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Text -- Hebrews 9:1-10 (NET)

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Context
The Arrangement and Ritual of the Earthly Sanctuary
9:1 Now the first covenant, in fact, had regulations for worship and its earthly sanctuary. 9:2 For a tent was prepared, the outer one, which contained the lampstand, the table, and the presentation of the loaves; this is called the holy place. 9:3 And after the second curtain there was a tent called the holy of holies. 9:4 It contained the golden altar of incense and the ark of the covenant covered entirely with gold. In this ark were the golden urn containing the manna, Aaron’s rod that budded, and the stone tablets of the covenant. 9:5 And above the ark were the cherubim of glory overshadowing the mercy seat. Now is not the time to speak of these things in detail. 9:6 So with these things prepared like this, the priests enter continually into the outer tent as they perform their duties. 9:7 But only the high priest enters once a year into the inner tent, and not without blood that he offers for himself and for the sins of the people committed in ignorance. 9:8 The Holy Spirit is making clear that the way into the holy place had not yet appeared as long as the old tabernacle was standing. 9:9 This was a symbol for the time then present, when gifts and sacrifices were offered that could not perfect the conscience of the worshiper. 9:10 They served only for matters of food and drink and various washings; they are external regulations imposed until the new order came.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Aaron a son of Amram; brother of Moses,son of Amram (Kohath Levi); patriarch of Israel's priests,the clan or priestly line founded by Aaron


Dictionary Themes and Topics: Works | Types | Temple, Solomon's | Tabernacle | Symbols and Similitudes | PARABLE | Offerings | Mercy-seat | Holy Ghost | High priest | HEBREWS, EPISTLE TO THE | Commandments, the Ten | Clean | Cherub | Carnal | Baptism, Christian | BAPTISM (LUTHERAN DOCTRINE) | Almond | ATONEMENT, THE DAY OF | ARK OF THE COVENANT | 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 , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Barclay , Constable , College

Other
Critics Ask , Evidence

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Robertson: Heb 9:1 - -- Even the first covenant ( kai hē prōtē ). Kai (even) is doubtful. No word for covenant with prōte (cf. Heb 8:7).

Even the first covenant ( kai hē prōtē ).

Kai (even) is doubtful. No word for covenant with prōte (cf. Heb 8:7).

Robertson: Heb 9:1 - -- Had ( eiche ). Imperfect active, used to have.

Had ( eiche ).

Imperfect active, used to have.

Robertson: Heb 9:1 - -- Ordinances ( dikaiōmata ). Regulations (from dikaioō ) as in Luk 1:6; Rom 5:16.

Ordinances ( dikaiōmata ).

Regulations (from dikaioō ) as in Luk 1:6; Rom 5:16.

Robertson: Heb 9:1 - -- Of divine service ( latreias ). No word for "divine,"though worship is meant as in Rom 9:4; Phi 3:3. Genitive case.

Of divine service ( latreias ).

No word for "divine,"though worship is meant as in Rom 9:4; Phi 3:3. Genitive case.

Robertson: Heb 9:1 - -- And its sanctuary, a sanctuary of this world ( to te hagion kosmikon ). By to hagion the author describes the whole sanctuary (Exo 36:3; Num 3:38) ...

And its sanctuary, a sanctuary of this world ( to te hagion kosmikon ).

By to hagion the author describes the whole sanctuary (Exo 36:3; Num 3:38) like tōn hagiōn in Heb 8:2. Kosmikon is a late adjective (Aristotle, Plutarch) from kosmos , relating to this world, like epi gēs (upon earth) of Heb 8:4. It is in the predicate position, not attributive.

Robertson: Heb 9:2 - -- A tabernacle the first ( skēnē hē prōtē ). See Heb 8:2 for skēnē . Large tents usually had two divisions (the outer and the inner or th...

A tabernacle the first ( skēnē hē prōtē ).

See Heb 8:2 for skēnē . Large tents usually had two divisions (the outer and the inner or the first and the second). Note prōtē for the first of two as with the first covenant (Heb 8:7, Heb 8:13; Heb 9:1). The large outer tent was entered first and was called Hagia (Holy), the first division of the tabernacle. The two divisions are here termed two tabernacles.

Robertson: Heb 9:2 - -- Was prepared ( kateskeuasthē ). First aorist passive of kataskeuazō . See Heb 3:3. For the furniture see Exod 25; 26. Three items are named here:...

Was prepared ( kateskeuasthē ).

First aorist passive of kataskeuazō . See Heb 3:3. For the furniture see Exod 25; 26. Three items are named here: the candlestick (hē luchnia , late word for luchnion ) or lampstand, necessary since there were no windows (Exo 25:31-39); the table (hē trapeza , old word, Mat 15:27) for the bread (Exo 25:23-30; Lev 24:6 of pure gold); the shewbread (hē prothesis tōn artōn ) as in Exo 25:30; Exo 40:23; Lev 24:5-9. Probably a hendiadys for the table with the loaves of God’ s Presence.

Robertson: Heb 9:3 - -- After the second veil ( meta to deuteron katapetasma ). The first veil opened from outside into the Holy Place, the second veil opened from the Holy ...

After the second veil ( meta to deuteron katapetasma ).

The first veil opened from outside into the Holy Place, the second veil opened from the Holy Place into the Holy of Holies (Hagia Hagiōn ). The word katapetasma is from katapetannumi , to spread down, and we have already had it in Heb 6:19. Cf. also Mat 27:51.

Robertson: Heb 9:4 - -- Having a golden censer ( chrusoun echousa thumiatērion ). The present active participle echousa (feminine singular) agrees with skēnē (the ...

Having a golden censer ( chrusoun echousa thumiatērion ).

The present active participle echousa (feminine singular) agrees with skēnē (the Holy of Holies). It is not certain whether thumiatērion here means censer or altar of incense. In the lxx (2Chron 26:19; Exod 8:11; 4Macc 7:11) it means censer and apparently so in the inscriptions and papyri. But in Philo and Josephus it means altar of incense for which the lxx has thusiastērion tou thumiatos (Exod 30:1-10). Apparently the altar of incense was in the Holy Place, though in Exo 30:1-10 it is left quite vague. B puts it in Heb 9:2. So we leave the discrepancy unsettled. At any rate the altar of incense was used for the Holy of Holies ("its ritual associations,"Dods).

Robertson: Heb 9:4 - -- The ark of the covenant ( tēn kibōton tēs diathēkēs ). A box or chest four feet long, two and a half broad and high (Exo 25:10.). The Scotc...

The ark of the covenant ( tēn kibōton tēs diathēkēs ).

A box or chest four feet long, two and a half broad and high (Exo 25:10.). The Scotch have a "meal-ark."

Robertson: Heb 9:4 - -- Wherein ( en hēi ). In the ark. There were three treasures in the ark of the covenant (a pot of manna, Aaron’ s rod, the tables of the covenan...

Wherein ( en hēi ).

In the ark. There were three treasures in the ark of the covenant (a pot of manna, Aaron’ s rod, the tables of the covenant). For the pot of manna (golden added in the lxx) see Exo 16:32-34. For Aaron’ s rod that budded (hē blastēsasa , first aorist active participle of blastanō ) see Num 17:1-11. For the tables of the covenant see Exo 25:16.; Exo 31:18; Deu 9:9; Deu 10:5. Not definitely clear about these items in the ark, but on front, except that 1Ki 8:9 states that it did contain the tables of the covenant. For plakes (tables) see 2Co 3:3 (only other N.T. example).

Robertson: Heb 9:5 - -- Above it ( huperanō autēs ). Up above, in local sense as in Eph 4:10, with ablative case autēs (it, the ark).

Above it ( huperanō autēs ).

Up above, in local sense as in Eph 4:10, with ablative case autēs (it, the ark).

Robertson: Heb 9:5 - -- Cherubim of glory ( Cheroubein doxēs ). Hebrew word (dual form), two in number, made of gold (Exo 25:18-22). They are called zōa (living creatu...

Cherubim of glory ( Cheroubein doxēs ).

Hebrew word (dual form), two in number, made of gold (Exo 25:18-22). They are called zōa (living creatures) in the lxx (Isaiah 6:2f.; Ezek 1:5-10; 10:5-20).

Robertson: Heb 9:5 - -- Overshadowing ( kataskiazonta ). Present active participle of kataskiazō , old verb to shadow down on, cover with shade, only here in the N.T.

Overshadowing ( kataskiazonta ).

Present active participle of kataskiazō , old verb to shadow down on, cover with shade, only here in the N.T.

Robertson: Heb 9:5 - -- The mercy seat ( to hilastērion ). The pinions of the Cherubim spread over the rectangular gold slab on top of the ark termed the mercy seat. Here ...

The mercy seat ( to hilastērion ).

The pinions of the Cherubim spread over the rectangular gold slab on top of the ark termed the mercy seat. Here the adjective hilastērios has to mean mercy seat, the place, not the propitiatory gift or propitiation, as in Rom 3:25 (Deissmann, Bible Studies , pp. 124-35).

Robertson: Heb 9:5 - -- Severally ( kata meros ). In detail, distributive use of kata with meros (part).

Severally ( kata meros ).

In detail, distributive use of kata with meros (part).

Robertson: Heb 9:6 - -- These things having been thus prepared ( toutōn houtōs kateskeuasmenōn ). Genitive absolute with the perfect passive participle of kataskeuazo...

These things having been thus prepared ( toutōn houtōs kateskeuasmenōn ).

Genitive absolute with the perfect passive participle of kataskeuazō for which verb see Heb 9:2. A mere summary has been made of the furniture.

Robertson: Heb 9:6 - -- Go in ( eisiasin ). Present active indicative of eiseimi , to go in, old verb, in N.T. only here, Act 3:3; Act 21:18, Act 21:26.

Go in ( eisiasin ).

Present active indicative of eiseimi , to go in, old verb, in N.T. only here, Act 3:3; Act 21:18, Act 21:26.

Robertson: Heb 9:6 - -- Accomplishing ( epitelountes ). Present active participle of epiteleō for which see Heb 8:5.

Accomplishing ( epitelountes ).

Present active participle of epiteleō for which see Heb 8:5.

Robertson: Heb 9:7 - -- Alone ( monos ). Predicate adjective with ho archiereus .

Alone ( monos ).

Predicate adjective with ho archiereus .

Robertson: Heb 9:7 - -- Once in the year ( hapax tou eniautou ). Once for each year (not pote , at any time) with genitive of time.

Once in the year ( hapax tou eniautou ).

Once for each year (not pote , at any time) with genitive of time.

Robertson: Heb 9:7 - -- Not without blood ( ou chōris haimatos ). According to Lev 16:14. Not even he could enter the second tent (Holy of Holies) without blood.

Not without blood ( ou chōris haimatos ).

According to Lev 16:14. Not even he could enter the second tent (Holy of Holies) without blood.

Robertson: Heb 9:7 - -- The errors of the people ( tōn tou laou agnoēmatōn ). Late word from agnoeō , not to know (Heb 5:2), only here in the N.T., but in lxx, papyr...

The errors of the people ( tōn tou laou agnoēmatōn ).

Late word from agnoeō , not to know (Heb 5:2), only here in the N.T., but in lxx, papyri, and inscriptions where a distinction is drawn between errors (agnoēmata ) and crimes (harmartēmata ). In Gen 43:12 agnoēma is "an oversight."But these sins of ignorance (agnoēmata ) were sins and called for atonement. See Heb 10:26 for willful sinning.

Robertson: Heb 9:8 - -- The Holy Ghost this signifying ( touto dēlountos tou pneumatos tou hagiou ). Genitive absolute with present active participle of dēloō , to mak...

The Holy Ghost this signifying ( touto dēlountos tou pneumatos tou hagiou ).

Genitive absolute with present active participle of dēloō , to make plain. Used as in Heb 12:27.

Robertson: Heb 9:8 - -- The way into the Holy place ( tēn tōn hagiōn hodon ). Here as in Heb 9:12, Heb 9:25 tōn hagiōn is used for the very Presence of God as in...

The way into the Holy place ( tēn tōn hagiōn hodon ).

Here as in Heb 9:12, Heb 9:25 tōn hagiōn is used for the very Presence of God as in Heb 8:2 and is in the objective genitive. Hodon is the accusative of general reference with the infinitive.

Robertson: Heb 9:8 - -- Hath not yet been made manifest ( mēpō pephanerōsthai ). Perfect passive infinitive of phaneroō , to make plain (phaneros ) in indirect disc...

Hath not yet been made manifest ( mēpō pephanerōsthai ).

Perfect passive infinitive of phaneroō , to make plain (phaneros ) in indirect discourse after dēlountos with negative mēpō .

Robertson: Heb 9:8 - -- While as the first tabernacle is yet standing ( eti tēs prōtēs skēnēs echousēs stasin ). Another genitive absolute with present active pa...

While as the first tabernacle is yet standing ( eti tēs prōtēs skēnēs echousēs stasin ).

Another genitive absolute with present active participle of echō (having standing stasin ), "the first tabernacle still having a place."The veil at the entrance kept the people out of the first tent as the second veil (Heb 9:3) kept the priests out of the Holy of Holies (the very Presence of God).

Robertson: Heb 9:9 - -- Which ( hētis ). "Which very thing,"the first tent (tēs prōtēs skēnēs , division of the tabernacle), a parenthesis and explanation.

Which ( hētis ).

"Which very thing,"the first tent (tēs prōtēs skēnēs , division of the tabernacle), a parenthesis and explanation.

Robertson: Heb 9:9 - -- A parable ( parabolē ). Only in the Synoptic Gospels in the N.T. and Heb 9:9; Heb 11:19. See note on Mat 13:3 for the word (from paraballō , to p...

A parable ( parabolē ).

Only in the Synoptic Gospels in the N.T. and Heb 9:9; Heb 11:19. See note on Mat 13:3 for the word (from paraballō , to place alongside). Here like tupos (type or shadow of "the heavenly reality,"Moffatt).

Robertson: Heb 9:9 - -- For the time now present ( eis ton kairon ton enestēkota ). "For the present crisis "(kairon , not aiōna , age, not chronon , time). Perfect acti...

For the time now present ( eis ton kairon ton enestēkota ).

"For the present crisis "(kairon , not aiōna , age, not chronon , time). Perfect active articular (repeated article) participle of enistēmi (intransitive), the age in which they lived, not the past, not the future. See 1Co 3:22; Rom 8:38 for contrast between enestōta and mellonta . This age of crisis, foreshadowed by the old tabernacle, pointed on to the richer fulfilment still to come.

Robertson: Heb 9:9 - -- According to which ( kath' hēn ). Here the relative refers to parabolē just mentioned, not to skēnēs . See Heb 5:1; Heb 8:3.

According to which ( kath' hēn ).

Here the relative refers to parabolē just mentioned, not to skēnēs . See Heb 5:1; Heb 8:3.

Robertson: Heb 9:9 - -- As touching the conscience ( kata suneidēsin ). For suneidēsis see 1Co 8:10; 1Co 10:17; Rom 2:15. This was the real failure of animal sacrifice...

As touching the conscience ( kata suneidēsin ).

For suneidēsis see 1Co 8:10; 1Co 10:17; Rom 2:15. This was the real failure of animal sacrifice (Heb 10:1-4).

Robertson: Heb 9:9 - -- Make the worshipper perfect ( teleiōsai ton latreuonta ). First aorist active infinitive (Heb 2:10). At best it was only ritual or ceremonial purif...

Make the worshipper perfect ( teleiōsai ton latreuonta ).

First aorist active infinitive (Heb 2:10). At best it was only ritual or ceremonial purification (Heb 7:11), that called for endless repetition (Heb 10:1-4).

Robertson: Heb 9:10 - -- Only with meats and drinks and divers washings ( monon epi brōmasin kai pomasin kai diaphorois baptismois ). The parenthesis of the Revised Version...

Only with meats and drinks and divers washings ( monon epi brōmasin kai pomasin kai diaphorois baptismois ).

The parenthesis of the Revised Version here is unnecessary. The use of epi here with the locative case is regular, "in the matter of"(Luk 12:52; Joh 12:16; Act 21:24). What ritual value these Levitical sacrifices had was confined to minute regulations about diet and ceremonial cleansing (clean and unclean). For "divers"(diaphorois , late adjective, in N.T. only in Heb 1:4; Heb 8:6; Heb 9:10; Rom 12:6) say "different"or "various."Baptismois is, of course, the Jewish ceremonial immersions (cf. Mar 7:4; Exo 29:4; Lev 11:25, Lev 11:28.; Num 8:7; Rev 6:2).

Robertson: Heb 9:10 - -- Carnal ordinances ( dikaiōmasin sarkos ). But the correct text is undoubtedly simply dikaiōmata sarkos (nominative case), in apposition with do...

Carnal ordinances ( dikaiōmasin sarkos ).

But the correct text is undoubtedly simply dikaiōmata sarkos (nominative case), in apposition with dōra te kai thusiai (gifts and sacrifices). See Heb 9:1 for dikaiōmata .

Robertson: Heb 9:10 - -- Imposed ( epikeimena ). Present middle or passive participle of epikeimai , old verb to lie upon (be laid upon). Cf. 1Co 9:16.

Imposed ( epikeimena ).

Present middle or passive participle of epikeimai , old verb to lie upon (be laid upon). Cf. 1Co 9:16.

Robertson: Heb 9:10 - -- Until a time of reformation ( mechri kairou diorthōseōs ). Definite statement of the temporary nature of the Levitical system already stated in H...

Until a time of reformation ( mechri kairou diorthōseōs ).

Definite statement of the temporary nature of the Levitical system already stated in Heb 7:10-17; Heb 8:13 and argued clearly by Paul in Gal 3:15-22. Diorthōsis is a late word, here alone in N.T. (from diorthoō , to set right or straight), used by Hippocrates for making straight misshapen limbs like anorthoō in Heb 12:12. Here for reformation like diorthōma (reform) in Act 24:2. Christianity itself is the great Reformation of the current Judaism (Pharisaism) and the spiritual Judaism foreshadowed by the old Abrahamic promise (see Gal 3; Rom 9).

Vincent: Heb 9:1 - -- Ordinances of divine service ( δικαιώματα λατρείας ) For δικαίωμα ordinance , see on Rom 5:16. For λατρει...

Ordinances of divine service ( δικαιώματα λατρείας )

For δικαίωμα ordinance , see on Rom 5:16. For λατρεία service , see on Luk 1:74; see on Rev 22:3; see on Phi 3:3; see on 2Ti 1:3. The meaning is ordinances directed to or adapted for divine service.

Vincent: Heb 9:1 - -- A worldly sanctuary ( τὸ ἅγιον κοσμικόν ) The A.V. misses the force of the article. Rend. and its sanctuary a san...

A worldly sanctuary ( τὸ ἅγιον κοσμικόν )

The A.V. misses the force of the article. Rend. and its sanctuary a sanctuary of this world . Τὸ ἅγιον in the sense of sanctuary only here. Elsewhere the plural τὰ ἅγια . of this world in contrast with the heavenly sanctuary to be mentioned later.

Vincent: Heb 9:2 - -- Was made ( κατεσκευάσθη ) See on Heb 3:3.

Was made ( κατεσκευάσθη )

See on Heb 3:3.

Vincent: Heb 9:2 - -- The first The first tabernacle , that is, the first division of the tabernacle. He speaks of the two divisions as two tabernacles.

The first

The first tabernacle , that is, the first division of the tabernacle. He speaks of the two divisions as two tabernacles.

Vincent: Heb 9:2 - -- Candlestick ( λυχνία ) Rend. lampstand . See on Mat 5:15; see on Rev 1:12. Description in Exo 25:31-37. Comp. Zec 4:1-14.

Candlestick ( λυχνία )

Rend. lampstand . See on Mat 5:15; see on Rev 1:12. Description in Exo 25:31-37. Comp. Zec 4:1-14.

Vincent: Heb 9:2 - -- The table and the shewbread ( ἡ τράπεξα καὶ ἡ πρόθεσις τῶν ἀρτῶν ) See Exo 25:23-30; Exo 35:13; 2Ch 2...

The table and the shewbread ( ἡ τράπεξα καὶ ἡ πρόθεσις τῶν ἀρτῶν )

See Exo 25:23-30; Exo 35:13; 2Ch 2:4; 2Ch 13:11. The table and the loaves are treated as one item. Lit. the table and the setting forth of the loaves , that is, the table with its loaves set forth . See on Mar 2:26; see on Act 11:23.

Vincent: Heb 9:2 - -- Which is called the sanctuary ( ἥτις - ἅγια ) Since it was thus furnished. See on Heb 8:2.

Which is called the sanctuary ( ἥτις - ἅγια )

Since it was thus furnished. See on Heb 8:2.

Vincent: Heb 9:3 - -- After the second veil ( μετὰ τὸ δεύτερον καταπέτασμα ) According to Exo 26:31-37 there were two veils, the one b...

After the second veil ( μετὰ τὸ δεύτερον καταπέτασμα )

According to Exo 26:31-37 there were two veils, the one before the door of the tent and the other before the sanctuary. After passing the first veil and entering the tent, the worshipper would see before him the second veil behind which was the holy of holies. The writer calls this also a tabernacle , Heb 9:2.

Vincent: Heb 9:4 - -- The golden censer ( χρυσοῦν θυμιατήριον ) The noun N.T.o . It may mean either censer or altar of incense . In lxx th...

The golden censer ( χρυσοῦν θυμιατήριον )

The noun N.T.o . It may mean either censer or altar of incense . In lxx the altar of incense is called θυσιαστήριον θυμιάματος Exo 30:1, Exo 30:27; Lev 4:7 : comp. Luk 1:11. Θυμιατήριον is used of a censer , 2Ch 26:19; Eze 8:11; 4 Macc. 7:11. These are the only instances of the word in lxx: accordingly, never in lxx of the altar of incense. Josephus uses it for both. The golden censer is not mentioned in O.T. as a part of the furniture of the holy of holies. The facts of the case then are as follows: (a) according to Exodus 31 the incense-altar was in the holy place, not in the holy of holies; (b) Philo and Josephus use θυμιατήριον for the altar of incense; (c) there is no mention in O.T. of a censer set apart for the day of atonement; (d) the high priest was to enter with incense, so that the ark might be veiled by the smoke (Lev 16:12). Hence the censer could not have been kept in the holy of holies; (e) the writer clearly speaks of an abiding-place of the θυμιατήριον in a particular division of the tabernacle. There is evidently a discrepancy, probably owing to the fact that the writer drew his information from the O.T. by which he might have been led into error. Thus Exo 26:35, there are mentioned in the holy place without the veil only the candlestick and the table, and not the incense-altar. Again, when the standing-place of the incense altar was mentioned, the expressions were open to misconstruction: see Exo 30:6; Exo 40:5. On the day of atonement, the incense-altar, like the most holy place, was sprinkled with blood. This might have given rise to the impression that it was in the holy of holies.

Vincent: Heb 9:4 - -- With gold ( χρυσίῳ ) Properly, wrought gold.

With gold ( χρυσίῳ )

Properly, wrought gold.

Vincent: Heb 9:4 - -- Wherein ( ἐν ᾗ ) But according to Exo 16:34; Num 17:10, neither the pot of manna nor Aaron's rod was in the ark, but " before the test...

Wherein ( ἐν ᾗ )

But according to Exo 16:34; Num 17:10, neither the pot of manna nor Aaron's rod was in the ark, but " before the testimony" ; while in Exo 25:16, Moses was commanded to put only the tables of the law into the ark; and in 1Ki 8:9 it is said of the ark in the temple, " there was nothing in the ark save the two tables of stone." The writer follows the rabbinical tradition that the pot of manna and the rod were inside of the ark.

Vincent: Heb 9:4 - -- Golden pot ( στάμος χρυσῆ ) Σταμος , N.T.o , a few times in lxx, rare in Class. Golden is an addition of the lxx. Comp. Ex...

Golden pot ( στάμος χρυσῆ )

Σταμος , N.T.o , a few times in lxx, rare in Class. Golden is an addition of the lxx. Comp. Exo 16:33.

Vincent: Heb 9:5 - -- Cherubim of glory ( χερουβεὶν δόξης ) Setting forth or exhibiting the divine glory. The word signifies living creatures , an...

Cherubim of glory ( χερουβεὶν δόξης )

Setting forth or exhibiting the divine glory. The word signifies living creatures , and they are described as ζῶα . Hence usually with the neuter article τὰ . See Isa 6:2, Isa 6:3; Eze 1:5-10; 10:5-20, and comp. Rev 4:6-8. Nothing could be more infelicitous than the A.V. rendering of ζῶα beasts .

Vincent: Heb 9:5 - -- Shadowing the mercy-seat ( κατασκιάζοντα τὸ ἱλαστήριον ) Κατασκιάζειν , N.T.o , o lxx, occasionall...

Shadowing the mercy-seat ( κατασκιάζοντα τὸ ἱλαστήριον )

Κατασκιάζειν , N.T.o , o lxx, occasionally in Class. Throwing their shadow down upon the mercy-seat. For, ἱλασρήριον , see on Rom 3:25. Used in lxx to translate ëַּôֹøֶè , the place of covering sin , the throne of mercy above the ark.

