Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Hebrews 1-6 Part 2 • Dr. Matthew Grey • Oct 30 - Nov 5
Episode Date: October 25, 2023Dr. Grey continues to teach why we worship Jesus Christ and the depths and breadths of His Atonement and how it allows Him to succor His people as well as exploring the wisdom of the author of Hebrews... as they emphasize the importance of beginning with spiritual “milk” but the necessity of progressing to spiritual “meat” and spiritual maturity.Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.co/new-testament-episodes-41-52/YouTube: https://youtu.be/xTeKy8bE5mcFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/15G9TTz8yLp0dQyEcBQ8BYPlease rate and review the podcast!00:00 Part II– Dr. Matthew Grey00:06 Jesus is superior to angels and Moses04:21 Psalm 95 references08:42 Hear and act10:16 Jesus is superior to Levitical priesthood system12:49 Review of Levitical priesthood system and the temple16:13 Priests act as intercessory17:54 Plato’s Allegory of the Cave23:09 Confidence in the grace of Jesus26:34 Elder Christofferson and Helen Keller31:58 High Priest in Israel is shadow and type of Jesus33:52 Psalm 11036:20 Christology for emphasis40:36 High Priest after the Order of Melchizedek43:27 Milk and meat of the gospel of Jesus Christ46:59 Melchizedek and Jesus50:45 Psalm 11055:15 Perfection through priesthood power58:52 Dead Sea community connections1:07:10 30,000 foot overview1:11:15 End of Part II– Dr. Matthew GreyThanks to the followHIM team:Shannon Sorensen: Cofounder, Executive Producer, SponsorDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing, SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Editor, Show NotesJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignAnnabelle Sorensen: Creative Project ManagerWill Stoughton: Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Translation Team, English & French Transcripts, WebsiteAriel Cuadra: Spanish Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to part two with Dr. Matt Gray, Hebrews 1 through 6.
We move on to kind of the second major segment now of the book.
And that is, having just argued that Jesus is superior to the angels, we now need to show
that Jesus is superior to Moses.
That's going to be the theme of chapter 3 and the first part of our chapter 4.
So here we are chapter 3, verse 1.
Wherefore Holy brothers and sisters,
partakers of the heavenly calling. Let's think about this apostle, the sent one, and the high
priest of our profession, Jesus Christ, another beautiful term title that will be explored later
in the book. But now let's talk about Moses, who was faithful to him that appointed him as
Moses was faithful in all of his house. Chapter 3 goes on to say, Moses was a faithful servant in God's house.
So if we envision the community as a house that was built for God's people, for God's children,
Moses was a faithful servant in that house.
And we value that.
We appreciate that.
We love Moses.
But Jesus is the son who will inherit the house.
Jesus is the heir to the estate. So how much superior, how much
better would it be to follow the heir of the estate than one of the household servants? And that's
the metaphor that the author will use to assert that Jesus is in fact superior to Moses. And you can
read in chapter three verses two through six about this house imagery. Moses truly was a faithful servant
in the house. And we value him for that.
But verse 6, but Christ as a son over the house, whose house we are. If we listen to the servant, how much more important is it to listen to the heir of the estate?
It's kind of a similar line of thinking with the angels and chapters one and two, but now it's applying it to Moses.
It does seem to be telling this audience,
we just don't need to rely on the law of Moses anymore.
If you're feeling drawn to those old
pentatoucals structures and laws
and that old Torah-based framework,
we have the Sun now, and we can now separate from that.
Which again, it's reading a little bit different than Paul.
Paul had a bit of a different approach on the Torah,
where the Torah was very much alive and well
in the lives of the Jewish covenant for Paul,
but this author seems to be saying,
it's time to move on because now we have something superior,
we have Jesus.
Wow.
This is great.
It's really fun to be able to just understand
what the author is trying to do when I took this on my own.
I was like, okay, you know, there's some great one liners
and I'm seeing this in this way.
It's an argument.
It is. He's laying out a case. He's laying out a case. That's a great way to put it.
This might not have made sense to the Gentile converts. Why would you quote seven old Testament passages to Gentile converts? But to this audience, he's showing them, no, this Torah that
you revere, look what it's pointing us to. It's pointing us to to cry.
Am I getting that right?
Exactly. Yeah.
In fairness, that could go both ways.
Scholars do wonder, is it in fact a Jewish Christian audience who are
feeling drawn to the ways of their former community, rather former walk?
Or are these Gentile converts who maybe are being pressured to become
Jewish Christians? We've seen that as a dynamic all throughout the book of Acts where there are
some Jewish Christians who believe that to be a follower of Jesus, he's the Jewish Messiah,
come to save the Jewish people. If you want to avail yourself of that salvation, you have to be Jewish.
And so the idea being that there are early Christians who are convincing
those who are not ethnically Jewish Gentiles to become Jewish first, is this argument
away to tell Gentile Christians you don't need to make that move. That is a thing that
Paul would agree with. Paul would agree that Gentiles don't need to convert to Judaism
in order to be a follower of Jesus. It's hard to know exactly which way this is going in
terms of the audience and the background. Whoever it is, whoever this audience is, they know their Old Testament quite well.
This is a very thoughtful community that this author is making an argument with.
Okay.
Yeah, let's keep going, Matt.
We're still now in the middle of chapter three.
Now that the first six verses have made the argument that Moses is a faithful servant in
the house, but Jesus is the heir to the estate.
We now continue that theme of Jesus being superior to Moses or certainly the generation that Moses
represented. The rest of chapter 3 gives a little bit of a homily on Psalm 95. Again, another
contact with the Old Testament. Psalm 95 is a passage that refers back to the wanderings
of the Israelites in the desert under Moses, and how the Israelites wanted to obtain the
rest.
And that's going to be the key word here, is the rest by entering into the promised land,
but because that early generation, that first generation of Israelites wandering with
Moses did not give heed to the words of the Lord rebelled against the way of the Lord, or gave into
certain temptations, they were not allowed to obtain the rest, meaning enter into the promised land.
They were not able to inherit that as they had hoped. Instead, they ended up dying out in the desert.
I took another generation to enter into the promised land, the quote-unquote rest that the first
generation had sought. The rest of this chapter, drawing upon Psalm 95, which is literally an Old Testament
song about the first generations of Israelites not being able to enter into the rest of the
promised land, under Moses.
The author of Hebrews now proceeds to say, let's not be like that.
Let's not be like that generation of Israelites under Moses who never did obtain
the rest of entering into the Promised Land. But instead, let us boldly go into the Promised Land.
Let's follow the captain of our salvation, Jesus, to accomplish something that Moses couldn't accomplish,
which was bringing his generation unto the rest of the Lord. That's the rest of this sermon is
how do we, as followers of Jesus, inherit the rest that the early Israelites could not?. So that's the rest of this sermon is how do we, as followers of Jesus, inherit
the rest that the early Israelites could not? And so that's kind of the way he concludes
this segment on Jesus as a superior to Moses. He now kind of thinks about Jesus doing something
that Moses couldn't do by bringing us into that rest and into that promise. And this argument
continues into chapter 4. In fact, the first half of chapter four
is just further exploring this theme.
And he actually kind of allegorizes it
in a really interesting way, right?
He talks about, so what rest are we talking about here?
Well, you know, the early Israelites
saw the Promised Land as the rest,
but there's an eternal rest that we're all looking for,
an eternal paradise, an eternal Promised Land.
And that's the rest that we're actually seeking.
And that's the rest that Jesus can bring us to if we allow him to.
So therefore, don't backslide, don't give up on Jesus.
Jesus will bring you into the eternal rest that earlier generation is only dreamed of.
So that's the way this author concludes the second unit of the book.
Jesus is a period of Moses and can bring us into the rest of the Lord.
Whereas that first generation could not experience that.
I'm grateful we're talking about this, the day of provocation,
because it shows up in other scriptures and had students.
What is that? The day of provocations.
So that became a term where they referred to the kind of rebellion
against Moses, am I getting that right?
Right. And it's used throughout other scriptures,
even in the book Mormon.
Exactly. Yeah. That phrase actually comes from
this author's quotation of Psalm 95.
That's the Psalm on which this short homily is based.
So if you read Psalm 95 versus 7 through 11,
that's where we get this language of,
don't harden your hearts as in the day of provocation,
as in the day of temptation in the wilderness.
