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The Preacher's Commentary - Vol. 33: Hebrews
The Preacher's Commentary - Vol. 33: Hebrews
The Preacher's Commentary - Vol. 33: Hebrews
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The Preacher's Commentary - Vol. 33: Hebrews

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Written BY Preachers and Teachers FOR Preachers and Teachers

Combining fresh insights with readable exposition and relatable examples, The Preacher's Commentary will help you minister to others and see their lives transformed through the power of God's Word. Whether preacher, teacher, or Bible study leader--if you're a communicator, The Preacher's Commentary will help you share God's Word more effectively with others.

This volume on the book of Hebrews tackles this underappreciated New Testament book as a whole, unpacking its rich store of truth and spiritual power.

Each volume is written by one of today's top scholars, and includes:

  • Innovative ideas for preaching and teaching God's Word
  • Vibrant paragraph-by-paragraph exposition
  • Impelling real-life illustrations
  • Insightful and relevant contemporary application
  • An introduction, which reveals the author's approach
  • A full outline of the biblical book being covered
  • Scripture passages (using the New King James Version) and explanations

 

The Preacher's Commentary offers pastors, teachers, and Bible study leaders clear and compelling insights into the Bible that will equip them to understand, apply, and teach the truth in God's Word.

 

LanguageEnglish
PublisherThomas Nelson
Release dateJul 22, 2003
ISBN9781418587765
The Preacher's Commentary - Vol. 33: Hebrews

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    The Preacher's Commentary - Vol. 33 - Louis Evans

    EDITOR’S PREFACE

    God has called all of His people to be communicators. Everyone who is in Christ is called into ministry. As ministers of the manifold grace of God, all of us—clergy and laity—are commissioned with the challenge to communicate our faith to individuals and groups, classes and congregations.

    The Bible, God’s Word, is the objective basis of the truth of His love and power that we seek to communicate. In response to the urgent, expressed needs of pastors, teachers, Bible study leaders, church school teachers, small group enablers, and individual Christians, the Preacher’s Commentary is offered as a penetrating search of the Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments to enable vital personal and practical communication of the abundant life.

    Many current commentaries and Bible study guides provide only some aspects of a communicator’s needs. Some offer in-depth scholarship but no application to daily life. Others are so popular in approach that biblical roots are left unexplained. Few offer impelling illustrations that open windows for the reader to see the exciting application for today’s struggles. And most of all, seldom have the expositors given the valuable outlines of passages so needed to help the preacher or teacher in his or her busy life to prepare for communicating the Word to congregations or classes.

    This Preacher’s Commentary series brings all of these elements together. The authors are scholar-preachers and teachers outstanding in their ability to make the Scriptures come alive for individuals and groups. They are noted for bringing together excellence in biblical scholarship, knowledge of the original Greek and Hebrew, sensitivity to people’s needs, vivid illustrative material from biblical, classical, and contemporary sources, and lucid communication by the use of clear outlines of thought. Each has been selected to contribute to this series because of his Spirit-empowered ability to help people live in the skins of biblical characters and provide a you-are-there intensity to the drama of events of the Bible which have so much to say about our relationships and responsibilities today.

    The design for the Preacher's Commentary gives the reader an overall outline of each book of the Bible. Following the introduction, which reveals the author's approach and salient background on the book, each chapter of the commentary provides the Scripture to be exposited. The New King James Bible has been chosen for the Preacher's Commentary because it combines with integrity the beauty of language, underlying Greek textual basis, and thought-flow of the 1611 King James Version, while replacing obsolete verb forms and other archaisms with their everyday contemporary counterparts for greater readability. Reverence for God is preserved in the capitalization of all pronouns referring to the Father, Son, or Holy Spirit. Readers who are more comfortable with another translation can readily find the parallel passage by means of the chapter and verse reference at the end of each passage being exposited. The paragraphs of exposition combine fresh insights to the Scripture, application, rich illustrative material, and innovative ways of utilizing the vibrant truth for his or her own life and for the challenge of communicating it with vigor and vitality.