Vincent: Heb 9:5 - -- Particularly ( κατὰ μέρος ) In detail; his main point being the twofold division of the tabernacle. The phrase N.T.o . Note the comp...

Particularly ( κατὰ μέρος )

In detail; his main point being the twofold division of the tabernacle. The phrase N.T.o . Note the completeness of the list of articles of furniture in the tabernacle, even to the inclusion of things which had no connection with worship; also the emphasis on the costliness of the articles - gold. The writer will say all that can be said for this transitory, shadowy tabernacle; but all that he can say about the costliness of the apparatus only emphasizes the inferior and unspiritual character of the worship. The vessels are superior to the service.

Vincent: Heb 9:6 - -- The inferiority of the ancient system was proved by the old tabernacle itself: by its division into two parts, both of which were inaccessible to the...

The inferiority of the ancient system was proved by the old tabernacle itself: by its division into two parts, both of which were inaccessible to the people.

Always ( διὰ παντὸς )

Rend. continually . The phrase is usually found in connection with matters involving relations to God - worship, sacrifice, etc. See Mat 18:10; Luk 24:53; Act 2:25; Act 10:2; 2Th 3:16; Heb 13:5.

Vincent: Heb 9:6 - -- Accomplishing ( ἐπιτελοῦντες ) See on Heb 8:5, and see on Gal 3:3. The verb is used of performing religious services by Herodotus...

Accomplishing ( ἐπιτελοῦντες )

See on Heb 8:5, and see on Gal 3:3. The verb is used of performing religious services by Herodotus. See i. 167; ii. 63, 122; iv. 186.

Vincent: Heb 9:7 - -- Errors ( ἀγνοημάτων ) Lit. ignorances . See on Heb 5:2.

Errors ( ἀγνοημάτων )

Lit. ignorances . See on Heb 5:2.

Vincent: Heb 9:8 - -- The Holy Ghost Speaking through the appliances and forms of worship. The intimation is that God intended to emphasize, in the old economy itself,...

The Holy Ghost

Speaking through the appliances and forms of worship. The intimation is that God intended to emphasize, in the old economy itself, the fact of his inaccessibility, in order to create the desire for full access and to prepare the way for this.

Vincent: Heb 9:8 - -- The way into the holiest of all ( τὴν τῶν ἁγίων ὁδὸν ) Lit. the way of the holies . For the construction comp...

The way into the holiest of all ( τὴν τῶν ἁγίων ὁδὸν )

Lit. the way of the holies . For the construction comp. ὸδὸν ἐθνῶν way of the Gentiles , Mar 10:5. The phrase N.T.o . Τῶν ἀγίων as in Heb 9:12, Heb 9:24, Heb 9:25; Heb 10:19.

Vincent: Heb 9:8 - -- While as the first tabernacle was yet standing ( ἔτι τῆς πρώτης σκηνῆς ἐχούσης στάσιν ) By the fir...

While as the first tabernacle was yet standing ( ἔτι τῆς πρώτης σκηνῆς ἐχούσης στάσιν )

By the first tabernacle is meant the first division . The point is that the division of the tabernacle showed the limitations of the Levitical system, and kept the people from coming directly to God. Of this limitation the holy place, just outside the second veil, was specially significant; for the holy place barred priests and people alike from the holy of holies. The priests could not pass out of it into the holy of holies; the people could not pass through it to that sanctuary, since they were not allowed in the holy place. The priests in the holy place stood between the people and God as revealed in the shrine. Εξούσης στάσιν , lit. had standing . The phrase N.T.o . Στάσις everywhere in N.T. except here, is used in its secondary sense of faction , sedition , insurrection . Here in its original sense. Note that the sense is not physical and local as the A.V. implies, but remained a recognized institution .

Vincent: Heb 9:9 - -- Which ( ἥτις ) The first division of the tabernacle. The double relative directs attention to the emphasis which belongs to the first tab...

Which ( ἥτις )

The first division of the tabernacle. The double relative directs attention to the emphasis which belongs to the first tabernacle. The way into the holiest was not yet manifest while the first tabernacle continued to be a recognized institution, seeing that the first tabernacle was a parable, etc.

Vincent: Heb 9:9 - -- A figure ( παραβολὴ ) Outside of the Synoptic Gospels, only here and Heb 11:19. Here of a visible symbol or type. See on Mat 13:3.

A figure ( παραβολὴ )

Outside of the Synoptic Gospels, only here and Heb 11:19. Here of a visible symbol or type. See on Mat 13:3.

Vincent: Heb 9:9 - -- For the time then present ( εικς τὸν καιρὸν τὸν ἐνεστηκότα ) Rend. now present, as contrasted with the " ti...

For the time then present ( εικς τὸν καιρὸν τὸν ἐνεστηκότα )

Rend. now present, as contrasted with the " time of reformation," Heb 9:10. See on these last days , Heb 1:2. Ἐις for ; with reference to ; applying to . Καιρὸς season is used instead of αἰὼν age , because " the time" is conceived by the writer as a critical point, - a turning-point, at which the old system is to take its departure. For ἐνεστηκότα present, see on Gal 1:4, and comp. Rom 8:38; 1Co 3:22.

Vincent: Heb 9:9 - -- In which ( καθ ' ἥν ) The A.V. wrongly assumes a reference to the tabernacle ; whereas the reference is to the parable . Rend. ac...

In which ( καθ ' ἥν )

The A.V. wrongly assumes a reference to the tabernacle ; whereas the reference is to the parable . Rend. according to which .

Vincent: Heb 9:9 - -- Were offered - could not ( προσφέρονται μὴ δυνάμεναι ) Rend. " are offered" or " are being offered " ; and f...

Were offered - could not ( προσφέρονται μὴ δυνάμεναι )

Rend. " are offered" or " are being offered " ; and for " could not," " cannot."

Vincent: Heb 9:9 - -- Make him that did the service perfect ( τελειῶσαι τὸν λατρεύοντα ) Rend. as Rev. " make the worshipper perfect." See...

Make him that did the service perfect ( τελειῶσαι τὸν λατρεύοντα )

Rend. as Rev. " make the worshipper perfect." See Heb 7:11.

Vincent: Heb 9:9 - -- As pertaining to the conscience ( κατὰ συνείδησιν ) Having shown that the division of the tabernacle proved the imperfection of...

As pertaining to the conscience ( κατὰ συνείδησιν )

Having shown that the division of the tabernacle proved the imperfection of the worship, the writer will now show that the Levitical ritual did not accomplish the true end of religion. The radical defect of the Levitical system was its inability to deal with the conscience , and thus bring about the " perfection" which is the ideal of true religion. That ideal contemplated the cleansing and renewal of the inner man; not merely the removal of ceremonial uncleanness, or the formal expiation of sins. Comp. Mat 23:25, Mat 23:26. For συνείδησις conscience , see on 1Pe 3:16.

Vincent: Heb 9:10 - -- The impotence of the gifts and sacrifices lay in the fact that they were only symbolic ordinances. Which stood in ( ἐπὶ ) The passage sho...

The impotence of the gifts and sacrifices lay in the fact that they were only symbolic ordinances.

Which stood in ( ἐπὶ )

The passage should be read thus: " according to which are offered gifts and sacrifices which cannot perfect the worshipper as touching the conscience, being mere ordinances of the flesh on the ground of (ἐπὶ resting upon ) meats," etc.

Vincent: Heb 9:10 - -- Meats and drinks and divers washings ( βρώμασιν καὶ πόμασιν καὶ διαφόροις βαπτισμοῖς ) Βρω...

Meats and drinks and divers washings ( βρώμασιν καὶ πόμασιν καὶ διαφόροις βαπτισμοῖς )

Βρώμασιν , clean and unclean meats . πόμασιν drinks , concerning which the Levitical law laid down no prescriptions except as to abstinence in the case of a Nazarite vow, and of the priests when they were about to officiate. See Num 6:3; Lev 10:9. For βαπτισμοῖς washings see on Heb 6:2.

Vincent: Heb 9:10 - -- And carnal ordinances ( δικαιώματα σαρκὸς ) Omit and . The phrase is a general description of meats , etc. Lit. ordinances...

And carnal ordinances ( δικαιώματα σαρκὸς )

Omit and . The phrase is a general description of meats , etc. Lit. ordinances of the flesh .

Vincent: Heb 9:10 - -- Imposed ( ἐπικείμενα ) Some interpreters find in this the suggestion of a burden , which these ceremonial observances assuredly ...

Imposed ( ἐπικείμενα )

Some interpreters find in this the suggestion of a burden , which these ceremonial observances assuredly were. Comp. Act 15:10. This, however, is not probable.

Vincent: Heb 9:10 - -- Until the time of reformation ( μέχρι καιροῦ διορθώσεως ) Διόρθωσις N.T.o , o lxx, occasionally in Class....

Until the time of reformation ( μέχρι καιροῦ διορθώσεως )

Διόρθωσις N.T.o , o lxx, occasionally in Class. Διόρθωμα correction , amendment , Act 24:2. Διόρθωσις lit. making straight : used by medical writers of straightening a distorted limb. The verb διορθοῦν (not in N.T.) in lxx of mending one's ways , Jer 7:3, Jer 7:5; Wisd. 9:18. Of setting up or establishing , Isa 16:5; Isa 42:7. " The time of reformation" is the Christian age, when God made with his people a better covenant. It was inaugurated by the death of Christ. See on Heb 1:2. The gifts and offerings were only provisional, to tide the people over to the better time.

Wesley: Heb 9:1 - -- a visible, material sanctuary, or tabernacle. Of this sanctuary he treats, Heb 9:2-5. Of those ordinances, Heb 9:6-10.

a visible, material sanctuary, or tabernacle. Of this sanctuary he treats, Heb 9:2-5. Of those ordinances, Heb 9:6-10.

Wesley: Heb 9:2 - -- The outward tabernacle. In which was the candlestick, and the table - The shewbread, shown continually before God and all the people, consisting of tw...

The outward tabernacle. In which was the candlestick, and the table - The shewbread, shown continually before God and all the people, consisting of twelve loaves, according to the number of the tribes, was placed on this table in two rows, six upon one another in each row. This candlestick and bread seem to have typified the light and life which are more largely dispensed under the gospel by Him who is the Light of the world, and the Bread of life.

Wesley: Heb 9:3 - -- The second veil divided the holy place from the most holy, as the first veil did the holy place from the courts.

The second veil divided the holy place from the most holy, as the first veil did the holy place from the courts.

Wesley: Heb 9:4 - -- Used by the high priest only, on the great day of atonement. And the ark, or chest, of the covenant - So called from the tables of the covenant contai...

Used by the high priest only, on the great day of atonement. And the ark, or chest, of the covenant - So called from the tables of the covenant contained therein.

Wesley: Heb 9:4 - -- The monument of God's care over Israel.

The monument of God's care over Israel.

Wesley: Heb 9:4 - -- The monument of the regular priesthood.

The monument of the regular priesthood.

Wesley: Heb 9:4 - -- The two tables of stone, on which the ten commandments were written by the finger of God the most venerable monument of all.

The two tables of stone, on which the ten commandments were written by the finger of God the most venerable monument of all.

Wesley: Heb 9:5 - -- Over which the glory of God used to appear. Some suppose each of these had four faces, and so represented the Three - One God, with the manhood assume...

Over which the glory of God used to appear. Some suppose each of these had four faces, and so represented the Three - One God, with the manhood assumed by the Second Person.

Wesley: Heb 9:5 - -- spread wings shadowing the mercy - seat - Which was a lid or plate of gold, covering the ark.

spread wings shadowing the mercy - seat - Which was a lid or plate of gold, covering the ark.

Wesley: Heb 9:6 - -- Every day.

Every day.

Wesley: Heb 9:6 - -- Lighting the lamps, changing the shewbread, burning incense, and sprinkling the blood of the sin offerings.

Lighting the lamps, changing the shewbread, burning incense, and sprinkling the blood of the sin offerings.

Wesley: Heb 9:7 - -- That is, sins of ignorance, to which only those atonements extended.

That is, sins of ignorance, to which only those atonements extended.

Wesley: Heb 9:8 - -- By this token.

By this token.

Wesley: Heb 9:8 - -- Into heaven.

Into heaven.

Wesley: Heb 9:8 - -- Not so clearly revealed. While the first tabernacle, and its service, were still subsisting - And remaining in force.

Not so clearly revealed. While the first tabernacle, and its service, were still subsisting - And remaining in force.

Wesley: Heb 9:9 - -- Tabernacle, with all its furniture and services.

Tabernacle, with all its furniture and services.

Wesley: Heb 9:9 - -- Or type, of good things to come Which cannot perfect the worshipper - Neither the priest nor him who brought the offering.

Or type, of good things to come Which cannot perfect the worshipper - Neither the priest nor him who brought the offering.

Wesley: Heb 9:9 - -- So that he should be no longer conscious of the guilt or power of sin. Observe, the temple was as yet standing.

So that he should be no longer conscious of the guilt or power of sin. Observe, the temple was as yet standing.

Wesley: Heb 9:10 - -- Till Christ came.

Till Christ came.

JFB: Heb 9:1 - -- Greek, "Accordingly then." Resuming the subject from Heb 8:5. In accordance with the command given to Moses, "the first covenant had," &c.

Greek, "Accordingly then." Resuming the subject from Heb 8:5. In accordance with the command given to Moses, "the first covenant had," &c.

JFB: Heb 9:1 - -- Not "has," for as a covenant it no longer existed, though its rites were observed till the destruction of Jerusalem.

Not "has," for as a covenant it no longer existed, though its rites were observed till the destruction of Jerusalem.

JFB: Heb 9:1 - -- Of divine right and institution.

Of divine right and institution.

JFB: Heb 9:1 - -- Worship.

Worship.

JFB: Heb 9:1 - -- Greek, "its (literally, 'the') sanctuary worldly," mundane; consisting of the elements of the visible world. Contrasted with the heavenly sanctuary. C...

Greek, "its (literally, 'the') sanctuary worldly," mundane; consisting of the elements of the visible world. Contrasted with the heavenly sanctuary. Compare Heb 9:11-12, "not of this building," Heb 9:24. Material, outward, perishing (however precious its materials were), and also defective religiously. In Heb 9:2-5, "the worldly sanctuary" is discussed; in Heb 9:6, &c., the "ordinances of worship." The outer tabernacle the Jews believed, signified this world; the Holy of Holies, heaven. JOSEPHUS calls the outer, divided into two parts, "a secular and common place," answering to "the earth and sea"; and the inner holiest place, the third part, appropriated to God and not accessible to men.

JFB: Heb 9:2 - -- Defining "the worldly tabernacle."

Defining "the worldly tabernacle."

JFB: Heb 9:2 - -- "the tabernacle."

"the tabernacle."

JFB: Heb 9:2 - -- Built and furnished.

Built and furnished.

JFB: Heb 9:2 - -- The anterior tabernacle.

The anterior tabernacle.

JFB: Heb 9:2 - -- Typifying light and life (Exo 25:31-39). The candlestick consisted of a shaft and six branches of gold, seven in all, the bowls made like almonds, wit...

Typifying light and life (Exo 25:31-39). The candlestick consisted of a shaft and six branches of gold, seven in all, the bowls made like almonds, with a knop and a flower in one branch. It was carried in Vespasian's triumph, and the figure is to be seen on Titus' arch at Rome. The table of shittim wood, covered with gold, was for the showbread (Exo 25:23-30).

JFB: Heb 9:2 - -- Literally, "the setting forth of the loaves," that is, the loaves set forth: "the show of the bread" [ALFORD]. In the outer holy place: so the Euchari...

Literally, "the setting forth of the loaves," that is, the loaves set forth: "the show of the bread" [ALFORD]. In the outer holy place: so the Eucharist continues until our entrance into the heavenly Holy of Holies (1Co 11:26).

JFB: Heb 9:2 - -- "which (tabernacle) is called the holy place," as distinguished from "the Holy of Holies."

"which (tabernacle) is called the holy place," as distinguished from "the Holy of Holies."

JFB: Heb 9:3 - -- Greek, "But."

Greek, "But."

JFB: Heb 9:3 - -- Behind; within.

Behind; within.

JFB: Heb 9:3 - -- There were two veils or curtains, one before the Holy of Holies (catapetasma), here alluded to, the other before the tabernacle door (calumma).

There were two veils or curtains, one before the Holy of Holies (catapetasma), here alluded to, the other before the tabernacle door (calumma).

JFB: Heb 9:3 - -- As opposed to "the true."

As opposed to "the true."

JFB: Heb 9:4 - -- The Greek, must not be translated "altar of incense," for it was not in "the holiest" place "after the second veil," but in "the holy place"; but as i...

The Greek, must not be translated "altar of incense," for it was not in "the holiest" place "after the second veil," but in "the holy place"; but as in 2Ch 26:19, and Eze 8:11, "censer": so Vulgate and Syriac. This GOLDEN censer was only used on the day of atonement (other kinds of censers on other days), and is therefore associated with the holiest place, as being taken into it on that anniversary by the high priest. The expression "which had," does not mean that the golden censer was deposited there, for in that case the high priest would have had to go in and bring it out before burning incense in it; but that the golden censer was one of the articles belonging to, and used for, the yearly service in the holiest place. He virtually supposes (without specifying) the existence of the "altar of incense" in the anterior holy place, by mentioning the golden censer filled with incense from it: the incense answers to the prayers of the saints; and the altar though outside the holiest place, is connected with it (standing close by the second veil, directly before the ark of the covenant), even as we find an antitypical altar in heaven. The rending of the veil by Christ has brought the antitypes to the altar, candlestick, and showbread of the anterior holy place into the holiest place, heaven. In 1Ki 6:22, Hebrew, "the altar" is said to belong to the oracle, or holiest place (compare Exo 30:6).

JFB: Heb 9:4 - -- Of shittim wood, that is, acacia. Not in the second temple, but in its stead was a stone basement (called "the stone of foundation"), three fingers hi...

Of shittim wood, that is, acacia. Not in the second temple, but in its stead was a stone basement (called "the stone of foundation"), three fingers high.

JFB: Heb 9:4 - -- "golden," added in the Septuagint, and sanctioned by Paul.

"golden," added in the Septuagint, and sanctioned by Paul.

JFB: Heb 9:4 - -- An omer, each man's daily portion. In 1Ki 8:9; 2Ch 5:10, it is said there was nothing in the ark of Solomon's temple save the two stone tables of the ...

An omer, each man's daily portion. In 1Ki 8:9; 2Ch 5:10, it is said there was nothing in the ark of Solomon's temple save the two stone tables of the law put in by Moses. But the expression that there was nothing THEN therein save the two tables, leaves the inference to be drawn that formerly there were the other things mentioned by the Rabbis and by Paul here, the pot of manna (the memorial of God's providential care of Israel) and the rod of Aaron, the memorial of the lawful priesthood (Num 17:3, Num 17:5, Num 17:7, Num 17:10). The expressions "before the Lord" (Exo 16:32), and "before the testimony" (Num 17:10) thus mean, "IN the ark." "In," however, may be used here (as the corresponding Hebrew word) as to things attached to the ark as appendages, as the book of the law was put "in the side of the ark," and so the golden jewels offered by the Philistines (1Sa 6:8).

JFB: Heb 9:4 - -- (Deu 9:9; Deu 10:2).

JFB: Heb 9:5 - -- Over "the ark of the covenant."

Over "the ark of the covenant."

JFB: Heb 9:5 - -- Representing the ruling powers by which God acts in the moral and natural world. (See on Eze 1:6; Eze 10:1). Hence sometimes they answer to the minist...

Representing the ruling powers by which God acts in the moral and natural world. (See on Eze 1:6; Eze 10:1). Hence sometimes they answer to the ministering angels; but mostly to the elect redeemed, by whom God shall hereafter rule the world and set forth His manifold wisdom: redeemed humanity, combining in, and with itself, the highest forms of subordinate creaturely life; not angels. They stand on the mercy seat, and on that ground become the habitation of God, from which His glory is to shine upon the world. They expressly say, Rev 5:8-10, "Thou hast redeemed us." They are there distinguished from the angels, and associated with the elders. They were of one piece with the mercy seat, even as the Church is one with Christ: their sole standing is on the blood-sprinkled mercy seat; they gaze down at it as the redeemed shall for ever; they are "the habitation of God through the Spirit."

JFB: Heb 9:5 - -- The cherubim were bearers of the divine glory, whence, perhaps, they derive their name. The Shekinah, or cloud of glory, in which Jehovah appeared bet...

The cherubim were bearers of the divine glory, whence, perhaps, they derive their name. The Shekinah, or cloud of glory, in which Jehovah appeared between the cherubim over the mercy seat, the lid of the ark, is doubtless the reference. THOLUCK thinks the twelve loaves of the showbread represent the twelve tribes of the nation, presented as a community before God consecrated to Him (just as in the Lord's Supper believers, the spiritual Israel, all partaking of the one bread, and becoming one bread and one body, present themselves before the Lord as consecrated to Him, 1Co 10:16-17); the oil and light, the pure knowledge of the Lord, in which the covenant people are to shine (the seven (lights), implying perfection); the ark of the covenant, the symbol of God's kingdom in the old covenant, and representing God dwelling among His own; the ten commandments in the ark, the law as the basis of union between God and man; the mercy seat covering the law and sprinkled with the blood of atonement for the collective sin of the people, God's mercy [in Christ] stronger than the law; the cherubim, the personified [redeemed] creation, looking down on the mercy seat, where God's mercy, and God's law, are set forth as the basis of creation.

JFB: Heb 9:5 - -- Greek, "the propitiatory": the golden cover of the ark, on which was sprinkled the blood of the propitiatory sacrifice on the day of atonement; the fo...

Greek, "the propitiatory": the golden cover of the ark, on which was sprinkled the blood of the propitiatory sacrifice on the day of atonement; the footstool of Jehovah, the meeting place of Him and His people.

JFB: Heb 9:5 - -- Conveniently: besides what met the eye in the sanctuary, there were spiritual realities symbolized which it would take too long to discuss in detail, ...

Conveniently: besides what met the eye in the sanctuary, there were spiritual realities symbolized which it would take too long to discuss in detail, our chief subject at present being the priesthood and the sacrifices. "Which" refers not merely to the cherubim, but to all the contents of the sanctuary enumerated in Heb 9:2-5.

JFB: Heb 9:6 - -- The use made of the sanctuary so furnished by the high priest on the anniversary of atonement.

The use made of the sanctuary so furnished by the high priest on the anniversary of atonement.

JFB: Heb 9:6 - -- Arranged.

Arranged.

JFB: Heb 9:6 - -- Twice at the least every day, for the morning and evening care of the lamps, and offering of incense (Exo 30:7-8).

Twice at the least every day, for the morning and evening care of the lamps, and offering of incense (Exo 30:7-8).

JFB: Heb 9:6 - -- Greek, "enter": present tense.

Greek, "enter": present tense.

JFB: Heb 9:7 - -- The tenth day of the seventh month. He entered within the veil on that day twice at least. Thus "once" means here on the one occasion only. The two, o...

The tenth day of the seventh month. He entered within the veil on that day twice at least. Thus "once" means here on the one occasion only. The two, or possibly more, entrances on that one day were regarded as parts of the one whole.

JFB: Heb 9:7 - -- (Heb 8:3).

(Heb 8:3).

JFB: Heb 9:7 - -- Greek, "offers."

Greek, "offers."

JFB: Heb 9:7 - -- Greek, "ignorances": "inadvertent errors." They might have known, as the law was clearly promulged, and they were bound to study it; so that their ign...

Greek, "ignorances": "inadvertent errors." They might have known, as the law was clearly promulged, and they were bound to study it; so that their ignorance was culpable (compare Act 3:17; Eph 4:18; 1Pe 1:14). Though one's ignorance may mitigate one's punishment (Luk 12:48), it does not wholly exempt from punishment.

JFB: Heb 9:8 - -- Moses himself did not comprehend the typical meaning (1Pe 1:11-12).

Moses himself did not comprehend the typical meaning (1Pe 1:11-12).

JFB: Heb 9:8 - -- By the typical exclusion of all from the holiest, save the high priest once a year.

By the typical exclusion of all from the holiest, save the high priest once a year.

JFB: Heb 9:8 - -- Heaven, the antitype.

Heaven, the antitype.

JFB: Heb 9:8 - -- The anterior tabernacle, representative of the whole Levitical system. While it (the first tabernacle, and that which represents the Levitical system)...

The anterior tabernacle, representative of the whole Levitical system. While it (the first tabernacle, and that which represents the Levitical system) as yet "has a standing" (so the Greek, that is, "has continuance": "lasts"), the way to heaven (the antitypical "holiest place") is not yet made manifest (compare Heb 10:19-20). The Old Testament economy is represented by the holy place, the New Testament economy by the Holy of Holies. Redemption, by Christ, has opened the Holy of Holies (access to heaven by faith now, Heb 4:16; Heb 7:19, Heb 7:25; Heb 10:19, Heb 10:22; by sight hereafter, Isa 33:24; Rev 11:19; Rev 21:2-3) to all mankind. The Greek for "not yet" (me po) refers to the mind of the Spirit: the Spirit intimating that men should not think the way was yet opened [TITTMANN]. The Greek negative, "ou po," would deny the fact objectively; "me po" denies the thing subjectively.

