and of it testifieth by him, Psa 95:7,8 .

To-day, after so long a time after four hundred years past of Israel’ s rest in Canaan, which was a long time, doth David say of to-day, a time present, then and further to be extended, even the gospel day, in David’ s time, and after it; not in Joshua’ s, for that was past long before.

As it is said, To-day if ye will hear his voice, harden not your hearts ye ought to-day to hear, receive, and believe the gospel of God’ s rest, and not by unbelief to turn your hearts from the voice of God in the gospel.

Poole: Heb 4:8 - -- This is the improvement of the former instance, Heb 4:7 . If Joshua, by bringing Israel into Canaan, had given rest to all believers, then God would...

This is the improvement of the former instance, Heb 4:7 . If Joshua, by bringing Israel into Canaan, had given rest to all believers, then God would not by David have spoken of another day and state of rest to come. Joshua was a type of Jesus bringing believers into the true rest of the heavenly Canaan, as he did Israel into a literal one, Act 7:45 .

For if Jesus had given them rest if that of Canaan was the full and perfect rest of believers, which was given them by him.

Then would he not afterward have spoken of another day then God himself would not have spoken by David of a better and heavenly rest promised believers in the gospel; of which spiritual and eternal one, both God’ s seventh-day sabbath, and the rest of Canaan, were but fainter shadows and types. The expostulation is vehemently denying it.

Poole: Heb 4:9 - -- Here the Spirit concludes from his former proofs, that there is a more excellent rest revealed to faith in the gospel, which is remaining, future, a...

Here the Spirit concludes from his former proofs, that there is a more excellent rest revealed to faith in the gospel, which is remaining, future, and to come, and will surely and most certainly do so; though it be behind, yet it will be enjoyed. A sabbatism, which is a state and season of a most glorious rest, see Heb 4:10shall be enjoyed by sincere believers, the true Israel of God, of whom he is the Proprietor, and who are for their eternal state so excellently holy, and of so Divine a nature, that he is not ashamed to be called their God. They have an entrance here into the initials of this sabbatism in internal peace, and the glorious liberty of the children of God; and by it are secured of their full possession of it in the eternal inheritance of the saints in light, Col 1:12,13 1Pe 1:3-5 Rev 14:13 .

Poole: Heb 4:10 - -- This proveth the foregoing consequence of a rest remaining, from the nature of a true rest, which is a resting from all labours, which the Israelite...

This proveth the foregoing consequence of a rest remaining, from the nature of a true rest, which is a resting from all labours, which the Israelites did not in Canaan, therefore it is yet to come. For every true believer who hath full possession of God’ s rest, where God is satisfying of them in bliss, they rest in his loves, of which the sabbath and Canaan were but types.

He also hath ceased from his own works such true Christians have ceased and rested from all their sinful works and labours, as works of callings, miseries, anxieties, and sufferings of any kind, resting from them perfectly and perpetually, having finished all his work of evangelical obedience through them.

As God did from his they have rested not in a parity of rest, or work in kind, but as God from his own in likeness of order, his work going before rest, and of rest fitted for believers by him conformable to his own. Some refer these words and the relative he to our Lord Jesus Christ, as Head of his body, the church of true believers; and that the parallel runs between God the Father and him in the works of the old and new creation, which works were good and complete in their different kinds, in their cessation from them, and their rest in their respective sabbaths, both days being founded thereon; and that believers shall be conformable to their Head, treading in his steps in doing and suffering, and then in rest.

PBC: Heb 4:1 - -- Entering God’s Sabbath Rest Heb 4:1-13 Augustine, a fourth century bishop in North Africa, wrote in his Confessions, " O Lord, Thou hast made us fo...

Entering God’s Sabbath Rest Heb 4:1-13

Augustine, a fourth century bishop in North Africa, wrote in his Confessions, " O Lord, Thou hast made us for thyself, and our hearts are restless until they find their rest in Thee." Restlessness of heart! That’s the condition of man when he is out of touch and out of fellowship with his God. In a word, inner restlessness is the product of unbelief. Only God can satisfy the deepest needs of the soul; only He can fill the God-shaped vacuum of the heart. Though people attempt to achieve peace and contentment of soul by the relentless pursuit of wealth, pleasure, or leisure, such diversions only compound their inner frustration. Unbelief, the quest for satisfaction apart from God is the thief that steals our rest.