    It has been gratifying to me as Editor of this series to receive enthusiastic progress reports from each contributor. As they worked, all were gripped with new truths from the Scripture—God-given insights into passages, previously not written in the literature of biblical explanation. A prime objective of this series is for each user to find the same awareness: that God speaks with newness through the Scriptures when we approach them with a ready mind and a willingness to communicate what He has given; that God delights to give communicators of His Word I-never-saw-that-in-that-verse-before intellectual insights so that our listeners and readers can have I-never-realized-all-that-was-in-that-verse spiritual experiences.

    The thrust of the commentary series unequivocally affirms that God speaks through the Scriptures today to engender faith, enable adventuresome living of the abundant life, and establish the basis of obedient discipleship. The Bible, the unique Word of God, is unlimited in its resource for Christians in communicating our hope to others. It is our weapon in the battle for truth, the guide for ministry, and the irresistible force for introducing others to God.

    A biblically rooted communication of the gospel holds in unity and oneness what divergent movements have wrought asunder. This commentary series courageously presents personal faith, caring for individuals, and social responsibility as essential, inseparable dimensions of biblical Christianity. It seeks to present the quadrilateral gospel in its fullness which calls us to unreserved commitment to Christ, unrestricted self-esteem in His grace, unqualified love for others in personal evangelism, and undying efforts to work for justice and righteousness in a sick and suffering world.

    A growing renaissance in the church today is being led by clergy and laity who are biblically rooted, Christ-centered, and Holy Spirit-empowered. They have dared to listen to people’s most urgent questions and deepest needs and then to God as He speaks through the Bible. Biblical preaching is the secret of growing churches. Bible study classes and small groups are equipping the laity for ministry in the world. Dynamic Christians are finding that daily study of God’s Word allows the Spirit to do in them what He wishes to communicate through them to others. These days are the most exciting time since Pentecost. The Preacher’s Commentary is offered to be a primary resource of new life for this renaissance.

    Over the years, my conversations with pastors and teachers about their expository communication of the New Testament has revealed that the Epistle to the Hebrews has been overlooked. It is one of the least appreciated and utilized books of the New Testament for comprehensive, thematic, or verse-by-verse study and preaching. Some preachers have found individual verses or favorite chapters propitious for powerful preaching, but they seldom take their congregations through the entire epistle in a prolonged series of messages. Teachers of Bible classes or small group discussion leaders frequently quote from the rich store of truth in the epistle, but few tackle it as a whole. Yet Hebrews is a treasure chest brimming over with spiritual power for the preacher and teacher. However, help is needed to examine these jewels and utilize them in a way that not only exposes the separate texts in depth, but the context of the epistle as a whole.

    We have needed a contemporary commentary on Hebrews that explains the sweep of its deeper meaning and that exemplifies how to develop a series of messages or classes for preaching and teaching today. I believe this commentary on Hebrews accomplishes both—and so much more.

    When I carefully and prayerfully considered the persons who might most creatively write the commentary on Hebrews, I wanted an author who had made the epistle a major focus of his study, research, and expository preaching and teaching through the years. That choice was not difficult. One scholar-preacher who has become distinguished for his work in Hebrews over the years is Dr. Louis H. Evans, Jr., for 18 years pastor of the National Presbyterian Church, Washington, D.C., and now pastor-at-large at First Presbyterian Church, Fresno, Calif.

    Dr. Evans’s concentration on Hebrews began during his postgraduate studies at New College, University of Edinburgh, Scotland. His research and writing on Hebrews at that time has been further refined and deepened in application in preaching and teaching to congregations, classes, and conferences through the years. His distilled insights into the text, as well as his magnificent outline of the contents of the epistle as a whole, offer the communicator a ready guide for the development of sermons and study plans for classes and group discussions. In a very viable way, Dr. Evans has given Hebrews back to the contemporary church as a basis for dynamic preaching and teaching of Christ, our High Priest, Prophet, and King.