JFB: Heb 9:9 - -- "The which," namely, anterior tabernacle: "as being that which was" [ALFORD].

"The which," namely, anterior tabernacle: "as being that which was" [ALFORD].

JFB: Heb 9:9 - -- Greek, "parable": a parabolic setting forth of the character of the Old Testament.

Greek, "parable": a parabolic setting forth of the character of the Old Testament.

JFB: Heb 9:9 - -- "in reference to the existing time." The time of the temple-worship really belonged to the Old Testament, but continued still in Paul's time and that ...

"in reference to the existing time." The time of the temple-worship really belonged to the Old Testament, but continued still in Paul's time and that of his Hebrew readers. "The time of reformation" (Heb 9:10) stands in contrast to this, "the existing time"; though, in reality, "the time of reformation," the New Testament time, was now present and existing. So "the age to come," is the phrase applied to the Gospel, because it was present only to believers, and its fulness even to them is still to come. Compare Heb 9:11, "good things to come."

JFB: Heb 9:9 - -- Tabernacle, not time, according to the reading of the oldest manuscripts. Or translate, "according to which" parabolic representation, or figure.

Tabernacle, not time, according to the reading of the oldest manuscripts. Or translate, "according to which" parabolic representation, or figure.

JFB: Heb 9:9 - -- Greek, "are."

Greek, "are."

JFB: Heb 9:9 - -- Unbloody oblations.

Unbloody oblations.

JFB: Heb 9:9 - -- Greek, "cannot": are not able.

Greek, "cannot": are not able.

JFB: Heb 9:9 - -- Any worshipper. The Greek is "latreuein," serve God, which is all men's duty; not "leitourgein," to serve in a ministerial office.

Any worshipper. The Greek is "latreuein," serve God, which is all men's duty; not "leitourgein," to serve in a ministerial office.

JFB: Heb 9:9 - -- Perfectly remove the sense of guilt, and sanctify inwardly through love.

Perfectly remove the sense of guilt, and sanctify inwardly through love.

JFB: Heb 9:9 - -- "in respect to the (moral-religious) consciousness." They can only reach as far as the outward flesh (compare "carnal ordinances," Heb 9:10, Heb 9:13-...

"in respect to the (moral-religious) consciousness." They can only reach as far as the outward flesh (compare "carnal ordinances," Heb 9:10, Heb 9:13-14).

JFB: Heb 9:10 - -- Sacrifices.

Sacrifices.

JFB: Heb 9:10 - -- Consisted in [ALFORD]; or, "have attached to them" only things which appertain to the use of foods, &c. The rites of meats, &c., go side by side with ...

Consisted in [ALFORD]; or, "have attached to them" only things which appertain to the use of foods, &c. The rites of meats, &c., go side by side with the sacrifices [THOLUCK and WAHL]; compare Col 2:16.

JFB: Heb 9:10 - -- (Lev 10:9; Lev 11:4). Usage subsequently to the law added many observances as to meats and drinks.

(Lev 10:9; Lev 11:4). Usage subsequently to the law added many observances as to meats and drinks.

JFB: Heb 9:10 - -- (Exo 29:4).

JFB: Heb 9:10 - -- One oldest manuscript, Syriac and Coptic, omit "and." "Carnal ordinances" stand in apposition to "sacrifices" (Heb 9:9). Carnal (outward, affecting on...

One oldest manuscript, Syriac and Coptic, omit "and." "Carnal ordinances" stand in apposition to "sacrifices" (Heb 9:9). Carnal (outward, affecting only the flesh) is opposed to spiritual. Contrast "flesh" with "conscience" (Heb 9:13-14).

JFB: Heb 9:10 - -- As a burden (Act 15:10, Act 15:28) continually pressing heavy.

As a burden (Act 15:10, Act 15:28) continually pressing heavy.

JFB: Heb 9:10 - -- Greek, "the season of rectification," when the reality should supersede the type (Heb 8:8-12). Compare "better," Heb 9:23.

Greek, "the season of rectification," when the reality should supersede the type (Heb 8:8-12). Compare "better," Heb 9:23.

Clarke: Heb 9:1 - -- The first covenant had also ordinances - Our translators have introduced the word covenant, as if διαθηκη had been, if not originally in th...

The first covenant had also ordinances - Our translators have introduced the word covenant, as if διαθηκη had been, if not originally in the text, yet in the apostle’ s mind. Several MSS., but not of good note, as well as printed editions, with the Coptic version, have σκηνη tabernacle; but this is omitted by ABDE, several others, both the Syriac, Ethiopic, Armenian, Vulgate, some copies of the Itala, and several of the Greek fathers; it is in all probability a spurious reading, the whole context showing that covenant is that to which the apostle refers, as that was the subject in the preceding chapter, and this is a continuation of the same discourse

Clarke: Heb 9:1 - -- Ordinances - Δικαιωματα· Rites and ceremonies

Ordinances - Δικαιωματα· Rites and ceremonies

Clarke: Heb 9:1 - -- A worldly sanctuary - Ἁγιον κοσμικον . It is supposed that the term worldly, here, is opposed to the term heavenly, Heb 8:5; and tha...

A worldly sanctuary - Ἁγιον κοσμικον . It is supposed that the term worldly, here, is opposed to the term heavenly, Heb 8:5; and that the whole should be referred to the carnality or secular nature of the tabernacle service. But I think there is nothing plainer than that the apostle is speaking here in praise of this sublimely emblematic service, and hence he proceeds to enumerate the various things contained in the first tabernacle, which added vastly to its splendor and importance; such as the table of the show-bread, the golden candlestick, the golden censer, the ark of the covenant overlaid round about with gold, in which was the golden pot that had the manna, Aaron’ s rod that budded, and the two tables which God had written with his own finger: hence I am led to believe that κοσμικος is here taken in its proper, natural meaning, and signifies adorned, embellished, splendid; and hence κοσμος, the world: Tota hujus universi machina, coelum et terram complectens et quicquid utroque contineter , κοσμος dicitur, quod nihil ea est mundius, pulchrius, et ornatius . "The whole machine of this universe, comprehending the heavens and the earth, and whatsoever is contained in both, is called κοσμος, because nothing is more beautiful, more fair, and more elegant."So Pliny, Hist. Nat., l. ii. c. 5: Nam quem κοσμον Graeci nomine ornamenti appellaverunt, eum nos a perfecta absolutaque elegantia, Mundum . "That which the Greeks call κοσμος, ornament, we, (the Latins), from its perfect and absolute elegance call mundum, world."See on Gen 2:1 (note)

The Jews believe that the tabernacle was an epitome of the world; and it is remarkable, when speaking of their city, that they express this sentiment by the same Greek word, in Hebrew letters, which the apostle uses here: so in Bereshith Rabba, s. 19, fol. 19: כל קוזמיקון שלו שם הוא col kozmikon ( κοσμικον ) shelo sham hu . "All his world is placed there."Philo says much to the same purpose

If my exposition be not admitted, the next most likely is, that God has a worldly tabernacle as well as a heavenly one; that he as truly dwelt in the Jewish tabernacle as he did in the heaven of heavens; the one being his worldly house, the other his heavenly house.

Clarke: Heb 9:2 - -- For there was a tabernacle made; the first, wherein - The sense is here very obscure, and the construction involved: leaving out all punctuation, wh...

For there was a tabernacle made; the first, wherein - The sense is here very obscure, and the construction involved: leaving out all punctuation, which is the case with all the very ancient MSS., the verse stands thus: Σκηνη γαρ κατεσκευασθη ἡ πρωτη εν ᾑ ἡ τε λυχνια, κ. τ. λ. which I suppose an indifferent person, who understood the language, would without hesitation render, For, there was the first tabernacle constructed, in which were the candlestick, etc. And this tabernacle or dwelling may be called the first dwelling place which God had among men, to distinguish it from the second dwelling place, the temple built by Solomon; for tabernacle here is to be considered in its general sense, as implying a dwelling

To have a proper understanding of what the apostle relates here, we should endeavor to take a concise view of the tabernacle erected by Moses in the wilderness. This tabernacle was the epitome of the Jewish temple; or rather, according to this as a model was the Jewish temple built. It comprised

1.    The court where the people might enter

2.    In this was contained the altar of burnt-offerings, on which were offered the sacrifices in general, besides offerings of bread, wine, and other things

3.    At the bottom or lower end of this court was the tent of the covenant; the two principal parts of the tabernacle were, the holy place and the holy of holies

In the temple built by Solomon there was a court for the Levites, different from that of the people; and, at the entrance of the holy place, a vestibule. But in the tabernacle built by Moses these parts were not found, nor does the apostle mention them here

In the holy place, as the apostle observes, there were

1.    The golden candlestick of seven branches, on the south

2.    The golden altar, or altar of incense, on the north

3.    The altar, or table of the show-bread; or where the twelve loaves, representing the twelve tribes, were laid before the Lord

1.    In each branch of the golden candlestick was a lamp; these were lighted every evening, and extinguished every morning. They were intended to give light by night

2.    The altar of incense was of gold; and a priest, chosen by lot each week, offered incense every morning and evening in a golden censer, which he probably left on the altar after the completion of the offering

3.    The table of the show-bread was covered with plates of gold; and on this, every Sabbath, they placed twelve loaves in two piles, six in each, which continued there all the week till the next Sabbath, when they were removed, and fresh loaves put in their place. The whole of this may be seen in all its details in the book of Exodus, from chap. 35 to Exo 40:1. See Calmet also

Clarke: Heb 9:2 - -- Which is called the sanctuary - Ἡτις λεγεται ἁγια· This is called holy. This clause may apply to any of the nouns in this vers...

Which is called the sanctuary - Ἡτις λεγεται ἁγια· This is called holy. This clause may apply to any of the nouns in this verse, in the nominative case, which are all of the feminine gender; and the adjective ἁγια, holy, may be considered here as the nominative singular feminine, agreeing with ἡτις . Several editions accent the words in reference to this construction. The word σκηνη, tabernacle, may be the proper antecedent; and then we may read ἁγία, instead of ἅγια : but these niceties belong chiefly to grammarians.

Clarke: Heb 9:3 - -- And after the second veil - The first veil, of which the apostle has not yet spoken, was at the entrance of the holy place, and separated the temple...

And after the second veil - The first veil, of which the apostle has not yet spoken, was at the entrance of the holy place, and separated the temple from the court, and prevented the people, and even the Levites, from seeing what was in the holy place

The second veil, of which the apostle speaks here, separated the holy place from the holy of holies

Clarke: Heb 9:3 - -- The tabernacle, which is called the Holiest of all - That is, that part of the tabernacle which is called the holy of holies.

The tabernacle, which is called the Holiest of all - That is, that part of the tabernacle which is called the holy of holies.

Clarke: Heb 9:4 - -- Which had the golden censer - It is evident that the apostle speaks here of the tabernacle built by Moses, and of the state and contents of that tab...

Which had the golden censer - It is evident that the apostle speaks here of the tabernacle built by Moses, and of the state and contents of that tabernacle as they were during the lifetime of Moses. For, as Calmet remarks, in the temple which was afterwards built there were many things added which were not in the tabernacle, and several things left out. The ark of the covenant and the two tables of the law were never found after the return from the Babylonish captivity. We have no proof that, even in the time of Solomon, the golden pot of manna, or the rod of Aaron, was either in or near the ark. In Solomon’ s temple the holy place was separated from the holy of holies by a solid wall, instead of a veil, and by strong wooden doors, 1Ki 6:31-33. In the same temple there was a large vestibule before the holy place; and round about this and the holy of holies there were many chambers in three stories, 1Ki 6:5, 1Ki 6:6. But there was nothing of all this in the Mosaic tabernacle; therefore, says Calmet, we need not trouble ourselves to reconcile the various scriptures which mention this subject; some of which refer to the tabernacle, others to Solomon’ s temple, and others to the temple built by Zorobabel; which places were very different from each other

The apostle says that the golden censer was in the holy of holies; but this is nowhere mentioned by Moses. But he tells us that the high priest went in, once every year, with the golden censer to burn incense; and Calmet thinks this censer was left there all the year, and that its place was supplied by a new one, brought in by the priest the year following. Others think it was left just within the veil, so that the priest, by putting his hand under the curtain, could take it out, and prepare it for his next entrance into the holiest

Clarke: Heb 9:4 - -- The ark of the covenant - This was a sort of chest overlaid with plates of gold, in which the two tables of the law, Aaron’ s rod, the pot of m...

The ark of the covenant - This was a sort of chest overlaid with plates of gold, in which the two tables of the law, Aaron’ s rod, the pot of manna, etc., were deposited. Its top, or lid, was the propitiatory or mercy-seat.

Clarke: Heb 9:5 - -- And over it the cherubims of glory - Cherubim is the plural of cherub, and it is absurd to add our plural termination (s) to the plural termination ...

And over it the cherubims of glory - Cherubim is the plural of cherub, and it is absurd to add our plural termination (s) to the plural termination of the Hebrew. The glory here signifies the shechinah or symbol of the Divine presence

Clarke: Heb 9:5 - -- Shadowing the mercy-seat - One at each end of the ark, with their faces turned toward each other, but looking down on the cover or propitiatory, ι...

Shadowing the mercy-seat - One at each end of the ark, with their faces turned toward each other, but looking down on the cover or propitiatory, ἱλαστηριον, here called the mercy-seat

Clarke: Heb 9:5 - -- Of which we cannot now speak particularly - The apostle did not judge any farther account of these to be necessary; and I may be excused from consid...

Of which we cannot now speak particularly - The apostle did not judge any farther account of these to be necessary; and I may be excused from considering them particularly here, having said so much on each in the places where they occur in the Pentateuch. What these point out or signify is thus explained by St. Cyril: Christus licet unus sit, multifariam tamen a nobis intelligitur: Ipse est Tabernaculum propter carnis tegumenturn: Ipse est Mensa, quia noster cibus est et vita: Ipse est Arca habens legem Dei reconditam, quia est Verbum Patris: Ipse est Candelabrum, quia est lux spiritualis: Ipse est Altare incensi, quia est odor suavitatis in sanctificationem: Ipse est Altare holocausti, quia est hostia pro totius mundi vita in cruce oblata . "Although Christ be but one, yet he is understood by us under a variety of forms. He is the Tabernacle, on account of the human body in which he dwelt. He is the Table, because he is our Bread of life. He is the Ark which has the law of God enclosed within, because he is the Word of the Father. He is the Candlestick, because he is our spiritual light. He is the Altar of incense, because he is the sweet-smelling odour of sanctification. He is the Altar of burnt-offering, because he is the victim, by death on the cross, for the sins of the whole world."This father has said, in a few words, what others have employed whole volumes on, by refining, spiritualizing, and allegorizing.

Clarke: Heb 9:6 - -- When these thing were thus ordained - When the tabernacle was made, and its furniture placed in it, according to the Divine direction

When these thing were thus ordained - When the tabernacle was made, and its furniture placed in it, according to the Divine direction

Clarke: Heb 9:6 - -- The priests went always into the first Tabernacle - That is, into the first part of the tabernacle, or holy place, into which he went every day twic...

The priests went always into the first Tabernacle - That is, into the first part of the tabernacle, or holy place, into which he went every day twice, accomplishing the services, τας λατρειας επιτελουντες, which included his burning the incense at the morning and evening sacrifice, dressing the lamps, removing the old show-bread and laying on the new, and sprinkling the blood of the sin-offerings before the veil Lev 4:6 : and for these works he must have constant access to the place.

Clarke: Heb 9:7 - -- But into the second - That is, the holy of holies, or second part of the tabernacle, the high priest alone, once every year, that is, on one day in ...

But into the second - That is, the holy of holies, or second part of the tabernacle, the high priest alone, once every year, that is, on one day in the year only, which was the day on which the general atonement was made. The high priest could enter into this place only on one day in the year; but on that day he might enter several times. See Lev. 16

Clarke: Heb 9:7 - -- Not without blood - The day prescribed by the law for this great solemnity was the tenth of the month Tisri, in which the high priest brought in the...

Not without blood - The day prescribed by the law for this great solemnity was the tenth of the month Tisri, in which the high priest brought in the incense or perfumes, which he placed on the golden censer; he brought also the blood of the bullock; and sprinkled some portion of it seven times before the ark, and the veil which separated the holy place from the holy of holies. See Lev 16:14. He then came out, and, taking some of the blood of the goat which had been sacrificed, he sprinkled it between the veil and the ark of the covenant, Lev 16:15

Clarke: Heb 9:7 - -- Which he offered for himself, and for the errors of the people - Ὑπερ των του λαου αγνοηματων· For transgressions of wh...

Which he offered for himself, and for the errors of the people - Ὑπερ των του λαου αγνοηματων· For transgressions of which they were not conscious: there were so many niceties in the ritual worship of the Jews, and so many ways in which they might offend against the law and incur guilt, that it was found necessary to institute sacrifices to atone for these sins of ignorance. And as the high priest was also clothed with infirmity, he required to have an interest in the same sacrifice, on the same account. This was a national sacrifice; and by it the people understood that they were absolved from all the errors of the past year, and that they now had a renewed right of access to the mercy-seat.

Clarke: Heb 9:8 - -- The Holy Ghost this signifying - These services were divinely appointed, and by each of them the Holy Spirit of God is supposed to speak

The Holy Ghost this signifying - These services were divinely appointed, and by each of them the Holy Spirit of God is supposed to speak

Clarke: Heb 9:8 - -- The way into the holiest - That full access to God was not the common privilege of the people, while the Mosaic economy subsisted. That the apostle ...

The way into the holiest - That full access to God was not the common privilege of the people, while the Mosaic economy subsisted. That the apostle means that it is only by Christ that any man and every man can approach God, is evident from Heb 10:19-22, and it is about this, and not about the tabernacle of this world, that he is here discoursing

I have already observed that the apostle appears to use the word σκηνη, or tabernacle, in the general sense of a dwelling place; and therefore applies it to the temple, which was reputed the house or dwelling place of God, as well as the ancient tabernacle. Therefore, what he speaks here concerning the first tabernacle, may be understood as applying with propriety to the then Jewish temple, as well as to the ancient tabernacle, which, even with all their sacrifices and ceremonies, could not make the way of holiness plain, nor the way to God’ s favor possible.

Clarke: Heb 9:9 - -- Which - Tabernacle and its services, was a figure, παραβολη, a dark enigmatical representation, for the time then present - for that age an...

Which - Tabernacle and its services, was a figure, παραβολη, a dark enigmatical representation, for the time then present - for that age and dispensation, and for all those who lived under it

In which, καθ ὁν, during which, time or dispensation were offered both gifts and sacrifices - eucharistic offerings and victims for sin, that could not make him that did the service, whether the priest who made the offering, or the person who brought it in the behalf of his soul, perfect as pertaining to the conscience - could not take away guilt from the mind, nor purify the conscience from dead works. The whole was a figure, or dark representation, of a spiritual and more glorious system: and although a sinner, who made these offerings and sacrifices according to the law, might be considered as having done his duty, and thus he would be exempted from many ecclesiastical and legal disabilities and punishments; yet his conscience would ever tell him that the guilt of sin was still remaining, and that it was impossible for the blood of bulls and goats to take it away. Thus even he that did the service best continued to be imperfect - had a guilty conscience, and an unholy heart

The words καθ ὁν, in which, referred in the above paraphrase to τον καιρον, the time, are read καθ ἡν by ABD, and several others, one copy of the Slavonic, the Vulgate, and some of the fathers, and thus refer to την σκηνην, the tabernacle; and this is the reading which our translators appear to have followed. Griesbach places it in his margin, as a very probable reading; but I prefer the other.

Clarke: Heb 9:10 - -- In meats and drinks, and divers washings - He had already mentioned eucharistic and sacrificial offerings, and nothing properly remained but the dif...

In meats and drinks, and divers washings - He had already mentioned eucharistic and sacrificial offerings, and nothing properly remained but the different kinds of clean and unclean animals which were used, or forbidden to be used, as articles of food; together with the different kinds or drinks, washings, βαπτισμοις, baptisms, immersions, sprinklings and washings of the body and the clothes, and carnal ordinances, or things which had respect merely to the body, and could have no moral influence upon the soul, unless considered in reference to that of which they were the similitudes, or figures

Clarke: Heb 9:10 - -- Carnal ordinances - Δικαιωματα σαρκος· Rites and ceremonies pertaining merely to the body. The word carnal is not used here, nor ...

Carnal ordinances - Δικαιωματα σαρκος· Rites and ceremonies pertaining merely to the body. The word carnal is not used here, nor scarcely in any part of the New Testament, in that catachrestical or degrading sense in which many preachers and professors of Christianity take the liberty to use it

Clarke: Heb 9:10 - -- Imposed on them until the time of reformation - These rites and ceremonies were enacted, by Divine authority, as proper representations of the Gospe...

Imposed on them until the time of reformation - These rites and ceremonies were enacted, by Divine authority, as proper representations of the Gospel system, which should reform and rectify all things

The time of reformation, καιρος διορθωσεως, the time of rectifying, signifies the Gospel dispensation, under which every thing is set straight; every thing referred to its proper purpose and end; the ceremonial law fulfilled and abrogated; the moral law exhibited and more strictly enjoined; (see our Lord’ s sermon upon the mount); and the spiritual nature of God’ s worship taught, and grace promised to purify the heart: so that, through the power of the eternal Spirit, all that was wrong in the soul is rectified; the affections, passions, and appetites purified; the understanding enlightened; the judgment corrected; the will refined; in a word, all things made new.

Calvin: Heb 9:1 - -- 1.=== Then verily the first, === etc 138 After having spoken generally of the abrogation of the old covenant, he now refers specially to the ceremon...

1.=== Then verily the first, === etc 138 After having spoken generally of the abrogation of the old covenant, he now refers specially to the ceremonies. His object is to show that there was nothing practiced then to which Christ’s coming has not put an end. He says first, that under the old covenant there was a specific form of divine worship, and that it was peculiarly adapted to that time. It will hereafter appear by the comparison what kind of things were those rituals prescribed under the Law.

Some copies read, πρώτη σκηνὴ the first tabernacle; but I suspect that there is a mistake as to the word “tabernacle;” nor do I doubt but that some unlearned reader, not finding a noun to the adjective, and in his ignorance applying to the tabernacle what had been said of the covenant, unwisely added the wordσκηνὴ tabernacle. I indeed greatly wonder that the mistake had so prevailed, that it is found in the Greek copies almost universally. 139 But necessity constrains me to follow the ancient reading. For the Apostle, as I have said, had been speaking of the old covenant; he now comes to ceremonies, which were additions, as it were, to it. He then intimates that all the rites of the Mosaic Law were a part of the old covenant, and that they partook of the same ancientness, and were therefore to perish.

Many take the wordλατρείας as an accusative plural. I agree with those who connect the two words together, δικαιώματα λατρείας for institutes or rites, which the Hebrews call חוקים , and the Greeks have rendered by the wordδικαιώματα ordinances. The sense is, that the whole form or manner of worshipping God was annexed to the old covenant, and that it consisted of sacrifices, ablutions, and other symbols, together with the sanctuary. And he calls it a worldly sanctuary, because there was no heavenly truth or reality in those rites; for though the sanctuary was the effigy of the original pattern which had been shown to Moses; yet an effigy or image is a different thing from the reality, and especially when they are compared, as here, as things opposed to each other. Hence the sanctuary in itself was indeed earthly, and is rightly classed among the elements of the world, it was yet heavenly as to what it signified. 140

Calvin: Heb 9:2 - -- 2.=== For there was a tabernacle, === etc. As the Apostle here touches but lightly on the structure of the tabernacle, that he might not be detained...

2.=== For there was a tabernacle, === etc. As the Apostle here touches but lightly on the structure of the tabernacle, that he might not be detained beyond what his subject required; so will I also designedly abstain from any refined explanation of it. It is then sufficient for our present purpose to consider the tabernacle in its three parts, — the first was the court of the people; the middle was commonly called the sanctuary; and the last was the inner sanctuary, which they called, by way of eminence, the holy of holies. 141

As to the first sanctuary, which was contiguous to the court of the people, he says that there were the candlestick and the table on which the shew­bread was set: he calls this place, in the plural number, the holies. Then, after this is mentioned, the most secret place, which they called the holy of holies, still more remote from the view of the people, and it was even hid from the priests who ministered in the first sanctuary; for as by a veil the sanctuary was closed up to the people, so another veil kept the priests from the holy of holies. There, the Apostle says, was theθυμιατήριον by which name I understand the altar of incense, or fumigation, rather than the censer; 142 then the ark of the covenant, with its covering, the two cherubim, the golden pot filled with manna, the rod of Aaron, and the two tables. Thus far the Apostle proceeds in describing the tabernacle.