In Heb 4:1-16, the writer reminds his weary Christian brothers of one of the most important lessons in Jewish history- the forty year trek in the wilderness that ended in the demise of the multitude who had escaped from Egypt. Because they disbelieved God, all but Joshua and Caleb perished in the wilderness, prior to entering God’s promised rest in the land of Canaan.

Why did they fall in the wilderness? Because of unbelief. {Heb 3:19} They heard God’s word through Moses, but they failed to heed God’s word: " The word preached did not profit them, not being mixed with faith in them that heard it" .{Heb 4:2} They " hardened their hearts," resisting the message of God’s faithful servant Moses, and devoted themselves instead to the habit of complaining and murmuring about the difficulties to which they were subjected in the wilderness.

Because they persisted in this rebellious attitude, preoccupied with the past life in Egypt, embittered by present hardships, and uncommitted to the future God had chosen for them, God swore in His wrath, " They shall not enter into my rest."

What can we learn from this scenario about " unbelief?" We can learn that unbelief is a matter of distrusting the God who has proven himself faithful; it is a matter of disregarding His word. It is also an attitude that is preoccupied with the past, an attitude that looks longingly to the past, opting for personal safety instead of obedience to God. Unbelief may take the initial form of reluctance to trust God, a kind of " slowness of heart" that hesitates to take a risk. This is the kind of unbelief expressed by the father who cried out with tears, " Lord I believe; help thou my unbelief." {Mr 9:24}

This " reluctance" or hesitancy to believe, however, is not the kind of unbelief for which the Israelites were destroyed in the wilderness. Their problem was not reluctance, but rebellion. They refused to believe God in spite of evidence that merited their faith. Unbelief, in other words, is a deliberate refusal to submit to the God who has proven Himself trustworthy.

Why does the writer warn the Hebrew Christians about the danger of unbelief? In the pressure cooker of persecution, they were beginning to talk of going back to their former religion. The writer compares their situation, consequently, to the wilderness wanderings of their forefathers. Beware, he says, of the subtle tendency to begin to murmur and complain about your current trials. Beware of the attitude that begins to look backward instead of forward. The promised land, God’s Canaan of " spiritual rest," is ahead. Unbelief will rob you of the sabbath rest God has in store for your soul.

The word translated " rest" refers to the cessation of labor. It is the kind of rest God Himself enjoyed on the seventh day of creation. {Heb 4:4} It is the ultimate sabbath, the reprieve from internal struggles that plague and torment the soul, to which the weekly sabbaticals as well as the rest Joshua gave the Jews when he led them into Canaan’s land pointed. {Heb 4:8} It is a blessed acquiescence in the arms of the One who has said, " Come unto me all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest." {Mt 11:28} It is the quiet peace of a soul that has found solace in God that it could not find in self or in the world. This is a rest available to every believer, a rest of such inestimable value that Christians should " labor" to attain it, {Heb 4:11} and " fear" lest they should miss it. {Heb 4:1} Where there is hardness and unbelief in our hearts, our God, through His word, will reveal it. {Heb 4:12-13} Let us, then, learn from the failures of those in the wilderness. Let us tenaciously resist the hard heart of unbelief. Let us humble ourselves when his word is proclaimed and reverently " hear His voice."  {Heb 4:7} And let us laboriously pursue the blessing of rest He has promised us. Until we adopt this attitude- until the thoughts and intents of our hearts are right before Him- our hearts will be restless.

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Haydock: Heb 4:1 - -- Let us, therefore, fear, &c. St. Paul continues his exhortation to them, not to be like the incredulous Jews, and so to be excluded from the place o...