    This stunning commentary of Hebrews provides a stimulating resource for preachers and teachers. The author’s etymological exposure of the deeper meaning of the Greek, along with his interpretation of the Old Testament roots of the phrases, images, and concepts of the epistle make this commentary a rich source of material for the communicator. The work stands on its own as an excellent scholarly treatment of Hebrews, but it is done in a way that will enable the reader to approach his or her own preaching and teaching with new depth and freshness. The essential research and exposition has been done. The contemporary and personal illustrations and anecdotes used to clarify introduce us to the author’s mind and heart; they also show us how to draw on our own experiences and observations of life in our teaching and preaching of Hebrews. I predict that this volume will become one of the most cherished and used commentaries for the exposition of the epistle today.

    Dr. Evans is one of the finest biblical preachers in America today. During his years at the strategic National Presbyterian Church in Washington, he became a distinguished, pivotal leader of church renewal in the nation. Admired and emulated by pastors and church leaders, he is noted for his forthright preaching and the way he exemplifies the implementation of the gospel in his own life and in his leadership of his parish. He is a frontiersman, constantly breaking new ground with new forms of ministry to meet the deepest needs of people and to confront the urgent issues of our society. In his personal life, he puts his money, energy, and influence where his preaching is. He has become a front-runner in the most crucial issues gripping us today. Hunger, poverty, and human rights, as well as the spiritual needs of people, are all urgent concerns of his life and ministry. Dr. Evans’s leadership is a magnificent blend of a call to personal faith and social responsibility. For that reason, his writing, preaching, and innovative church-manship result in solidly converted, deeply committed, and energetically involved laity who can share their faith and work for justice and righteousness in the structures of society. And at the source of it all is the quality of biblical research and exposition you will appreciate in this volume. All this has made him a revered pastor and friend of both the top leaders of the nation who depend on his counseling and care and the disadvantaged who have been helped by his practical compassion and concern.

    One added personal word. Dr. Evans is a valued covenant brother of mine. Over the years we have been part of a covenant group of men and women who meet consistently for study, prayer, and mutual encouragement, as well as to strategize for the renewal of the church in America. As my friend, Lou has been a faithful prayer partner who has shared the joys and challenges of the adventure of discipleship.

    Thus, it is with profound gratitude that I commend to you this outstanding treatment of Hebrews and rejoice with you as you enjoy the new delight of communicating Christ’s authority, power, and redemption from this epistle.

    —Lloyd J. Ogilvie

    INTRODUCTION

    Expositional works are usually written in a nonpersonal style, either without reference to the author or, if any is made, in the third person. My editor, good friend, and covenant brother Lloyd Ogilvie has asked me in his own quiet but graciously persistent manner to make a personal statement introducing this study to you. At first I hesitated, but realize that any work is an expression of the person and experience of the writer. After many years of reading scholarly works, I am convinced that the claim for utterly objective and scholastic approach is a false one. Therefore I may as well tell you who I am and why I have approached this work in the manner I have. You will discover it sooner or later anyway.

    My family background has two main streams, one Calvinistic and the other Anabaptist. On my father’s side, Presbyterianism and Calvinism were my strong diet and environment as long as I can remember. My grandfather William, an early convert of D. L. Moody, and the first graduate from Moody Bible Institute, was one of America’s great scholar-preachers. He knew the New Testament by heart in several English versions and major portions of the Greek. He was a master of memorization and wrote a book on the subject, How to Memorize, published by Moody Press in 1909. His lecturing and preaching skills led him around the country in the great movement of Chatauquas and tabernacle meetings in every corner of the nation and across the seas. He was a Welshman, native born, and always a colonialist and Britisher at heart. I remember his saying in his great elocutionary style, Son, there will always be an England. The sun never sets on the British Empire. He was a disciplined scholar, spending six to eight hours each working day in scriptural studies and writing.

    My father, Louis H. Evans, Sr., was one of the nation’s great pastors and preachers. Honored several times as one of America’s ten great preachers, he brought the stirring combination of fine athlete, musician, and forceful presence to all his ministries. Collegians thronged university auditoriums to hear him; men hung on his words at large church rallies and responded to his powerful challenges for the kingdom of God. He served the Presbyterian denomination as president of the Board of National Missions, the pastor of its largest congregation, Hollywood, California, and finally as Minister-at-Large for the Board of National Missions.