But he says that the pot in which Moses had deposited the manna, and Aaron’s rod which had budded, were in the ark with the two tables; but this seems inconsistent with sacred history, which in 1Kg 8:9, relates that there was nothing in the ark but the two tables. But it is easy to reconcile these two passages: God had commanded the pot and Aaron’s rod to be laid up before the testimony; it is hence probable that they were deposited in the ark, together with the tables. But when the Temple was built, these things were arranged in a different order, and certain history relates it as a thing new that the ark had nothing else but the two tables. 143

Calvin: Heb 9:5 - -- 5.=== Of which we cannot now, === etc. As nothing can satisfy, curious men, the apostle cuts off every occasion for refinements unsuitable to his pr...

5.=== Of which we cannot now, === etc. As nothing can satisfy, curious men, the apostle cuts off every occasion for refinements unsuitable to his present purpose, and lest a longer discussion of these things should break off the thread of his argument. If, therefore, any one should disregard the Apostle’s example, and dwell more minutely on the subject, he would be acting very unreasonably. There might be, indeed, an occasion for doing this elsewhere; but it is now better to attend to the subject of which he treats: it may further be said, that to philosophize beyond just limits, which some do, is not only useless, but also dangerous. There are some things which are not obscure and fitted for the edification of faith; but discretion and sobriety ought to be observed, lest we seek to be wise above what God has been pleased to reveal.

Calvin: Heb 9:6 - -- 6.=== Now, when these things were thus ordained, === etc. Omitting other things, he undertakes to handle the chief point in dispute: he says that th...

6.=== Now, when these things were thus ordained, === etc. Omitting other things, he undertakes to handle the chief point in dispute: he says that the priests who performed sacred rites were wont to enter the first tabernacle daily, but that the chief priest entered the holy of holies only yearly with the appointed sacrifice. He hence concludes, that while the tabernacle under the Law was standing, the sanctuary was closed up, and that only through that being removed could the way be open for us to the kingdom of God. We see that the very form of the ancient tabernacle reminded the Jews that they were to look for something else. Then foolishly did they act who, by retaining the shadows of the Law, willfully obstructed their own way.

He mentionsπρώτην σκηνὴν the first tabernacle, in Heb 9:2, in a different sense from what it has here, for here it means the first sanctuary, but there the whole tabernacle; for he sets it in opposition to the spiritual sanctuary of Christ, which he presently mentions. He contends that this had fallen for our great benefit, for through its fall a more familiar access to God has been obtained for us.

Calvin: Heb 9:7 - -- 7.For himself and for the errors of the people, or for his own and the ignorances of the people. As the verb |shagag|, means in Hebrew to err, to mis...

7.For himself and for the errors of the people, or for his own and the ignorances of the people. As the verb |shagag|, means in Hebrew to err, to mistake, so |shgagah|, derived from it, properly denotes error, or mistake; but yet it is generally taken for any kind of sin; and doubtless we never sin except when deceived by the allurements of Satan. The Apostle does not understand by it mere ignorance, as they say, but, on the contrary, he includes also voluntary sins; but as I have already said, no sin is free from error or ignorance; for however knowingly and willfully any one may sin, yet it must be that he is blinded by his lust, so that he does not judge rightly, or rather he forgets himself and God; for men never deliberately rush headlong into ruin, but being entangled in the deceptions of Satan, they lose the power of judging rightly. 144

Calvin: Heb 9:9 - -- 9.Which was a figure, === etc. The wordπαραθολὴ, used here, signifies, as I think, the same thing withἀντίτυπος, antitype; for...

9.Which was a figure, === etc. The wordπαραθολὴ, used here, signifies, as I think, the same thing withἀντίτυπος, antitype; for he means that that tabernacle was a second pattern which corresponded with the first. For the portrait of a man ought to be so like the man himself, that when seen, it ought immediately to remind us of him whom it represents. He says further, that it was a figure, or likeness, for the time then present, that is, as long as the external observance was in force; and he says this in order to confine its use and duration to the time of the Law; for it means the same with what he afterwards adds, that all the ceremonies were imposed until the time of reformation; nor is it any objection that he uses the present tense in saying, gifts are offered; for as he had to do with the Jews, he speaks by way of concession, as though he were one of those who sacrificed. Gifts and sacrifices differ, as the first is a general term, and the other is particular.

===That could not make him that did the service perfect as pertaining to the conscience; that is, they did not reach the soul so as to confer true holiness. I do not reject the words, make perfect, and yet I prefer the term sanctify, as being more suitable to the context. But that readers may better understand the meaning of the Apostle, let the contrast between the flesh and the conscience be noticed; he denies that worshippers could be spiritually and inwardly cleansed by the sacrifices of the Law. It is added as a reason, that all these rites were of the flesh or carnal. What then does he allow them to be? It is commonly supposed, that they were useful only as means of training to men, conducive to virtue and decorum. But they who thus think do not sufficiently consider the promises which are added. This gloss, therefore, ought to be wholly repudiated. Absurdly and ignorantly too do they interpret the ordinances of the flesh, as being such as cleansed or sanctified only the body; for the Apostle understands by these words that they were earthly symbols, which did not reach the soul; for though they were true testimonies of perfect holiness, yet they by no means contained it in themselves, nor could they convey it to men; for the faithful were by such helps led, as it were, by the hand to Christ, that they might obtain from him what was wanting in the symbols.

Were any one to ask why the Apostle speaks with so little respect and even with contempt of Sacraments divinely instituted, and extenuates their efficacy? This he does, because he separates them from Christ; and we know that when viewed in themselves they are but beggarly elements, as Paul calls them. (Gal 4:9.)

Calvin: Heb 9:10 - -- 10.=== Until the time of reformation, === etc. Here he alludes to the prophecy of Jeremiah. (Jer 31:31.) 145 The new covenant succeeded the old as a...

10.=== Until the time of reformation, === etc. Here he alludes to the prophecy of Jeremiah. (Jer 31:31.) 145 The new covenant succeeded the old as a reformation. He expressly mentions meats and drinks, and other things of minor importance, because by these trifling observances a more certain opinion may be formed how far short was the Law of the perfection of the Gospel. 146

Defender: Heb 9:2 - -- The design of the tabernacle in the wilderness, with its appurtenances, is described specifically in Exodus 25-27. Many of these details, as well as t...

The design of the tabernacle in the wilderness, with its appurtenances, is described specifically in Exodus 25-27. Many of these details, as well as the worship services specified for the tabernacle, were models of the heavenly tabernacle and types of the spiritual ministry of the Lord Jesus Christ, our great High Priest (Heb 9:9, Heb 9:23, Heb 9:24)."

Defender: Heb 9:3 - -- Also called "the most holy place" (Exo 26:34), in extra-Biblical writings it has been called "the Holy of holies." This chamber could only be entered ...

Also called "the most holy place" (Exo 26:34), in extra-Biblical writings it has been called "the Holy of holies." This chamber could only be entered once a year on the great Day of Atonement by the high priest to present sacrificial blood for all the people (Heb 9:25; see Leviticus 16)."

Defender: Heb 9:4 - -- The "golden censer" was only brought into the holiest place on the Day of Atonement (Lev 16:12-15), burning incense with coals from the altar, so the ...

The "golden censer" was only brought into the holiest place on the Day of Atonement (Lev 16:12-15), burning incense with coals from the altar, so the cloud of incense would cover the mercy seat where the sacrificial blood was to be sprinkled.

Defender: Heb 9:4 - -- See Exo 16:33.

See Exo 16:33.

Defender: Heb 9:4 - -- See Num 17:10.

See Num 17:10.

Defender: Heb 9:4 - -- These were the two tables of the law containing God's ten commandments (Deu 10:2-5)."

These were the two tables of the law containing God's ten commandments (Deu 10:2-5)."

Defender: Heb 9:5 - -- The carved figures of the "cherubims" overshadowed the mercy seat (Exo 25:18-20), guarding access to God just as the true cherubims guarded the entran...

The carved figures of the "cherubims" overshadowed the mercy seat (Exo 25:18-20), guarding access to God just as the true cherubims guarded the entrance to Eden after the expulsion of Adam and Eve (Gen 3:24).

Defender: Heb 9:5 - -- "Mercyseat" is a translation of the same Greek word translated "propitiation" in Rom 3:25. It was the place where the high priest offered the blood of...

"Mercyseat" is a translation of the same Greek word translated "propitiation" in Rom 3:25. It was the place where the high priest offered the blood of the propitiatory sacrifice for the sins of the people."

Defender: Heb 9:9 - -- "Figure" is from the Greek parabole, from which we get "parable." The wilderness tabernacle with its various services was a sort of parable or picture...

"Figure" is from the Greek parabole, from which we get "parable." The wilderness tabernacle with its various services was a sort of parable or picture of Christ's ministry in the heavenly tabernacle."

TSK: Heb 9:1 - -- the first : Heb 8:7, Heb 8:13 had : Heb 9:10; Lev 18:3, Lev 18:4, Lev 18:30, Lev 22:9; Num 9:12; Eze 43:11; Luk 1:6 ordinances : or, ceremonies and : ...

the first : Heb 8:7, Heb 8:13

had : Heb 9:10; Lev 18:3, Lev 18:4, Lev 18:30, Lev 22:9; Num 9:12; Eze 43:11; Luk 1:6

ordinances : or, ceremonies

and : Heb 9:10,Heb 9:11, Heb 8:2; Exo 25:8; Col 2:8

TSK: Heb 9:2 - -- a tabernacle : Exod. 26:1-30, Exo 29:1, Exo 29:35, 36:8-38, Exo 39:32-34, Exo 40:2, Exo 40:18-20 the first : Exod. 25:23-40, Exo 26:35, Exo 37:10-24, ...

a tabernacle : Exod. 26:1-30, Exo 29:1, Exo 29:35, 36:8-38, Exo 39:32-34, Exo 40:2, Exo 40:18-20

the first : Exod. 25:23-40, Exo 26:35, Exo 37:10-24, Exo 39:36-38, Exo 40:4, Exo 40:22-24

the table : Exo 40:4; Lev 24:5, Lev 24:6

the showbread : Exo 25:23, Exo 25:30

the sanctuary : or, holy, Exo 26:33

TSK: Heb 9:3 - -- the second : Heb 6:19, Heb 10:20; Exo 26:31-33, Exo 36:35-38, Exo 40:3, Exo 40:21; 2Ch 3:14; Isa 25:7; Mat 27:51 the Holiest : Heb 9:8, Heb 10:19; 1Ki...

TSK: Heb 9:4 - -- the golden : Lev 16:12; 1Ki 7:50; Rev 8:3 the ark : Exo 25:10-16, Exo 26:33, Exo 37:1-5, Exo 39:35, Exo 40:3, Exo 40:21 was : Exo 16:33, Exo 16:34 and...

TSK: Heb 9:5 - -- over : Exo 25:17-22, Exo 37:6-9; Lev 16:2; Num 7:89; 1Sa 4:4; 1Ki 8:6, 1Ki 8:7; 2Ki 19:15; Psa 80:1, Psa 99:1; Eph 3:10; 1Pe 1:12 the mercyseat : Heb ...

TSK: Heb 9:6 - -- the priests : Exo 27:21, Exo 30:7, Exo 30:8; Num 28:3; 2Ch 26:16-19; Dan 8:11; Luk 1:8-11

TSK: Heb 9:7 - -- into : Heb 9:24, Heb 9:25; Exo 30:10; Lev. 16:2-20,Lev 16:34 not : Heb 5:3, Heb 7:27, Heb 10:19, Heb 10:20 errors : Lev 5:18; 2Sa 6:7; 2Ch 33:9; Psa 1...

TSK: Heb 9:8 - -- Holy Ghost : Heb 3:7, Heb 10:15; Isa 63:11; Act 7:51, Act 7:52, Act 28:25; Gal 3:8; 2Pe 1:21 the way : Heb 9:3, Heb 4:15, Heb 4:16, Heb 10:19-22; Joh ...

TSK: Heb 9:9 - -- a figure : Heb 9:24, Heb 11:19; Rom 5:14; 1Pe 3:21 the time : Heb 7:11, Heb 11:39, Heb 11:40; 1Pe 1:11, 1Pe 1:12 gifts : Heb 5:1 that could : Heb 9:13...

TSK: Heb 9:10 - -- in meats : Heb 13:9; Lev. 11:2-47; Deut. 14:3-21; Eze 4:14; Act 10:13-15; Col 2:16 divers : Heb 6:2 *Gr: Heb 10:22; Exo 29:4, Exo 30:19-21, Exo 40:12;...

in meats : Heb 13:9; Lev. 11:2-47; Deut. 14:3-21; Eze 4:14; Act 10:13-15; Col 2:16

divers : Heb 6:2 *Gr: Heb 10:22; Exo 29:4, Exo 30:19-21, Exo 40:12; Lev 14:8, Lev 14:9, Lev 16:4, Lev 16:24, Lev 17:15, Lev 17:16, Lev 22:6; Num 19:7-21; Deu 21:6, Deu 23:11

carnal : Heb 9:1, Heb 7:16; Gal 4:3, Gal 4:9; Eph 2:15; Col 2:20-22

ordinances : or, rites, or, ceremonies

until : Heb 2:5, Heb 6:5; Gal 4:4; Eph 1:10

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Heb 9:1 - -- Then verily - Or, moreover. The object is to describe the tabernacle in which the service of God was celebrated under the former dispensation, ...

Then verily - Or, moreover. The object is to describe the tabernacle in which the service of God was celebrated under the former dispensation, and to show that it had a reference to what was future, and was only an imperfect representation of the reality. It was important to show this, as the Jews regarded the ordinances of the tabernacle and of the whole Levitical service as of divine appointment, and of perpetual obligation. The object of Paul is to prove that they were to give place to a more perfect system, and hence, it was necessary to discuss their real nature.

The first covenant - The word "covenant"is not in the Greek, but is not improperly supplied. The meaning is, that the former arrangement or dispensation had religious rites and services connected with it.

Had also ordinances - Margin, "Ceremonies."The Greek word means "laws, precepts, ordinances;"and the idea is, that there were laws regulating the worship of God. The Jewish institutions abounded with such laws.

And a worldly sanctuary - The word "sanctuary"means a holy place, and is applied to a house of worship, or a temple. Here it may refer either to the temple or to the tabernacle. As the temple was constructed after the same form as the tabernacle, and had the same furniture, the description of the apostle may be regarded as applicable to either of them, and it is difficult to determine which he had in his eye. The term "worldly,"applied to "sanctuary,"here means that it pertained to this world; it was contradistinguished from the heavenly sanctuary not made with hands where Christ was now gone; compare Heb 9:11-24. It does not mean that it was "worldly"in the sense in which that word is now used as denoting the opposite of spiritual, serious, religious; but worldly in the sense that it belonged to the earth rather than to heaven; it was made by human hands, not directly by the hands of God.

Barnes: Heb 9:2 - -- For there was a tabernacle made - The word "tabernacle"properly means a tent, a booth, or a hut, and was then given by way of eminence to the t...

For there was a tabernacle made - The word "tabernacle"properly means a tent, a booth, or a hut, and was then given by way of eminence to the tent for public worship made by Moses in the wilderness. For a description of this, see Exo. 26. In this place the word means the "outer sanctuary"or "room"in the tabernacle; that is, the "first"room which was entered - called here "the first."The same word - σκηνή skēnē - is used in Heb 9:3 to denote the "inner"sanctuary, or holy of holies. The tabernacle, like the temple afterward, was divided into two parts by the veil Exo 26:31, Exo 26:33, one of which was called "the holy place,"and the other "the holy of holies."The exact size of the two rooms in the tabernacle is not specified in the Scriptures, but it is commonly supposed that the tabernacle was divided in the same manner as the temple was afterward; that is, two-thirds of the interior constituted the holy place, and one-third the holy of holies. According to this, the holy place, or "first tabernacle"was twenty cubits long by ten broad, and the most holy place was ten cubits square. The whole length of the tabernacle was about fifty-five feet, the breadth eighteen, and the height eighteen. In the temple, the two rooms, though of the same relative proportions, were of course much larger. See a description of the temple in the notes on Mat 21:12. In both cases, the holy place was at the east, and the Holy of Holies at the west end of the sacred edifice.

The first - The first room on entering the sacred edifice, here called the "first tabernacle."The apostle proceeds now to enumerate the various articles of furniture which were in the two rooms of the tabernacle and temple. His object seems to be, not for information, for it could not be supposed that they to whom he was writing were ignorant on this point, but partly to show that it could not be said that he spoke of that of which he had no information, or that he undervalued it; and partly to show the real nature of the institution, and to prove that it was of an imperfect and typical character, and had a designed reference to something that was to come. It is remarkable that though he maintains that the whole institution was a "figure"of what was to come, and though he specifies by name all the furniture of the tabernacle, he does not attempt to explain their particular typical character, nor does he affirm that they had such a character.

He does not say that the candlestick, and the table of show-bread, and the ark, and the cherubim were designed to adumbrate some particular truth or fact of the future dispensation, or had a designed spiritual meaning. It would have been happy if all expositors had followed the example of Paul, and had been content, as he was, to state the facts about the tabernacle, and the general truth that the dispensation was intended to introduce a more perfect economy, without endeavoring to explain the typical import of every pin and pillar of the ancient place of worship. If those things had such a designed typical reference, it is remarkable that Paul did not go into an explanation of that fact in the Epistle before us. Never could a better opportunity for doing it occur than was furnished here. Yet it was not done. Paul is silent where many expositors have found occasion for admiration. Where they have seen the profoundest wisdom, he saw none; where they have found spiritual instruction in the various implements of divine service in the sanctuary, he found none.

Why should we be more wise than he was? Why attempt to hunt for types and shadows where he found none? And why should we not be limited to the views which he actually expressed in regard to the design and import of the ancient dispensation? Following an inspired example we are on solid ground, and are not in danger. But the moment we leave that, and attempt to spiritualize everything in the ancient economy, we are in an open sea without compass or chart, and no one knows to what fairy lands he may be drifted. As there are frequent allusions in the New Testament to the different parts of the tabernacle furniture here specified, it may be a matter of interest and profit to furnish an illustration of the most material of them.

(Without attempting to explain the typical import of every pin and pillar of the tabernacle, one may be excused for thinking, that such prominent parts of its furniture, as the ark, the candlestick, and the cherubim, were designed as types. Nor can it be wrong to inquire into the spiritual significancy of them, under such guidance as the light of Scripture, here or affords elsewhere. This has been done by a host of most sober and learned commentators. It is of no use to allege, that the apostle himself has given no particular explanation of these matters, since this would have kept him back too long from his main object; and is, therefore, expressly declined by him. "Yet,"says McLean, his manner of declining it implies, that each of these sacred utensils had a mystical signification. They were all constructed according to particular divine directions, Exo. 25. The apostle terms them, "the example and shadow of heavenly things,"Heb 8:5; "the patterns of things in the heavens, Heb 9:23; and these typical patterns included not only the tabernacle and its services, but every article of its furniture, as is plain from the words of Moses, Exo 25:8-9. There are also other passages which seem to allude to, and even to explain, some of these articles, such as the golden candlestick, with its seven lamps, Rev 1:12-13, Rev 1:20; the golden censer, Rev 8:3-4; the vail, Heb 10:20; the mercy-seat, Rom 3:25; Heb 4:16; and, perhaps, the angelic cherubim, 1Pe 1:12."It must, however, be acknowledged that too great care and caution cannot be used in investigating such subjects.)

The candlestick - For an account of the candlestick, see Exo 25:31-37. It was made of pure gold, and had seven branches, that is, three on each side and one in the center. These branches had on the extremities seven golden lamps, which were fed with pure olive oil, and which were lighted "to give light over against it;"that is, they shed light on the altar of incense, the table of show-bread, and generally on the furniture of the holy place. These branches were made with three "bowls,""knops,"and "flowers"occurring alternately on each one of the six branches; while on the center or upright shaft there were four "bowls,""knops"and "flowers"of this kind. These ornaments were probably taken from the almond, and represented the flower of that tree in various stages. The "bowls"on the branches of the candlestick probably meant the calyx or cup of that plant from which the flower springs.

The "knops"probably referred to some ornament on the candlestick mingled with the "bowls"and the "flowers,"perhaps designed as an imitation of the nut or fruit of the almond. The "flowers"were evidently ornaments resembling the flowers on the almond-tree, wrought, as all the rest were, in pure gold. See Bush’ s notes on Exodus 25. The candlestick was undoubtedly designed to furnish light in the dark room of the tabernacle and temple; and in accordance with the general plan of those edifices, was ornamented after the most chaste and pure views of ornamental architecture of those times - but there is no evidence that its branches, and bowls, and knops, and flowers each had a special typical significance. The sacred writers are wholly silent as to any such reference, and it is not well to attempt to be "wise above that which is written."An expositor of the Scripture cannot have a safer guide than the sacred writers themselves.

How should any uninspired man know that these things had such a special typical signification? The candlestick was placed on the south, or lefthand side of the holy place as one entered, the row of lamps being probably parallel with the wall. It was at first placed in the tabernacle, and afterward removed into the temple built by Solomon. Its subsequent history is unknown. Probably it was destroyed when the temple was taken by the Chaldeans. The form of the candlestick in the second temple, whose figure is preserved on the "Arch of Titus"in Rome, was of somewhat different construction. But it is to be remembered that the articles taken away from the temple by Vespasian were not the same as those made by Moses, and Josephus says expressly that the candlestick was altered from its original form.

And the table - That is, the table on which the showbread was placed. This table was made of shittim-wood, overlaid with gold. It was two cubits long, and one cubit broad, and a cubit and a half high; that is, about three feet and a half in length, one foot and nine inches wide, and two feet and a half in height. It was furnished with rings or staples, through which were passed staves, by which it was carried. These staves, we are informed by Josephus, were removed when the table was at rest, so that they might not be in the way of the priest as they officiated in the tabernacle. It stood lengthwise east and west, on the north side of the holy place.

And the show-bread - On the table just described. This bread consisted of twelve loaves, placed on the table, every Sabbath. The Hebrews affirm that they were square loaves, having the four sides covered with leaves of gold. They were arranged in two piles, of course with six in a pile; Lev 24:5-9. The number twelve was selected with reference to the twelve tribes of Israel. They were made without leaven; were renewed each Sabbath, when the old loaves were then taken away to be eaten by the priests only. The Hebrew phrase rendered "show-bread"means properly "bread of faces,"or "bread of presence."The Septuagint render it ἄρτους ἐνώπιους artous enōpious - foreplaced loaves. In the New Testament it is, ἡ πρόθεσις τῶν ἄρτων hē prothesis tōn artōn - "the placing of bread;"and in Symmachus, "bread of proposition,"or placing. Why it was called "bread of presence"has been a subject on which expositors have been much divided.

Some have held that it was because it was "before,"or in the presence of the symbol of the divine presence in the tabernacle, though in another department; some that it was because it was set there to be seen by people, rather than to be seen by God. Others that it had an emblematic design, looking forward to the Messiah as the food or nourishment of the soul, and was substantially the same as the table spread with the symbols of the Saviour’ s body and blood. See Bush, in loc. But of this last-mentioned opinion, it may be asked where is the proof? It is not found in the account of it in the Old Testament, and there is not the slightest intimation in the New Testament that it had any such design. The object for which it was placed there can be only a matter of conjecture, as it is not explained in the Bible, and it is more difficult to ascertain the use and design of the show-bread than of almost any other emblem of the Jewish economy."

Calmet. Perhaps the true idea, after all that has been written and conjectured is, that the table and the bread were for the sake of carrying out the idea that the tabernacle was the dwelling-place of God, and that there was a propriety that it should be prepared with the usual appurtenances of a dwelling. Hence, there was a candlestick and a table, because these were the common and ordinary furniture of a room; and the idea was to be kept up constantly that that was the dwelling-place of the Most High by lighting and trimming the lamps every day, and by renewing the bread on the table periodically. The most simple explanation of the phrase "bread of faces,"or "bread of presence"is, that it was so called because it was set before the "face"or in the "presence"of God in the tabernacle. The various forms which it has been supposed would represent the table of showbread may be seen in Calmet’ s Large Dictionary. The Jews say that they were separated by plates of gold.

Which is called the sanctuary - Margin, "Or, holy."That is, "the holy place."The name sanctuary was commonly given to the whole edifice, but with strict propriety appertained only to this first room.

Barnes: Heb 9:3 - -- And after the second veil - There were two "veils"to the tabernacle. The one which is described in Exo 26:36-37, was called "the hanging for th...

And after the second veil - There were two "veils"to the tabernacle. The one which is described in Exo 26:36-37, was called "the hanging for the door of the tent,"and was made of "blue, and purple, and scarlet, and fine twined linen,"and was suspended on five pillars of shittim-wood, overlaid with gold. This answered for a door to the whole tabernacle. The second or inner veil, here referred to, divided the holy from the most holy place. This is described in Exo 26:31-33. It was made of the same materials as the other, though it would seem in a more costly manner, and with more embroidered work. On this veil the figures of the cherubim were curiously wrought. The design of this veil was to separate the holy from the most holy place; and in regard to its symbolical meaning we can be at no loss, for the apostle Paul has himself explained it in this chapter; see notes on Heb 9:8-14. "The tabernacle."That is, the inner tabernacle; or what more properly was called the tabernacle. The name was given to either of the two rooms into which it was divided, or to the whole structure.