Let us, therefore, fear, &c. St. Paul continues his exhortation to them, not to be like the incredulous Jews, and so to be excluded from the place of eternal rest. (Witham)

Haydock: Heb 4:2 - -- To us....hath been declared, as well as to them. That is, as the riches of the country of Chanaan [Canaan], was told by Josue [Joshua] and Caleb to ...

To us....hath been declared, as well as to them. That is, as the riches of the country of Chanaan [Canaan], was told by Josue [Joshua] and Caleb to the people, but they would not believe them; so the happiness of the kingdom of heaven has been preached by us to you: but the word they heard (literally, the word of hearing ) did not profit them, not being mixed, or received with faith: let not this be your case. (Witham) ---

As the want of a firm faith was the cause of the punishment of the Israelites, of their privation of a promised inheritance, so Christians will be eternally excluded from the kingdom promised them, unless they steadily believe and obey the gospel of Jesus Christ. The reason who so few profit of the word, is because few take care to meditate on it, to digest it, and as it were, incorporate it with themselves by proper considerations.

Haydock: Heb 4:3 - -- It is faith that opens heaven; but faith animated by charity, nourished by good works, and perfected by mortification of the senses. God only enters ...

It is faith that opens heaven; but faith animated by charity, nourished by good works, and perfected by mortification of the senses. God only enters into his rest after the accomplishment of his works, and shall we expect to enter before we accomplish what he has given us to do? Let us fear, but in hoping; let us hope, but in labouring. ---

The works....were finished. [1] This place is the same, and equally obscure in the Greek as in the Latin text. The apostle here examines what David, as a prophet, could mean, when he said of some: they shall not enter, or, if they shall enter into my rest. His argument is this: David could not prophesy of that rest, by which God, after he had created all things, (Genesis ii. 2.) is said to have rested the seventh day, when he had finished the works of creation. Nor could David speak of that other time of resting, which was promised and given to the Israelites, when, having conquered all their enemies, they were introduced by Jesus, or Josue [Joshua], into the promised land of Chanaan [Canaan]; for these two rests were passed long before his prophesy: therefore David must speak of some rest that was to come afterwards, when he said: To-day, if you shall hear his voice, harden not your hearts, &c. Therefore it must needs follow that some day of rest, some sabbatism, as he calls it, after his time, must remain for the people of God, that should not harden their hearts: and from hence he concludes that David had in view that eternal rest of happiness which the Messias was to obtain for us, a rest without end in the kingdom of heaven. ---

Let us hasten, therefore, or as it is in the Greek, let us make it our endeavour, to gain that place of rest, by our persevering in faith and good works, and take heed not to be excluded with the unbelievers. (Witham)

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[BIBLIOGRAPHY]

Operibus ab institutione mundi perfectis, Greek: kai toi ton ergon apo kataboles kosmou genethenton.

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Gill: Heb 4:1 - -- Let us therefore fear,.... Not with a fear of wrath and damnation; nor with a fear of diffidence and distrust of the power, grace, and goodness of God...

Let us therefore fear,.... Not with a fear of wrath and damnation; nor with a fear of diffidence and distrust of the power, grace, and goodness of God; but with a cautious fear, a godly jealousy, a careful circumspection, and watchfulness:

lest a promise being left us of entering into his rest; not the land of Canaan, the type of heaven, but rather heaven itself, the ultimate glory: there is a rest of the body in the grave, from work, service, and labour, and from distempers and diseases, where it rests under the guardianship of the Spirit, until the resurrection morn; and there is a rest of the soul before the resurrection, in the arms of Christ, with whom it immediately is, upon its departure from the body; and there is a rest both of soul and body after the resurrection, from sin, from afflictions, from Satan's temptations, from unbelief, doubts, and fears, and from all enemies: and this may be called the rest of God, because he is the author and giver of it; and it will lie much in communion with him; and besides, heaven is the place of God's rest, Isa 66:1 and the possession and enjoyment of the heavenly glory is often signified by an entering into it: and there is a promise of this, which is left in Christ's hands, and shall never fail; though some who have hoped for it may come short of it, or at least seem to do so: but rather a rest under the Gospel dispensation is here intended, since it is a rest believers enter into now, Heb 4:3 and since the Gospel church is represented as a state of peace and rest, Isa 11:6 and which lies in a more clear and comfortable application of the blood and righteousness of Christ to the saints; in a freedom from a spirit of bondage to fear, and from the yoke of carnal ordinances, and in the enjoyment of Gospel privileges and ordinances; and this is God's rest, which he has provided for New Testament saints, and into which they enter by faith, and a profession of it; and the Gospel is the promise or declaration which was left among these Hebrews, and in the world, to encourage them so to do: lest