    On my mother’s side the Anabaptist stream ran rich. My great-grandfather, Bishop Henry Egly, an Amishman of Swiss descent, discovered Christ in a life-changing evangelical encounter. He preached the Christian experience until an evangelical movement among the Amish became so significant it was named the Egly Amish. Pressed out of that fellowship over this matter, he became the founder of the Defenseless Mennonites, later to become the Evangelical Mennonite Church of America.

    My grandfather, Joseph Egly, moved from Berne, Indiana, the center of the Defenseless Mennonites, to begin a Missionary and Alliance congregation in Phoenix, Arizona, where my mother was raised.

    Mother is one of those radiant, solid Christian women whose strong piety has always been touched with realism and practicality. Her life has been an example par excellence for the servant, always strong and filled with a love for Jesus Christ.

    My own pilgrimage has had perhaps four phases. The first I can remember is that of traditional and institutional Christianity as expressed in the life of the Presbyterians in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. I was conscious of a socially oriented congregation of Pittsburgh’s wealthy, whose people vacationed in Miami and Lake Placid. Smooth sophistication, nonenthusiastic attitudes toward religion, nonintimate relationships, country club protocol, and the right schools seemed to me the emphases of greatest magnitude. Dad’s ministry appeared tangential to the society’s main course and few followed him.

    My second phase began as my father moved to Hollywood, California, where I experienced evangelical faith for the first time. In 1947 I had a life-transforming experience with Christ and in the ensuing years was disciplined in a mildly fundamental and dispensational theology. Even in this phase, however, I began to struggle with certain doctrines of inspiration that did not appear to correlate with what I was discovering in New Testament studies of ancient manuscripts. Moreover, I was questioning the New Testament writers’ use of Old Testament material. Having some background in philosophy and logic, I found it difficult to go along with or understand some of the interpretations made by New Testament authors.

    Finishing seminary and wanting to answer some questions I had in Christology and hermeneutics (the art of interpreting the Scriptures), I counseled with Dr. Jesse Baird, President of San Francisco Seminary, and Dr. John Wick Bowman, my New Testament professor, who urged me to do a post-graduate study in Edinburgh with Professors James S. Stewart, Matthew Black, and William Manson. They suggested the Epistle to the Hebrews which would cover both the christological and hermeneutical themes.

    The thesis topic was chosen: A Christological Study of the Epistle to the Hebrews with Special Emphasis on the Writers’ Use of Old Testament Material. About that time the Qumran Fragments broke upon the path of the thesis and I found myself involved in a very heavy topic indeed.

    Since that time I have taught the epistle many times, always with a deepening sense of appreciation and insight.

    The third phase of my Christian growth came during the social justice movement of the sixties and seventies when dear friends of the black community began to share with Colleen and me the painful experiences of being blacks in contemporary America. This led me to a new study of the Scriptures which resulted in a firm conviction that there could be no bifurcation of the faith into the camps of soul-saving or social action. Evangelism and justice were two coordinate themes of the same gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ. The experiences of pastoring in San Diego’s suburb of La Jolla and then in Washington, D.C., where we were active in the inner-city ministry, convinced me that we have a whole gospel for the whole person in the whole world. In no way can I deny or diminish either emphasis without doing damage to the gospel.

    The fourth and present phase of my Christian walk is that of trying to live out my simple role of being a pastor-at-large, writer, and teacher in the early years of the twenty-first century, a member of the rising third party of the church which must be unembarrassingly evangelical and justice-oriented at the same time.

    There is another facet of my thinking of which you must be aware: the deep concern I have for our mainline denominations. I love the church of which I am a part and at the same time I agonize for its loss of spiritual vitality in a day of atrophy. Membership of major denominations dwindles from historic peaks; mission efforts wallow in a mixture of theological vagueness, postcolonial guilt, and embarrassment of association with a nation that is a world power. Tragically, in all too many instances the church has been polarized by a dichotomy between the evangelical passion for the souls of people on one hand and the social concern for justice on the other. Issues and power politics, not the Person of Jesus Christ, have become the rallying points at which segments of the church muster for battle. The result is division, distrust, and dissipated energies. The Person and ministry of Jesus Christ have been demythologized of supernatural elements in a milieu of humanistic scientism so that the church’s banners are bleached.