Which is called the Holiest of all - It was called "the Most Holy place;""the Holy of Holies;"or "the Holiest of all."It was so called because the symbol of the divine presence - the "Shekinah"- dwelt there between the Cherubim.

Barnes: Heb 9:4 - -- Which had the golden censer - The censer was a "fire-pan,"made for the purpose of carrying fire, in order to burn incense on it in the place of...

Which had the golden censer - The censer was a "fire-pan,"made for the purpose of carrying fire, in order to burn incense on it in the place of worship. The forms of the censer were various. Some difficulty has been felt respecting the statement of Paul here that the "golden censer"was in the most holy place, from the fact that no such utensil is mentioned by Moses as pertaining to the tabernacle, nor in the description of Solomon’ s temple, which was modelled after the tabernacle, is there any account of it given. But the following considerations will probably remove the difficulty.

(1) Paul was a Jew, and was familiar with what pertained to the temple, and gave such a description of it as would be in accordance with what actually existed in his time. The fact that Moses does not expressly mention it, does not prove that in fact no such censer was laid up in the most holy place.

(2) Aaron and his successors were expressly commanded to burn incense in a "censer"in the most holy place before the mercy-seat. This was to be done on the great day of atonement, and but once in a year; Lev 16:12-13.

\caps1 (3) t\caps0 here is every probability that the censer that was used on such an occasion was made of gold. All the implements that were employed in the most holy place were made of gold, or overlaid with gold, and it is in the highest degree improbable that the high priest would use any other on so solemn an occasion; compare 1Ki 7:50.

\caps1 (4) a\caps0 s the golden censer was to be used only once in a year, it would naturally be laid away in some secure situation, and none would so obviously occur as the most holy place. There it would be perfectly safe. No one was permitted to enter there but the high priest, and being preserved there it would be always ready for his use. The statement of Paul, therefore, has the highest probability, and undoubtedly accords with what actually occurred in the tabernacle and the temple. The object of the incense burned in worship was to produce an agreeable fragrance or smell; see notes on Luk 1:9.

And the ark of the covenant - This ark or chest was made of shittim-wood, was two cubits and a half long, a cubit and a half broad, and the same in height; Exo 25:10. It was completely covered with gold, and had a "lid,"which was called the "mercy-seat,"on which rested the Shekinah, the symbol of the divine presence, between the outstretched wings of the cherubim. It was called "the ark of the covenant,"because within it were the two tables of the covenant, or the Law of God written on tables of stone. It was a simple "chest, coffer, or box,"with little ornament, though rich in its materials. A golden crown or molding ran around the top, and it had rings and staves in its sides by which it might be borne; Exo 25:12-16. This ark was regarded as the most sacred of all the appendages of the tabernacle. Containing the Law, and being the place where the symbol of the divine presence was manifested, it was regarded as especially holy, and in the various wars and revolutions in the Hebrew commonwealth, it was guarded with special care.

After the passage over the Jordan it remained for some time at Gilgal Jos 4:19, whence it was removed to Shiloh; 1Sa 1:3. From hence, the Israelites took it to their camp, apparently to animate them in battle, but it was taken by the Philistines; 1 Sam. 4. The Philistines, however, oppressed by the hand of God, resolved to return it, and sent it to Kirjath-Jearim; 1Sa 7:1. In the reign of Saul it was at Nob. David conveyed it to the house of Obededom, and thence to his palace on Mount Zion; 2 Sam. 6. At the dedication of the temple it was placed in the Holy of Holies by Solomon, where it remained for many years. Subsequently, it is said, the wicked kings of Judah, abandoning themselves to idolatry, established idols in the most holy place itself, and the priests removed the ark, and bore it from place to place to secure it from profanation. "Calmet."When Josiah ascended the throne he commanded the priests to restore the ark to its place in the sanctuary, and forbade them to carry it about from one place to another as they had before done; 2Ch 35:3. The subsequent history of the ark is unknown. It is probable that it was either destroyed when the city of Jerusalem was taken by Nebuchadnezzar, or that it was carried with other spoils to Babylon, There is no good reason to suppose that it was ever in the second temple, and it is generally admitted by the Jews that the ark of the covenant was one of the things that were wanting there. Abarbanel says, that the Jews flatter themselves that it will be restored by the Messiah.

Wherein - That is, in the ark - for so the construction naturally requires. In 1Ki 8:9, however, it is said that there was nothing in the ark, "save the two tables of stone which Moses put there at Horeb,"and it has been supposed by some that the pot of manna and the rod of Aaron were not in the ark, but that they were in capsules, or ledges made on its sides for their safe keeping, and that this should be rendered "by the ark."But the apostle uses the same language respecting the pot of manna and the rod of Aaron which he does about the two tables of stone, and as they were certainly in the ark, the fair construction here is that the pot of manna and the rod of Aaron were in it also. The account in Exo 16:32-34; Num 17:10, is, that they were laid up in the most holy place, "before the testimony,"and there is no improbability whatever in the supposition that they were in the ark. Indeed, that would be the most safe place to keep them, as the tabernacle was often taken down and removed from place to place. It is clear from the passage in 1Ki 8:9, that they were not in the ark in the temple, but there is no improbability in the supposition that before the temple was built they might have been removed from the ark and lost. When the ark was carried from place to place, or during its captivity by the Philistines, it is probable that they were lost, as we never hear of them afterward.

The golden pot - In Exo 16:33, it is simply "a pot,"without specifying the material. In the Septuagint it is rendered "golden pot,"and as the other utensils of the sanctuary were of gold, it may be fairly presumed that this was also.

That had manna - A small quantity of manna which was to be preserved as a perpetual remembrancer of the food which they had eaten in their long journey in the wilderness, and of the goodness of God in miraculously supplying their wants. As the manna, also, would not of itself keep, Exo 16:20, the fact that this was to be laid up to be preserved from age to age, was a perpetual miracle in proof of the presence and faithfulness of God. On the subject of the manna, see Bush’ s notes on Exo 16:15.

And Aaron’ s rod that budded - That budded and blossomed as a proof that God had chosen him to minister to him. The princes of the tribes were disposed to rebel, and to call in question the authority of Aaron. To settle the matter, each one was required to take a rod or staff of office, and to bring it to Moses with the name of the tribe to which it appertained written on it. These were laid up by Moses in the tabernacle, and it was found on the next day that the rod marked with the name of Levi had budded and blossomed, and produced almonds. In perpetual remembrance of this miracle, the rod was preserved in the ark; Num 17:1-13. Its subsequent history is unknown. It was not in the ark when the temple was built, nor is there any reason to suppose that it was preserved to that time.

And the tables of the covenant - The two tables of stone on which the ten commandments were written. They were expressly called "the words of the covenant"in Exo 34:28. On the word "covenant"; see notes on Heb 9:16 and 17 of this chapter. These two tables were in the ark at the time the temple was dedicated. 1Ki 8:9. Their subsequent history is unknown. It is probable that they shared the fate of the ark, and were either carried to Babylon, or were destroyed when the city was taken by Nebuchadnezzar.

Barnes: Heb 9:5 - -- And over it - That is, over the ark. The cherubim of glory - A Hebrew mode of expression, meaning "the glorious cherubim."The word "cheru...

And over it - That is, over the ark.

The cherubim of glory - A Hebrew mode of expression, meaning "the glorious cherubim."The word "cherubim"is the Hebrew form of the plural, of which cherub is the singular. The word "glory"used here in connection with "cherubim,"refers to the splendor, or magnificence of the image, as being carved with great skill, and covered with gold. There were two cherubim on the ark, placed on the lid in such a manner that their faces looked inward toward each other, and downward toward the mercy-seat. They stretched out their wings "on high,"and covered the mercy-seat, or the lid of the ark; Exo 25:18-20; compare 1Ki 8:6-7; 1Ch 28:18. In the temple, the cherubim were made of the olive tree, and were ten cubits high. They were overlaid with gold, and were so placed that the wing of one touched the wall on one side of the Holy of Holies, and that of the other the other side, and their wings met together over the ark; 1Ki 6:23-28.

It is not probable, however, that this was the form used in the tabernacle, as wings thus expanded would have rendered it inconvenient to carry them from place to place. Of the form and design of the cherubim much has been written, and much that is the mere creation of fancy, and the fruit of wild conjecture. Their design is not explained in the Bible, and silence in regard to it would have been wisdom. If they were intended to be symbolical, as is certainly possible, (compare Eze 10:20-22), it is impossible now to determine the object of the symbol. Who is authorized to explain it? Who can give to his speculations anything more than the authority of "pious conjecture?"And of what advantage, therefore, can speculation be, where the volume of inspiration says nothing? They who wish to examine this subject more fully, with the various opinions that have been formed on it, may consult the following works, namely, Calmet’ s Dictionary, Fragment No. 152, with the numerous illustrations; Bush’ s notes on Exo 25:18; and the Quarterly Christian Spectator, vol. viii. pp. 368-388. Drawings resembling the cherubim were not uncommon on ancient sculptures.

Shadowing - Stretching out its wings so as to cover the mercy-seat.

The mercy-seat - The cover of the ark on which rested the cloud or visible symbol of the divine presence. It was called "mercy-seat,"or "propitiatory"- ἱλαστήριον hilastērion - because it was this which was sprinkled over with the blood of atonement or propitiation, and because it was from this place, on which the symbol of the deity rested, that God manifested himself as propitious to sinners. The blood of the atonement was that through or by means of which he declared his mercy to the guilty. Here God was supposed to be seated, and from this place he was supposed to dispense mercy to man when the blood of the atonement was sprinkled there. This was undoubtedly designed to be a symbol of his dispensing mercy to people in virtue of the blood which the Saviour shed as the great sacrifice for guilt; see Heb 9:13-14.

Of which we cannot now speak particularly - That is, it is not my present design to speak particularly of these things. These matters were well understood by those to whom he wrote, and his object did not require him to go into a fuller explanation.

Barnes: Heb 9:6 - -- When these things were thus ordained - Thus arranged or appointed. Having shown what the tabernacle was, the apostle proceeds to show what was ...

When these things were thus ordained - Thus arranged or appointed. Having shown what the tabernacle was, the apostle proceeds to show what was done in it. "The priests went always into the first tabernacle."The outer tabernacle called the holy place. They were not permitted to enter the Holy of Holies, that being entered only once in a year by the High Priest. The holy place was entered every day to make the morning and evening oblation.

Accomplishing the service of God - Performing the acts of worship which God had appointed - burning incense, etc.; Luk 1:9.

Barnes: Heb 9:7 - -- But into the second - The second apartment or room, called the most holy place; Heb 9:3. Went the high priest alone once every year - On ...

But into the second - The second apartment or room, called the most holy place; Heb 9:3.

Went the high priest alone once every year - On the great day of atonement; Exo 30:10. On that day he probably entered the Holy of Holies three or four times, first to burn incense, Lev 16:12; then to sprinkle the blood of the bullock on the mercy-seat, Lev 16:14; then he was to kill the goat of the sin-offering, and bring that blood within the Veil and sprinkle it also on the mercy-seat, and then, perhaps, he entered again to bring out the golden censer. The Jewish tradition is, that he entered the Holy of Holies four times on that day. After all, however, the number of times is not certain, nor is it material, the only important point being that he entered it only on one day of the year, while the holy place was entered every day.

Not without blood - That is, he bare with him blood to sprinkle on the mercy-seat. This was the blood of the bullock and of the goat - borne in at two different times.

Which he offered for himself - The blood of the bullock was offered for himself and for his house or family - thus keeping impressively before his own mind and the mind of the people the fact that the priests even of the highest order were sinners, and needed expiation like others; Lev 9:7.

And for the errors of the people - The blood of the goat was offered for them; Lev 16:15. The word rendered "errors"- ἀγνόημα agnoēma - denotes properly "ignorance, involuntary error;"and then error or fault in general - the same as the Hebrew משׁגה mishgeh - from שׁגה shaagah - "to err."The object was to make expiation for all the errors and sins of the people, and this occurred once in the year. The repetition of these sacrifices was a constant remembrancer of sin, and the design was that neither the priests nor the people should lose sight of the fact that they were violators of the Law of God.

Barnes: Heb 9:8 - -- The Holy Ghost - Who appointed all this. The whole arrangement in the service of the tabernacle is represented as having been under the directi...

The Holy Ghost - Who appointed all this. The whole arrangement in the service of the tabernacle is represented as having been under the direction of the Holy Spirit, or this was one of his methods of teaching the great truths of religion, and of keeping them before the minds of people. Sometimes that Spirit taught by direct revelation; sometimes by the written word, and sometimes by symbols. The tabernacle, with its different apartments, utensils, and services, was a permanent means of keeping important truths before the minds of the ancient people of God.

This signifying - That is, showing this truth, or making use of this arrangement to impress this truth on the minds of people that the way into the holiest of all was not yet made manifest.

That the way into the holiest of all - Into heaven - of which the Most Holy place in the tabernacle was undoubtedly designed to be an emblem. It was the place where the visible symbol of God - the Shekinah - dwelt; where the blood of propitiation was sprinkled, and was, therefore, an appropriate emblem of that holy heaven where God dwells, and whence pardon is obtained by the blood of the atonement.

Was not yet made manifest - The way to heaven was not opened or fully understood. It was not known how people could appear before God, or how they could come with the hope of pardon. That way has now been opened by the ascension of the Redeemer to heaven, and by the assurance that all who will may come in his name.

While as the first tabernacle was yet standing - As long as it stood, and the appointed services were held in it. The idea is, that until it was superseded by a more perfect system, it was a "proof"that the way to heaven was not yet fully and freely optioned, and that the Holy Spirit "designed"that it should be such a proof. The apostle does not specify in what the proof consisted, but it may have been in something like the following.

(1)\caps1     i\caps0 t was a mere "symbol,"and not the "reality"- showing that the true way was not yet fully understood.

(2)\caps1     i\caps0 t was entered but once a year - showing that there was not access at all times.

(3)\caps1     i\caps0 t was entered only by the High Priest - showing that there was not free end full access to all the people.

(4)\caps1     i\caps0 t was accessible only by Jews - showing that the way in which all men might be saved was not then fully revealed.

The sense is, that it was a system of types and shadows, in which there were many burdensome rites and many things to prevent people from coming before the symbol of the divinity, and was, therefore, an "imperfect system."All these obstructions are now removed; the Saviour - the great High Priest of his people - has entered heaven and "opened it to all true believers,"and all of every nation may now have free access to God; see Heb 9:12; compare Heb 10:19-22.

Barnes: Heb 9:9 - -- Which was a figure for the time then present - That is, as long as the tabernacle stood. The word rendered "figure"- παραβολὴ par...

Which was a figure for the time then present - That is, as long as the tabernacle stood. The word rendered "figure"- παραβολὴ parabolē - is not the same as type - τύπος tupos - (Rom 5:14; Act 7:13, Act 7:44; Joh 20:25; 1Co 10:6, 1Co 10:11; Phi 3:17, et al.) - but is the word commonly rendered "parable;"Mat 13:3, Mat 13:10, Mat 13:13, Mat 13:18, Mat 13:24, Mat 13:31, Mat 13:33-36, Mat 13:53; Mat 15:15, "et soepe,"and means properly "a placing side by side;"then a "comparison, or similitude."Here it is used in the sense of "image, or symbol"- something to "represent"other things. The idea is, that the arrangements and services of the tabernacle were a representation of important realities, and of things which were more fully to be revealed at a future period. There can be no doubt that Paul meant to say that this service in general was symbolical or typical, though this will not authorize us to attempt to spiritualize every minute arrangement of it. Some of the things in which it was typical are specified by the apostle himself, and wisdom and safety in explaining the arrangements of the tabernacle and its services consist in adhering very closely to the explanations furnished by the inspired writers. An interpreter is on an open sea, to be driven he knows not whither, when he takes leave of these safe pilots.

Both gifts - Thank-offerings.

And sacrifices - Bloody offerings. The idea is, that all kinds of offerings to God were made there.

That could not make him that did the service perfect - That could not take away sin, and remove the stains of guilt on the soul; note, Heb 7:11; compare Heb 8:7; Heb 7:27; Heb 10:1, Heb 10:11.

As pertaining to the conscience - They related mainly to outward and ceremonial rites, and even when offerings were made for sin the conscience was not relieved. They could not expiate guilt; they could not make the soul pure; they could not of themselves impart peace to the soul by reconciling it to God. They could not fully accomplish what the conscience needed to have done in order to give it peace. Nothing will do this but the blood of the Redeemer.

Barnes: Heb 9:10 - -- Which stood only in meats and drinks - The idea is, that the ordinances of the Jews, in connection with the services of religion, consisted muc...

Which stood only in meats and drinks - The idea is, that the ordinances of the Jews, in connection with the services of religion, consisted much of laws pertaining to what was lawful to eat and drink, etc. A considerable part of those laws related to the distinction between clean and unclean beasts, and to such arrangements as were designed to keep them externally distinct from other nations. It is possible also that there may be a reference here to meat and drink offerings. On the grammatical difficulties of this verse, see Stuart on the Hebrews, in loc.

And divers washings - The various ablutions which were required in the service of the tabernacle and the temple - washing of the hands, of the victim that was to be offered, etc. It was for this purpose that the laver was erected in front of the tabernacle Exo 30:18; Exo 31:9; Exo 35:16, and that the brass sea and the lavers were constructed in connection with the temple of Solomon; 2Ch 4:2-5; 1Ki 7:26. The Greek word here is "baptisms."On its meaning, see Mat 3:6 note; Mar 7:4 note.

And carnal ordinances - Margin, "Or, rites, or ceremonies."Greek "Ordinances of the flesh;"that is, which pertained to the flesh or to external ceremonies. The object was rather to keep them "externally"pure than to cleanse the conscience and make them holy in heart.

Imposed on them - "Laid on them"- ἐπικέιμενα epikeimena . It does not mean that there was any "oppression"or "injustice"in regard to these ordinances, but that they were appointed for a temporary purpose.

Until the time of reformation - The word rendered here "reformation"- διόρθωσις diorthōsis - means properly "emendation, improvement, reform."It refers to putting a thing in a right condition; making it better; or raising up and restoring what is fallen down. Passow. Here the reference is undoubtedly to the gospel as being a better system - "a putting things where they ought to be;"compare notes on Act 3:21. The idea here is, that those ordinances were only temporary in their nature, and were designed to endure until a more perfect system should be introduced. They were of value "to introduce"that better system; they were not adapted to purify the conscience and remove the stains of guilt from the soul.

Poole: Heb 9:1 - -- Heb 9:1-14 The service and sacrifices of the first tabernacle were far less perfect and efficacious to purge the conscience than the blood of Christ...

Heb 9:1-14 The service and sacrifices of the first tabernacle

were far less perfect and efficacious to purge the

conscience than the blood of Christ.

Heb 9:15-22 The necessity of Christ’ s death for the confirmation

of the new covenant,

Heb 9:23,24 and of better sacrifices than those legal ones to

purify the heavenly things.

Heb 9:25-28 Christ was offered once for all.

The Holy Spirit, Heb 9:1-10:18 , is illustrating his two last arguments taken from the tabernacle and covenant administrations, about which both the Aaronical priests and the gospel High Priest did minister; in both which Christ hath beyond all comparison the pre-eminence, which the Spirit proves by an argument drawn a comparatis, of the tabernacle and service of the Aaronical priests, and the tabernacle and work of Christ. He beginneth with a proposition of the adjuncts of the first covenant from Heb 9:1-10 : The three particles introducing it, men , oun , and kai , agree, the one in connecting, the other demonstrating, and the last in asserting, that which followeth to depend on what went before, as: And then truly the first.

The first covenant: h prwth is an ellipsis, nothing is in the Greek text joined with it, though some Greek copies add skhnh , the first tabernacle; but this is to make the same thing a property of itself, and it is absurd to read, the first tabernacle had a tabernacle; it is therefore better supplied from that which first relates to in Heb 8:7,13 , viz. the Mosaical covenant administration, which had or possessed, as its proper adjuncts, even those three distinct ones following.

Had also ordinancesdikaiwmata , we read ordinances; others, ceremonies or rites. It is derived from a passive verb, and may signify, a righteous sentence or ordinance of God, or a righteous event that answers that law or decree, as Rom 8:4 . In the plural it notes jura, the laws of God, but especially here the ceremonial laws, these just constitutions for ministry which God gave by Moses to the Aaronical priesthood.

Of divine servicelatreiav , which our translators make of the genitive case singular; but this is repugnant to the next words connected to it, which should strictly be of the same case; it is therefore best rendered in the accusative case plural, and by apposition to ordinances, and so is read services or worship, which because it refers to God, our translators have added to it the word Divine. How various this worship was in the ministry of the high priest and ordinary priests, the apostle showeth afterward, and therefore most properly to be rendered services.

And a worldy sanctuary: to agion was the sanctuary where these services were performed, called the holy, from its relation to God and his service. It consisted of two tabernacles, as is described, Heb 9:2,3 . It is styled kosmikon , being externally decent, beautiful, and glorious, as is evident by its description, Exo 26:1-37 . Made it was after God’ s own model, a mystical structure, and a type of a better; yet though that were so pleasing to the eye of the world, its materials were, like it, frail, brittle, and passing away, as things made with hands make way for better, Heb 9:24 .

Poole: Heb 9:2 - -- For there was a tabernacle made: the Spirit descends to a particular account of the three former adjuncts to the covenant, beginning with the last, t...

For there was a tabernacle made: the Spirit descends to a particular account of the three former adjuncts to the covenant, beginning with the last, the sanctuary; which being glorious, he advanceth the glory of Christ from the place of his ministry above it.

For is demonstrative of what was asserted Heb 9:1 , the first visible habitation that God had amongst men, 2Sa 7:6 , as a token of his gracious presence with them. This tabernacle consisted of three parts, of the court where stood the brazen altar of burnt offerings, the brazen laver for the priests to wash the sacrifices in, and to purify themselves when they came and offered them upon the altar, Exo 27:1 , &c.; Exo 30:17-21 38:1-20 40:28-33 . This court the Holy Ghost here leaves out. Separated from this court by a veil was the first tent or tabernacle, called the sanctuary, or holy place, where the priest did the daily service, which is called the first, Exo 26:36 40:22-29 . Inward of this, and separated by a veil, was the holy of holiest, where the ark was, and where the high priest only entered once a year, Exo 25:10,22 40:20,21 . This tabernacle was according to God’ s pattern and command, prepared, finished, and reared up by Moses, Exo 40:1-38 .

The first the sanctuary, or holy place, separated by one veil from the holy of holiest, and from the court by another, had in it the following sacred utensils.

The candlestick for matter and form answering God’ s pattern, as Exo 25:31,40 37:17,25 40:24,25 . It was of pure gold, and of six branches artificially wrought, by which was typified that Spirit of light which Christ giveth to the true tabernacle, his body mystical, the church wherein God dwelleth, not unusually set out by lamps, Rev 4:5 . And by reason of that light is the church set out by the emblem of candlesticks, Rev 1:4,12,13,20 .

The table for matter, of plates of pure gold covering the shittim wood, and a crowning verge of gold round it, Exo 25:23-30 37:10-16 Exo 40:22,23 . Most excellent for its spiritual use, setting out Christ in all his excellencies, well stored and furnished for his; which the Jews by their unbelief and profaneness made contemptible, Mal 1:7 .

The shewbread was twelve cakes made and set on the table, new every sabbath day in the morning, and when taken away were to be eaten by the priests only, Exo 25:30 40:23 Lev 24:5-9 . However, on David’ s necessity God dispensed with that law, and allowed him to eat of it, Mar 2:26 . This was an emblem of God’ s provision for the twelve tribes, the type of his church; and the bestowing on them the bread of life from heaven, the all-sufficient food for them, Joh 6:32-58 ; compare Col 2:16,17 .

Which is called the sanctuary which first tabernacle was called the holy place or sanctuary, being relatively so, as God’ s tent, and no otherwise, so is it styled by the Spirit, Exo 26:33 .

Poole: Heb 9:3 - -- And after the second veil: this distinguisheth the second tabernacle from the first; for, passing through it to the end of it, there hung up a curiou...

And after the second veil: this distinguisheth the second tabernacle from the first; for, passing through it to the end of it, there hung up a curious veil made of blue, purple, scarlet, and fine twined linen, with figures of cherubims, Exo 26:31,32 36:35,36 40:21 . The mystery of which is interpreted after, Heb 9:8 : see Heb 6:19 . A veil noteth distance and obscurity; or, covering, opposite to that which is open and free.

The tabernacle which is called the holiest of all: behind this veil was the second tabernacle, called the holy of holiest, Exo 26:33 , by God himself, which did really, though typically, hold out the place of God’ s special appearance for propitiation and gracious answers of peace to the desires of his people in the Lord Jesus; applied afterwards to heaven itself, the holiest of all, where the High Priest is entered for us, and sits at the right hand of his Father, making intercession for us, Heb 6:19,20 7:25 9:24 10:19 .

Poole: Heb 9:4 - -- Which had the golden censer in the holy of holiest was reserved the golden censer, on which the high priest put the incense when annually he entered ...