any of you should seem to come short of it; either of the promise, or the rest promised; which if understood of the heavenly glory, the sense is, that though true believers shall not come short of that, yet they may "seem" to others to do so; and therefore should be careful of their lives and conversations, that they might not seem to come short; and this they should do, for the glory of God, the honour of Christ and his Gospel, and the good of others; but if the rest, and the promise of it, intend the Gospel and its dispensation, the meaning is, that saints should be concerned so to behave, that they might not seem to fail of the doctrine of the grace of God, and to be disappointed of that rest and peace promised in it. One of Stephens's copies read, lest "any of us"; which seems most agreeable both to what goes before, and follows.

Gill: Heb 4:2 - -- For unto us was the Gospel preached,.... The Gospel is the good news and glad tidings of salvation by Christ; and this may be said to be preached, whe...

For unto us was the Gospel preached,.... The Gospel is the good news and glad tidings of salvation by Christ; and this may be said to be preached, when men preach not themselves, nor read lectures of morality, nor mix law and Gospel together, nor make justification and salvation to be by works, nor set persons to make their peace with God, or get an interest in Christ; but when they preach Christ and salvation alone by him; and so it was preached to the Hebrews, and that more fully, and with more clearness, power, and success than formerly; and which is a privilege and blessing; and is sometimes blessed for the conviction of sinners, for regeneration, for the implanting of faith, and the comfort of believers. The words may be rendered, we were evangelized; as such may be said to be, who have a spirit of liberty, in opposition to a spirit of bondage; who live by faith on Christ alone; who derive their peace and comfort, not from their works, but from him; whose repentance and obedience are influenced by the love of God; and who desire to perform all duties aright, and depend on none: now though this was true of the apostle and others, yet is not the sense here, because of what follows,

as well as unto them, or "even as they"; for though the Gospel was preached to the Israelites in the wilderness, in the ministry of Moses, and by types and sacrifices; yet they were not evangelized by it, or cast into a Gospel mould, or brought into a Gospel spirit: however, it was preached unto them; which shows the antiquity of it; the sameness of the method of salvation in all ages; the necessity of salvation by Christ, and the unity of Christ's church under different dispensations:

but the word preached did not profit them; that is, the Gospel, which is here called the word of hearing, as it may be rendered; because it is and may be heard; and there is a necessity of hearing, in order to faith in Christ: the word signifies a rumour, or report: the Gospel is a report of Christ, his person and offices; of his great love to sinners, and of what he has done for them; but though it is a word of hearing, a report made, and the word preached, yet to some it is unprofitable; it has no good effect upon them; yea, it is the savour of death unto death to them, and the aggravation of condemnation; and the reason of the inefficacy and unprofitableness of the word to the Israelites was, its

not being mixed with faith in them that heard it; the Gospel is as food, and faith is the hand that receives it, and takes it, and tastes of it, and eats it, and concocts and digests it; and when this is the case, it is profitable and nourishing; but when it is otherwise, it is not. The Alexandrian copy, the Complutensian edition, and five of Beza's ancient copies, and as many of Stephens's, with others, read, "they were not mixed" referring it not to the word, but to persons; and so read the Arabic and Ethiopic versions: and the sense is, that the generality of the Israelites did not join themselves in faith, in believing in God, to Caleb and Joshua; who hearkened to the Lord, and received and obeyed his word; and so the word became useless to them: there ought to be an union or conjunction of the saints, and the bond of this union is love; and the thing in which they unite is faith, believing in Christ, and the doctrine of faith, which is but one; and though the word may be profitable to others who are not in the communion of the saints; yet forsaking the assembly of the saints, and not constantly attending with them, or not mixing with them continually in public worship, is one reason of the unprofitable hearing of the word when it is preached to them.

