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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Robertson: Heb 9:27 - -- It is appointed ( apokeitai ).
Present middle (or passive) of apokeimai , "is laid away"for men. Cf. same verb in Luk 19:20; Col 1:5; 2Ti 4:8 (Paul...
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Robertson: Heb 9:27 - -- Once to die ( hapax apothanein ).
Once for all to die, as once for all to live here. No reincarnation here.
Once to die (
Once for all to die, as once for all to live here. No reincarnation here.
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Robertson: Heb 9:27 - -- After this cometh judgment ( meta touto krisis ).
Death is not all. Man has to meet Christ as Judge as Jesus himself graphically pictures (Matt 25:31...
After this cometh judgment (
Death is not all. Man has to meet Christ as Judge as Jesus himself graphically pictures (Matt 25:31-46; Joh 5:25-29).
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Robertson: Heb 9:28 - -- Shall appear a second time ( ek deuterou ophthēsetai ).
Future passive indicative of horaō . Blessed assurance of the Second Coming of Christ, bu...
Shall appear a second time (
Future passive indicative of
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Robertson: Heb 9:28 - -- Unto salvation ( eis sōtērian ).
Final and complete salvation for "them that wait for him"(tois auton apekdechomenois ). Dative plural of the ar...
Unto salvation (
Final and complete salvation for "them that wait for him"(
Vincent: Heb 9:27 - -- That there is no place for a repeated offering of Christ is further shown by reference to the lot of men in general. The very idea is absurd; for men...
That there is no place for a repeated offering of Christ is further shown by reference to the lot of men in general. The very idea is absurd; for men die once, and judgment follows. Christ was man, and Christ died. He will not come to earth to live and die again. Christ died, but judgment did not follow in his case. On the contrary, he became judge of all.
It is appointed (
Lit. is laid by in store . Comp. Luk 19:20; Col 1:5 (see note); 2Ti 4:8.
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Christ
Emphasizing him, as the figure to which the old economy pointed.
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Vincent: Heb 9:28 - -- Was once offered ( ἅπαξ προσενεχθεὶς )
Lit. having been offered once for all . Note the passive in contrast with...
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Vincent: Heb 9:28 - -- To bear ( ἀνενεγκεῖν )
Not in the sense of bearing a sin offering up to the cross ; for ἁμαρτία never me...
To bear (
Not in the sense of bearing a sin offering up to the cross ; for
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Vincent: Heb 9:28 - -- Unto them that look for him ( τοῖς αὐτὸν ἀπεκδεχομένοις )
Rend. await him . For the verb, see on Phi 3:20. Th...
Unto them that look for him (
Rend. await him . For the verb, see on Phi 3:20. This second coming with salvation is only for those who await him in faith.
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Vincent: Heb 9:28 - -- Shall he appear ( ὀφθήσεται )
The usual verb for the appearance of Christ after his resurrection.
Shall he appear (
The usual verb for the appearance of Christ after his resurrection.
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Vincent: Heb 9:28 - -- The second time ( ἐκ δευτέρου )
A phrase quite common in N.T., but not in Paul. The idea is, beginning from the second: the secon...
The second time (
A phrase quite common in N.T., but not in Paul. The idea is, beginning from the second: the second in a series taken as the point of departure. As among men judgment follows as the second thing after death, so, when Christ shall appear for the second time, he will appear as the sinless Savior.
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Vincent: Heb 9:28 - -- Unto salvation ( εἰς σωτηρίαν )
Not as a sinner to be judged, but as the Savior of mankind. It is not said that he will appear as ...
Unto salvation (
Not as a sinner to be judged, but as the Savior of mankind. It is not said that he will appear as judge, but only that he will not share the judgment which befalls all men after death. Still the phrase may imply that he will award salvation, as judge, to such as have believed on him.
Wesley: Heb 9:27 - -- Of the great day. At the moment of death every man's final state is determined. But there is not a word in scripture of a particular judgment immediat...
Of the great day. At the moment of death every man's final state is determined. But there is not a word in scripture of a particular judgment immediately after death.
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Even as many as are born into the world.
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Wesley: Heb 9:28 - -- Not as he did before, bearing on himself the sins of many, but to bestow everlasting salvation.
Not as he did before, bearing on himself the sins of many, but to bestow everlasting salvation.
Inasmuch as.
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JFB: Heb 9:27 - -- Greek, "it is laid up (as our appointed lot)," Col 1:5. The word "appointed" (so Hebrew "seth" means) in the case of man, answers to "anointed" in the...
Greek, "it is laid up (as our appointed lot)," Col 1:5. The word "appointed" (so Hebrew "seth" means) in the case of man, answers to "anointed" in the case of Jesus; therefore "the Christ," that is, the anointed, is the title here given designedly. He is the representative man; and there is a strict correspondence between the history of man and that of the Son of man. The two most solemn facts of our being are here connected with the two most gracious truths of our dispensation, our death and judgment answering in parallelism to Christ's first coming to die for us, and His second coming to consummate our salvation.
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JFB: Heb 9:27 - -- Namely, at Christ's appearing, to which, in Heb 9:28, "judgment" in this verse is parallel. Not, "after this comes the heavenly glory." The intermedia...
Namely, at Christ's appearing, to which, in Heb 9:28, "judgment" in this verse is parallel. Not, "after this comes the heavenly glory." The intermediate state is a state of joyous, or else agonizing and fearful, expectation of "judgment"; after the judgment comes the full and final state of joy, or else woe.
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JFB: Heb 9:28 - -- Greek, "THE Christ"; the representative MAN; representing all men, as the first Adam did.
Greek, "THE Christ"; the representative MAN; representing all men, as the first Adam did.