When your fathers tested me and saw my works for 40 years
and I was grieved with that generation and said, they are airing in their hearts, they have not known my ways,
so I swore in my wrath that they would not enter into my rest. So that language, that framing of it, that's Psalm 95, and then taking that idea,
and almost making an allegory for eternal salvation is what the rest of chapter
3 and chapter 4 do.
So we do not want to be like the Israelites in the day of provocation under Moses who could
not enter that rest.
We want to enter an eternal rest, a heavenly rest, a rest of salvation, and that happens
by following Jesus.
That's the way the author is concluding that argument of Jesus' superiority.
For in chapter 4, just to hear some of the language of this author, which is really beautiful.
Chapter 4 verse 8, for if Jesus had given them rest, meaning that's an interesting passage,
because Jesus there to us looks like we're talking about Jesus, Jesus, like Jesus Christ.
But that's actually not, this is the Greek Joshua. Exactly right.
For if Joshua had given them rest, then the Psalms would not have talked about another rest to come in the future.
So we're not actually talking about that original rest of going into the Promised Land that Joshua ultimately did.
We are talking about verse 11, therefore led us labor to enter into that rest, that eternal rest,
unless anyone fall under the same example of unbelief as the ancient Israelites did.
So really interesting plays on words, really interesting illusions to Psalms and earlier Old Testament stories. It is a rich text. This is why you need some
study resources. If you spend the time unpack it, it is a great journey. I noticed a pattern come up.
Hebrews three verse seven, he says today, hear his voice. He says it again in 13 while it is called today, verse 15, while it is said
today, if you will hear his voice. Chapter four verse seven, saying in David today, after so a long
time, and then again in verse seven, as it is said today, if you will hear his voice, I like that theme.
I think I'm on the right track here where he says act act today, don't harden your hearts, do something today.
I love this thought from Elder Maxwell.
He said, one of the most cruel games anyone can play with
self is the not yet game.
Hoping to sin just a little bit more before ceasing
to enjoy the praise of the world a little longer
before turning away from the applause
to end just one more in the wearing sweepstakes
of materialism to be chased
but not yet.
The truth is that not yet usually means never.
And then this statement, trying to run away from the responsibility to decide about Christ
is childish.
I think the author of Hebrews might agree, like, act today.
This is your decision about Christ and it's time to make a decision
and to move forward with him.
What's gonna happen next?
Matt has made this parallel between Moses
and the children of Israel and Christ and us.
What does he do next?
Well, so right there in the middle of chapter four,
that's where we really end our second segment.
So Jesus is superior to the angels, chapters one and two.
Jesus is superior to the Moses, chapters one and two. Jesus is superior
to the Moses, it's a Moses, and brings us into our true eternal rest. That's chapter
three and the first part of chapter four. But at this point in chapter four, moving on
through chapter seven, we're now going to enter the next, kind of the third segment of
the book. And in some ways, this segment and the segment that follows really are kind of the meat and potatoes of Hebrews.
The first two items of the angels and Moses have been really great, certainly to set the stage and to give framing of the superiority of Jesus.
But I think the heart and soul of this book is in the next two segments.
And those two segments are chapter 4, verse 14, through chapter seven, the idea that Jesus' priesthood
is superior to the previous Levitical priesthood system.
And then chapters eight through 10
is that Jesus' sacrifice is superior
to the animal sacrifices of the Jerusalem temple.
And so it's gonna be in these two segments
that we get this iconic imagery from Hebrews
of Jesus as our great high priest after the Order of a Melchizedek, who's making intercession
for us right now in the heavenly temple and who is superior to the high priest of the
Aaronic priesthood system.
That's chapter 414 through chapter 7 and then chapter 8 through 10.
And Jesus' sacrifice is the ultimate atonement.
Everything that went before were shadows
of the heavenly reality,
of Jesus' sacrifice,
providing ultimate reconciliation between humans and God.
For these two segments,
the author is assuming an extensive knowledge
of the Old Testament temple system.
That's why I said,
this really is the meat and potatoes of the book
because this is the segment where he will draw heavily on the Levitical Priesthood structure and the sacrificial
system of the Jerusalem temple as a way to make the point that you no longer need to go to the
Jerusalem temple. You no longer need to feel drawn to the priestly rituals of mediation offered
at the temple. This is something new and it's something higher and it's something better. This
is the ultimate version of what the Old Testament priesthood in temple was meant to be.
Is the argument that this author makes. To work through these next two sections,
I think it might be useful if you guys are interested in taking just a few minutes, just very brief
summary, brief review of how Old Testament priesthood works and how the Old Testament temple works
so that we can follow the logic of the author in making the argument that Jesus is superior. This is what we did with you last year, right, Matt?
It is. We can very briefly review some key highlights. First, let's look at the Old Testament
Levitical Prested system that this author assumes that you, as a reader, know. That system is a
system based on hereditary lineage. So it's a system of a physical priesthood based on your ancestry. The idea that a
priesthood class is set apart in ancient Israel based on what
tribe they were born into. If you were born into the larger
tribe of Levi, you are a Levite. If within that tribe, you were
born into the line of Aaron, you were an Aaronic priest. And if
within that tribe and within that Aaronic lineage, you were the first born son, ideally,
who was going to inherit the office, you would be the presiding Aaronic priest, what we sometimes
call the high priest.
Not to be confused with a Latter-day Sainte Office of High Priest.
These are two very different things, as we'll see in a moment.
But the point is that the Old Testament Levitical Priestly system is a hereditary one.
It's all based on which tribe you're born into.
So with that idea of birth and tribal affiliation, setting this class of people apart,
that class is now the mediating class between Israel and God.
It's going to be those Levitical or Aaronic priests that will perform sacrifices on behalf of Israel,
that will offer prayers and intercession through
the rituals of the temple. Those Levitical or Aaronic priests will represent Israel to God
and will also represent God to Israel. In addition to offering sacrifices on behalf of Israel
or offering incense-born prayers on behalf of Israel, making intercession pleading to God on behalf
of Israel, those priests will then turn to God on behalf of Israel, those priests
will then turn around, emerge from the sanctuary, raise their hands above their head, and give the
priestly blessing from number six. May the Lord bless you and keep you may his face shine upon you
and give you peace. These priests are the mediating link between Israel and God. They're the intercessors
in the Old Testament and Levitical system. How are they set apart by their lineage,
by their birth, and among those Levitical or Aaronic priests, the one presiding priest,
the High Priest, is the one who will perform additional rituals of mediation and intercession.
For example, on the day of atonement, once a year, the High Priest will go through the veil,
through the curtain leading into the Holy of Holies, and we'll bring some of the sacrificial blood
into the Holy of Holies, and that blood will reconnect,
will reaffirm the purity of the sanctuary,
will provide atonement for Israel,
will reconnect Israel to God,
that blood is the seal of the covenant.
And once a year, the high priest will renew
that covenant by applying that seal as the chief mediator between Israel and God.
Yom Kippur, right?
Yom Kippur, right, the day of atonement.
Exactly right.
That's a really important idea to keep in mind when we're talking about these next segments
of how that system worked because this author is going to say that that system was very powerful,
but there are reasons why that system was limited.
That system did not have the power to actually provide salvation.
The actual high priest is going to be Jesus.
He will be the true high priest, mediating in the heavenly temple offering ultimate intercession
between Israel and God.
So that's going to be one of the main theme of the next section.
And we'll kind of walk through the argument when we get there.
But I think before we do, I think the next thing to remember though, is the temple.
How does the temple and its sacrificial system, how does that function in ancient Israel?
The author assumes that you know that as well.
Just a quick review, it would just remind you that if priests performed rituals that interceded,
mediated between Israel and God, it was the sacrificial slaughter of animals that provided
atonement offerings or guilt
offerings, various offerings that through the death of this animal, through the shedding of this
animal's blood, you could be purified of any kind of impurities. You could be atoned for various
sins or transgressions or guilty things. The rituals were performed by the priests. It's the blood
that is the seal that provides the reappearification or the forgiveness or the at-onement, the atonement, the reconciliation between Israel and God.
And those sacrifices occurred on a regular basis.
Every day, there was morning and afternoon sacrifices, symbolizing the death of an animal that then symbolized that reconciliation every week.