    In the words of Charles Malik before the Evanston Assembly in 1954, What is desperately needed, beside the highest political wisdom, is a ringing, positive message, one of reality, of truth, and of hope. Jesus Christ is the center and throbbing core of that reality, truth, and hope. Professor Edmund Schlink said to the same assembly, The whole point of Christian hope is that we live and act in faith. Christian hope is based in Jesus Christ alone.

    Who is this Jesus Christ? Why is hope founded on Him alone? For one simple reason that has many facets: Jesus Christ is the foundation of the church’s being. The church’s existence is dependent upon its relation to the historical Christ. It is a matter of ontology (the science of being and reality). Without Christ there is no church; without Jesus of Nazareth there is no reality for the church. Because of His identity, because of His life and ministry, because of His atoning death and Resurrection, His gift of the Holy Spirit, and His promise of ultimate victory, believers are drawn into a fellowship of hope. To fail to understand Jesus Christ is to fail to understand the church. Cleave the branch from the Vine and the branch will wither! There is no way it can be kept alive apart from the Vine.

    Renewal in the church depends upon a renewed understanding and a commitment to Jesus Christ as God Incarnate; One of us; Priest, Sacrifice, and Coming Messiah. No other New Testament document so fully explores Him in these dimensions as does the Epistle to the Hebrews. The epistle makes no attempt to prove the existence of Jesus Christ or His atoning death. The author simply makes an exposition of that which he takes as given and so would I. My purpose is to share with you the rich truths and imagery of this passionate and fertile mind of the first century. This author—his (or her) style, thought-form, and urgency—has impacted my life in an inescapable manner and stimulated me to be a different person, a more committed disciple of Jesus my Lord. I trust the same will be true for you, my friend. Needless to say, I am indebted to the teachers and scholars of the centuries who have made their insights available to you and me. Few of these ideas are my own, and even if I should think so, I am sure some saint thought of them long ago. Yet the gracious Holy Spirit permits us the joy of thinking we have made a discovery. So come, share in discovering!

    This commentary series is not designed for many footnotes and quotations. Rather, it is to be an aid to those who desire to teach and illustrate the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ out of responsible scholarship but without the heavy drapes of academic sophistication. I am excited to do this study with you. My only wish is to be servant to your growth, knowing that you will go far beyond my limited insights into this great epistle. If anything can be a stepping-stone or resource for your journey, it is yours. After all, all belongs to Christ.

    About the Epistle

    The Epistle to the Hebrews is sometimes known as the forgotten epistle. One might wonder why. I see several possible explanations.

    First, the epistle argues strongly from the standpoint of comparative sacrifices, a topic we today are not eager to pursue. Blood sacrifice is no longer practiced, and its liturgical significance has been deemphasized, if not rejected. We tend to turn our backs and minds on that which seems repulsive and some would call uncivilized.

    Second, contemporary theology has attempted to demythologize the historical Jesus and those atonement principles that deal with supernatural or nonscientific themes. These thought-forms in Hebrews are not familiar to a technologically oriented society.

    Further, much of the church has strongly emphasized social concerns to the detriment of evangelical religious experience. Thus the thrust of Hebrews on a cleansing sacrifice that can make the conscience of a believer clean is not as exciting as street action for social justice. The latter appears more pragmatic than the former. Christian faith is desperately weakened when urgent prophetic social concern is separated from a personal relationship with God. How can we be close to the God of justice and not know His untiring vigilance against oppression? How can we be involved in the draining efforts for the oppressed without being sustained by personal relationship with God?

    Finally, the epistle’s format makes it a difficult document to study. Its themes weave in and out on the warp of doctrine and the woof of exhortation. So smooth are these transitions that the reader is easily confused by the movement from one to the other.

    Now there are fresh reasons for reconsidering this epistle and bringing it out of the forgotten bin into the light of study. We have already mentioned the hunger for renewed insights into the study of Christ (Christology) and sacrifice (soteriology). After trying all our human and scientific methods of realizing the good life and having failed so miserably, we are ready to consider our need for some outside help—for salvation from God and on God’s terms.