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JFB: Heb 9:28 - -- Not "often," Heb 9:25; just as "men," of whom He is the representative Head, are appointed by God once to die. He did not need to die again and again ...
Not "often," Heb 9:25; just as "men," of whom He is the representative Head, are appointed by God once to die. He did not need to die again and again for each individual, or each successive generation of men, for He represents all men of every age, and therefore needed to die but once for all, so as to exhaust the penalty of death incurred by all. He was offered by the Father, His own "eternal Spirit" (Heb 9:14) concurring; as Abraham spared not Isaac, but offered him, the son himself unresistingly submitting to the father's will (Gen. 22:1-24).
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JFB: Heb 9:28 - -- Referring to Isa 53:12, "He bare the sins of many," namely, on Himself; so "bear" means, Lev 24:15; Num 5:31; Num 14:34. The Greek is literally "to be...
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JFB: Heb 9:28 - -- Not opposed to all, but to few. He, the One, was offered for many; and that once for all (compare Mat 20:28).
Not opposed to all, but to few. He, the One, was offered for many; and that once for all (compare Mat 20:28).
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JFB: Heb 9:28 - -- With waiting expectation even unto the end (so the Greek). It is translated "wait for" in Rom 8:19, Rom 8:23; 1Co 1:7, which see.
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JFB: Heb 9:28 - -- Rather, as Greek, "be seen." No longer in the alien "form of a servant," but in His own proper glory.
Rather, as Greek, "be seen." No longer in the alien "form of a servant," but in His own proper glory.
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JFB: Heb 9:28 - -- Apart from, separate from, sin. Not bearing the sin of many on Him as at His first coming (even then there was no sin in Him). That sin has been at Hi...
Apart from, separate from, sin. Not bearing the sin of many on Him as at His first coming (even then there was no sin in Him). That sin has been at His first coming once for all taken away, so as to need no repetition of His sin offering of Himself (Heb 9:26). At His second coming He shall have no more to do with sin.
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JFB: Heb 9:28 - -- To bring in completed salvation; redeeming then the body which is as yet subject to the bondage of corruption. Hence, in Phi 3:20 he says, "we look fo...
To bring in completed salvation; redeeming then the body which is as yet subject to the bondage of corruption. Hence, in Phi 3:20 he says, "we look for THE SAVIOUR." Note, Christ's prophetical office, as the divine Teacher, was especially exercised during His earthly ministry; His priestly is now from His first to His second coming; His kingly office shall be fully manifested at, and after, His second coming.
Clarke: Heb 9:27 - -- As it is appointed - Αποκειται· It is laid before them by the Divine decree: Dust thou art, and unto dust thou shalt return. Unto men ge...
As it is appointed -
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Clarke: Heb 9:27 - -- But after this the judgment - They shall die but once, and be judged but once, therefore there is no metempsychosis, no transmigration from body to ...
But after this the judgment - They shall die but once, and be judged but once, therefore there is no metempsychosis, no transmigration from body to body; judgment succeeds to dying; and as they shall be judged but once, they can die but once.
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Clarke: Heb 9:28 - -- So Christ was once offered - He shall die no more; he has borne away the sins of many, and what he has done once shall stand good for ever. Yet he w...
So Christ was once offered - He shall die no more; he has borne away the sins of many, and what he has done once shall stand good for ever. Yet he will appear a second time without sin,
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Clarke: Heb 9:28 - -- Unto salvation - To deliver the bodies of believers from the empire of death, to reunite them to their purified souls, and bring both into his etern...
Unto salvation - To deliver the bodies of believers from the empire of death, to reunite them to their purified souls, and bring both into his eternal glory. This is salvation, and the very highest of which the human being is capable. Amen! Even so, come Lord Jesus! Hallelujah
1. In the preceding notes I have given my reasons for dissenting from our translation of the 15th, 16th, and 17th verses. Many learned men are of the same opinion; but I have not met with one who appears to have treated the whole in a more satisfactory manner than Dr. Macknight, and for the edification of my readers I shall here subjoin the substance of what he has written on this point
" Heb 9:15. Mediator of the new covenant. See Heb 8:7. The word
1. In what sense the Sinaitic covenant or law of Moses, which required perfect obedience to all its precepts under penalty of death, and allowed no mercy to any sinner, however penitent, can be called a testament, which is a deed conferring something valuable on a person who may accept or refuse it, as he thinks fit? Besides, the transaction at Sinai, in which God promised to continue the Israelites in Canaan, on condition they refrained from the wicked practices of the Canaanites, and observed his statutes, Lev. 18, can in no sense be called a testament
2. If the law of Moses be a testament, and if, to render that testament valid, the death of the testator be necessary, as the English translators have taught us, Heb 9:16, I ask who it was that made the testament of the law? Was it God or Moses? And did either of them die to render it valid
3. I observe that even the Gospel covenant is improperly called a testament, because, notwithstanding all its blessings were procured by the death of Christ, and are most freely bestowed, it lost any validity which, as a testament, it is thought to have received by the death of Christ, when he revived again on the third day
4. The things affirmed in the common translation of Heb 9:15, concerning the new testament, namely, that it has a Mediator; that that Mediator is the Testator himself; that there were transgressions of a former testament, for the redemption of which the Mediator of the new testament died; and, Heb 9:19, that the first testament was made by sprinkling the people in whose favor it was made with blood; are all things quite foreign to a testament. For was it ever known in any nation that a testament needed a mediator? Or that the testator was the mediator of his own testament? Or that it was necessary the testator of a new testament should die to redeem the transgressions of a former testament? Or that any testament was ever made by sprinkling the legatees with blood? These things however were usual in covenants. They had mediators who assisted at the making of them, and were sureties for the performance of them. They were commonly ratified by sacrifices, the blood of which was sprinkled on the parties; withal, if any former covenant was infringed by the parties, satisfaction was given at the making of a second covenant