There were special sacrifices of goats and sheep every month.
There were special sacrifices every year. There were annual sacrifices like goats and sheep. Every month, there were special sacrifices.
Every year, there were annual sacrifices, like on the day of atonement, and then various festivals
on a routine calendar or a clinical basis, there were various sacrifices. So this was a world of
sacrifice, a world of animal slaughter and blood, which provided that reconciliation. And it's that
system of priestly mediation and sacrificial atonement that the author assumes that you know that the audience seems to still be drawn to
whether it be a living temple and pre-70 Jerusalem or
Questions of what do we do now? The temple is no longer there if you're in post-70 Jerusalem
But the author is trying to make the argument you no longer need to feel drawn to that system because we have something that supersedes it. It's Jesus. He's the ultimate, he's the real version of this. He's
the ultimate heavenly high priest or he's the ultimate atoning sacrifice, providing that reconciliation.
In addition to being immersed in that Hebrew Bible culture, immersed in the Old Testament institutions
of priesthood and sacrifice that we've been discussing. This author is also very much a part of the intellectual climate of his own day.
And in the first century, especially among well-educated Greek-speaking diaspora Jews like
this author seems to be, that means you're also going to be very well acquainted with various
Hellenistic philosophies.
You're going to be very interested in an aware of platonic ideas, for example,
and in these next two segments,
the author will also use those platonic ideas
and assume that the audience understands them.
And the big idea here, I think, that we just need to note
is the idea of types and shadows.
Those are phrases or terms that we tend to use a lot
as Latter-day Saints,
but from a new testament context,
those terms come from middle platenism. The intellectual climate of this world, the author's world and the world of
the audience, if you've ever read Plato's allegory of the cave, you have a decent sense of how this
image of types and shadows work. The way that it works is that things on Earth that we see
are simply a shadow of the true heavenly realities.
If you imagine we're all sitting in a cave and we're facing the back wall of the cave,
so our backs are to the entrance of the cave, all we see are the shadows of things that are cast
by the actual sunlight which is behind us.
So if we were to stand up and turn around, we would see the actual thing, the real thing.
Right now, we just tend to look at shadows.
So when we talk about types and shadows, that's the language, it's a platonic category
of the things that we see on earth that are mere shadows of the heavenly realities.
Plato, like this author, is encouraging us to stand up and no longer look at the shadows
casting against the back wall of the cave, but to stand up and look behind us and see
the actual light and see the real items that are casting those shadows. And the reason why that metaphor,
those platonic categories of types and shadows, are so important as because this author will use
that image as a way to describe the priesthood in the temple. The earthly priesthood, this author
will argue, the earthly, levitical priests are simply the shadows of the heavenly reality who is Jesus.
When we see the earthly high priest in the Jerusalem temple,
we're only seeing the shadow of the heavenly reality,
which is Jesus as the actual high priest.
So stand up and turn around and see the real version,
rather than just fixate on the shadow
that is cast against the wall.
And same thing with the temple.
The temple on the earth, this author will say,
in the next few chapters, is a mere shadow of the heavenly reality.
There is a temple in heaven. It's where God actually lives. There's an actual heavenly curtain,
and there's an actual heavenly altar, and there's an actual heavenly high priest. That's the real
version. With that idea of types and shadows in mind, I think we're now very well positioned to
see how this author will show the superiority of Jesus is pre-stead and the superiority of his sacrifice.
That's really helpful to understand types and shadows.
We're still in chapter four, verse 14. This begins the next segment, the superiority of Jesus'
pre-stead. And the way this author does it is, there's some really great stuff along the way here.
So let's just read together. Chapter four verse 14.
So seeing then that we have a great high priest
that is passed into the heavens.
He's already kind of alluding to this idea.
You're used to an earthly high priest
going through the veil of the Jerusalem temple
to go into the Holy of Holies to make intercession,
but we have a great high priest
who's passing through the heavenly veil
into the heavenly holy of Holies.
That's Jesus the Son of God. So let's talk about Jesus as our great high priest. Let us hold fast
to our profession. I think that's another reminder that this is an author who's trying to convince
the audience to hang on, to hold fast to what you know. Don't go back to the previous way. We have
confidence and trust that this heavenly high priest, the great high priest,
is the true captain of our salvation.
And then I love how he says in verse 15,
for we do not have a high priest
who cannot be touched with the feelings of our infirmities,
but was in all points tempted like we are yet without sin.
So another reminder that when we're talking
about our heavenly mediator,
our heavenly high priestly intercessor, we're not talking about our heavenly mediator, our heavenly high-priestly intercessor,
we're not talking about one who is eternally detached. We're talking about a heavenly high priest who actually became a human,
suffered like a human, was tempted in all points like a human.
I think that can be extremely encouraging and helpful for those of us who are working through temptations.
Jesus knows exactly what that's like and he brought that experience with him into his heavenly
role as the great high priest.
So, we're talking about a high priest who knows exactly what it's like to be you, who's
walked in your sandals, who can walk this journey with you, but who right now is interceding
for you before the true heavenly throne room, before the heavenly holy of Holies.
This author literally wants to envision Jesus dressed in the robes of the high priesthood,
standing in front of the veil of the heavenly temple
and offering his prayers.
Just like the earthly high priest would have been.
He's doing that for you right now.
He can do that with such power
because he knows what it's like to be you.
He knows what it's like to have experienced that temptation.
He knows what it's like for you to experience that suffering.
And now he's pleading with that knowledge,
with that experiential
knowledge. He's not pleading for you as we speak before the heavenly veil. Because of that, verse 16, let us therefore, connect it to that thought, let us therefore come boldly unto the
the throne of grace so that we can obtain mercy and find grace to help in the time of need. We can
have complete confidence in our ability to approach God's throne and to receive the mercy
from God's throne because our high priest
who's making intercession for us as we speak
has the ultimate power to make that intercession.
We can have complete trust, complete confidence.
We can boldly approach the throne of grace.
I think it's interesting because you and I are so used
to the idea of saying our prayers throughout the day
that we address the Lord and we speak to the Lord and we talk to
him, we beg for help, we give him thanks and praise, we speak to God in prayer.
That is something that was little unusual in the ancient world because in the ancient world,
priests prayed for you.
Priests offered intercessory prayers.
This author is basically saying, look, that curtain has been drawn aside because of the intercessory work of Jesus, which means all of us, not just earthly high priest, we can all now go through that veil, go through that curtain,
and you'll write down at the throne of God and obtain grace from him when we need it, obtain the mercy, when we need it, feel the love, when we need it, feel the reconciliation, when we need need it because of our great high priest. That is how the
author starts this third segment of the book with that really beautiful image of Jesus dressed as
the high priest, intercessing for us at the veil of the heavenly temple. I've always loved verse 15,
but you have like doubled it for me because I just thought, oh yeah, the author is speaking of Jesus
as a great high priest.
The double negative there helps too.
All these years we've had a high priest who might not know you.
He's kind of intercessing for Israel.
But now we have a high priest who can be touched with the feeling of our firmities, who was
tempted as we are but without sin comparing it to that old
high priest that probably doesn't know your name you're just one of the
House of Israel this one does this one knows everything you've been through
and this high priest has been tempted like you it reminds me there's this talk
of elder Bednar a BYU devotional in October 23rd of 2001, Elder Bednar said,
There's no physical pain, no anguish of soul, no suffering of spirit,
no infirmity or weakness that you are I ever experienced during our mortal journey,
that the Savior did not experience first.
You and I in a moment of weakness may cry out, no one understands, no one knows.
No human being perhaps knows, but the Son of God
perfectly knows and understands, for He felt and bore our burdens before we ever did. And
because He paid the ultimate price and bore that burden, He has perfect empathy and can
extend to us His arm of mercy in so many phases of our life. He can reach out touch and sucker, literally run to us and
strengthen us to be more than we could ever be and help us to do that, which we could never do
through relying only upon our own power. That comes along with that. He's touched with the feeling
of our infirmities. I loved it before. Love it even more now. That's great. Feels like Elder Benar is very much tapping into not only that book of Mormon theology
of Alma 7, but the theology of the book of Hebrews here. I love that. Back in 2016, Elder
Christopherson used this verse, Hebrews 4.15. He told the story of Helen Keller to help us understand this verse. He said,
the story of Helen Keller is something of a parable, suggesting how divine love can transform a
willing soul. Helen was born in Alabama in 1880. When she was just 19 months old, she suffered an
undiagnosed illness that left her both deaf and blind. She was extremely intelligent and became frustrated as she tried to understand and make sense of her surroundings.