Gill: Heb 4:3 - -- For we which have believed do enter into rest,.... Not eternal rest; all believers shall enjoy this, and they only; but this is not now, or at present...

For we which have believed do enter into rest,.... Not eternal rest; all believers shall enjoy this, and they only; but this is not now, or at present enjoyed, unless things future may be said to be present, because of faith in them, and the certainty of them but spiritual rest in Christ under the Gospel dispensation, which is a rest from the burden of the law of Moses, and from all toil and labour for life, and salvation by works, and lies in an enjoyment of much inward peace of soul, notwithstanding the world's troubles and Satan's temptations; and such who believe the word or Gospel preached, and Christ in it, not with a general and historical high, or only in profession, but with the heart, and in truth, these enjoy this rest; they are kept in perfect peace, and have much spiritual ease and comfort: this character distinguishes them from the unbelieving Israelites of old, and from present hypocrites and formal professors:

as he said, as I have sworn in wrath, if they shall enter into my rest; the words are in Psa 95:11, and are before cited in Heb 3:11; see Gill on Heb 3:11, they entered not in because of unbelief; none but believers enter into spiritual rest. The apostle applies this proof to his design, by removing all other rests, and particularly by showing that does not mean God's rest from the works of creation:

although the works were finished from the foundation of the world; that is, though the works of creation, that God designed to make, were finished and perfected within the first six days of the world, and then God rested, or ceased to work in a creative way; yet this is not the rest designed in the passage of Scripture cited, nor is it that rest which believers enter into.

Gill: Heb 4:4 - -- For he spake in a certain place,.... Gen 2:2 that is, Moses, the penman of that book spoke, or God by him: of the seventh day on this wise; of the ...

For he spake in a certain place,.... Gen 2:2 that is, Moses, the penman of that book spoke, or God by him:

of the seventh day on this wise; of the seventh day of the world, or from the creation of the heavens and the earth:

and God did rest the seventh day from all his works: of creation, but not of providence; for in them he works hitherto; nor does this rest suppose labour with fatigue and weariness, and ease and refreshment from it; only cessation from working in a creative way, and the utmost delight, complacency and satisfaction in what he had done. The Alexandrian copy leaves out the phrase, "the seventh day".

Gill: Heb 4:5 - -- And in this place again,.... In Psa 95:11 he speaks again of another rest distinct from that on the seventh day; which, and not the latter, is what be...

And in this place again,.... In Psa 95:11 he speaks again of another rest distinct from that on the seventh day; which, and not the latter, is what believers under the Gospel dispensation enter into:

if they shall enter into my rest: that is, unbelievers shall not enter into it; as the unbelieving Israelites did not enter into the typical rest, so neither shall any unbeliever enter into the Gospel rest, the antitype of the former.

Gill: Heb 4:6 - -- Seeing therefore it remaineth,.... It follows by just consequence, that some must enter therein; for God's swearing concerning some, that they shou...

Seeing therefore it remaineth,.... It follows by just consequence,

that some must enter therein; for God's swearing concerning some, that they should not enter into his rest, supposes that others should: and

they to whom it was first preached; to whom the Gospel was first preached, namely, the Israelites in the wilderness: entered not in because of unbelief; See Heb 3:19.

Gill: Heb 4:7 - -- Again he limiteth a certain day,.... Since the seventh day of the creation was a day of rest which God entered into, and not man; and since the land o...