5. By calling Christ the Mediator of the new testament our thoughts are turned away entirely from the view which the Scriptures give us of his death as a sacrifice for sin; whereas, if he is called the Mediator of the new covenant, which is the true translation of
" He is the Mediator. Here it is remarkable that Jesus is not called
Heb 9:16. For where a covenant (is made by sacrifice), there is a necessity that the death of the appointed sacrifice be produced. This elliptical expression must be completed, if, as is probable, the apostle had now in his eye the covenant which God made with Noah and Abraham. His covenant is recorded, Gen 8:20, where we are told, that on coming out of the ark Noah offered a burnt-offering of every clean beast and fowl. And the Lord smelled a sweet savor. And the Lord said in his heart, I will not again curse the ground, neither will I again smite any more every living thing as I have done. This promise or declaration God called his covenant with men, and with every living creature. Gen 9:9, Gen 9:10. In like manner God made a covenant with Abraham by sacrifice, Gen 15:9, Gen 15:18, and with the Israelites at Sinai, Exo 24:8. See also Psa 50:5. By making his covenants with men in this manner, God taught them that his intercourses with them were all founded on an expiation afterwards to be made for their sins by the sacrifice of the seed of the woman, the bruising of whose heel, or death, was foretold at the fall. On the authority of these examples, the practice of making covenants by sacrifice prevailed among the Jews; Jer 34:18; Zec 9:11; and even among the heathens; for they had the knowledge of these examples by tradition. Stabant et caesa jungebant foedera porca ; Virgil, Aeneid, viii. 611. Hence the phrases, foedus ferire and percutere, to strike or kill the covenant
" There is a necessity that the death
" Be brought in ;
Heb 9:17. A covenant is firm over dead sacrifices;
" It never hath force whilst the appointed liveth;
1. "The faultiness of the common translation of the 15th, 16th, 17th, 18th, and 20th verses of this chapter having been already shown in the notes, nothing needs be added here, except to call the reader’ s attention to the propriety and strength of the apostle’ s reasoning, as it appears in the translation of these verses which I have given, compared with his reasoning as represented in the common version.
2. It is supposed that in Heb 9:28, the apostle, in speaking about Christ’ s bearing the sins of many, alludes to the ceremony of the scape goat. This mysterious sacrifice was to be presented to God, Lev 16:7, and the sins of the people were to be confessed over the head of it, Lev 16:21, and after this the goat was dismissed into a land uninhabited, laden, as the institution implied, with the sins of the people; and this the word
3. In Christ’ s coming, or appearing the second time, it is very probable, as Dr. Doddridge and others have conjectured, that there is an allusion to the return of the high priest from the inner tabernacle; for, after appearing there in the presence of God, and making atonement for the people in the plain dress of an ordinary priest, Lev 16:23, Lev 16:24, he came out arrayed in his magnificent robes, to bless the people, who waited for him in the court of the tabernacle of the congregation. "But there will be this difference,"says Dr. Macknight, "between the return of Christ to bless his people, and the return of the high priest to bless the congregation. The latter, after coming out of the most holy place, made a new atonement in his pontifical robes for himself and for the people, Lev 16:24, which showed that the former atonement was not real but typical. Whereas Jesus, after having made atonement, (and presented himself in heaven, before God), will not return to the earth for the purpose of making himself a sacrifice the second time; but having procured an eternal redemption for us, by the sacrifice of himself once offered, he will return for the purpose of declaring to them who wait for him that they are accepted, and of bestowing on them the great blessing of eternal life. This reward he, being surrounded with the glory of the Father, Mat 16:27, will give them in the presence of an assembled universe, both as their King and their Priest. This is the great salvation which Christ came to preach, and which was confirmed to the world by them who heard him: Heb 2:3."Reader, lay this sincerely to heart
4. The form in which the high priest and the ordinary priests were to bless the people, after burning the incense in the tabernacle, is prescribed, Num 6:23-26. Literally translated from the Hebrew it is as follows, and consists of three parts or benedictions: -
1. May Jehovah bless thee, and preserve thee
2. May Jehovah cause his face to shine upon thee, and be gracious unto thee
3. May Jehovah lift up his faces upon thee, and may he put prosperity unto thee! (See my notes on the place, Num 6:23-26.
We may therefore say that Christ, our High Priest, came to bless each of us, by turning us away from our iniquity. And let no one ever expect to see him at his second coming with joy, unless he have, in this life, been turned away from his iniquity, and obtained remission of all his sins, and that holiness without which none can see God. Reader, the time of his reappearing is, to thee, at hand! Prepare to meet thy God
On the word conscience, which occurs so often in this chapter, and in other parts of this epistle, see the observations at the end of chap. 13.
Calvin: Heb 9:27 - -- 27.=== And as it is appointed, === etc. The meaning is this: since we patiently wait after death for the day of judgment, it being the common lot of...
27.=== And as it is appointed, === etc. The meaning is this: since we patiently wait after death for the day of judgment, it being the common lot of nature which it is not right to struggle against; why should there be less patience in waiting for the second coming of Christ? For if a long interval of time does not diminish, as to men, the hope of a happy resurrection, how unreasonable would it be to render less honor to Christ? But less would it be, were we to call upon him to undergo a second death, when he had once died. Were any one to object and say, that some had died twice, such as Lazarus, and not once; the answer would be this, — that the Apostle speaks here of the ordinary lot of men; but they are to be excepted from this condition, who shall by an instantaneous change put off corruption, (1Co 15:51;) for he includes none but those who wait for a long time in the dust for the redemption of their bodies.