When Helen felt the moving lips of family members and realized they were using their mouths to speak,
she flew into a rage because she was unable to join the conversation.
By the time Helen was six, her need to communicate and her frustration grew so intense that
outbursts occurred daily, sometimes hourly.
Helen's parents hired a teacher for their daughter, a woman named Anne Sullivan.
Just as we have in Jesus Christ, one who understands our infirmities, Anne Sullivan had struggled
with her own serious hardships and understood Helen's infirmities. At age five, Anne had contracted a disease that
caused painful scarring of the cornea and left her mostly
blind. When Anne was eight, her mother died, her father abandoned
her, and her younger brother, Jimmy, and they were sent to a
poor house, where conditions were so deplorable that Jimmy died
after three months. Through her own persistence, Anne gained an
entry into Burkins School for the Blind
and vision impaired.
So now she's able to work with Helen.
It says at the beginning, Helen hit, pinched,
and kicked her teacher and knocked out one of her teeth.
Anne finally gained control by moving with Helen
into a small cottage on the Keller's property.
Through patience and firm consistency, she finally won the child's heart and trust.
He goes through this moment when Anne taught Helen the word water and what it meant.
And then he says, everything had a name.
Each name gave birth to a new thought.
Every object, she said later, she touched,
seemed to quiver with life.
Elder Christopherson returns to the thought of Jesus here.
He says, let us consider the cost of God's precious love.
Jesus revealed that to atone for our sins
and rademos from death, both physical and spiritual,
his suffering caused himself, even God,
the greatest of all, to tremble because of pain.
His agony in Gethsemane and on the cross
was greater than any mortal could bear.
What a precious gift is divine love.
Filled with that love, Jesus asks,
will ye not return unto me in repent of your sins
and be converted that I may heal you?
He assures behold, mine arm of mercy is extended towards you.
And whosoever will come, will I receive?
Will you not love him who first loved you, then keep his commandments?
Will you not be a friend to him who laid down his life for his friends?
Then keep his commandments.
Will you not abide in his love and receive all that he graciously offers you? Then keep his commandments. We not abide in his love and receive all that he graciously
offers you, then keep his commandments. Just a great analogy of what it's like to be someone who,
quote, which cannot be touched with the feeling of our infirmities, the way that Anne was able to
take Helen from this terrible situation into a situation where she could truly learn, I think
Elder Christopherson is saying the same thing about the Lord that
because he has suffered these kind of infirmities, he is able now to transform your life.
To sucker us to help us.
Yeah, and you know that takes me back to my favorite Helen Keller quotation, which goes back to Plato's cave kind of
Helen Keller quotation, which goes back to Plato's cave, kind of, she said, when you face the sun, the shadows of discouragement fall behind you, but change that sun,
SU, and to S-O-N, and when you face the sun, the sun of God, the shadows of discouragement fall
behind you, kind of fits in. That's cool. Later in 2023, Elder Christopherson quotes Hebrews 415 again, and he said, Jesus was also
a being of flesh and spirit. He was tested. He understands. He can help us achieve unity within.
Therefore, drawing upon the light and grace of Christ, we strive to give our spirit and the
Holy Spirit dominance over the physical. So this verse is a oft-quoted
verse throughout the restoration from the Book of Hebrews. That's really great. Well, and hopefully
the historical context behind that verse and the imagery that this author is using for that verse
can just enhance and expand upon the way we already value that message. But envisioning it the way
that this author is asking us
to envision it is a pretty powerful first statement
in this segment of the book.
So I guess the idea is that now that we were envisioning
Jesus as a great high priest in the heavens
making intercession for us right now,
but it's an intercession that's a very
experientially informed intercession, right?
He knows what it's like so he can really plead our case.
We can boldly come to God, receive that mercy,
receive that love in time of need.
What he'll do now in what we call chapter five,
so we're now continuing with the logic,
we have to finish this whole segment,
is he'll now contrast that with the earthly high priest.
So we're going back to that image
that the high priest is the earthly shadow.
This author is encouraging you to stand up
and turn around and see the heavenly reality.
But in chapter five, we look at the shadow for a few minutes.
And so what he'll do in chapter five
is make an argument for the limitations
of the earthly, levitical, eronic priesthood
and it's presiding high priest.
Kind of like Moses and the angels,
I don't think he's saying these are bad human beings
or this was not an inspired system. I don't think he's saying any of that.
He's just saying, don't forget, it's the shadow.
And we need to look at the reality.
So here's how he describes the shadow, you know, exploring these limitations of earthly
Levitical priests, priesthood and the high priest.
Chapter 5 verse 1, he says,
So for every earthly high priest taken from among humans, there, there were ordained for humans in things pertaining to God.
That these high priests can offer both gifts and sacrifices for sins.
That's why these high priests were set apart.
By their lineage, as Levitical high priests, who can have compassion on the ignorant, and
on them, they are out of the way, for that he himself, meaning the earthly high priest,
also is encompassed with infirmities. One of the things with the shadow, the earthly high priest, is he actually is just
a human being. He's got sins like every single one of us. He's got limitations like every
single one of us. He's got infirmities like every single one of us because of that, verse
three, by reason thereof he needs to, as for the people, so also for himself to offer sacrifices for sin.
The earthly, levitical priestly system, this author is saying, has priests and a high
priest who need to offer sacrifices for the people, but they also need to offer sacrifices
for themselves, because they need to be reconciled, because they have impurities or guilt
or sin that separates them from God, and that's just baked into the system.
It's a reminder that every single one of us are human beings, including the earthly high priest. We all need those
atoning, reconciling sacrifices. Now, having identified that, the author will say, it's said,
now Jesus did not glorify himself to be made, our great high priest will quote Psalm 2,
right? It was said to him, you are my son, today I begotten you, so we're back to quoting Psalms.
But in another place, and this is where the argument gets really interesting, in another
place, and this is Psalm 110, verse 4, the Psalmist says, you are a priest forever after the
order of Melchizedek.
This is our first introduction to the idea that Jesus is not a high priest after the order
of Levi.
He's not even a Levi.
In fact, later on in chapter, I think it's chapter seven,
the author will again anticipate a pushback from his audience.
If you're saying that Jesus is our great high priest,
how is that even possible?
He wasn't even born into the tribe of Levi.
He was born into the tribe of Judah.
This is where the author needs to make a really interesting move
by saying that yes, he is a high priest.
He's our great intercessor, but he's not a high priest because he was born into the tribe of Levi.
You're right, he was of the tribe of Judah.
He has a completely different order of priesthood.
And this is going to introduce this very interesting idea of Jesus being a high priest after the order of Melchizedek.
And in a few minutes, I think we'll come back to that in just a moment.
We all have to unpack that chapter 7, especially really goes into depth of the difference
between a Levitical priesthood order and this higher Melchizedek priesthood order, according
to this author's view.
So, we'll come back to that in a second, but this is the first hint that we get that this
is where the author is going to go.
He's a high priest after a different order of priesthood, not Levitical, but in fact, Melchizedek. So we'll come back to that in a second. That's all based on
Psalm 110, verse 4. So this is Hebrews 5, verse 7, who in the days of his flesh, Jesus, he had to
offer up prayers and supplications with strong crying and tears unto him that was able to save him from
death and was heard in that he feared. When he goes on to say,
though he were a son,
verse eight,
he learned by obedience,
by the things which he suffered.
Being made perfect,
he became the author of eternal salvation
unto all those that obey him.
Therefore he's called of God a high priest
after this different order of Melchizedek.
There's some really beautiful language there.
I think we can unpack. We'll come back to the Melchizedek order in just some really beautiful language there. I think we can unpack.
We'll come back to the Melchizedek order in just a second.
But along the way, what interesting idea, right?
Jesus in his human wanderings, in his mortal condition,
he knew what it was like to offer up prayers
and supplications with strong crying and tears.
This author goes back and forth
between an extremely high Christology.