Again he limiteth a certain day,.... Since the seventh day of the creation was a day of rest which God entered into, and not man; and since the land of Canaan was a typical rest, which the unbelieving Israelites did not enter into, because of unbelief; and yet there must be persons, and there must be a time for them to enter into the true rest which God has left a promise of; therefore he has limited, fixed, and appointed a certain day, the Gospel dispensation, for believers to enter into it:

saying in David; or by David, who was the penman of the 95th psalm, as may be learned from hence; and this is agreeably to, and confirms a rule which the Jews give, that those psalms which are without a title were written by David g; the Spirit of God spake in him and by him, and plainly pointed out another day of rest from the above mentioned:

today, after so long a time; as two thousand five hundred years from the first seventh day to the time of Moses, and five hundred years from the times of Moses and Joshua, to his:

as it is said; the Alexandrian copy reads, "as it is before said", or, "above said", as the Vulgate Latin, and Syriac versions; that is, in Psa 95:7 before cited, Heb 3:7

today if you will hear his voice, harden not your hearts; See Gill on Heb 3:7, Heb 3:8.

Gill: Heb 4:8 - -- For if Jesus had given them rest,.... That is, Joshua; for Hosheah, Joshua, and Jesus, are one and the same name; or Jesus himself, as two of Stephens...

For if Jesus had given them rest,.... That is, Joshua; for Hosheah, Joshua, and Jesus, are one and the same name; or Jesus himself, as two of Stephens's copies read; and so Joshua is called Jesus by the Septuagint interpreters on Exo 17:10 and other places where he is mentioned; and also, by Josephus h, and Philo i the Jew. The Syriac version, lest any should mistake this for Jesus Christ, adds, "the son of Nun": who is certainly the person designed, as the apostle's reasoning shows; who was an eminent type of Jesus Christ: there is an agreement in their names, both signify a saviour, Joshua was a temporal saviour, Christ a spiritual one; and in their office they were both servants; and in their qualifications for their office, such as wisdom, courage, faithfulness, and integrity. Joshua was a type of Christ in many actions of his life; in the miracles he wrought, or were wrought for him; in the battles he fought, and the victories he obtained; in saving Rahab and her family; in receiving the Gibeonites, who came submissively to him; and in leading the children of Israel into Canaan's land, which he divided to them by lot: but though he brought them into a land of rest, into the typical rest, where they had rest for a while from their temporal enemies, yet he did not give them the true spiritual rest: had he,

then would he not afterward have spoken of another day; that is, God, in David's time, and by him, would not have so long after appointed another day of rest; meaning, not any particular day of the week, but the whole Gospel dispensation, in the times of the Messiah; wherefore the apostle concludes as follows.

Gill: Heb 4:9 - -- Ver. 9 There remaineth therefore a rest for the people of God.] Not all mankind; nor the people of the Jews only; rather the people of God, both Jews ...

Ver. 9 There remaineth therefore a rest for the people of God.] Not all mankind; nor the people of the Jews only; rather the people of God, both Jews and Gentiles, under the New Testament; the people whom God has loved with a special love, has chose in Christ, and given to him, with whom he has made a covenant in him, and whom Christ saves from their sins, and calls by his grace; and the rest which remains for them is not a new sabbath day, but a sabbatism: and this does not so mush design eternal rest in heaven; though the Jews often call that a sabbath; the 92nd psalm they say is a psalm for the time to come, tbv wlkv, "which is all sabbath," and the rest of eternal life k: but rather this intends the spiritual rest believers have in Christ under the Gospel dispensation, which they now enter into, and of which the apostle had been treating; and as for the word "remaineth," this does not denote the futurity of it, but the apostle’s inference or consequence from what he had said; and the sense is, it remains therefore, and is a certain fact, a clear consequence from what has been observed, that there is another rest distinct from God’s rest on the seventh day, and from the rest in the land of Canaan; which were both typical ones of the present rest the saints now enjoy: so the Jews call the world to come the times of the Messiah, lwdgh tbv, "the great sabbath" l.

Gill: Heb 4:10 - -- For he that is entered into his rest, &c. This is to be understood not of believers, nor of their entrance into the Gospel rest, or into eternal rest,...