Which had the golden censer in the holy of holiest was reserved the golden censer, on which the high priest put the incense when annually he entered there, see Lev 16:12,13that the cloud of it might cover the mercy-seat, and so was kept for that service in it: see Joseph. Antiq. lib. 3. 7. Many would refer this to the golden altar of incense that stood before the veil in the holy place, Exo 30:6-8 ; and so they read it, having the golden altar of incense before it for its service, and not within it; signifying the Godhead, by which Christ maketh his intercession, sanctifying and perfuming his own, and all offerings made in his name.

And the ark of the covenant it was a coffer or chest of shittim wood, plated all over with gold, Exo 25:10-22 37:1,6 40:20,21 . This chest had for its cover a mercy-seat, listed or verged with a crown of gold round it; and is called the ark of the covenant, because the tables of testimony were laid up in it, Exo 25:16 40:20 ; those two stone tables wrought by Moses, and carried up into the mount, (after he had on the idolatry of Israel broken those of God’ s own making, and on which God had written the ten laws, the terms of his covenant with them), on which God wrote afresh his laws, and renewed his covenant with them, Exo 34:1,2,28,29 ; compare Exo 31:18 . This ark was a type of Christ interposing between God and us, who had broken the covenant of his laws.

Wherein was the golden pot that had mannaen h , wherein, refers not to the ark mentioned just before, for in it was nothing pnt but the two tables of the covenant; but the tabernacle, called the holy of holiest, in which was reserved the golden censer, pot of manna, provided by God’ s charge before the giving of the law, and laid up afterwards in that archive by God’ s order, Exo 16:32-34 . This manna was the bread God fed Israel in his church with forty years in the wilderness, and is called angels’ food, Psa 78:25 ; a type of Christ the true bread, that God gave from heaven to his church, Joh 6:31-58 .

And Aaron’ s rod that budded which was by God’ s order put before the testimony in the holy of holiest, and not into the ark, for it was to be in view there as a token of the true priesthood, the type of Christ’ s, against all after-murmurers and usurpers: see Num 17:1-11 .

And the tables of the covenant and as these, the urn of manna and rod of Aaron, were in the holy of holiest; so especially the two tables of the covenant were there too, but laid up in the ark which was in that place: see 1Ki 8:9 2Ch 5:10 . Oters think the preposition en is to be read, by which, or about, near which ark, as it is used of Christ’ s sitting en dezia , Heb 1:3 ; and so notes, as to the pot of manna and Aaron’ s rod, an apposition of them to or by the ark, when the tables of the covenant were undeniably put into it.

Poole: Heb 9:5 - -- And over it the cherubims of glory shadowing the mercy-seat on the cover of the ark at each end was a cherub of beaten gold; these and the cover of t...

And over it the cherubims of glory shadowing the mercy-seat on the cover of the ark at each end was a cherub of beaten gold; these and the cover of the ark were all of one piece, they had their feet on the ledge of the cover, or its crown, at each end; their faces looked towards each other, and their wings touched each other in the extreme part of them, and so on the cover formed the mercy seat see Exo 25:17-22 : and Exo 37:6-9 40:20 . Their form is described by Ezekiel, Eze 1:1-28 and Eze 10:1-22 . They were glorious for matter and service, God in his glory manifesting himself over them, gave propitious answers unto Moses about his church, Exo 25:22 Lev 16:2 . These cherubims typified the ministry of angels to our Lord Jesus, especially in his great work of rendering God propitious to his church, and saving it, Heb 1:14 . Standing on the two ends of the ark’ s cover, they showed Christ to be the basis of their own standing, when others fell: they spread out their wings, to show their readiness for serving him in all; with their faces opposite to each other, and looking down on the mercy-seat and ark, typifying what the apostle saith of them, 1Pe 1:10-12 , desirous to pry into the mystery of this great Propitiator, the Surety and Mediator of God’ s testament, and on his propitiation and its effects, which is admirable and astonishing, not to sinners only, but to angels, Eph 3:10 .

Of which we cannot now speak particularly the apostle apologizeth for his but mentioning these mysterious things now, that it was not to eclipse the glory of that administration, but because the matters were well known to them already, only in this they were defective, that they reached not after Christ, the truth and substance of all these types; and therefore he proceeds from the places, to treat of the services to be performed by the Aaronical priesthood in them.

Poole: Heb 9:6 - -- The Spirit now proceeds to the second adjunct of the Mosaical administration, having stated the places of them, even the Aaronical priests’ se...

The Spirit now proceeds to the second adjunct of the Mosaical administration, having stated the places of them, even the Aaronical priests’ services in them.

Now when these things were thus ordained when the tabernacles were made and reared, and the utensils rightly disposed in them, and all things set in God’ s own order, now

the priests went always into the first tabernacle, accomplishing the service of God into the holy place or sanctuary within the first veil, described, Heb 9:2 . Not only the high priest, but all the common priests, consecrated by God’ s order to their work; every one in his daily course, constantly performing, and completely acting, all the services enjoined on them by God to be done there, as to put on the shew-bread, and to eat what they took off, Exo 25:30 Lev 24:5-9 ; to keep the lights in the candlestick, supplying it with oil, and clearing the lights, Exo 25:37,38 Ex 27:20,21 30:1,8 Nu 8:2,3 ; to burn incense on the golden altar before the ark: the priests took a censer, and filled it with fire from the altar of burnt sacrifice, and then came to the altar of incense before the veil, and there put the incense on the fire in the censer; during the evaporating of which, the people in the court were pouring out their prayers for pardon, each person by himself; see Exo 30:1-9,34-36 40:26,27 Lu 1:9,10 ; even all the ordinances of worship commanded by God, did the priests perform in it. All which services in the holy place do but typify the true services in the gospel church, of all made priests by the blood of Christ, 1Pe 2:5,9 Re 1:5,6 5:9,10 ; offering prayers and praises to God continually in the name of Christ, perfumed with the incense of his merits, Mal 1:11 ; compare Rev 8:3 ; obtaining thereby the light of his grace through his Spirit, and the bread of life, till they are perfected by their great High Priest, and carried into the holy of holiest, there to be praising and enjoying God in him for ever, as he hath prayed for them, and promised to them, Joh 14:2,3 17:20,21 .

Poole: Heb 9:7 - -- This verse contains the special anniversary of the high priest alone in the inward tabernacle, the holy of holiest, of which you have the law, Exo 3...

This verse contains the special anniversary of the high priest alone in the inward tabernacle, the holy of holiest, of which you have the law, Exo 30:14 Lev 16:2 , &c.

But into the second went the high priest alone once every year into this place the high priest was to enter once a year only, and every year to repeat it, as Exo 30:10 , upon the atonement day, being the tenth day of the month Tisri, the seventh month in their ecclesiastical year, and the first of their civil: that day was he to enter several times into that place, first for himself, Lev 16:11-14 , and then for the people, Lev 16:15,16 , &c., carrying in the blood first within the veil, and then coming out again, and carrying in the incense on the golden censer: none of the other priests were to enter into the holy place while he was ministering, but him alone, as Lev 16:17 .

Not without blood: when he first entered into the holiest of all, it was with the blood of a young bull, of a ram, Lev 16:3,14 , with the blood of the he-goat, Heb 9:15,27 . After he had offered the incense on his golden censer, Heb 9:4 , he must sprinkle the blood upon the mercy-seat and before it, by which expiatory blood there was made an atonement, Heb 9:12-14 .

Which he offered for himself, and for the errors of the people first, for his sinful self and family, Lev 16:11 , and then for the ignorances, incogitancies, errors, and all sorts of sins committed by the people, Heb 9:16 Heb 7:27 ; all of them being committed with some error of the understanding. Which type, in all its parts, was perfectly fulfilled in Christ, the gospel High Priest, as is shown in the following verses; whereby not only his office, but his services, are transcendently set above, and preferred to, all the Aaronical ones.

Poole: Heb 9:8 - -- The Holy Ghost this signifying God the Spirit himself, the third relation in the Deity, the author of all the Mosaical institutions, who commanded al...

The Holy Ghost this signifying God the Spirit himself, the third relation in the Deity, the author of all the Mosaical institutions, who commanded all these ritual, ceremonial services in this tabernacle to be performed, who revealed all this to Moses, and who inspired him with it, Lev 16:1,2 , the most infallible interpreter of his own institutions, declared by these signals and types, and demonstrated by the frame of ordinances, then given to the church, in these expressions, Exo 30:10 Lev 16:2,12-15,17 : the veil ever covering the holy of holiest, but only on the day of expiation, when it was drawn aside, and that laid open.

That the way into the holiest of all was not yet made manifest the true and very means to God’ s presence in heaven itself, which is only by Christ the great High Priest, through whose blood we can come to the throne of his grace there boldly, Heb 10:19-22 , and by the perfect work of his Spirit on us, can enter with him into the holy of holiest in heaven; this was not so plainly, clearly, fully, universally known as afterwards by the shedding of Christ’ s blood, and the revelation of it in the gospel to all the world. Christ was revealed to the Hebrews, and all these ceremonial ordinances did hold him out, and by him only the saints under that covenant administration got to heaven; yet the manifestation of it was obscure in comparison of what it is since.

While as the first tabernacle was yet standing while the Mosaical covenant administration was to continue, till the coming of Christ in the flesh, and perfecting the work by his death, for the space of near one thousand five hundred years, was the true, right, and proper way for entering into heaven, darkly, and obscurely, and typically revealed unto the church; when by the death of Christ the veil of the holy of holiest was rent asunder, heaven laid open to be seen, and entered into by all penitent believing sinners through Christ, every day in their duties, and then in their persons, Mat 27:51 .

Poole: Heb 9:9 - -- Which was a figure for the time then present: the tabernacle in all its parts, and the whole economy of it, was parabolh , which signifieth the trans...

Which was a figure for the time then present: the tabernacle in all its parts, and the whole economy of it, was parabolh , which signifieth the translation of a word or thing from its own natural signification to signify another, which thing so signified by it is commonly more excellent than itself, as the substance exceeds the shadow; equivalent it is to those terms of types, examples, figures of things to come: such are the tabernacle and its services, representations of things spiritual and Divine, and very imperfect shadows of them, serving only for that infant state of the church: and when its nonage was to expire by the coming of the truths themselves, then were they to expire too. The only time when the tabernacle administration was present, and no longer.

In which were offered both gifts and sacrifices in which tabernacle were performed services to the great God, whose tent it was, suitable to his person, and agreeable to his will, even gifts and sacrifices, as before described, Heb 5:1 8:3 .

That could not make him that did the service perfect, as pertaining to the conscience they were all impotent as to the restoring of a sinner to God’ s favour by themselves; they could not reconcile him to God, preserve communion with him, nor bring them to happiness in him, Heb 10:3,4 ; no perfect justifying, sanctifying could be had by any of them, though never so often repeated. They might do all to the letter which God required, absolving the worshipper as to the external part, but not at all according to the conscience; or they could not take the guilt of sin from the conscience as to themselves, but it would cry guilty still; neither could they remove the power of it, for it was under bondage to it still; neither could they take away the fears and terrors of it, but left it shaking under them and unquiet still, being abused by them as a veil to keep them from Christ the true Priest and sacrifice, when as types and shadows they should have led these worshippers to him.

Poole: Heb 9:10 - -- Having shown the typicalness, weakness of the Mosaical covenant administration; in respect of the tabernacles, services, and ordinances, he closeth ...

Having shown the typicalness, weakness of the Mosaical covenant administration; in respect of the tabernacles, services, and ordinances, he closeth his description of them in this verse, by showing their carnality and mortality. As they were external things, they could reach no further than the flesh only, as appears by particular instances, and therefore could not quiet the conscience, considered without Christ, nor justify, sanctify, or save the sinner. For meat and drink offerings, and meats clean and unclean, and drinks prohibited by God, in which the Jews placed much of their religion, separate from what they signified, commended no man unto God, 1Co 8:8 .

Which stood only in meats and drinks: as to meats, see Lev 11:1-47 Deu 14:3-21 . As to drinks, forbidden the priests, Lev 10:9 , and the Nazarites, Num 6:2,3 ; the jealousy water, Num 5:24 , and the paschal cup, Psa 116:13 , and cup of thank-offerings; see Lev 1:1-17 and Lev 2:1-16 .

And divers washings which were many for the priests in their services, and for others in performing theirs by them; some by sprinkling with blood, Exo 29:20,21 , with water, Num 8:7 19:9-19 ; some by washing at the brazen laver, as the priests, Exo 29:4 30:17-21 ; so the sprinkling of healed lepers, Lev 14:4-9 , and the purification of the unclean. All these were of God’ s own instituting, but still reach no further than the flesh or body of the sinner: see Heb 9:13 .

And carnal ordinances: other carnal rites and ceremonies, such as could not reach the conscience, as they used them, yet were to be used by them in obedience to God’ s will, and to discriminate them from others, which were various in the ceremonial law.

Imposed on themepikeimena , imposed, may agree with dwra , Heb 9:9 , gifts imposed; or may have the whole sentence for its substantive, as, being matters imposed or settled in meats and drinks. All these things were not the inventions of Moses, but God’ s own institutions, enjoined by his own authority on the Jewish church, to lead them by a regular use of them to life by Christ, but by their own corruptions were made burdens to them. The Divine precept obliged them to an observation of them, and to the serving God in, by, and through them.

Until the time as they were outward, bodily, and carnal things, so they were mortal; as to their being and continuance enjoined by God, they were mecri kairou until is a term settled and limited, and not indefinite, and its limit is a singular time, even that point of time wherein Christ, having finished the work of redemption, ascended and sat down on the right hand of God, and powerfully thence breathed forth the Spirit, of infallibility on his apostles, for guiding them in laying the foundation of his church, by preaching the gospel throughout the world, and perfecting of it, and no other. This the Jews and others expected from the Messiah, Joh 4:25 , in his time. All the New Testament perfecting was by them, and therefore they give a charge against the least alteration of the gospel, truth, and law, which they left as a rule for ordering of Christ’ s church to his last coming: see Mat 28:20 .

Of reformationdiorywsewv , of putting things to rights by the law, rule, and ordinance of Christ, the work of this special point of time. He, the great church reformer, thoroughly righteth things to God-ward, by removing and taking away what was faulty, not in itself, but by man’ s abuse of it, even all the Mosaical economy and church-frame, which carried men about to God, by opening and making that to be seen with open face, which was well veiled, and so mistaken, even the mystery of Christ hid from ages, by manifesting and establishing that which was the truth itself, instead of the shadows that did but represent it; even that true churchframe intended first by God, and now fully revealed and settled by his Son as a standing rule and pattern to all for ever; which unmovable kingdom of his is described further, Heb 12:22-28 .

PBC: Heb 9:1 - -- The book of Hebrews legitimizes a view of the Old Testament law, particularly the worshipping rituals of priesthood and sacrifice as a legitimate type...

The book of Hebrews legitimizes a view of the Old Testament law, particularly the worshipping rituals of priesthood and sacrifice as a legitimate type of the Lord Jesus Christ and His priesthood. If you follow the theme of this reading {Heb 9:1-14} and the remainer of Hebrews you can make a strong case from biblical instruction that every piece of furniture and that every act of the priest was a symbol that pointed specifically and uniquely to the work of the Lord Jesus Christ who is yet to come.

Frequently when we read this passage, immediately we start delving into all the details and plunged ourselves hopelessly into the details of symbolic meaning, rituals, and furnishings related to Levitical worship. There is perhaps occasion where these details are profitable. What the writer of Hebrews does is the very opposite. If we are going to follow the text, rather than plunging into minute detail, we’re going to run at almost break-neck speed across a big-picture view of what happened under the Old Testament ritual. The first five verses {Heb 9:1-5} give you the details of the furnishing. For 2 chapters the Hebrew writer has dealt with the person of our Priest (Heb 7:1-28, the priest after the order of Melchisedec; Heb 8:1-13, the priest who takes the Melchisedec order and expands it into something far greater in His function and His eternal priesthood). A good consolation we have in Christ is the hope that links and secures us to the works of God because of our sins. With Heb 9:1-28 a major transition will occur. We move from emphasis on the priest to emphasis on his work, the work the Lord Jesus Christ, our heavenly priest is to accomplish.

390

PBC: Heb 9:7 - -- The priests went into these outer areas of the tabernacle daily, a morning and evening sacrifice. They offered incidental, or what we should call occa...

The priests went into these outer areas of the tabernacle daily, a morning and evening sacrifice. They offered incidental, or what we should call occasional sacrifices. You commit a sin in ignorance; you come to the realization of that sin; the law prescribes that you bring a certain kind of animal for that particular sin to the priest; you kill it and prepare it; you take it, ready to be sacrificed, to the priest at the gate or door of the temple. You give it to the priest, put your hand of the head of the animal, and confess your sin. Anyone who says that we should confess to God but never to man needs to go back and read Leviticus. The priest received that animal, took it into the tabernacle, and offered it for that person who brought his confession forward.

Vegetable sacrifices, sheep, turtledoves- various animals were sacrificed on different occasions- but the annual sacrifice offered for all Israel by the high priest in the holy of holies was prescribed to be a goat- actually 2 goats, one was sacrificed, one was treated differently; a goat, not a sheep. A goat was less precious to a Jew in the Jewish economy than a sheep. In Mt 25:1-46 Jesus subjects the symbolism of sheep and goats to a fairly powerful theological point- a goat is to represent a sacrifice for the whole nation? Yes! In Heb 9:9 we find that all the individual sacrifices could not make him that did the service perfect as pertaining to the conscience. In Heb 9:11 Christ is not just an ordinary priest (Occasionally in Hebrews interpretation, he is an ordinary priest.) but this text depicts Him specifically in the role of High Priest. It is Christ, our High Priest, who becomes both priest and sacrifice -He becomes God’s goat (He actually becomes both of God’s goats) -the one sacrificed and offered in the the tabernacle and, as well, the one on whose head our sins were confessed before he was sent away into the wilderness never to be allowed back into the camp. In this symbolism of Levitical worship the Lord Jesus Christ is our priest and both goat sacrifices.

391

PBC: Heb 9:8 - -- Primarily the inspired Hebrew writer has dealt with the furnishings and the arrangement of the tabernacle, not the later temple constructed by Solomon...

Primarily the inspired Hebrew writer has dealt with the furnishings and the arrangement of the tabernacle, not the later temple constructed by Solomon. Hebrews consistently deals with the tabernacle that God directed Moses to construct in the wilderness, not to the temple Solomon later erected in Jerusalem. It appears that the tabernacle gives us a closer replica of what Moses saw on Mount Sinai and that’s the point Hebrews reminds us to follow.

392

Haydock: Heb 9:1 - -- The former. [1] In the ordinary Greek copies is expressed the former tabernacle; but even the Protestant translators have abandoned that reading, a...

The former. [1] In the ordinary Greek copies is expressed the former tabernacle; but even the Protestant translators have abandoned that reading, and understand the former testament or covenant, which they have put in a different character. ---

Worldly sanctuary, or a temporal sanctuary, to last only for a time, like the things of this world. (Witham) -- The word ordinances ( Greek: dikaiomata ) is frequently used for the laws and ordinances of God, because the observance of the laws is the justification of man; see particularly in the 118th Psalm, the legal rites justified in regard to the outward policy of the Jews.

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[BIBLIOGRAPHY]

Habuit & prius, Greek: eiche e prote. Though almost all Greek copies have Greek: skene, tabernacle: yet even the Protestant translators add in a different print, covenant, as if Greek: diatheke was understood. Ibid. [Ver. 1.] Sanctum sæculare, Greek: kosmikon. This Greek word is only found in one other place in the New Testament, Titus ii. 12. sæcularia desideria.

Haydock: Heb 9:2 - -- First tabernacle. By this word is signified, the sanctuary or place for worshipping God, ordained by Moses, which was an oratory to be moved from p...

First tabernacle. By this word is signified, the sanctuary or place for worshipping God, ordained by Moses, which was an oratory to be moved from place to place with the Israelites, which they kept afterwards, and had a resemblance of it in the temple. This tabernacle consisted of two parts, which St. Paul here calls the first and second. The first part was called the holy, which was separated from the rest of the temple by a veil. In this first part were the candlesticks, i.e. one candlestick, as it is called, Exodus xxv. 37. having seven branches in which were placed lamps; and a table, on which were placed twelve loaves, according to the number of the Jewish tribes, to be changed every week. (Witham)

Haydock: Heb 9:3 - -- And after the second veil, or partition, was the second or inward part, or that part called the holy of holies. (Witham) --- The first veil was at t...

And after the second veil, or partition, was the second or inward part, or that part called the holy of holies. (Witham) ---

The first veil was at the entrance of the holy place, and separated it from the outward court; the second veil separated the holy place from the holy of holies.

Haydock: Heb 9:4 - -- Having the golden censer. What is meant by this is uncertain, no mention being made of a golden censer in either part of the tabernacle made by the ...

Having the golden censer. What is meant by this is uncertain, no mention being made of a golden censer in either part of the tabernacle made by the order of Moses, which the apostle here speaks of. Some say that the high priest, when he entered once a year into the holy of holies, made use of a golden censer, which he left there: but this is merely a conjecture. Others think that by the golden censer is meat the altar of perfumes, or where perfumes were burnt, which was, as it were a large censer, and is called by the same Greek word by Josephus, the historian; but then there occurs a difficulty, that this altar was in that first part called the holy, not in the holy of holies, to which the same interpreters answer, that this altar was placed just at the entrance into the holy of holies, and so may be looked upon as belonging to the holy of holies: not does the text say it was in the holy of holies, but only having, &c. as a town may be said to have fortifications which are not within the town itself. ---

And the tables of the testament, or covenant. The ark was certainly in the holy of holies, in which[2] was the golden urn, with a measure of manna, and Aaron's rod that budded, and the tables of the testament, or the tables of stone, on which were engraven the ten commandments. Noting but these tables were within the ark: (see 3 Kings viii. and 2 Paralipomenon v. 10.) so that when it is said, in which was the golden urn and the rod of Aaron, the meaning seems to be, that they were indeed in the holy of holies with the ark, but not within the ark. (Witham) ---

In the Greek it is easy to confound the word Greek: thusiasterion, which signifies altar, with Greek: thumiaterion, which means censer. It was placed adjoining the inward veil, so that the clouds of the incense filled the holy of holies; and hence it is mentioned by St. Paul as contained therein. ---

The apostle describes these things as they were in the tabernacle of Moses constructed in the desert. (Bible de Vence) ---

We see with what great and continued respect and veneration the manna and Aaron's rod, &c. were kept by the Jews, and shall not Christians be allowed to preserve with equal respect the monuments of God's mercies, and tokens of Christ's passion? See St. Cyril, (lib. iv. cont. Julianum) where he defends against the apostate, the keeping and honouring the cross on which Christ died. See also in St. Jerome (ep. xvii. chap. 5.) and in St. Paulinus, (ep. 11.) what reverence the faithful in those early periods of the Church paid to the sepulchres of Christ and his martyrs, as also to their relics. "We reverence and worship [honour]," says the latter, "the sepulchres of the martyrs; and, if we can, we apply the holy ashes to our eyes and mouth."

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[BIBLIOGRAPHY]

Habens thuribulum aureum, Greek: chrusoun echousa thumiaterion. Josephus useth the same word for the altar of perfumes, lib. 6. The Jewish War , chap. vi. and lib. 3. Jewish Antiquities, chap. vii. Ibid. [Ver. 4.] In qua, Greek: en e. It may signify the same as cum qua.

Haydock: Heb 9:5 - -- And over it (the ark) were cherubims of glory or glorious cherubims, (in what shape they were represented, is not certain) overshadowing the propi...

And over it (the ark) were cherubims of glory or glorious cherubims, (in what shape they were represented, is not certain) overshadowing the propitiatory, or seat of mercy, which was all of gold, of the same size as the ark, and like a cover to it. Just over this propitiatory were placed the two cherubs, spreading their wings looking towards one another, and upon the propitiatory. See Exodus xxxvi. and xxxvii. From this place God made known his presence, and the effects of his mercy to this people. Here he was said to be seated on the cherubims, and that the ark was his footstool. Psalm xcviii. Adore his footstool; i.e. prostrate before his ark. These two images of cherubs, shew that God did not absolutely forbid images at that time, when the people were so addicted to idolatry, but only to adore them. (Witham) ---

How futile is it to object from the commandment that it is forbidden to use holy images in the Church, when we here behold even amongst the people most prone to idolatry, most gross in their ideas of spiritual things, and to whom the precept was specially given not to make any graven idols, the same God commanding these images of angels to be made and set in the most holy place of the tabernacle or temple.

Haydock: Heb 9:6 - -- The rites of the sacrifices. The priests, as the tells us, entered every day, that is, by turns, (see Luke i. 5.) to make the offering of incense mo...

The rites of the sacrifices. The priests, as the tells us, entered every day, that is, by turns, (see Luke i. 5.) to make the offering of incense morning and night, also to change the loaves, take care of the lamps, &c. But we must not think that they offered in that place victims or holocausts of sheep, lambs, oxen, &c. This was not done in any part of the sanctuary, neither before nor after the building of the temple, but in a place or court adjoining the tabernacle, upon a large altar of five cubits long and as many broad. See Exodus xxvii. and xxxviii. (Witham)

Haydock: Heb 9:7 - -- Into the second part of the sanctuary, (i.e. the holy of holies) no one entered but the high priest, and he but once a year, on the feast called of ...