On the one hand, the divine, all-powerful Christ who created the world,
the intercessing high priest of the heavenly temple,
back to the reminder that he actually
experienced the human suffering, experience the human condition. He knows what it's like to literally pour out his heart and soul and prayer and
strong tears and crying. It's almost like this author is aware of it it kind of sounds a little bit like the Gethsemane tradition
from the Gospels where we see Jesus,
especially in the synoptic tradition, Mark and Matthew
in particular where Jesus is crying,
literally crying in tears to God.
Take this cup away from me, begging the Lord to remove this thing.
He's scared, he's terrified, he doesn't want to be here.
He's in tears,
begging God to remove the cup, but then reconciles by saying nevertheless, not what I want, but
what you want. He's very powerful, gets so many moments. I don't know if that's exactly
what the author of Hebrews is directly referring to, but it's something like that. He seems
to be saying that in his human wanderings, Jesus knows what it's like to cry out in
strong tears and really cry out. And he worked through that.
He pushed through that.
He turned his will over to the will of God.
And that's how through obedience, he became this exalted son who can make this priestly
intercession for us.
That's how he became perfect.
That's how he became the author of our eternal salvation, if we just obey him.
That's how he was called God a high priest after this different order of priesthood that we're going to call the Melchizedic order. So that's a really
interesting way to start this segment of the book. Any thoughts so far about those passages?
Yeah, can I just rewind? Give us the big picture again. Hebrews starts out, Jesus is greater than
the angels. Right, that's chapter one, yep, and two. Jesus is greater than Moses.
Moses, chapter three, and the first part of chapter four. Jesus was greater than the
current high priest that they had. Right, the superiority of his priesthood, chapter four
through seven. He's telling us why. Okay, this big picture helps me. Thank you. Yeah, and Matt the author here tying Jesus or
we're seeing Jesus in his sufferings. He's offering up these prayers and supplication.
I think it was Matthew who says in the Garden of Guest, how many did the Lord falls on his face
and is in this suffering moment. Maybe I don't know about his intended audience, but a latter-day audience
can really feel the power of that. Back to Nephi, I know a style, the condescension of God,
because I know both of you well, and like everybody else, you have knelt and prayed and begged God
for something. And when you hear that the Lord did that same thing, there's a connection there.
And maybe a sense of purpose in my own sufferings, my own prayers and supplications and tears that
the Lord went through all that and look what it turned him into. And maybe those same things will
turn me into something. Yeah, I love that. And I think, again, it's hard to know exactly what moment
in Jesus' human life this author is referring to.
Is it the moment in Gethsemane where he's on his face
and crying, take this cup away?
Abba, father, I'm scared, I don't want to be here,
but nevertheless, not my will, but your will be done.
The other possibility, of course,
is the cry on the cross.
Another powerful moment in the synoptic tradition,
in Mark and Matthew in particular, is the cry on the cross. Another powerful moment in the synoptic tradition, in Mark and Matthew in particular,
where Jesus is on the cross,
and he feels that deep moment of I'm going to trust that this is
going somewhere. I'm going to never, the last not my will, but your will be done. That
was the path through his exaltation according to this author, right? That's he learned through
that process how to become the exalted glorified son at the right hand of God, the high priest
after the order of Melchizedek. So I think there's so much there for us as members of the human family to connect to it with Jesus and realize this is
part of his heavenly high priesthood is having experienced those things. Perfect. I think what we
should do then, let's just keep going through this section. I think that's where we'll take this
in our conversation. We'll leave the rest of the book for another guest in another discussion.
But I think we should at least finish chapter 5, 6, and 7
because that is that unit of Jesus is priesthood
and him is the great high priest.
So having just set up those themes
and just now exploring this idea of him
of being a priest after the Order of Melchizedek,
I've seen some limitations of the earthly high priest
with the shadows versus the heavenly reality.
The rest of chapter 5 and most of chapter six
does take a little bit of an interesting tangent.
It's almost like, you know, kind of you and I,
well, as we've done here today, right?
What we're focusing on, the argument,
we're focusing on the text, and it kind of key moments
will stop and, you know, take a little bit of a detour,
or I will say, oh, that reminds me of this,
so this reminds me of that.
Well, the author does that here too.
And the image that the author kind of takes a small detour on
is an image that we have used in our community,
although I don't know if we use it the same way.
And that's the idea of milk before meat.
It's a really interesting image.
Sometimes when we use that phrase milk before meat,
it's our way of saying,
we're getting into some pretty deep, heavy stuff here.
Let's stick with the basics and milk before meat.
Let's stick with the basic kind of the bullet points of the manual. That those are the basics. Let's stick with the basics. Milk before meat. Let's stick with the basic, kind of the bullet points
of the manual.
Those are the basics.
Let's just stick with that and the meat
for some other time.
So we use that image as a way to say,
let's not go too heavy.
Well, that's not good too deep.
This author uses it in exactly the opposite way.
This author says, look, just like, you know,
infants do need milk, that this all they can handle,
but you're not an infant for very long.
And eventually you grow up
and your body needs actual sustenance, like meaty substance.
And you need some stuff to keep you sustained
and to keep you growing and maturing.
So this author uses that milk before meat image
as a way to say, you can't just stay on the milk
for very long.
At some point, you need to start having some solid food.
And the way this author describes the milk and the meat is actually really interesting,
because he describes the milk as being the basic ideas of the Christian creed, the basic
ideas of the Christian profession.
And he's saying, look, you guys have been Christians now for a while.
You know the basics.
You have the milk.
And he then lists things like baptism and repentance and having faith and the laying on of hands.
You have those basics already.
You already have that milk.
What I'm talking about now, what I'm going to continue to explore is the idea of Jesus
being the great high priest after the Order of Melchizedek.
That's pretty meaty stuff and you need it.
Because apparently if you're just staying on the milk, your roots just aren't deep enough.
Your muscles just aren't strong enough.
That's the entryway.
That's the gate, as Nephi strong enough. That's the entryway, that's the gate,
as Nephi would say, that's the way in,
but pretty soon you're no longer a six month old,
pretty soon you're a five year old and a 10 year old
and a 20 year old, you need some meaty stuff,
and that's what I'm gonna give you here.
So it's a really interesting way
that he uses this image that I actually quite like.
I think that's pretty cool.
He says in chapter five or 12,
when the time that you ought to be teachers,
you have need that one teach you again, focusing on this,
right, which the first principles of God are the oracles of God,
such as have need of milk and not of strong meat.
But he goes on and say, like, you've all had the milk, though.
So let's move on. Here, chapter 6 verse 1,
therefore, again, he's continuing the argument,
therefore, leaving the principles of the doctrine of Christ,
let us go on to the principles of perfection.
Now, I think we can read that out of context,
and it's almost like he's saying,
don't worry about the basics.
That's actually not what he's saying.
He's saying, you've got the basics.
You've got the glass of milk in front of you.
You've had that glass of milk for a very long time.
So he's not saying, leaving the doctrine of Christ,
he's saying, yeah, keep that glass of milk on the table,
but now here's the steak.
So let us move on to perfection now.
So now let's give you some meat.
Let's give you some sustenance.
Let's build those muscles.
And that's the image here.
So let us go on to perfection.
Not laying again,
the foundations of the Milky Stuff.
Repentance, it's great, faith, powerful,
doctrine of baptism, needful,
laying out of hands, great,
resurrection of the dead, eternal judgment.
That's all really great stuff.
We're not saying to go back on that,
but we're saying that's the milk.
Now let's move on to the principles of perfection.
Now let me talk to you more about Jesus as your great
high priest after the Order of Melchizedek.
I think it's a really cool image and it's an interesting way
to think about the way we study scripture.
And we really, this author says, can't just drink milk forever.
We need the milk.
But sooner or later, we do need some meaty stuff too.
Otherwise, he'll say, this is verse 4, 5, and 6.
Otherwise, you'll follow away.
You just won't have the strength.
If you just stick with five bullet points, your whole life.
It's just not enough.
It's a place to get started, but it's not the sustaining power of the meat.
Let's talk about the meat.
Who Jesus is. It seems to be the essence of it's not the sustaining power of the meat. Let's talk about the meat, who Jesus is.
Seems to be the essence of spiritual maturity. You're no longer an infant.
It's time to move on and really, really learn.