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Calvin: Heb 9:28 - -- 28.=== The second time without sin, === etc. The Apostle urges this one thing, — that we ought not to be disquieted by vain and impure longings fo...
28.=== The second time without sin, === etc. The Apostle urges this one thing, — that we ought not to be disquieted by vain and impure longings for new kinds of expiations, for the death of Christ is abundantly sufficient for us. Hence he says, that he once appeared and made a sacrifice to abolish sins, and that at his second coming he will make openly manifest the efficacy of his death, so that sin will have no more power to hurt us. 160
To bear, or, take away sins, is to free from guilt by his satisfaction those who have sinned. He says the sins of many, that is, of all, as in Rom 5:15. It is yet certain that all receive no benefit from the death of Christ; but this happens, because their unbelief prevents them. At the same time this question is not to be discussed here, for the Apostle is not speaking of the few or of the many to whom the death of Christ may be available; but he simply means that he died for others and not for himself; and therefore he opposes many to one. 161
But what does he mean by saying that Christ will appear without sin? Some say, without a propitiation or an expiatory sacrifice for sin, as the word sin is taken in Rom 8:3; 2Co 5:21; and in many places in the writings of Moses; but in my judgment he intended to express something more suitable to his present purpose, namely, that Christ at his coming will make it known how truly and really he had taken away sins, so that there would be no need of any other sacrifice to pacify God; as though he had said, “When we come to the tribunal of Christ, we shall find that there was nothing wanting in his death.” 162
And to the same effect is what he immediately adds, unto salvation to them who look, or wait for him. Others render the sentence differently, “To them who look for him unto salvation;” But the other meaning is the most appropriate; for he means that those shall find complete salvation who recumb with quiet minds on the death of Christ; for this looking for or wanting has a reference to the subject discussed. The Scripture indeed does elsewhere ascribe this in common to believers, that they look for the coming of the Lord, in order to distinguish them from the ungodly, by whom his coming is dreaded, (1Th 1:10;) but as the Apostle now contends that we ought to acquiesce in the one true sacrifice of Christ, he calls it the looking for Christ, when we are satisfied with his redemption alone, and seek no other remedies or helps. 163
Defender: Heb 9:27 - -- Enoch and Elijah seem to have been exceptions to this principle (Gen 5:24; 2Ki 2:11), but they will probably return to the earth in the last days and ...
Enoch and Elijah seem to have been exceptions to this principle (Gen 5:24; 2Ki 2:11), but they will probably return to the earth in the last days and then die (see notes on Rev 11:3-12). There will be one great exception, the saints living on earth when Christ returns (1Co 15:51-53), but all (even those who will be living at that time) must prepare for death, for no one can be sure he will not die before Christ comes."
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Defender: Heb 9:28 - -- "Bear" here is the same word as "offer up" in Heb 7:27. Christ not only bore the penalty of our sins on the cross but also offered up His sacrificial ...
"Bear" here is the same word as "offer up" in Heb 7:27. Christ not only bore the penalty of our sins on the cross but also offered up His sacrificial blood to the Father as proof thereof (compare Heb 9:24, Heb 9:25). Israel's high priest offered up the blood of animals as an atonement for sins. Our High Priest offered up Himself.
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Defender: Heb 9:28 - -- To "look for Him" means to "expectantly wait for Him," knowing that He might come at any time. There is nothing in the whole scope of prophesied event...
To "look for Him" means to "expectantly wait for Him," knowing that He might come at any time. There is nothing in the whole scope of prophesied events in the last days that must be fulfilled before He comes. Many of these events could happen before His return, but none must happen. We should "look for him" every day and "love his appearing" (2Ti 4:8)."
TSK: Heb 9:27 - -- as : Gen 3:19; 2Sa 14:14; Job 14:5, Job 30:23; Psa 89:48; Ecc 3:20, Ecc 9:5, Ecc 9:10, Ecc 12:7; Rom 5:12
but : Heb 6:2; Job 19:25; Ecc 11:9, Ecc 12:1...
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TSK: Heb 9:28 - -- was : Heb 9:25; Rom 6:10; 1Pe 3:18; 1Jo 3:5
to bear : Lev 10:17; Num 18:1, Num 18:23; Isa 53:4-6, Isa 53:11, Isa 53:12; Mat 26:28; Rom 5:15; 1Pe 2:24
...
was : Heb 9:25; Rom 6:10; 1Pe 3:18; 1Jo 3:5
to bear : Lev 10:17; Num 18:1, Num 18:23; Isa 53:4-6, Isa 53:11, Isa 53:12; Mat 26:28; Rom 5:15; 1Pe 2:24
them : Phi 3:20; 1Th 1:10; 2Ti 4:8; Tit 2:13; 2Pe 3:12
he appear : Zec 14:5; Joh 14:3; Act 1:11; 1Th 4:14-16; 2Th 1:5-9, 2Th 2:1; 1Jo 3:2; Rev 1:7
unto : Isa 25:9; Rom 8:23; 1Co 15:54; Phi 3:21; 1Th 4:17; 2Th 1:10
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Heb 9:27 - -- And as it is appointed unto men once to die - Or, "since it is appointed unto men to die once only."The object of this is to illustrate the fac...