    In addition, fresh approaches to the epistle have unraveled its interwoven style and made it excitingly clear and relevant.

    Style

    The style of the epistle is unique. From the very outset the author runs a race at top speed, not taking time to identify himself or his readers. He thrusts all his energies into the first lines of his argument and does not let up the pace until the end. During the race he changes his stride between doctrine or teaching and exhortation. It is as though he is running against an opponent, cultic Judaism, that will not let go its grasp on previous adherents. Thematically, his style is that of comparison. Better, superior, and more are words used consistently throughout the arguments. It is obvious that, by showing the superiority of the new covenant to the old and the better sacrifice of Christ to those of the Jewish sacrificial system (cultus), he believes he can pull his readers into the wholehearted acceptance of the uniqueness of Christ’s priestly ministry.

    In handling the doctrine and exhortation, he differs sharply from Paul. The latter holds his exhortational passages until the end of an epistle or until the doctrinal dissertation is complete. Our author, on the contrary, makes an excursion from the teaching material whenever it reminds him of some characteristic of his readers that demands improvement. The doctrinal and the exhortational are interwoven most smoothly, so that one finds oneself on a different tack within a matter of a few words or lines—now doctrine, now exhortation, now doctrine again. Farther along, we will peruse a schematic diagram of this interweaving; I think it will greatly facilitate and clarify the material we study.

    More than any other New Testament writer, our author is classical in his Greek style. Where Paul will use one word, such as law in Romans 7, to mean several different types of law, our writer will use several different words for the same thing, showing an immense vocabulary that continues to build all through the epistle.

    Among his various peculiarities is his use of what I would call rhetorical similarity. Using a root word, he will, in order to make a point, choose compound words that have not only rhetorical similarity but contrasting meanings. For example, he uses the root philo in three different combinations to form this rhetorical similarity: in Hebrews 13:1, Philadelphia (brotherly love), verse 2, philozenias (hospitality), and in verse 5, aphilarguros (not greedy for money). He also enjoys using compounds, beginning with a root word and embellishing it with prefixes (e.g., Heb. 13:2).

    Authorship

    Perhaps you have heard arguments among your Christian friends over the question, Who wrote the Epistle to the Hebrews? My King James Bible says Paul wrote it, so that must be the case! is a common response. And yet Origen, a biblical scholar of the second and third centuries, felt that because of style the epistle could not have been the direct work of Paul. ¹ Roman Catholics, while wanting to keep the epistle in the Pauline school and yet admitting the differences with Paul, claim the writer was in the company of Paul. Others have even speculated on female authorship, perhaps that of Priscilla, who was undeniably a teacher of no mean ability (Acts 18; Rom. 16:3–5).

    These things we can know about the author: He (or she) was a teacher. The thoughtfulness and thoroughness in persuasion marks him (or her) as an instructor in Christian life. Moreover, he (or she) was a second generation Christian, claiming the gospel was confirmed to us by those who heard Him [Jesus] (Heb. 2:3).

    Our author was most probably a Jew—perhaps an Alexandrian Jew, or one of the diaspora, those who had been taken into exile from Israel but who retained connection with the religion of their fatherland. His knowledge of the Old Testament is extensive, not only in the number of Old Testament quotations used but in the manner in which they are used. His method of argument follows Jewish rules of scriptural interpretation, as we shall see later in this Introduction. He interprets with authority as a Jew, not speculatively as a Greek, as some would have him be. The way in which he uses Old Testament material is reminiscent of the Haggadah and the midrash, two forms of Jewish religious tradition. The Haggadah expressed the real-life, flexible, allegorical interpretations of the Torah as would have been expressed by loving and sensitive preachers, rather than Halakah, the hard, tight legalism of the Pharisees. It lifted and inspired. Our author is at home in this tradition. The midrash was the product of seeking out or searching the Scriptures. This process of investigation would often result in the type of insights represented in the Haggadah. Our author uses this peculiar Jewish style with ease and obvious practice. For this reason, some wish to believe the author was Apollos.

    The writer of this epistle is aflame with the apostolic message. He has been thoroughly trained in Christian doctrine and can recognize variances from it, which he

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