Not that your previous learning was bad, it was great.
Yeah.
You're not going to be able to, that's not going to sustain you.
Now, as a, in your maturity as a Christian.
Isn't that interesting?
And essentially they use the word maturity,
because that's actually the closer to the word perfection.
Then when we think of perfection,
we think of you need to be perfect in all of these things.
And we kind of generate that cultural perfectionism
that we sometimes struggle with as Latter-day Saints.
But that's not what the Greek word for perfection means here.
When Jesus says in Greek in the sermon on the Mount Matthew 5,
or the author of Hebrews says perfection here,
he's talking about a maturity, a development that leads you to completion.
And so that's what he's saying is it's time to now move on towards that maturity,
towards that development of the perfect journey, the perfection journey,
of not being perfect in all things the way we think of it,
but just that maturity of spiritual life and growth and discipleship.
So anyway, I think that's a real interesting way to say that.
So that's his tangent. Actually, most of chapter 6 is growth and discipleship. So anyway, I think that's a real interesting way to say it. So that's his tangent.
Actually, most of chapter six is that little detour.
I'm about to, you need some meaty stuff
and I'm gonna give you some meaty stuff.
He concludes chapter six, though,
by getting back to the image.
So here's why you need the meat.
It's because that meat is the anchor to the soul.
The milk is what gets you started.
You know, nourish it for your first few months of life.
But chapter six, verse 19, we are now talking about the hope
that we have as an anchor to the soul, it's sure instead fast and which entered into that within
the veil, meaning that which is in the past, the heavenly veil, that's where we're going to,
not the crib, we're going to the heavenly holy of holies. So we need the bottle of milk,
but now we need the meat to get us through the rest of the
way. We are talking here about the forerunner for us who has entered through that heavenly veil. Into
the heavenly holy of Holies, we're talking about Jesus, the high priest after the order of
Melchizedek. Now let's talk about the meaty teachings of Jesus as our great high priest after the order
of Melchizedek. And that brings us then, of course, to chapter seven. And I recognize that in our Come Follow Me curriculum,
I think the manual kind of artificially cuts us off here.
I think this is only Hebrews one through six.
But again, that's a little bit of an artificial divide
to finish the thought of this author.
We really do have to continue on through chapter seven.
So if you guys are up for that,
maybe we can just conclude our discussion today
by concluding this segment of the book
by following the logic into chapter 7. So chapter 7 then goes on to talk about
this melchistic. This is a really fascinating chapter. For Latter-day Saints, we've been
interested in this material for a very long time. But when Joseph Smith and the early
history of the restoration started articulating the differences of priesthoods for the Latter-day
Saint community, the Levitical or Arronic Priesthood on the one hand, or the higher
Melchizedic Priesthood on the other. These chapters, Hebrews 5 through 7,
were a major source of language, verbiage, inspiration, conceptual ideas for
him, then Foster Through Additional Revelation. These chapters in comparison
with Section 84 of the Doctrine and Covenant, the Oath and Covenant of the
Priesthood, Section 107 about the higher
Melchizedek priesthood and how it differs from the lower
Levitical priesthood a lot of those ideas at least the language of that those revelations come from the
Chapters he five through seven here in Hebrews so the first thing we need to do is so let's talk about this idea of Jesus being a
High priest after the Melchizedek order because again, it's in chapter seven where he anticipates the concern of his audience,
saying, how do you say Jesus is a high priest?
He's not even a Levi.
He's from the House of Judah.
Well, he's from a different order of priesthood.
Let's talk about that order of priesthood.
Now, this order of priesthood,
called the Melchistic priesthood,
is an idea that is a little bit obscure in the Bible.
And for totally honest, we basically have
from an Old Testament perspective.
We basically have two passages that give us hints
as to who Melchizedek is and to what it even means
to be a priest after the order of Melchizedek.
There's not a lot to go on there.
It comes from Genesis 14, where Melchizedek
was the priest of the most high god in a place called Salem.
His name, of course, means the King of righteousness.
Melchizedek, Zedek is righteous and Melchizedek is my king or something like that. So Melchizedek is a king of course, means the king of righteousness. Melchized Zedic is righteous and Melchized is my king,
or something like that.
So Melchized is a king of righteous,
some kind of righteous king,
who is a king and a priest of the most high God
in Salem, traditionally associated with an early version
of Jerusalem, to whom Abraham paid tithes.
So here we have Abraham, who is the great patriarch
of the covenant and the great father of the covenant of Israel and the tribes,
Levi is not even a speck in anyone's eye yet. There is no Levitical priesthood yet. This author will remind us,
Levi is going to be a grandson of Abraham. We are talking about Abraham, the great patriarch, who himself,
when he went to pay tides, would pay tides and make offerings through this Melchistic figure. And this author
of Hebrews chapter 7 will say, the lesser will always be blessed by the greater when Melchistic
would receive the tithes of Abraham, suggesting that he, Melchistic, was somehow greater than Abraham.
A Melchistic would then bless Abraham in the name of the Lord. And if the lesser is blessed by the
greater, that means that Abraham was actually subordinate
in some way to this great priest, Melchizedek.
The author will then take it's kind of a fun, I'll call it a leap of argument, but it's
kind of an interesting move and the argumentation to say, you know, if Levi wasn't even born
yet, if Levi was just in the line of Abraham at this point, clearly that shows that there's
already a hierarchical difference between the later Levitical
hereditary priesthood and the greater order of priesthood that Melchizedek somehow represents,
which is a priesthood that Abraham defers to let alone his not yet born grandson Levi.
So it's a really interesting move that this author is making in terms of setting up the
scriptural story.
That's all we get from Genesis 14.
We don't know who Melchizedek is.
We don't know who Melchizedek is. We don't know where he
comes from. This author in chapter 7 of Hebrews will go on to say, the Melchizedek priesthood,
therefore, is characterized not by lineage, like the Levitical priesthood. Melchizedek is without
father and without mother. We don't even know who his parents are. This is a priesthood that is
not connected to lineage. It's without father. It's without end of years. It's without mother. So
he's already kind of setting up
these kind of categorical differences
between the two priesthoods.
So that being the case, let's just maybe we can read
a few passages here.
It really is fun to see him kind of think through this.
Oh, I'm sorry, I should have said one more thing
before we read is in addition to Genesis 14,
the only other passage we have in the Old Testament
that refers to this is gonna be Psalm 110.
Psalm 110.
Psalm 110 is a Psalm that we've referred to throughout the book of Hebrews a few times
already.
We've already seen him allude to this.
So he's clearly interested in this Psalm.
Psalm 110 is where the Davidic King is pronounced a priest after the order of Melchizedek.
That's a really interesting move.
There's some idea in ancient Israelite kingship that they function in a priestly
role too, but it's not the lineage-based priesthood of the Levites. It's a royal priesthood of some
kind. It's the king of righteousness and the priest of Salem idea. It's the king and priest idea
that Nelkezdik seems to represent. And apparently occasionally, Davidic kings were pronounced to be
of the order of Nelkeek, these King priest combos.
In some ways, that's all we have, almost no information about that.
It's very vague from an Old Testament perspective, but it's giving us something to go on.
That there's this figure named Melchizedek.
There's something called an order of Melchizedek that seems to be kind of a royal priesthood
order of some kind.
That's what we have.
And as a result, by the time we get to Judaism
in the late second temple period,
among the various expectations of what the Messiah would be,
there is one interesting, it's a minority strand.
Most people just assume the Messiah will be a royal king,
who will be a victorious general or something like that.