And as it is appointed unto men once to die - Or, "since it is appointed unto men to die once only."The object of this is to illustrate the fact that Christ died but once for sin, and that is done by showing that the most important events pertaining to man occur but once. Thus, it is with "death."That does not, and cannot occur many times. It is the great law of our being that people die only once, and hence, the same thing was to be expected to occur in regard to him who made the atonement. It could not be supposed that this great law pertaining to man would be departed from in the case of him who died to make the atonement, and that he would repeatedly undergo the pains of death. The same thing was true in regard to the "judgment."Man is to he judged once, and but once. The decision is to be final, and is not to be repeated. In like manner there was a fitness that the great Redeemer should die "but once,"and that his death should, without being repeated, determine the destiny of man. There was a remarkable "oneness"in the great events which most affected people; and neither death, the judgment, nor the atonement could be repeated. In regard to the declaration here that "it is appointed unto men once to die,"we may observe:
\caps1 (1) t\caps0 hat death is the result of "appointment;"Gen 3:19. It is not the effect of chance, or haphazard. It is not a "debt of nature."It is not the condition to which man was subject by the laws of his creation. It is not to be accounted for by the mere principles of physiology. God could as well have made the heart to play forever as for 50 years. Death is no more the regular result of physical laws than the guillotine and the gallows are. It is in all cases the result of "intelligent appointment,"and for "an adequate cause."
\caps1 (2) t\caps0 hat cause, or the reason of that appointment, is sin; notes, Rom 6:23. This is the adequate cause; this explains the whole of it. Holy beings do not die. There is not the slightest proof that an angel in heaven has died, or that any perfectly holy being has ever died except the Lord Jesus. In every death, then, we have a demonstration that the race is guilty; in each case of mortality we have an affecting memento that we are individually transgressors.
\caps1 (3) d\caps0 eath occurs but "once"in this world. It cannot be repeated if we should desire to have it repeated. Whatever truths or facts then pertain to death; whatever lessons it is calculated to convey, pertain to it as an event which is not to occur again. That which is to occur but once in an eternity of existence acquires, from that very fact, if there were no other circumstances, an immense importance. What is to be done but, "once,"we should wish to be done well. We should make all proper preparation for it; we should regard it with singular interest. If preparation is to be made for it, we should make all which we expect "ever"to make. A man who is to cross the ocean but "once;"to go away from his home never to return, should make the right kind of preparation. He cannot come back to take what he has forgotten; to arrange what he has neglected; to give counsel which he has failed to do; to ask forgiveness for offences for which he has neglected to seek pardon. And so of death. A man who dies, dies but once. He cannot come back again to make preparation if he has neglected it; to repair the evils which he has caused by a wicked life; or to implore pardon for sins for which he had failed to ask forgiveness. Whatever is "to be done"with reference to death, is to be done "once for all"before he dies.
\caps1 (4) d\caps0 eath occurs to all. "It is appointed unto men"- to the race. It is not an appointment for one, but for all. No one is appointed by name to die; and not an individual is designated as one who shall escape. No exception is made in favour of youth, beauty, or blood; no rank or station is exempt; no merit, no virtue, no patriotism, no talent, can purchase freedom from it. In every other sentence which goes out against people there may be "some"hope of reprieve. Here there is none. We cannot meet an individual who is not "under sentence of death."It is not only the poor wretch in the dungeon doomed to the gallows who is to die, it is the rich man in his palace; the frivolous trifler in the assembly room; the friend that we embrace and love; and she whom we meet in the crowded saloon of fashion with all the graces of accomplishment and adorning. Each one of these is just as much under sentence of death as the poor wretch in the cell, and the execution on any one of them may occur before his. It is too for substantially the same cause, and is as really deserved. It is for "sin"that all are doomed to death, and the "fact"that we must die should be a constant remembrancer of our guilt.
\caps1 (5) a\caps0 s death is to occur to us but once, there is a cheering interest in the reflection that when it is passed it is passed "forever."The dying pang, the chill, the cold sweat, are not to be repeated. Death is not to approach us often - he is to be allowed to come to us but once. When we have once passed through the dark valley, we shall have the assurance that we shall never tread its gloomy way again. Once, then, let us be willing to die - since we can die "but"once; and let us rejoice in the assurance which the gospel furnishes, that they who die in the Lord leave the world to go where death in any form is unknown.
But after this the judgment - The apostle does not say "how long"after death this will be, nor is it possible for us to know; Act 1:7; compare Mat 24:36. We may suppose, however. that there will be two periods in which there will be an act of judgment passed on those who die.
\caps1 (1) i\caps0 mmediately after death when they pass into the eternal world, when their destiny will be made known to them. This seems to be necessarily implied in the supposition that they will continue to live, and to be happy or miserable after death. This act of judgment may not be formal or public, but it will be such as to show them what must be the issues of the final day, and as the result of that interview with God, they will be made happy or miserable until the final doom shall be pronounced.
\caps1 (2) t\caps0 he more public and formal act of judgment, when the whole world will be assembled at the bar of Christ; Matt. 25. The decision of that day will not change or reverse the former; but the trial will be of such a nature as to bring out all the deeds done on earth, and the sentence which will be pronounced will be in view of the universe, and will fix the everlasting doom. Then the body will have been raised; the affairs of the world will be wound up; the elect will all be gathered in, and the state of retribution will commence, to continue forever. The main thought of the apostle here may be, that after death will commence a state of "retribution"which can never change. Hence, there was a propriety that Christ should die but once. In that future world he would not die to make atonement, for there all will be fixed and final. If people, therefore, neglect to avail themselves of the benefits of the atonement here, the opportunity will be lost forever. In that changeless state which constitutes the eternal judgment no sacrifice will be again offered for sin; there will be no opportunity to embrace that Saviour who was rejected here on earth.
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Barnes: Heb 9:28 - -- So Christ was once offered - Since people are to die but once; and as all beyond the grave is fixed by the judgment, so that his death there wo...
