The Letter to the Hebrews. Jon C. Laansma

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The Letter to the Hebrews - Jon C. Laansma

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for their salvation; and establishes that covenant as the certain, imminent, universal rule of God. As to when he is appointed as priest, there are strong indications that it correlated with his accomplished offering, perhaps specifically his resurrected entrance to God’s presence. Yet the latter is continuous with his incarnation (10:5–10) and life of obedience (5:1–10; 10:5–10), and at places his death as such seems to be the key priestly act.16 It is forced to correlate stages before and after his heavenly Session with Aaronic and Melchizedekian patterns. That he is high priest arises not directly from a Scriptural pronouncement—Ps 110:4 does not say high priest—but from his uniqueness (he is alone in his order), eternality, and role (his work correlates with the Day of Atonement). For further on his priestly appointment, identity, and role, see 4:14—5:10 and 7:1–28.

      To reiterate the point about the way in which the history of the shadows and patterns and the history of Jesus have to be taken into account: In Israel’s history there was a drawn out sequence of exodus, wanderings, Sinai, preparations for the tabernacle, inauguration through Moses, implementation through Aaron with the Day of Atonement at the center. In Jesus’ history all this happens in a stroke and in a way that resists assigning discrete effects to separate stages of his work. Therefore the true Day of Atonement is achieved in Christ by the very same self-offering that inaugurates the covenant history within which (by the logic of the patterns) the Day of Atonement would be observed. That he is mediator is expressly stated in Hebrews to highlight his role as inaugurator, the one who brings all these things into effect, but this is said only with the understanding that the inaugurating sacrifice is also the cleansing sacrifice that qualifies the people for entrance. Obviously—and this is contextually warranted—he is mediator in the latter sense also.

      It can be asked why Hebrews does not content itself with the already-established idea of Christ as an offering but, uniquely, goes on to name Jesus as our high priest. No doubt an expositional mindset encountering Ps 110:4 is part of the answer, but it is not likely the image would have been pursued beyond an intuition unless it proved fruitful on many levels and also comported with the person and work of the Son as already confessed. The idea of priestly representation and intercession is potent in itself, but it also brings in its wake the much larger treatment of the systems and the covenants within the history of God and his word, culminating in the announced gospel.

      As for the question of deity and humanity as such, neither can be taken for granted. Moderns may take humanity as a starting point and debate whether deity is applicable, but in the history of christology it has frequently been the other way around. In Hebrews we can note the way in which the Son can be addressed as God outright (1:8) and without so much as pausing for reaction. We can then note the rhetorical effort to assert full humanity and we might wonder if the deity of the Son was a given and his full humanity was in question and in need of reinforcement. This latter seems closer to the mark if either of these identities was needing buttressing, but it is more likely that neither was really a bone of contention as such. What was needed was a deepening of both emphases—along with other aspects of their confession—in the interest of the teaching about the great salvation.

      As for his deity and humanity in his activity, there has always been a tradition of assigning certain roles or activities to either his deity or his humanity. It is not to pass judgment against all such readings to observe that Hebrews itself is more inclined to assign the Son’s work to his full identity: the Son’s work is carried out as the Son—as God-man—from his incarnation (an act of obedience in his role as our representative, an act that is uniquely his prerogative as the one who can chose to accept his body) to his exaltation (taking a place which properly belongs to God, not merely an exalted human; but doing so as one of us). The same must be said of the atoning work that spans these points. Likewise, his life won through resurrection is somehow improperly separated from (even if it might be distinguished from) his eternality by nature. The comparison with Melchizedek that launches 7:1–28 characterizes him as “without father or mother or genealogy, having neither beginning of days nor end of life” suggesting that the “indestructible [endless] life” of 7:16 is somehow owing to something intrinsically indestructible as much as it is to what is shown to be and won as indestructible in the resurrection (cf. John 10:18).

      In the Son both God and the chosen seed of Abraham keep covenant, as was fitting and necessary. In him, and as the Son, God takes responsibility for his creation and works salvation, as he alone was able (Isa 59:16; 63:5). He does so as the one who created all things for himself, acting in faithfulness to his handiwork and with transcendent power. He does so as the one whose saving work is his speech and whose speech is the act of salvation, communicated by the Spirit in the word of the gospel. He does so by giving us himself, who alone is life. Yet he does so as one of us, so that by sharing in him, the heir of all things, we receive the promised inheritance.

      Jesus and the Old Testament Witness

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