For he that is entered into his rest, &c. This is to be understood not of believers, nor of their entrance into the Gospel rest, or into eternal rest, but of the Lord Jesus Christ; for a single person is only spoken of, and not many, as in Heb 4:3 and the rest entered into is his own, which cannot be said of any other; and besides, a comparison is run between his entrance into rest, and ceasing from his works, and God's resting the seventh day, and ceasing from his, which can only agree with him; and besides, Christ is immediately spoken of, and at large described in Heb 4:12. Now he entered into his rest, not when he was laid in the grave, but when he rose from the dead, and ascended into heaven, and sat down at the right hand of God, as having done his work; and this is the ground and foundation of the saints' rest under the Gospel dispensation; for these words are a reason of the former, as appears by the causal particle "for": and now being at rest,

he also hath ceased from his own works, as God did from his; Christ had works to do, as preaching the Gospel, performing miracles, and obtaining the redemption and salvation of his people: these were given him to do, and he undertook them, and he has finished them; and so ceases from them, as never to repeat them more; they being done effectually, stand in no need of it; and so as to take delight and complacency in them; the pleasure of the Lord prospering in, his hand, the effects of his labour answering his designs; just as God ceased from the works of creation, when he had finished them.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Heb 4:1 Grk “let us fear.”

NET Notes: Heb 4:2 A few mss (א and a few versional witnesses) have the nominative singular participle συγκεκερασ...

NET Notes: Heb 4:3 Grk “although the works,” continuing the previous reference to God. The referent (God) is specified in the translation for clarity.

NET Notes: Heb 4:4 A quotation from Gen 2:2.

NET Notes: Heb 4:5 Grk “and in this again.”

NET Notes: Heb 4:7 Grk “today if you hear his voice.”

NET Notes: Heb 4:8 Grk “he”; the referent (God) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

NET Notes: Heb 4:10 Grk “his”; the referent (God) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

Geneva Bible: Heb 4:2 ( 1 ) For unto us was the gospel preached, as well as unto them: but the word preached did not profit them, not being ( a ) mixed with faith in them t...

Geneva Bible: Heb 4:3 ( 2 ) For we which have believed do enter into rest, as he said, As I have sworn in my wrath, if they shall enter into my rest: although the works wer...

Geneva Bible: Heb 4:8 For if ( b ) Jesus had given them rest, then would he not afterward have spoken of another day. ( b ) He speaks of Joshua the son of Nun: and as the ...

Geneva Bible: Heb 4:10 ( c ) For he that is entered into his rest, he also hath ceased from his own works, as God [did] from his. ( c ) As God rested the seventh day, so mu...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Heb 4:1-16 - --1 The rest of Christians is attained by faith.12 The power of God's word.14 By our high priest Jesus, the Son of God,16 we may and must go boldly to t...

Combined Bible: Heb 4:1-3 - --Superior to Joshua.    (Hebrews 4:1-3)    The exhortation begun by the apostle in Hebrews 3:12 is not completed till Hebrews 4:...

Combined Bible: Heb 4:4-10 - --Superior to Joshua.    (Hebrews 4:3-10)    There has been so much confusion in the minds of commentators, so many conflicting i...

Maclaren: Heb 4:3 - --The Rest Of Faith We which have believed do enter into rest'--Heb. 4:3. Do enter'--but on a hundred gravestones you will read He entered into rest' o...

Maclaren: Heb 4:9-10 - --Entrance Into God's Rest There remaineth therefore a rest to the people of God. 10. For He that is entered into His rest, He also hath ceased from Hi...

MHCC: Heb 4:1-10 - --The privileges we have under the gospel, are greater than any had under the law of Moses, though the same gospel for substance was preached under both...

Matthew Henry: Heb 4:1-10 - -- Here, I. The apostle declares that our privileges by Christ under the gospel are not only as great, but greater than those enjoyed under the Mosaic ...

Barclay: Heb 4:1-10 - --In a complicated passage like this it is better to try to grasp the broad lines of the thought before we look at any of the details. The writer is re...

Constable: Heb 3:1--5:11 - --II. The High Priestly Character of the Son 3:1--5:10 The writer proceeded to take up the terms "merciful" and "f...