So Christ was once offered - Since people are to die but once; and as all beyond the grave is fixed by the judgment, so that his death there would make no change in the destiny, there was a propriety that he should die but once for sin. The argument is, there is one probation only, and therefore there was need of but one sacrifice, or of his dying but once. If death were to occur frequently in the existence of each individual, and if each intermediate period were a state of probation, then there might be a propriety that an atonement should be made with reference to each state. Or if beyond the grave there were a state of probation still, then also there might be propriety that an atoning sacrifice should be offered there. But since neither of these things is true, there was a fitness that the great victim should die but once.
(Rather, perhaps, as in the original sentence, "once dying"was the penalty denounced on the sinner, so the substitute in enduring it, is in like manner, under necessity of dying but once. By this he fully answers the requirement of the Law. Or there may be in the passage a simple intimation that, in this respect, as in others. Christ is like us, namely, in being but once subject to death. It would be inconsistent with the nature which he sustains, to suppose him a second time subject to death.)
To bear the sins of many - To suffer and die on account of their sins; see Isa 53:6, Isa 53:11 notes; Gal 3:13 note. The phrase does not mean:
\caps1 (1) t\caps0 hat Christ was a "sinner"- for that was in no sense true. See Heb 7:26. Nor
\caps1 (2) t\caps0 hat he literally bore the penalty due to transgression - for that is equally untrue.
The penalty of the Law for sin is all which the Law when executed inflicts on the offender for his transgression, and includes, in "fact,"remorse of conscience, overwhelming despair, and eternal punishment. But Christ did not suffer forever, nor did he experience remorse of conscience, nor did he endure utter despair. Nor.
\caps1 (3) d\caps0 oes it mean that he was literally "punished"for our sins. Punishment pertains only to the guilty. An innocent being may "suffer"for what another does, but there is no propriety in saying that he is "punished"for it. A father suffers much from the misconduct of a son, but we do not say that he is punished for it; a child suffers much from the intemperance of a parent - but no one would say that it was a punishment on the child. Men always connect the idea of criminality with punishment, and when we say that a man is punished, we suppose at once that there is "guilt."The phrase here means simply, that Christ endured sufferings in his own person, which, if they had been inflicted on us, would have been the proper punishment of sin. He who was innocent interposed, and received on himself what was descending to meet us, and consented to be treated "as he would have deserved if he had been a sinner."Thus, he bore what was due to us; and this, in Scripture phrase, is what is meant by "bearing our iniquities;"see the notes Isa 53:4.
(It is indeed true, that Christ did not endure the very penalty which we had incurred, and, but for his interference, should have endured. His sufferings must be regarded in the light of an equivalent to the Law’ s original claim, of a satisfaction to its injured honor, which the Lawgiver has been pleased to accept. It is, however, equally true, that the sufferings of Christ were strictly penal. They were the punishment of sin. The true meaning of the important phrase in this verse, "to bear sin,"establishes this point. It can have no other meaning than bearing the punishment of sin. See Stuart’ s xix. Excursus. That punishment supposes guilt is not denied. What then? Not certainly that Christ was personally guilty, but that our guilt has been imputed to him - that he has taken the place of the guilty, and become answerable for their transgressions. See Supp. note, 2Co 5:21.)
And unto them that look for him - To his people. It is one of the characteristics of Christians that they look for the return of their Lord; Tit 2:13; 2Pe 3:12; compare the notes, 1Th 1:10. They fully believe that he will come. They earnestly desire that he will come; 2Ti 4:8; Rev 22:20. They are waiting for his appearing; 1Th 1:10. He left the world and ascended to heaven, but he will again return to earth, and his people are looking for that time as the period when they shall be raised up from their graves; when they shall be publicly acknowledged to be his, and when they shall be admitted to heaven; see the notes on Joh 14:3.
Shall he appear the second time - He first appeared as the man of sorrows to make atonement for sin. His second appearance will be as the Lord of his people, and the Judge of the quick and the dead; Mat 25:31, see the notes, Act 1:11. The apostle does not say when this would be, nor is any intimation given in the Scriptures when it will occur. It is on the contrary everywhere declared that this is concealed from people Act 1:7; Mat 24:36, and all that is known respecting the time is, that it will be suddenly and at an unexpected moment; Mat 24:42, Mat 24:44, Mat 24:50.
Without sin - That is, when be comes again he will not make himself a sin-offering; or will not come in order to make atonement for sin. It is not implied that when he came the first time he was in any sense a sinner, but that he came then with reference to sin. or that the main object of his incarnation was to "put away sin by the sacrifice of himself."When he comes the second time, it will be with reference to another object.
Unto salvation - That is, to receive his friends and followers to eternal salvation. He will come to save them from all their sins and temptations; to raise them from their graves; to place them at his right hand in glory, and to confirm them in the everlasting inheritance which he has promised to all who truly love him, and who wait for his appearing.
In view of this anticipated return of the Redeemer, we may remark:
(1) There is a propriety that the Lord Jesus should thus return. He came once to be humbled, despised, and put to death; and there is a fitness that he should come to be honored in his own world.
\caps1 (2) e\caps0 very person on earth is interested in the fact that he will return, for "every eye shall see him;"Rev 1:7. All who are now In their graves, and all who now live, and all who will hereafter live, will behold the Redeemer in his glory.
\caps1 (3) i\caps0 t will not be merely to gaze upon him, and to admire his magnificence that they will see him. It will be for greater and more momentous purposes - with reference to an eternal doom.
\caps1 (4) t\caps0 he great mass of people are not prepared to meet him. They do not believe that he will return; they do not desire that he should appear; they are not ready for the solemn interview which they will have with him. His appearing now would overwhelm them with surprise and horror. There is nothing in the future which they less expect and desire than the second coming of the Son of God, and in, the present state of the world his appearance would produce almost universal consternation and despair. It would be like the coming of the flood of waters on the old world; like the sheets of flame on the cities of the plain; or as "death"now comes to the great mass of those who die.