Into the second part of the sanctuary, (i.e. the holy of holies) no one entered but the high priest, and he but once a year, on the feast called of expiation, to make an aspersion of blood upon the ark and round about, which he offereth for his own and the people's ignorance, or ignorances, as in the Greek; that is, for all his and their sins. See Leviticus x. (Witham) ---

He offered that blood of a calf for his own sins and those of his family, and the blood of a goat for the sins of the people. (Leviticus xvi.)

Haydock: Heb 9:8 - -- The Holy Ghost signifying this. Here the apostle begins to tell us in what manner the sanctuary was a figure of things in the new law of Christ. Th...

The Holy Ghost signifying this. Here the apostle begins to tell us in what manner the sanctuary was a figure of things in the new law of Christ. The holy of holies was a figure of heaven, and this prohibition of any one going into it, was to signify that the way to heaven was not to be made manifest, nor to be opened, as long as the former tabernacle and law subsisted; that it was not to be opened till Christ, the high priest of the new testament, first entered, by shedding his blood on the cross, and by his glorious ascension. (Witham) ---

But when Christ expired, the veil of temple was rent asunder, to shew that the way to heaven was now laid open to mankind.

Haydock: Heb 9:9-10 - -- Which is a parable of the time then present; or, unto the present time, as in the Greek. By the present time, according to the common exposition...

Which is a parable of the time then present; or, unto the present time, as in the Greek. By the present time, according to the common exposition, is not meant the time of the new law, as some would have it, but the time of the former law; so that the sense is, which parable or type was a representation of things as they were to be performed, and to last during the time of the law, which was before present. ---

According to which. Some understand, according to which time; others, according to which parable, type, or typical worship of the former law, gifts and sacrifices are (i.e. were, and are) still offered by those who adhere to the Jewish law and ceremonies, which cannot of themselves make such worshippers perfect in conscience; i.e. can never give true interior sanctification, being only in meats, and drinks, and baptisms, &c. These words must not be referred to gifts and sacrifices, but to the worshipper; (literally, server) and the sense is, that to the priests, who worshipped and served God in the sanctuary and in offering sacrifices, was not prescribed an interior purity and sanctity, as in the new law, but only that legal sanctity which consisted in abstaining from such meats or drinks as were called unclean, or made them unclean. See Leviticus x. 9. where the priests are forbidden to drink wine when they were to enter into the tabernacle of the testimony. ---

In divers washings, &c. These precepts and ceremonies were only to last till the time of their correction, by the coming of Christ under the new and better law and testament. (Witham) ---

Of correction; viz. when Christ should correct and settle all things. (Challoner)

Gill: Heb 9:1 - -- Then verily the first covenant had ordinances of divine service,.... The design of the apostle in this chapter, as it stands in connection with what g...

Then verily the first covenant had ordinances of divine service,.... The design of the apostle in this chapter, as it stands in connection with what goes before, is to show the pre-eminence of Christ, from the tabernacle, and the things in it; as well as from the priesthood and covenant; and as also the abrogation of the Levitical ceremonies in particular, as well as the first covenant in general; and that they were all types and figures of Christ, and had their fulfilment in him: the word "first", here used, designs not the tabernacle, but the covenant; therefore it is rightly thus supplied in our version, as it is in the Arabic and Ethiopic versions: which is said to have "ordinances of divine service"; belonging to the service of God, which was performed both by the priests, and by the people; and these ordinances were no other than the carnal ordinances, or rites of the ceremonial law: the word used signifies "righteousnesses"; and they are so called, because they were appointed by a righteous God; and were imposed on the people of the Jews in a righteous way; and by them men became externally and typically righteous; for they were figures and types of justification by the righteousness of Christ, though no complete, perfect, real righteousness, came by them.

And a worldly sanctuary. Philo the Jew says l, it was a type of the world, and of the various things in it; though it was rather either a type of the church, or of heaven, or of Christ's human nature: the better reason of its being so called is, because it consisted of earthly matter, and worldly things; it was in the world, and only had its use in the world, and so is opposed to the heavenly sanctuary; for the Jews often speak of מקדש שלמעלה, "a sanctuary above", and מקדש שלמטה, "a sanctuary below" m, and of משכנא דלעילא, "a tabernacle above", and משכנא דלתתא, "a tabernacle below" n; which answered to one another: the words may be rendered "a beautiful sanctuary", a well adorned one; and such especially was the temple, or sanctuary built by Solomon, rebuilt by Zerubbabel, and repaired and adorned by Herod, Luk 21:5. And the Jews say, that he that never saw Herod's building, meaning the temple, never saw a beautiful building; see Luk 21:5.

Gill: Heb 9:2 - -- For there was a tabernacle made,.... By the direction of Moses, according to the pattern showed him in the Mount: the first; that is, the first par...

For there was a tabernacle made,.... By the direction of Moses, according to the pattern showed him in the Mount:

the first; that is, the first part of the tabernacle, called the holy place, in distinction from the holy of holies, which was the second part of the tabernacle; for otherwise there were not a first and a second tabernacle; there never was but one tabernacle:

wherein was the candlestick; that this was in the tabernacle, and on the south side of it, and without the vail, where the apostle has placed it, is plain from Exo 26:35. This was wanting in the second temple o: it was a type of Christ mystical, or the church; in the general use of it, to hold forth light, so the church holds forth the light of the Gospel, being put into it by Christ; in the matter of it, which was pure gold, denoting the purity, worth, splendour, glory, and duration of the church; in the parts of it, it had one shaft in the middle of it, in which all the parts met and cemented, typical of Christ the principal, and head of the church, whose situation is in the midst of the church, and who unites all together, and is but one: the six branches of it may intend all the members of the church, and especially the ministers of the word; the seven lamps with oil in them, may have a respect to the seven spirits of God, or the Spirit of God with his gifts and graces, and a profession of religion with grace along with it: and it was typical of the church in its ornaments and decorations; its bowls, knops, and flowers, may signify the various gifts of the Spirit, beautifying ministers, and fitting them for usefulness; and in the appurtenances of it, the tongs and snuff dishes may signify church discipline, censures, and excommunications.

And the table and the shewbread; the table, with the shewbread on it, was also in the tabernacle, on the north side of it, and without the vail, Exo 26:35. This was also wanting in the second temple p: the table was typical of Christ, and of communion with him; of the person of Christ; in the matter of it, which was Shittim wood overlaid with gold, whereby were signified the two natures of Christ in one person; the human nature by the Shittim wood, which is incorruptible, for though he died he saw no corruption, and is risen again, and lives for ever; and the divine nature by the gold, all the fulness of the Godhead dwelling in him; and in the decorations of it, as the border, golden crown, &c. which may respect the fulness of his grace, and the honour and glory he is crowned with, which render him exceeding valuable and precious: and it may be typical of communion with him, either hereafter, when the saints shall sit with him as at a table, and eat and drink with him in the kingdom of his Father; or here, to which Christ admits them, and than which nothing is more honourable, comfortable, and desirable; and it may be significative of the ministration of the word and ordinances, of which Christ is the sum and substance, and in which he grants his people fellowship with him: to this table belonged rings and bars to carry it from place to place, which was done by the priests; where the church is, there Christ is, and there is the ministration of his word and ordinances; and which are sometimes moved from one place to another, by the ministers of the word, according to divine direction. The "shewbread", on the table, was typical either of the church of Christ, the saints, who may be signified by the unleavened cakes, being true and sincere, and without the leaven of malice and hypocrisy; and by twelve of them, which may represent the twelve tribes of Israel, the whole spiritual Israel of God; and by bread of faces, as the word for shewbread may be rendered, since they are always before the Lord, and his eyes are continually upon them; they are set upon the pure table, Christ, on whom they are safe, and by whom they are accepted with God: and the shewbread being set in rows, may denote their order and harmony; and their being removed every sabbath day, may signify the succession of saints in the church, as one is removed, another is brought in; and the frankincense put upon each row, shows them to be a sweet savour to God: or else the shewbread was typical of Christ himself, who is the bread of life, the food of his people; and may be signified by the shewbread for its fineness and purity, being made of fine flour, Christ is the finest of the wheat, bread from heaven, and angels' food; for its quantity, twelve cakes, with Christ, is bread enough, and to spare, for all the elect; for its continuance, Christ always abides, and such as feed upon him live for ever; for its gratefulness, Christ's flesh is meat indeed, and his blood drink indeed; and for its being only for the priests, as only such who are made priests to God, live by faith on Christ; see Lev 25:5. Moreover, the intercession of Christ may be prefigured by the shewbread, or bread of faces, he being the angel of God's presence or face, who appears in the presence of God for his people; and this consisting of twelve loaves, according to the number of the tribes of Israel, shows that Christ represents the whole Israel of God in heaven, and intercedes for them; and whereas the shewbread always continued, no sooner was one set of loaves removed, but another was put in their room; this may point at the continual intercession of Christ for his people; and the frankincense may denote the acceptableness of it to God.

Which is called the sanctuary; or "holy"; this refers either to the first part of the tabernacle, which was called the holy place, in which the priests in common ministered; or else to the things which were in it, now mentioned, the candlestick table, and shewbread; to which the Ethiopic version adds, and the golden censer, which it leaves out in the fourth verse; which version renders these words, "and these they call holy"; and so the Arabic version, "which are called holy things", as they were, as well as the place in which they were; so the candlestick is called the holy candlestick in the Apocrypha,

"As the clear light is upon the holy candlestick; so is the beauty of the face in ripe age.'' (Sirach 26:17)

and the ark, candlestick, table, censer, and altar, are called σκευη ιερα, "holy vessels", by Philo the Jew q; but the former sense seems best, when compared with the following verse.

Gill: Heb 9:3 - -- And after the second vail,.... Were there more vails than one? the Scripture speaks but of one, Exo 26:31 there was indeed an hanging for the door of ...

And after the second vail,.... Were there more vails than one? the Scripture speaks but of one, Exo 26:31 there was indeed an hanging for the door of the tent, but that is not called a vail; nor was there more than one vail in the tabernacle, nor in the temple of Solomon; but in the second temple, under which the apostle lived, there were two vails, which divided between the holy place, and the holy of holies; and the innermost of these the apostle means: and so the Jewish writers r constantly affirm, that there were two vails between the said places, and that two new ones were made every year s. So on the day of atonement, when the high priest went into the most holy place, with the incense, it is said t, that

"he walked in the temple till he came between שתי הפרוכות, "the two vails", which divide between the holy, and holy of holies, and there was the space of a cubit between them.''

The reason of these two vails may be seen in the account Maimonides gives of this matter u:

"in the first temple there was a wall which divided between the holy, and holy of holies, the thickness of a cubit; but when they built the second temple, it was doubted by them, whether the thickness of the wall was of the measure of the holy place, or of the measure of the holy of holies; wherefore they made the holy of holies twenty cubits complete, and the holy place forty cubits complete, and they left the space of a cubit between the holy, and the holy of holies; and they did not build a wall in the second temple, but they made שתי פרוכות, "two vails", one on the side of the holy of holies, and the other on the side of the holy place, and between them a cubit answerable to the thickness of the wall, which was in the first temple; but in the first temple there was but one vail only, as it is said, Exo 26:33 and the vail shall divide unto you, &c.''

And to this account other Jewish writers w agree; and the space between the two vails is called by them טרקסין x, ταραξις, from the trouble and perplexity this affair gave them. This vail, or vails, might represent the sin of man, which separates between God and men, excludes from heaven; but is removed by the death of Christ, when the vail was rent in twain; so that now there is an open way to heaven; Christ has entered into it by his own blood; and saints have boldness to enter there by faith and hope now, and shall hereafter personally enter into it: or else this vail may signify the ceremonial law, which separated between Jew and Gentile, and is abolished by the death of Christ: or rather it was typical of the flesh, or human nature of Christ, called the vail of his flesh, Heb 10:20. Now within this second vail was

the tabernacle, or that part of it, the second part,

which is called the holiest of all; which was either typical of Christ, who is called the most Holy, Dan 9:24 he being so in both natures, divine and human; or of heaven, for the holy places, made with hands, were figures of heaven, Heb 9:24 for its holiness, it being the habitation of the holy God, holy angels, and spirits of just men made perfect; and for its invisibility, and the unseen things which faith and hope, which enter within the vail, are the evidence of; and for the things that are in it, typified by the following ones.

Gill: Heb 9:4 - -- Which had the golden censer,.... There were various censers used by the priests in the daily service, but this was a peculiar one, which was used by t...

Which had the golden censer,.... There were various censers used by the priests in the daily service, but this was a peculiar one, which was used by the high priest on the day of atonement; on other days he used a silver censer, but on that day a golden one, and with it he entered into the holy of holies y; and though Moses does not call it a golden one, Lev 16:12 yet Josephus does z; and so do the Jewish doctors in the place referred to, with whom the apostle agrees, and to this the allusion is in Rev 8:3 but here a difficulty arises, how this can be said to have been in the holy of holies, and within the vail, when, according to Moses, it was without the vail, and was only carried within on the day of atonement; and so Philo the Jew a places it in the other part of the tabernacle; and it seems as if it was to avoid this difficulty, that the Ethiopic version has removed it from this verse to verse the second, and put it among the things that were in the holy place; but there is no need of this, nor to say that the altar of incense is intended, for that is never so called, and, besides, was without the vail too. It should be observed, that the apostle does not say, that the golden censer was laid up in the holy of holies, and kept there, but that it "had" it; as it had it on the day of atonement, when it was carried in there by the high priest, who there made use of it; and it was for the use of it in that place, that it was peculiarly designed. What was done by it was this, burning coals were with it taken off from the altar before the Lord, and were brought in within the vail, where incense was put upon them, which covered the mercy seat, that so the high priest died not. The burning coals signify the very great sufferings of Christ, not only the sufferings of his body, which were very painful, but those of his soul, when the wrath and hot displeasure of God was poured out upon him; and those coals being taken off from the altar before the Lord, show that the sufferings of Christ were according to the will of God, were grateful to him, and always before him; and their being brought within the vail, does not denote that Christ is now in a suffering state, though he is in the midst of the throne, as a lamb that had been slain; but the continued virtue and efficacy of his sufferings, and that our faith and hope, which enter within the vail, have to do with his blood and sacrifice thither carried. And the incense, which was carried in with those coals, typified the intercession of Christ in heaven, which is pure and holy, sweet, fragrant, and perpetual; and the priest having his hands full of it, expresses the fulness of Christ's intercession for all his elect, and for all things for them, and his fulness of merit to plead, which makes his intercession efficacious and prevalent; and hence, through his much incense, the prayers of his people become odorous and acceptable: and the incense being put upon the burning coals in the censer, shows that Christ's intercession proceeds upon the foot of his blood and sacrifice, his sufferings and death; and hence it becomes grateful, and has its influence; the smoke of it covers the mercy seat, or throne of grace, and makes that accessible; and as the priest, who offers it, never dies, so none of those for whom he intercedes.

And the ark of the covenant overlaid round about with gold; this is called the ark of the covenant, because the tables of the covenant, afterwards mentioned, were put into it; and that it was overlaid with gold round about, is certain from Exo 25:11 where it is said to be overlaid with pure gold, within and without; and that the ark was within the vail, and in the most holy place, is manifest from Exo 40:21 that this was wanting in the second temple, is generally agreed b; but who took it away, where it was put, or what became of it various are the sentiments of the Jewish writers: some say c, it was carried away by Nebuchadnezzar into Babylon, and is meant by the goodly vessels of the house of the Lord, 2Ch 36:10 others say d, that Jeremiah the prophet took it, and hid it in a cave on Mount Nebo; but the more generally received opinion is, that it was hid by King Josiah in some hidden and deep place, which Solomon had built for that purpose under ground, knowing, that the temple would be destroyed e; and it is often said, that it was hid under the pavement of a room in the temple, called לשכת דיר העצים, "the wood room" f. The ark is, by some, thought to be a type of the church, which is the ark of God, of his building, and where he dwells; the ark of the covenant, or testimony, where the oracles of God, his word and ordinances, are: its being made of Shittim wood may denote the incorruption and duration of it: and its being covered with gold within and without is expressive of its glory; and its being portable, and carried from place to place, shows that the church is not always in one place; its rings, staves, and priests that bore it, may point at the Gospel, and the ministers of it, the instruments of moving it; and its moving from place to place, and falling into the hands of enemies, were emblematical of the church's afflictions; as its rest at last, in Solomon's temple, may signify the church's rest here and hereafter: but the ark is rather to be considered as a type of Christ; its various names agree with Christ, as the ark of God, the ark of his strength, the glory of God, the face of God, the holy ark, the ark of the covenant, or testimony, yea, Jehovah, and God himself: the time of its making is observable, it was made before the tabernacle, and the tabernacle for the sake of it; Christ is before all creatures, and was set up as Mediator before anything existed, and all things are for his sake; it being made of Shittim wood, covered with gold, may denote both the incorruption and glory of Christ; and its several decorations, the graces with which he was adorned, as man and Mediator; its staves and rings may design the word, ordinances, and ministers, whereby he is carried into the several places of the world; here God granted his presence, and counsel was asked of him, and it was brought forth in time of war, as a security from enemies, all which is applicable to Christ; by it wonders were done, as the dividing of Jordan for the Israelites to pass into the land of Canaan, the falling of the walls of Jericho, and the fall of Dagon; so Christ has opened the way for his people to heaven, has spoiled principalities and powers, and his Gospel is powerful to the pulling down the strongholds of sin and Satan; the moving of the ark from place to place, and its rest in the temple, may signify the rest of Christ, after his many fatigues in this world.

Wherein was the golden pot that had manna; which Aaron filled with manna by the direction of Moses, who gave it at the appointment of God, that it might be preserved to future ages, as a memorial of the goodness, care, and power of God in feeding the Israelites with it in the wilderness, Exo 16:33. This pot held an omer, which was more than three pints and a half; some say six pints: and though Moses does not call it a golden pot, yet it is so called, not only by the Septuagint in Exo 16:33 but also by Philo the Jew g; nor is it reasonable to think, with some Jewish writers h, that it should be made of earth, which was to continue for ages to come: this also was wanting in the second temple i; and this, with Aaron's rod, after mentioned, and other things, is said to be hid when the ark was, and along with it k: but how this pot, as well as Aaron's rod, can be said to be in the ark, when it is asserted, at the bringing of the ark into the temple, at the dedication of it by Solomon, that there was nothing in it but two tables of stone, 1Ki 8:9 and both the pot of "manna", and Aaron's rod, are said to be before the testimony, Exo 16:34 and not in it, is a difficulty. Some, in order to remove it, observe, that the phrase, "wherein", refers not to the ark, but to the tabernacle; but since the tables of the covenant were in the ark, and these are mentioned with it, and the phrase, "over it", in the next verse, cannot be understood of the tabernacle, but of the ark, this solution is not satisfactory. Others have observed, that they might be in the ark in Moses's time and in Jeremiah's time, when they are said to be hid, though they were not in Solomon's: and others have taken notice, that the preposition εν sometimes signifies "at", or "with", as in Col 3:1 and so the sense is, that these were near unto it in the most holy place, and might be in the sides of it, though not within it; for there were places in the sides of the ark to put things into, Deu 31:26. And certain it is from the above account from Scripture, that they were near it; and so, by the Jewish writers, they are always mentioned along with it: when that was carried away, and hid, they were hid with it; but what a certain Jewish commentator l observes on 1Ki 8:9 is so express, as if it was designed to vindicate our apostle: his remark is this:

"the intention of this is not to deny that there were not the things mentioned in the law, for they were מונחים בו, "left in it", as Aaron's "rod", and "the pot of manna", only to deny, hereby, that there was not anything of the law, save the decalogue.''

And it should be observed, that it is not said of these, that they were put before the ark, but "before the testimony"; that is, before the tables of the covenant, which were within the ark. The "manna", in this pot, was typical of Christ; in the signification of its name, whether it comes from מנה, "manah", which signifies to appoint, prepare, and distribute, Christ being appointed, prepared, and distributed, as food for his people; or from מן הו, "man hu", what is it? the words said by the Israelites, when they first saw it, not knowing what it was; so Christ is unknown to his people until revealed to them, and remains unknown to all natural and unregenerate men: the manna came from heaven, from God, and was a free gift of his, and so Christ: it was round in form, and may be expressive of Christ's perfection, and eternity: it was in colour white, which may signify his purity and innocence; it was sweet in taste, and so is Christ, his fruits, his word and ordinances: it was small in quantity, which may denote the meanness and despicableness of Christ in the eyes of the world: the people went out and gathered it, and ground it in mills, or beat it in mortars, and baked it, and ate, which may be typical of the apprehension, sufferings, and death of Christ, in order to be fit food for the faith of believers. The persons that were fed by it were the Israelites, who were brought out of Egypt, and then in the wilderness, a large number, and men of all sorts, rich, and poor, and who had an equal portion, though very undeserving; so those who are fed by Christ, and nourished with him, the bread of life, are the spiritual Israel of God, whom Christ has redeemed from worse than Egyptian bondage and darkness, though they are yet in the wilderness of this world; and they are a large number, the whole family of God, who receive out of Christ's fulness grace for grace; and there is no difference of high and low, rich and poor, bond or free, male or female; they are all one in Christ, and Christ is all in all; and they have all a whole Christ, though they are very undeserving, being by nature children of wrath as others. And as the Israelites had the manna every day, and all the while they were in the wilderness, so Christ is the daily bread of believers; by him, in his word and ordinances, is his church nourished in the wilderness, to whom he gives to eat of the hidden manna, the food of the wilderness. The "pot", in which this manna was kept, was typical of the ordinances of the Gospel; in its matter, being made of gold, denoting the preciousness and duration of them; in the size of it, holding an "omer", showing that these contain plenty of good things to satisfaction; in the situation of it before the ark, signifying the presence of Christ with his ordinances; and in its use to hold manna, and be a memorial of it to ages to come, as the ordinances have in them food for souls, and are the means of remembering Christ in future generations, till his second coming.

And Aaron's rod that budded; and not only budded, but bloomed; blossomed, and yielded almonds, Num 17:8. This also was laid before the ark of the testimony, Heb 9:10, and may be said to be in it, or with it, in the same sense as the pot of manna was; it was likewise wanting in the second temple m, and is said to be hid with the pot of manna, and other things, as before observed: it was a type of Christ: it is affirmed by the Jews, that in the days of the Messiah, the priesthood shall return, and the rod of Aaron shall flourish n; it was, very probably, as some have thought o, an almond tree stick, as that in Jer 1:11. The almond tree has its name, in Hebrew, from a word which signifies haste and vigilance; it being, as Pliny says p, the first of trees that buds and blossoms, and is very hasty in putting them forth. An almond tree rod may be a proper emblem of Christ's speedy incarnation in the fulness of time; and Aaron's almond tree rod, of his right to the priesthood, and his vigilance in it: this was first a dry rod or stick, and may design the mean descent and appearance of Christ, being born of mean parents, living a mean and obscure life; his entrance on his public ministry, and continuance in it, were without any pomp or grandeur; he was as a root out of a dry ground; and though he did many miracles, these were treated with contempt; and he was at last apprehended, arraigned, and condemned as a malefactor, and died a shameful and an accursed death: it looked very unlikely and unpromising, that he should be the King Messiah; that he should have all power in heaven and in earth; that he should have the wisdom he had, and do the miracles he did; and that he should be the author of eternal salvation; and that such fruits of grace, peace, pardon, and righteousness, should spring from him, as that Aaron's dry rod should bud, blossom, and bear almonds, in which it was a lively figure of Christ; that lying among other rods, and perhaps being like them, may denote Christ's assuming the common nature of men, or an individual of human nature in all things like to man: and this being cut off from the tree, and being a dry stick, may represent the death of Christ; and its budding and blossoming may point at the resurrection of Christ from the dead; and as Aaron's priesthood was confirmed by the budding and blossoming of his rod, so the deity and Messiahship of Christ are confirmed by his resurrection; and its bringing forth almonds may design the fruits of Christ's death and resurrection; and moreover, the almond tree being, as Philo the Jew says q the first of trees that buds and blossoms in the spring, and the last that casts its leaves, it may be, as he observes, a symbol of the priestly tribe; and it may be a figure of the perpetuity of Christ, and his priesthood:

and the tables of the covenant; the same with the testimony which was ordered to be put into the ark, and accordingly was, Exo 25:16. About this there is no controversy; though it is a matter of dispute with the Jews, whether the book of the law was in the ark or not: some say it was in the side of it, and others within it r; but Maimonides s says, that Moses wrote the whole law with his own hand before he died, and gave a book (or copy) to every tribe, and one copy he put בארון, "in the ark": so Jarchi says t, that the book of the law of Moses was put into the midst of the ark, and the ark was glorious and beautiful by that which was בתוכו, "within it". These tables were made of stone, an emblem of the hardness of man's heart, which is destitute of spiritual life and motion, senseless and stupid, impenitent, stubborn, and inflexible, and on which no impressions can be made but by powerful and efficacious grace; and also of the stability and duration of the law, as moral, which is not antiquated by another, nor made void by the Gospel, nor altered in its nature and terms, but remains the same as to the matter of it; though it is now no covenant of works to believers, and they are freed from the curse and condemnation of it: the number of these tables is two; the whole law is reduced by our Lord to two grand precepts of it, Mat 22:37 and the fleshly tables, on which it is reinscribed in regeneration, are the heart and mind, 2Co 3:3. The place where these tables were put is the ark, which was typical of the law being in Christ, not only in his hands, but in his heart, Psa 40:8 and in his keeping of which he is the fulfilling end; for he being the surety of his people, and becoming man, answered every part of the law; in the holiness of his nature, in the perfect obedience of his life, and in his sufferings and death, in which he bore the penalty of it: and these tables are called the tables of the covenant, because the law on Mount Sinai was a covenant made with the people of Israel; and was typical of the covenant, of which Christ is the surety and Mediator, and which is ratified by his blood.