But among the Dead Sea Scrolls, the Kumaran community,
who were active in the time of Jesus,
and presumably in the time of this author, they have A-texts called 11 Q-Melchestic,
it's a fascinating fragmentary scroll among the Dead Sea Scroll corpus that actually looks towards
a future Messiah as being a return of Melchestic. This great King Priest from Genesis 14 will
return one day and will actually initiate the great eternal Jubilee
Where all debts are canceled and all sins are forgiven and all prisoners are released and when that great messianic era comes
It's going to be a Melchizedic figure not a Levitical figure, but a Melchizedic figure who's going to do it and that one fragmentary passage in the Dead Sea Scrolls
suggests that these fairly obscure Old Testament passages were
he's scroll suggests that these fairly obscure Old Testament passages were speculated upon in the late second temple period. The later Jews were, wow, I wonder where that figure is,
that sounds really mysterious. And it even started to work into some messianic expectations,
right, not among all, but at least among some. So, I think that's finishing backdrop to think about,
the author's not pulling this out of thin air. He's drawing upon Genesis 14. He's drawing upon
Psalm 110,
and maybe even be aware of some groups who are expecting a return of a Melchizedek figure of some
kind, like 11Q13 from the Dead Sea Scrolls. So here we are. Hebrews 7 verse 1,
For this Melchizedek, this is referring to the Genesis 14 material, this Melchizedek was the king
of Salem, the priest of the most high god, who met Abraham returning from the slaughter
of the kings and gave him a blessing. He, Melchizedek blessed Abraham, to whom Abraham gave a
Typh, a tenth part of all. First being by interpretation, king of righteousness. That's how you
interpret the name Melchizedek. The Zedic part is righteous and the Melch part is king. Melch
Zedic is a righteous King or a King of righteousness.
So that's who this figure is.
And after that, he's also the King of Salem,
which apparently is playing on the name Shalom here,
which is King of Peace.
So he's the King of righteousness, he's the King of Peace,
and he's somehow superior to Abraham.
This mellachistic that we're talking about
from Genesis 14 is without father,
without mother, without descent, having neither beginning of
days nor end of life. So in other words, this is not a lineage-based priesthood order. This guy's
priesthood is without genealogy. Right? No beginning, no end, no father, no mother, no descendants. This
is a different class of priesthood. And therefore, he was made like unto the Son of God who abides as a priest continually.
Now keep in mind this author says this guy was superior to Abraham and Abraham presumably
superior to Levi. Levi was only in his loins at this point. So kind of through Abraham,
the author goes, it's almost like Levi himself, still in Abraham's loins, is paying tithing to this
malekezic. So clearly Levi is through Abraham deferring to this greater priest, Melchizedek.
Well, this is the priest that we're talking about.
This is the order that Jesus is part of.
And he goes on to talk about the Levi's, Levi paying tides to Melchizedek through Abraham's.
It's kind of an interesting argument.
I don't know if that's the most convincing part of the book, but it's certainly an interesting
way of trying to envision the relationship between these two.
But he does go on to say, and this is the rest of chapter 7, the reason for him, this author,
that these two priesthoods are so significant, is because the Levitical priesthood simply cannot
and was never designed to bring perfection, but the Melchizedic priesthood does and can
bring perfection.
So here's what he says, chapter 7, verse 11.
So if therefore, perfection could have come by the Le says, chapter 7, verse 11, so if therefore, perfection
could have come by the Levitical priesthood, then why would these other passages like Psalm
110 talk about another priesthood? Oh, why we wouldn't even need that other priesthood.
That indicates to this author that the Levitical priesthood never did have the power to
perfect and never did have the power to fully mature going on the Greek word perfection
there, right? But the Melchistic priesthood order has a power to fully mature going on the Greek word perfection there, right?
But the Melchizedic priesthood order has a power to do something that the Melchizedic priesthood,
or the Aaronic priesthood can't. It's like the Levitical priesthood is the milk of chapter 6,
and the Melchizedic priesthood is the meat of chapter 6. You can't stay on the milk forever. It
doesn't have the power to make you a strong human being. Eventually, you need the protein. So that's
the dichotomy between the two priesthoods that he's setting up here.
For verse 12, if the priesthood being changed
is made of necessity, it changed also of the law.
So he goes on to say, and this is where he says verse 14,
look, I recognize the Lord Jesus is, he's a Judah,
or whatever, but that's why he's of this other order,
the order of Melchizedek, and you can read it.
One is the carnal commandments, chapter, verse 16,
but the other is the power of eternal life.
So this author connects Carnal Commandments, kind of the routine of the sacrificial system
and the routines of the religious structure of Pentatucleot.
That's the Levitical system.
Those are the Carnal Commandments, but after the other order is the power of endless life
that is without beginning of days, without end of years, without genealogy, without descendants.
It's everlasting eternal power and life. And that's the priesthood that we are talking about here.
By the way, if we pause at this stage, this is going to be where you see a lot of conceptual
conversation between Hebrew 7 and doctrine and Covenants 84. When you talk about the difference
between a Levitical priesthood and the Melchizedic Presid, Joseph is drawing a lot of
language through the revelation process from this passage. The Levitical
Presid is a Carnal Presid. It's the entryway, it's the gate, it's the baptism,
it's the faith, repentance and baptism, but it's the Melchizedic Presid, the
greater Presid that has the power of eternal life. It has the power to make one
kings and priests or priests and queens and priests is under God. It's a totally
different priesthood power that's more into the eternities as opposed to kind of the earthly
structures and scaffolding that we see down here, the earthly shadows that we see down here.
That's the difference for this author between Levitical Priesthood and Melchizedic Priesthood. Jesus
is of the latter order. This is fantastic, But for these people is Melchizedek, this
enigmatic figure that was mentioned once or twice in the Old Testament and there,
they don't know who he is, they don't know much about him. And yet this author of the Hebrews is
saying, let's focus in on this person who's only mentioned a couple of times in our scripture and really understand
him.
That's right.
That's what this author is doing.
And he feels like he needs to because of the obvious point, Jesus is not a Levite.
So how can you say he's a high priest if he's not a Levite?
Well, let's explore this more enigmatic figure, Melchizedek, Psalm 110, a priest after the
order of Melchizedek.
That's the reason why the author seems to be expanding upon this very enigmatic Old Testament character in a way that is really, really interesting.
Yeah, it's really fascinating that he's bringing this man up and saying, he actually had
a really important role.
He's much more important than maybe we thought he was.
Yeah, exactly.
Well, and I can say that earlier though, there is some precedence for this, and that is
if we look at the Dead Sea Scroll community, that's at least one other community who also
took that enigmatic character of Melchizedek and even turned him into a future messianic
figure of some kind.
The ultimate eternal Jubilee is going to be brought in by a Melchizedek figure when
he returns again.
So, this would not be the only community in first century Judaism who is interested in
Melchistic and what Melchistic could represent.
The Dead Sea Scrolls are doing that to a small degree, but this author is clearly taking
it in a very crystallological direction.
So let's talk about Melchistic in that order in terms of Jesus and he being part of that
order.
I love the connection you're making to Joseph Smith and his revelations that he's drawing
off of this idea that there's a higher priesthood than the Levitical priesthood that functioned
throughout the Old Testament.
Exactly.
But in some ways, it's almost like the difference between the ward level of being Latter-day
Saints and the Temple level of being Latter-day Saints, right?
The ward level, it's a very eronic priesthood structure, right? It's an eronic priesthood bishop who presides over
eronic priesthood, baptisms, and eronic priesthood sacraments. It's passed by eronic priesthood
deconsamines. It's a very eronic priesthood organ, but then you go to the temple and that is
the greater Melchizedic priesthood organ of the church. That's where the powers to leave the milk,
not to leave the milk, but to build upon the milk
and add the meat by going through a priesthood
that can bring perfection,
a little bit of a priesthood was never meant
to bring perfection.
It's a gateway.
It's the shadow of the heavenly reality,
but the greater priesthood is the heavenly reality
that can bring perfection that has the power
to make one a king in a priest like Melchizedek was
and has the power to bring unto eternal life.
So it's almost like the way that Joseph Smith built upon
these categories that he reuses exploring here
in a first century Jewish context.
It's like Joseph Smith takes those categories
and through the revelation process expands them into
kind of two different levels
of what it even means to be a Latter-day saint.
Things kind of cool.
Yeah, it's fantastic.
Matt, let me read a quote from Joseph Smith and see what you think of it.
Joseph Smith says, what was the power of Melchizedek?
It was not the priesthood of Aaron, which administers in outward ordinances and the offering of sacrifices.
Those holding the fullness of the Melchizedic priesthood are kings and priests of the most
high God, holding the keys of power and blessings. In fact, this priesthood is a perfect law of
theocracy and stands as God to give the laws to the people administering endless lives to
the sons and daughters of Adam. Abraham says to Melchizedic, I believe all that thou has
stopped me concerning the priesthood and the coming of the Son of Man, so Melchizedek, I believe all that thou has taught me concerning the priesthood and the coming
of the Son of Man, so Melchizedek ordained Abraham and sent him away.