(5) Christians "are"prepared for his coming. They believe in it; they desire it; they are expecting it. In this they are distinguished from all the world besides, and they would be ready to hail his coming as that of a friend, and to rejoice in his appearance as that of "their"Saviour.
\caps1 (6) l\caps0 et us then live in habitual preparation for his advent. To each one of us he will come soon; to all he will come suddenly. Whether he come to remove us by death, or whether in the clouds of heaven to judge the world, the period is not far distant when "we"shall see him. Yes, our eyes shall behold the Son of God in his glory! That which we have long desired - a sight of our Saviour who died for us, shall soon, very soon be granted unto us. No Christian begins a week or a day in which there is not a possibility that, before its close, he may have seen the Son of God in his glory; none lies down upon his bed at night who may not, when the morning dawns upon this world, be gazing with infinite delight on the glories of the Great Redeemer in the heavens.
Poole: Heb 9:27 - -- And as it is appointed unto men once to die: the proof of the necessity of Christ’ s suffering death but once, is introduced in this verse by th...
And as it is appointed unto men once to die: the proof of the necessity of Christ’ s suffering death but once, is introduced in this verse by the conjunction And. It was according to God’ s decreed and published statute of men’ s but once dying; for God the Supreme Lord, Governor, and Judge of them, set, constituted, and appointed by an unalterable and irrevocable decree, as Lawgiver, and sentence, as Judge, to all of the sinful human race, the corrupt seed of apostate Adam, their grand representative, whom God threatened with this penalty upon his sinning and transgressing his law, Gen 2:17 ; which sentence was denounced upon him, Gen 3:19 ; compare Rom 5:12,14 Ro 6:23 . This sentence was but
once to be undergone by himself and all his sinful offspring, and by their Surety, and no more; so that the Second Adam needed but once to die by this statute. No man can keep himself from this, it being the general rule of God’ s proceeding with all persons. The Supreme Legislator may make what exceptions and provisos to his law he pleaseth. Those that were translated by him, did suffer a change proportionable to death, as Enoch, Heb 11:5 Gen 5:24 , and Elijah, 2Ki 2:11,12 ; and those that shall be changed at Christ’ s coming must undergo the like, as 1Co 15:51-54 1Th 4:17 . Those that were raised from death by Christ, Peter and Paul, &c., God might glorify his name by reiterating it; but whether they did die again, is not certain. This is to be the general settled law and rule of God.
But after this the judgment: in order, after souls by death are separated from their bodies, they come to judgment: and thus every particular one is handed over by death to the bar of God, the great Judge, and so is despatched by his sentence to its particular state and place with its respective people, Rom 14:12 . At the great and general assize, the day of judgment, shall the general and universal one take place, Act 17:31 , when all sinners in their entire persons, bodies and souls united, shall be adjudged to their final, unalterable, and eternal state, Rom 14:10 2Co 5:10 Jud 1:6 Rev 20:11-15 .
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Poole: Heb 9:28 - -- So Christ was once offered to bear the sins of many: outwv kai is an illative connection between the antecedent Heb 9:27 , and this consequent; As i...
So Christ was once offered to bear the sins of many:
And unto them that look for him shall he appear the second time without sin and to his believing, penitent expectants, such as long for his coming, Phi 3:20 Tit 2:13 , stretching out their heads, as the mother of Sisera, Jud 5:28 , with a holy impatience of seeing him, such as by faith and prayer are hastening it, Rom 8:23 2Co 5:1-10 1Pe 1:3-9 , shall he once more visibly appear to them and the world, Act 1:11 Rev 1:7 , gloriously, without need to suffer or die again for them, having at his departure after his first coming, carried all their sins into the land of forgetfulness.
Unto salvation and to their persons will he bring entire and complete salvation, raising and uniting bodies and souls together, Phi 3:21 ; and then take them as assistants to himself in the judgment-work on men and angels in the air; and having despatched that work, return with them to the holy of holiest in heaven, there to be completely blessed, in praising, serving, glorifying, and enjoying God in Christ, and the blessedness that attends that state, for ever and ever, as 1Co 6:2,3 1Th 4:17 .
PBC -> Heb 9:28
PBC: Heb 9:28 - -- " without sin unto salvation"
Without the necessity of making a sin offering, for that was already done- He did that the first time. But, He’s comi...
" without sin unto salvation"
Without the necessity of making a sin offering, for that was already done- He did that the first time. But, He’s coming back the second time without reference to the sin (suffering?) but it’s going to be with reference to salvation- deliverance of the body and fashioning it like unto the glory of His own body. Eld. Wiley Flanagan
Haydock -> Heb 9:28
Haydock: Heb 9:28 - -- To exhaust the sins of many. That is, of all, according to the style of the Scriptures. When he came first, he took upon him the load of our sins; ...
To exhaust the sins of many. That is, of all, according to the style of the Scriptures. When he came first, he took upon him the load of our sins; but at his second coming, at the end of the world, he will come in a quite different manner, not as laden with our sins, not after the similitude of a sinful man, not to redeem us, but with great power and majesty to judge all men. (Witham) ---
To exhaust. That is, to empty or draw out to the very bottom, by a plentiful and perfect redemption. (Challoner)
Gill: Heb 9:27 - -- And as it is appointed unto men once to die,.... Not a moral, or what is commonly called a spiritual death, nor an eternal one, but a corporeal one; w...