Constable: Heb 4:1-14 - --C. The Possibility of Rest for God's People 4:1-14 The writer returned again from exhortation to exposition. He now posed the alternatives of rest and...

College: Heb 4:1-16 - --HEBREWS 4 E. A SABBATH REST FOR THE PEOPLE OF GOD (4:1-5) 1 Therefore, since the promise of entering his rest still stands, let us be careful that n...

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Commentary -- Other

Evidence: Heb 4:4 Creation in six days . Most theologians throughout church history agree that in using the phrase "the evening and the morning were the first day," the...

Evidence: Heb 4:7 Isa 55:6 exhorts the lost to " seek the Lord while He may be found, call upon Him while He is near." God’s offer of grace will end, so sinners are...

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Introduction / Outline

Robertson: Hebrews (Book Introduction) The Epistle to the Hebrews By Way of Introduction Unsettled Problems Probably no book in the New Testament presents more unsettled problems tha...

JFB: Hebrews (Book Introduction) CANONICITY AND AUTHORSHIP.--CLEMENT OF ROME, at the end of the first century (A.D), copiously uses it, adopting its words just as he does those of the...

JFB: Hebrews (Outline) THE HIGHEST OF ALL REVELATIONS IS GIVEN US NOW IN THE SON OF GOD, WHO IS GREATER THAN THE ANGELS, AND WHO, HAVING COMPLETED REDEMPTION, SITS ENTHRONE...

TSK: Hebrews 4 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Heb 4:1, The rest of Christians is attained by faith; Heb 4:12, The power of God’s word; Heb 4:14, By our high priest Jesus, the Son of...

Poole: Hebrews 4 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 4

MHCC: Hebrews (Book Introduction) This epistle shows Christ as the end, foundation, body, and truth of the figures of the law, which of themselves were no virtue for the soul. The grea...

MHCC: Hebrews 4 (Chapter Introduction) (Heb 4:1-10) Humble, cautious fear is urged, lest any should come short of the promised rest, through unbelief. (Heb 4:11-16) Arguments and motives t...

Matthew Henry: Hebrews (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Epistle to the Hebrews Concerning this epistle we must enquire, I. Into the divine authority of it...

Matthew Henry: Hebrews 4 (Chapter Introduction) The apostle, having in the foregoing chapter set forth the sin and punishment of the ancient Jews, proceeds in this, I. To declare that our privil...

Barclay: Hebrews (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO THE LETTER TO THE HEBREWS God Fulfils Himself In Many Ways Religion has never been the same thing to all men. "God," as Tennyson sai...

Barclay: Hebrews 4 (Chapter Introduction) The Rest We Dare Not Miss (Heb_4:1-10) The Terror Of The Word (Heb_4:11-13) The Perfect High Priest (Heb_4:14-16)

Constable: Hebrews (Book Introduction) Introduction Historical background The writer said that he and those to whom he wrote ...

Constable: Hebrews (Outline)

Constable: Hebrews Hebrews Bibliography Andersen, Ward. "The Believer's Rest (Hebrews 4)." Biblical Viewpoint 24:1 (April 1990):31...

Haydock: Hebrews (Book Introduction) THE EPISTLE OF ST. PAUL, THE APOSTLE, TO THE HEBREWS. INTRODUCTION. The Catholic Church hath received and declared this Epistle to be part of ...

Gill: Hebrews (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO HEBREWS That this epistle was written very early appears from hence, that it was imitated by Clement of Rome, in his epistle to the...

Gill: Hebrews 4 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO HEBREWS 4 From the punishment inflicted on the unbelieving Hebrews, who died in the wilderness, and entered not into the land of re...

College: Hebrews (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION It is difficult to overestimate the significance of Hebrews for understanding the nature of the new covenant. No other document in the N...

College: Hebrews (Outline) OUTLINE I. JESUS IS SUPERIOR TO THE ANGELS - 1:1-14 A. The Preeminence of the Son - 1:1-4 B. The Son Superior to the Angels - 1:5-14 II. ...

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