Abraham rejoiced saying, now I have a priesthood.
The keys of the priesthood then continued through Isaac, Jacob, Joseph, Ephraim, and so
on through the centuries down to the time of Moses.
Any thoughts on that?
No, I think that's a fascinating quote.
I think that's reflecting the ways in which Joseph and his own revelatory framework is
engaging with this biblical material.
Right?
So if in Hebrews 5, 6, and 7, we get the idea that there are these two priesthoods.
One can't bring perfection, the other can.
One is based on lineage, the other is not.
And constantly comparing the reality versus the shadow, the heavenly priesthood versus the
earthly type of that,
Joseph clearly is engaging with this material.
So in his own revelatory process of section 84,
section 107, that quote that you just read,
he's clearly building upon this structure,
these categories that Hebrews is laying out,
and he's now envisioning what that looks like
on an ecclesiastical level for modern Latter-day Saints.
So I think the way that modern Latter-day Saints would envision
Melchizedek and Levitical or Aronic Priesthood has its roots right here.
And then it's further extrapolated upon by Joseph's revelatory process
where he's now envisioning, how does Levitical or Aronic Priesthood function?
And we see a lot of that at the ward level in our modern community.
How does Melchizedek Priesthood function?
We see a lot of that in the temple endowment experience where we have a priesthood there that has the power to
bring you into the presence of God that has the power to part the veil, that has the power to
bring one unto full maturity and perfection in the Greek sense there, that has the power to make one
kings and priests, queens and priestesses as some of the revelations indicate. So I think that
Joseph is building upon a really cool
foundation of Hebrews here, and then filling it out
for a Latter-day Saint context through his own revelations
in a way that we can, I think, greatly learn from
as modern Latter-day Saints.
I would just encourage us in that process
to be very clear about our sources.
What does Hebrews say?
How does it say it?
What's the cultural context in which Hebrews would articulate
those categories? And then be able to articulate for ourselves, okay, how did Joseph draw upon,
build upon those images, expand upon them, and just for the sake of literacy, being able to note
what is what? But clearly, these are all part of the same conversation for us. And so I just
think it's fascinating to see Hebrews maybe be the first Christian voice in the first entry to
articulate something along these lines.
And one of the only voices, we don't get a lot of this in early Christianity.
We don't get many people building on this in the first centuries of Christianity.
But here we have it in Hebrews 5 through 7.
It's a text that we, as Latter-day Saints, clearly need to be more familiar with.
We need to be more conversant in this.
And hopefully this conversation is helpful in some of those ways. But the way chapter 7 ends, now that we've again asserted the superiority of Jesus' priesthood,
we've shown the limits of the Levitical priesthood, we've explored what it means to be a high priest
after the order of Melchizedek. His concluding thoughts on Jesus' priesthood, the idea of Jesus as
our great eternal high priest, we can see at the end of chapter 7, let's just read a few verses together.
Chapter 7, maybe starting in verse 22, by so much was Jesus made a surety of a better testament, a better covenant.
There's another covenant here. This language seems to be drawing upon Jeremiah 31.
All right, Mary, Jeremiah had this idea that there would be a new covenant one day.
And this author seems to suggest that the Melchizedic priestly powers
an order of Jesus is that new covenant. It is that new testament. It's the surety of
a better testament that Jeremiah was talking about. So he's still very much trying to draw
upon Old Testament images here. And he goes on to say, and they truly were many priests.
In the Levitical system, there were lots of different priests because they were not suffered to continue by reason of death.
In other words, earthly priests died. They lived out their life of priestly service as a human being and then they died and that was it.
But this man, Jesus, the superior high priest, because he continues forever has an unchangeable priesthood.
So again, it's the eternal nature of the Melchizedic Order of Priesthood.
This author is interested in as opposed to the earth-bound genealogy-bound priesthood of
the Levites of the Pentateuch.
Then he concludes by saying, verse 25, wherefore, because of the eternal nature of this endless
priest, an endless priesthood of Jesus, wherefore Jesus, our great high priest, verse 25, is
able to save them to the uttermost
that come unto God through him.
He has the power to actually save,
to actually redeem, to actually atone,
to actually reconcile,
seeing that he lives to make intercession for them forever.
So he is our constant high priest,
has the eternal power to make that intercession.
And so if we come unto him, he has the power to save us to the uttermost.
I love that, to the absolute fullest extent.
And then he concludes by saying in verse 26,
for such a high priest, the great high priest Jesus, became us who is holy, harmless, undefiled,
separate from sinners, and made higher than the heavens, who needs not daily, as those
other high priests do, to offer up sacrifice
first for his own sins, and then for the peoples. He did his once, and when he offered himself,
for the law makes men high priests which have infirmities. But the word of the oath, the
Melchizedek priesthood that we're talking about here, which was since the law, makes the sun who
is consecrated forevermore. There's some really powerful ideas here, and I love that.
But I hope this has been helpful lots of gems along the way,
and as long as you can take the time to slowly unpack the logic
and with a good study Bible, maybe see how he's interacting
with the Old Testament, this goes from being a very confusing book
to one of your favorites in the New Testament.
Yeah.
How fun.
This is so helpful.
This is the view from 30,000 feet. Jesus is greater than
the angels. He's greater than Moses. He's greater than the high priest. He has a greater priesthood
than Aaronic or the political priesthood and coming up his sacrifice is greater. And therefore,
because he did this once and offered up himself, we can come boldly to the throne of grace.
That's a great name, the throne of grace.
So, so good.
Thank you so much, Matt.
It's just wonderful.
I get this so much better than I was trying to plow through this,
just going, what?
So thank you, Matt.
I'm glad that's helpful.
Matt, so let's say I'm a listener.
I'm on my commute,
I've listened to you on my way to work and my way home.
I'm getting out of my car to head inside.
What do you hope that that listener would have seen
or what they'll see differently or feel differently about?
Yeah, that's a great question.
I hope that coming out of the car, thinking about Hebrews
and its contribution to Christianity,
we get so many of our foundational ideas as Jesus followers, as Christians from this text,
and that's going to be very transformative.
I am someone who thoroughly enjoys traditions of ancient Judaism.
I resonate personally a lot with Paul.
I love Paul's message of ancient Judaism being part of a larger covenant that the Christian
message is simply expanding and just bringing in other people as well, kind of like the
Third Isaiah material.
So I really resonate with that in my soul.
With Hebrews, I also appreciate the message of what this author is trying to do, which
is saying that we don't need to feel drawn to some of the institutions of the past as Jesus
followers. We don't need to feel drawn to the Levitical Priesthood system or to the sacrificial system
because we do have something that takes us to another level. And this is kind of what sets us apart
as Jesus followers. And that is that we have a heavenly high priest who brings us that ultimate true
mediation. I love the picture that this author has painted.
He wants us to envision Jesus dressed in the priestly garments,
standing in front of the veil, offering the prayer
that would part that veil and bring us into God's presence,
so that we can have complete confidence
and boldly go into the presence of God ourselves
through our mediator Jesus.
And as the discussion will have, take next week,
and that we have complete confidence, complete boldness
and assurance in the salvation process because of Jesus's one-time sacrifice. and as the discussion will have, take next week, and that we have complete confidence, complete boldness,
an assurance in the salvation process,
because of Jesus' one-time sacrifice.
I'm actually one who does enjoy the value
and the power of the Old Testament priestly
and temple systems, and I also, as a believer in Jesus,
love the way this author is articulating
the identity of Jesus, the power of Jesus,
the divinity of Jesus, the intercessory role of Jesus,
so as a believer, those are things that are very meaningful to me.
Oh, what a good day.
What a good day.
Made a lot of notes today that are gonna help me so.
I feel like the book of Hebrews is clear to me now.
Much more clear than it was before Matt explained it.
Yeah, I've really been fed today.
It was really good.
Matt, thank you so much for being here.
Well, thank you. It's a pleasure to be today. It was really good. Matt, thank you so much for being here. Well, thank you.
It's a pleasure to be here.
We have loved this.
We want to thank Dr. Matthew Gray for being with us today.
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We hope you'll join us next week.
We're going to be in the second half of Hebrews on Follow Him.
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