And as it is appointed unto men once to die,.... Not a moral, or what is commonly called a spiritual death, nor an eternal one, but a corporeal one; which does not arise from the constitution of nature, but from the sin of man, and God's decree on account of it; by which it is fixed that men shall die, and how long they shall live, and when they shall die; so that they cannot die sooner nor later; all things antecedent to death, which lead on to it, and issue in it, are appointed by God, and so is death itself, with all its circumstances; men's days can neither be lengthened nor shortened, either by Christ himself, or others: and this statute and appointment of God concerns men, not angels, and reaches to all men, wicked and righteous; and though there have been some exceptions, as Enoch and Elijah; and all will not sleep, or die, some will be found alive at Christ's appearing; yet such will undergo a change which is equivalent to death, as Enoch and Elijah have done: and generally speaking men die but once; it is not usual for men to die, and live again, and then die again; there have been some extraordinary instances of this kind, but they are rare; it is the statute law of heaven in common for men to die and that but once; so Cicero o the Heathen says, "omnibus definitam esse mortem": Christ died once, he will die no more; and it is the comfort of the saints, that though they die the first death, they shall not be hurt of the second death; and the consideration of this decree should excite to diligence and industry: death is certain to God, but uncertain to us, as to the time, nor should we curiously inquire into it, but patiently wait for it, and quietly submit unto it:
but after this the judgment; the last and general judgment, which will reach to all men, quick and dead, righteous and wicked, and in which Christ will be Judge. There is a particular judgment which is immediately after death; by virtue of which, the souls of men are condemned to their proper state of happiness or woe; and there is an universal judgment, which will be after the resurrection of the dead, and is called eternal judgment, and to come; this is appointed by God, though the time when is unknown to men; yet nothing is more certain, and it will be a righteous one.
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Gill: Heb 9:28 - -- So Christ was once offered to bear the sins of many,.... As man dies but once, Christ was offered but once, or he suffered and died but once; and that...
So Christ was once offered to bear the sins of many,.... As man dies but once, Christ was offered but once, or he suffered and died but once; and that was not on his own account, or for his own sins, "but to bear the sins of many": not of angels but of men, and these not a few, but "many"; which is said to magnify the grace of God, to exalt the satisfaction and righteousness of Christ, and to encourage souls to hope in him: hence many are brought to believe in him, and many are justified by him, have their sins forgiven them, and are glorified; though Christ bore not the sins of all men; for as all men have not faith, all are not justified, pardoned, and saved: what he bore were "sins"; all kind of sin, every act of sin, and all that belongs to it; its filth, guilt, and punishment, even the iniquity of all his people; which must be a prodigious weight, and than which nothing could be more nauseous: his bearing them supposes they were upon him, though not in him, imputed, though not inherent; that he did not sink under them; that he made an entire satisfaction for them, and bore them wholly away, both from the persons of his people, and from the sight of justice. The way in which he came to bear them was this; he became a surety for all the elect; his Father imputed to him all their sins, and he voluntarily took them upon himself; where justice found them, and demanded satisfaction of him for them, and he gave it; which is an instance both of his great love, and of his great strength:
and unto them that look for him: with affection, faith and patience:
shall he appear the second time without sin unto salvation; this is to be understood of Christ's visible and personal appearance on earth, which will be a glorious one; he will appear in his own glory, and in his Father's glory, and in the glory of the holy angels, and in the glory of his power, to the joy of saints, and to the terror of the wicked; for every eye shall see him: and this is said to be "the second time"; that is, that he appears on earth, and personally; for though he often appears to his people, it is in a spiritual way; and though he appeared to Stephen and to Paul, yet not on earth, but in heaven; and this is called the second time, with reference to his first appearance in human nature at his incarnation, and after that he ascended to heaven; and as this will be the second, it will be the last: the manner in which he will appear, will be, "without sin"; without sin itself; without any thing like it: without any infirmities, which though not sinful are the effects of sin; without sin imputed to him, with which he appeared before; without being a sacrifice for sin; and without sin upon his people that come with him, or he shall meet whom he shall raise, or change, and take to himself: and the end of his appearance with respect to them, will be "unto salvation"; the end of his first appearance was to obtain salvation for his people, and he has obtained it, and there is a comfortable application of it made unto them by the Spirit of God; but the full possession of it will be hereafter, and into this will Christ put them, when he shall appear: the Alexandrian copy adds, "by faith", and also some other copies.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
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NET Notes: Heb 9:28 Grk “for salvation.” This may be construed with the verb “await” (those who wait for him to bring them salvation), but the con...
Geneva Bible: Heb 9:27 And as it is appointed unto men ( r ) once to die, but after this the judgment:
( r ) He speaks of the natural state and condition of man: For though...
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Geneva Bible: Heb 9:28 So Christ was once offered to bear the sins of ( s ) many; ( 16 ) and unto them that look for him shall he appear the second time without sin unto sal...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Heb 9:1-28
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 9:23-28
Combined Bible: Heb 9:23-28 - --Great Sacrifice
(Hebrews 9:23-28)
Our present passage is so exceeding full that it is expedient we should reduce our intr...
MHCC -> Heb 9:23-28
MHCC: Heb 9:23-28 - --It is evident that the sacrifices of Christ are infinitely better than those of the law, which could neither procure pardon for sin, nor impart power ...
Matthew Henry -> Heb 9:23-28
Matthew Henry: Heb 9:23-28 - -- In this last part of the chapter, the apostle goes on to tell us what the Holy Ghost has signified to us by the legal purifications of the patterns ...
Barclay -> Heb 9:23-28
Barclay: Heb 9:23-28 - --The writer to the Hebrews, still thinking of the supreme efficacy of the sacrifice which Jesus made, begins with a flight of thought which, even fo...
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 (...
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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...
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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...
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