Gill: Heb 9:5 - -- And over it the cherubim of glory,.... Or "glorious cherubim", where the Shechinah, or divine glory, dwelt, Psa 80:1. These were over the ark, and wer...

And over it the cherubim of glory,.... Or "glorious cherubim", where the Shechinah, or divine glory, dwelt, Psa 80:1. These were over the ark, and were in number two, as were the cherubim which God placed at the garden of Eden, Gen 3:24 according to the opinion of the ancient Jews u; and very likely these were made after the form of them. Some have thought them to be birds of a very terrible aspect, which were set there to deter Adam and Eve from coming to the tree of life; and both Philo w and Josephus x say, they were winged fowls; but the generality of the Jewish writers take them for angels y; and some of them say they were destroying angels, or noxious spirits z, which is not probable; but why angels should be so called, and what was their appearance, there are different opinions. Jerom says a the word signifies a multitude of knowledge; and indeed Philo the Jew b observes, that the Greeks would interpret the Hebrew word, much knowledge and understanding; and another Jewish writer c affirms, that the word "cherubim" is a name for separate intelligences, as if angels were so called from their great knowledge, and that the word is the same as "cerabbim", as "Rabbins", doctors, or teachers; but for the most part they interpret it, "as young men" d, because that angels have appeared in the form of young men. So in the Talmud e it is asked,

"what does cherub signify?" says R. Abhu, כרביא, "as a young man", for so in Babylon they call a young man רביא.''

Some think that the word "cherub" is the same with רכוב, "Recub", the letters transposed, which signifies "a chariot", because God is said to ride upon a "cherub" and the angels are called the chariots of the Lord, Psa 18:10 to which may be added, that Ezekiel's vision of the "cherubim" is frequently, by the Jews f, called מרכבה, "Mercabah", or "the chariot"; and mention is made of the chariot of the cherubim, in 1Ch 28:18 to which reference may be had in Hab 3:8 though I rather think, with others, that the word is derived from כרב, "Carab", which in the Syriac and Arabic languages signifies "to plough", and so in the Talmud g; and a cherub took its name from hence, because of the ox, whose face it had, that being a creature made use of in ploughing; and that the face of an ox, and the face of a cherub, is the same, may easily be concluded from Eze 1:10. And now because that Ezekiel's cherubim had four faces, the face of a man, the face of a lion, the face of an ox, and the face of an eagle; and the "cherubim" in the temple were in the same form, as may be gathered from Eze 41:18 those that were placed at the garden of Eden may be thought to be in the same form also: and some of late have fancied, that they were an hieroglyphic of the trinity of persons in the Godhead, signified by the ox, the lion, and eagle; and of the incarnation of the Son of God, the face of a man being added to them; to support which notion it is further observed, that the word כרובים should be pronounced "ce-rubbim", and interpreted, "as the mighty ones". But it should be known, that the word is also used in the singular number, Psa 18:10 and every single cherub had these four faces, so that each of them must be a representative of the Trinity, and of the incarnate Saviour, of which only the word in the singular number can be used; and then it can only be said of it, "cerub", as "the mighty one" which observation greatly weakens what is brought to support the fancy: besides, if the cherubim were an emblem of a plurality of persons in the Godhead, they would rather be an emblem of a quaternity, and not of a trinity of persons, since each had four faces, and those distinct from each other; for the face of a man is as much a distinct face as any of the rest. Now the human nature of Christ is no distinct person, much less one in the Godhead; and besides is the inferior nature of Christ, whereas the face of the man, in the "cherubim", is superior to the rest, which are the faces of irrational animals. Moreover, this would give us a similitude of the divine Being, and of that in him which is most incomprehensible by us, the trinity of persons in the Godhead; and so an answer may be given to such questions, the sense of which suggests, that no answer can be returned to them, Isa 40:18 and though the second Person often appeared in human form, and in the fulness of time became incarnate, and the Holy Ghost once descended as a dove, yet the Father's shape was never seen at any time, Joh 5:37 to which may be added, that this notion seems contrary to the second command, "thou shall not make unto thee any likeness of anything that is in heaven above", Exo 20:4 for allowing that the cherubim at the garden of Eden were figures made by the Lord himself, it is not credible he should make such, he afterwards forbid others to make; besides, the "cherubim" in the tabernacle and temple were the same figures with those in Eden, as is owned; and these were ordered of God to be made by men, and therefore surely cannot be thought to be figures, emblems, and representations of God himself in his three divine persons; likewise the cherubim are not only distinguished from him, but instead of being figures of him, they are always represented as vehicles on which he sits or rides, Exo 25:22. Once more, it may deserve some little consideration, that the prince of Tyre, a type of antichrist, the man of sin, is called a "cherub", Eze 28:14 which surely cannot be in allusion to the divine Being, and the persons in the Godhead, but very well in allusion to angels, the sons of God, as civil magistrates, good and bad, are sometimes called. No doubt there was something signified by the "cherubim" in the tabernacle and temple; but that this should be the mystery of them, is not easy of belief. Philo the Jew makes the "cherubim" to signify the two powers of God, his creative and governing powers h; and the Jews frequently speak of רזא דכרובים, "the mystery of the cherubim" i: the "cherubim" over the ark, here spoken of, are sometimes allegorized of the two Testaments, the Old and New; the matter of them being of gold may denote the excellency, purity, simplicity, and duration of them; their number is two, as were the "cherubim"; and as they were alike, and of one measure and size, this may intend the agreement between them; the doctrines, promises, prophecies, types, and figures of the Old Testament agree with the New; and the account that the one gives of the person and offices, and grace of Christ, agrees with the other; their situation and position, being placed at the two ends of the mercy seat, and looking towards it, may denote their being full of Christ, from one end to the other, and their pointing at him, and bearing witness to him; here God also reveals himself, as he did between the "cherubim"; and these are glorious as they were, full of glory, containing the glorious Gospel of the blessed God: though rather the "cherubim" on the mercy seat were symbols and representations of angels, since to these the Apostle Peter seems to allude, in 1Pe 1:12, their being made of gold may denote their excellency, purity, and simplicity; their being on the mercy seat shows their dependence on Christ, their confirmation by him, and ministration to him; their having wings, expresses their readiness to do his will; and their looking one to another, signifies their unity and concord among themselves; and their looking to the mercy seat, their inspection into the mysteries of grace; and their being over the ark, and God being in the midst of them, declares the presence of God with them, whose face they always behold; and as these "cherubim" of glory, they are very glorious creatures, and in the glory of them will Christ come a second time:

shadowing the mercy seat; that is, with their wings, as in Exo 25:20 which was typical of Christ; its name agrees with him, a mercy seat; for in him God shows himself merciful to his people; all the stores of mercy are laid up in him; the mission of him into this world is owing to the mercy of God; and the mercy of God was glorified by him in the redemption of his people; and he himself is the way through which they obtain and receive mercy; and he is also a merciful high priest to them: the Hebrew word for the mercy seat, כפורת, signifies "a covering": nor is our English word in sound very different from it; and it was so called, as Kimchi k observes, because it covered the ark: Christ is a covering to his people; their persons are clothed with his righteousness, and all their sins are covered by it; and they are secured from the curse and condemnation of the law, and wrath to come: the Septuagint interpreters render it by ιλαστηριον, the word used here by the Apostle Paul, in Rom 3:25, there rendered "propitiation", and applied to Christ, who has made reconciliation for sin, and through whom God is propitious to his people. The matter, of which the mercy seat was made, was pure gold, denoting the excellency and preciousness of Christ; the make of it, in its length and breadth, was just the same with the ark, in which the two tables were, Exo 25:10. Christ is the fulfilling end of the law, and exactly answers to all its requirements; his nature, to the holiness and spirituality of it; his righteousness, to all the obedience it commands; and his sufferings and death, to the penalty it enjoins: its situation above the ark shows that there is no mercy but in a way of righteousness, and that Christ stands between God and the law, and, by fulfilling it, covers all the transgressions of it; and being above it, is able to suppress all its accusations and charges: from off the mercy seat, God communed with his people; the way to communion with God is by Christ; the encouragement to go to God is from him; and the enjoyment of him is through him: on the day of atonement the mercy seat was sprinkled with blood, typical of the blood of Christ, whereby peace is made, and a way opened into the holiest of all:

of which we cannot now speak particularly; not only of the mercy seat, but of all the things before mentioned; for the word "which" is in the plural number, and refers to all the preceding things; to discourse of which, largely and particularly, required more time than the apostle had, and must have exceeded the bounds of an epistle. The Ethiopic version renders it in the singular number; "of this".

Gill: Heb 9:6 - -- Now when these things were thus ordained,.... Or prepared and got ready; that is, when the tabernacle was finished, and set up, and provided with all ...

Now when these things were thus ordained,.... Or prepared and got ready; that is, when the tabernacle was finished, and set up, and provided with all its vessels and furniture:

the priests went always into the first tabernacle; the first part of the tabernacle, which was called the holy place, Heb 9:2 here the common priests went continually every day, morning and evening; the Syriac and Ethiopic versions read, "the outward tabernacle", in distinction from the innermost part of the tabernacle, or the most holy place:

accomplishing the service of God; by offering sacrifices, burning incense, and trimming the lamps, which they did every day: the priests entered into the holy place every day for service; but they might not go in at any other time but the time of service l the phrase, "of God", is not in the text, but is a supplement; and it was usual with the Jews to call the worship of the temple, and especially that part of it which lay in sacrifices, עבודה, "the service": Simeon the just used to say, the world stands upon three things; upon the law, ועל העבודה, "and upon the service", and upon beneficence m; by "the service", the commentators n on the passage understand sacrifices; and again it is said o, no man enters into the court לעבודה, "for service", though he is clean, until he has dipped himself: the word here used in the Greek text is in the plural number, and may be rendered the services, because there were several sorts of services performed every day, as before observed, and several sacrifices offered; and the Vulgate Latin version renders it, "the offices of sacrifices"; and the Ethiopic version, "their offerings"; and the Arabic version, "offices": and the service which the high priest performed in the holiest of all once a year, was divers, which is mentioned in the following verses, and is called "service", Heb 9:8 it is said, that on the day of atonement there were five עבודות, "services" of the morning daily sacrifice p, in which the high priest ministered in his golden garments: but here the service of the common priests is meant, which was every day; and it becomes such who are employed in sacred service; both to be constant in it, and to do it fully and completely.

Gill: Heb 9:7 - -- Though this is not expressed in so many words in Lev 16:2 only it is said that "Aaron came not at all times into the holy place within the vail"; yet...

Though this is not expressed in so many words in Lev 16:2 only it is said that "Aaron came not at all times into the holy place within the vail"; yet it is the constant and generally received sense of the Jewish writers, in agreement with the apostle here, that the high priest went into the holy of holies but once a year q, on the day of atonement, which was on the tenth of the month Tisri, and answers to part of September; not but that he went in more than once on that day, for he went in no less than four times r; the first time he went in to offer incense; the second time with the blood of the bullock, to sprinkle it; the third time with the blood of the goat; and the fourth time to bring out the censer s; and if he entered a fifth time, they say he was worthy of death; wherefore Philo the Jew t seems to be mistaken when he affirms that, if he went in three or four times on the same day, he suffered death, nor was there any pardon for him; and as it was but one day in a year he might enter, so when he did, no other man, either Israelite or priest, might go in along with him; he went in alone without any attendance: the Jews say u, that a cord or thong was bound to the feet of the high priest when he went into the holy of holies, that if he died there, the rest might be able to draw him out; for it was not lawful for another priest to go in, no, not an high priest, none besides him on the day of atonement. Pausanias w makes mention of a temple of Minerva into which the priests entered once every year; which very likely was observed in imitation of this custom of the Jewish high priest; who in it was a type of Christ, and of his entrance into heaven, and of his constant and continued intercession there:

not without blood; for he went in with the blood of the bullock and the blood of the goat; which was typical of the blood of Christ, by which he entered in once into the holy place, into heaven, when he had obtained eternal redemption by it, Heb 9:12 which he offered for himself and for the errors of the people; the bullock was offered by the high priest for himself and his family; and the goat for the sins of the people of Israel, even all their iniquities, transgressions, and sins, Lev 16:11, but Christ the antitype having no sin, had no need to offer for himself, only for the sins of the people; See Gill on Heb 7:27.

Gill: Heb 9:8 - -- The Holy Ghost this signifying,.... This shows that the Holy Ghost existed under the Old Testament; that he is a distinct person in the Godhead, a per...

The Holy Ghost this signifying,.... This shows that the Holy Ghost existed under the Old Testament; that he is a distinct person in the Godhead, a personal act being here ascribed to him; that he is truly and properly God, the God whose service the priests accomplished in the tabernacle; and by whom Moses was admonished to make all things in it according to the pattern, and by whom the high priest was warned not to come at all times within the vail; moreover, that the Levitical ordinances were of God, and that they had a spiritual signification; that the Old Testament saints were not without some knowledge of the spiritual meaning of them; and that the Holy Ghost was the author of that knowledge; particularly by enjoining the high priest to enter within the vail but once a year, he gave a plain and strong intimation,

that the way into the holiest of all was not yet manifest, while as the first tabernacle was yet standing; by which is meant, not only the first part of the tabernacle, as in Heb 9:2 but the whole of it; and not only that, but the temple built in its room, and also the whole Levitical service is included; and the sense is, that while the tabernacle and tabernacle worship, the temple and temple service, were in being, "the way into the holiest of all was not yet manifest": the Vulgate Latin and all the Oriental versions render it, "the way of the saints"; of the priests who ministered in holy things, and were holy to the Lord, and of all the saints that lived before Christ; not that they did not go to heaven, but their way to it was not so manifestly known; life and immortality were not so clearly brought to light, as now by the Gospel; though rather it designs holy places, even heaven itself, which was typified by the holy place within the vail; and may be called the holiest of all, it being the residence of the holy God, holy angels, and holy men, and is sanctified by the presence of Christ, for his people, and where perfect holiness will be the glory of it: the way to it is not by works of righteousness done by men, which being imperfect cannot justify, and so not save, though this is the way men naturally seek and take; but Christ is the only way, and he is the plain, pleasant, and safe one: now let it be observed, that heaven was not shut to the Old Testament saints; there was a way into it for them, and they went the same way New Testament saints do; and that way was in some measure known, but it was not fully manifested; it lay hid in obscure prophecies, types, shadows, and sacrifices; hence being more clearly revealed under the Gospel dispensation, in comparison, of its former obscurity, and with respect to the manifestation of it, it is called a "new way".

Gill: Heb 9:9 - -- Which was a figure for the time then present,.... The tabernacle in general was a figure of Christ's human nature, Heb 8:2 and the most holy part of i...

Which was a figure for the time then present,.... The tabernacle in general was a figure of Christ's human nature, Heb 8:2 and the most holy part of it was a figure of heaven itself, Heb 9:24 the whole service of it was typical and shadowy; but it was but a temporary figure; it was for that present time only; the things of it were suited to that dispensation, and are now abolished, and ought not to be revived, the ordinances of the Gospel being greatly preferable to them; and while it did continue, it was only a parable, as the word here used signifies; it was like a dark saying; it had much obscurity and darkness in it; or as the Vulgate Latin version renders it, it was a "figure of the present time"; that is, of the Gospel dispensation; it was a shadow of good things to come under that; it prefigured what is now accomplished; or rather it was a "figure unto, or until the present time"; till Christ came, when all figures, types, and shadows fled away, and were of no more real use and service:

in which were offered both gifts and sacrifices; that is, in which tabernacle, or at which then present time, or καθ' ην, "according to which figure or parable", as the Alexandrian copy and Vulgate Latin version read, gifts and sacrifices were offered by the priests; see Heb 5:1,

that could not make him that did the service perfect; neither the priest that offered them, nor the people whom he represented, and for whom he did the service; they could not make real and perfect expiation for sin, nor justify from it, nor cleanse and sanctify; the spiritual worshippers had their sins expiated by the sacrifice of Christ; and their persons were justified by his righteousness, and they were cleansed by his blood: the particular instance in which, legal sacrifices did not make perfect is, "pertaining to the conscience"; there is in every man a conscience, and when sin is charged home upon it, that is filled with a sense of divine wrath; nor can it be pacified with anything short of what will answer the law and justice of God, and which is only done by the blood and righteousness of Christ.

Gill: Heb 9:10 - -- Which stood only in meats and drinks,.... That is, along with the gifts and sacrifices offered, there only were meat offerings and drink offerings; t...

Which stood only in meats and drinks,.... That is, along with the gifts and sacrifices offered, there only were meat offerings and drink offerings; things which only respect the body, and cannot therefore make perfect, as to the conscience; to which may be added, that while the tabernacle was standing, and typical service was in being, there was a prohibition of certain meats, as unclean, and an allowance of others, as clean, Lev 11:2 and there were certain drinks which were unlawful to certain persons, at certain times, as to the priests and Nazarites, Lev 10:9 and which, for the above reason, could make no man perfect:

and divers washings or "baptisms": the doctrine of which, the apostle would not have laid again, Heb 6:2 these were the washings of the priests and of the Israelites, and of sacrifices, and of garments, and of vessels and other things; and which, because they were performed by immersion, they are called "baptisms": and now since these only sanctified to the purifying of the flesh, or what was outward, they could not reach the conscience, or make perfect with respect to that: and

carnal ordinances: which belonged to the flesh, and not the spirit or soul, and therefore could not affect that; besides, these were only

imposed on them until the time of reformation; they were enjoined the Jews only, though by God himself; and were put upon them as a burden, or a yoke, and which was on some accounts intolerable, but were not to continue any longer than the time of the Gospel, here called "the time of reformation", or of "correction", and emendation; in which, things that were faulty and deficient are amended and perfected, and in which burdensome rites and ceremonies are removed, and better ordinances introduced: or rather of direction: in which saints are directed to Christ, the sum and substance of all types, shadows, and sacrifices, and in whom alone perfection is.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Heb 9:1 Grk “the first” (referring to the covenant described in Heb 8:7, 13). In the translation the referent (covenant) has been specified for cl...

NET Notes: Heb 9:2 Grk “which,” describing the outer tent.

NET Notes: Heb 9:4 Grk “in which”; in the translation the referent (the ark) has been specified for clarity.

NET Notes: Heb 9:5 The cherubim (pl.) were an order of angels mentioned repeatedly in the OT but only here in the NT. They were associated with God’s presence, glo...

NET Notes: Heb 9:6 Grk “the first tent.”

NET Notes: Heb 9:7 Or perhaps “the unintentional sins of the people”; Grk “the ignorances of the people.” Cf. BDAG 13 s.v. ἀγν ...

NET Notes: Heb 9:8 Grk “the first tent.” The literal phrase “the first tent” refers to either (1) the outer chamber of the tabernacle in the wild...

NET Notes: Heb 9:10 Grk “until the time of setting things right.”

Geneva Bible: Heb 9:1 Then verily ( 1 ) the first [covenant] had also ordinances of divine service, and a ( a ) worldly sanctuary. ( 1 ) A division of the first tabernacle...

Geneva Bible: Heb 9:3 And after ( b ) the second veil, the tabernacle which is called the ( c ) Holiest of all; ( b ) He calls it the second veil, not because there were t...

Geneva Bible: Heb 9:5 And over it the cherubims of glory shadowing the ( d ) mercyseat; of which we cannot now speak particularly. ( d ) The Hebrews call the cover of the ...

Geneva Bible: Heb 9:6 ( 2 ) Now when these things were thus ordained, the priests went always into the first tabernacle, accomplishing the service [of God]. ( 2 ) Now he c...

Geneva Bible: Heb 9:7 But into the second [went] the high priest alone once every year, not without blood, which he offered for himself, and [for] the ( e ) errors of the p...

Geneva Bible: Heb 9:8 ( 3 ) The Holy Ghost this signifying, that the way into the holiest of all was not yet made manifest, while as the first tabernacle was yet standing: ...

Geneva Bible: Heb 9:9 ( 4 ) Which [was] a figure ( f ) for the time then present, in which were offered both gifts and sacrifices, that could not make him that did the serv...

Geneva Bible: Heb 9:10 ( 5 ) [Which stood] only in meats and drinks, and divers washings, and carnal ordinances, ( g ) imposed [on them] until the time of reformation. ( 5 ...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Heb 9:1-28 - --1 The description of the rites and bloody sacrifices of the law;11 which are far inferior to the dignity and perfection of the blood and sacrifice of ...

Combined Bible: Heb 9:1-5 - --Typical Tabernacle    (Hebrews 9:1-5)    The principal design of the apostle in this epistle was to prove and make manifest tha...

Combined Bible: Heb 9:6-10 - --Contrasted Priests    (Hebrews 9:6-10)    At the commencement of our last article we stated that, the principal design of the a...

MHCC: Heb 9:1-5 - --The apostle shows to the Hebrews the typical reference of their ceremonies to Christ. The tabernacle was a movable temple, shadowing forth the unsettl...

MHCC: Heb 9:6-10 - --The apostle goes on to speak of the Old Testament services. Christ, having undertaken to be our High Priest, could not enter into heaven till he had s...

Matthew Henry: Heb 9:1-7 - -- Here, I. The apostle gives an account of the tabernacle, that place of worship which God appointed to be pitched on earth; it is called a worldly ...

Matthew Henry: Heb 9:8-14 - -- In these verses the apostle undertakes to deliver to us the mind and meaning of the Holy Ghost in all the ordinances of the tabernacle and legal eco...

Barclay: Heb 9:1-5 - --The writer to the Hebrews has just been thinking of Jesus as the one who leads us into reality. He has been using the idea that in this world we have...

Barclay: Heb 9:6-10 - --Only the High Priest could enter into the Holy of Holies and that only on The Day of Atonement. It is of the ceremonies of that day that the writer t...

Constable: Heb 5:11--11:1 - --III. The High Priestly Office of the Son 5:11--10:39 The transition from exposition (4:15-5:10) to exhortation (...

Constable: Heb 7:1--10:19 - --C. The Son's High Priestly Ministry 7:1-10:18 The great resource of Christians when tempted to apostatiz...

Constable: Heb 8:1--9:28 - --2. The work of our high priest chs. 8-9 The writer developed in this new section of the text top...

Constable: Heb 9:1-10 - --The heavenly sanctuary 9:1-10 In this pericope the writer concentrated on the tabernacle and its provisions for cultic worship.254 The word "first" (G...

College: Heb 9:1-28 - --HEBREWS 9 VI. JESUS' SACRIFICE OF HIMSELF IS SUPERIOR TO THE SACRIFICES OF THE OLD COVENANT AND SETS US FREE FROM SIN (9:1-10:39) The new covenant, ...

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Commentary -- Other

Critics Ask: Heb 9:3 HEBREWS 9:3-4 —Was the altar of incense in the Holy Place or in the Most Holy Place behind the veil? PROBLEM: According to Exodus 30:6 (cf. 26:...

Critics Ask: Heb 9:4 HEBREWS 9:3-4 —Was the altar of incense in the Holy Place or in the Most Holy Place behind the veil? PROBLEM: According to Exodus 30:6 (cf. 26:...

Evidence: Heb 9:3 " O Lord, Almighty and everlasting God, by Thy holy Word Thou hast created the heaven, and the earth, and the sea; blessed and glorified be Thy name, ...

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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 9 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Heb 9:1, The description of the rites and bloody sacrifices of the law; Heb 9:11, which are far inferior to the dignity and perfection of...

Poole: Hebrews 9 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 9

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 9 (Chapter Introduction) (Heb 9:1-5) The Jewish tabernacle and its utensils. (Heb 9:6-10) Their use and meaning. (Heb 9:11-22) These fulfilled in Christ. (Heb 9:23-28) The ...

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 9 (Chapter Introduction) The apostle, having declared the Old Testament dispensation antiquated and vanishing away, proceeds to let the Hebrews see the correspondence there...

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 9 (Chapter Introduction) The Glory Of The Tabernacle (Heb_9:1-5) The Only Entry To The Presence Of God (Heb_9:6-10) The Sacrifice Which Opens The Way To God (Heb_9:11-14) ...

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 9 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO HEBREWS 9 The apostle having, in the former chapter, taken notice of the first covenant, in this proceeds to show what belonged to ...

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. ...

Advanced Commentary (Dictionaries, Hymns, Arts, Sermon Illustration, Question and Answers, etc)


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