Saturday, June 25, 2016

A High Priest Forever

      The story of Melchizedek has always fascinated me. He appears in the scriptures, has major influence on Abraham, and is gone just as quickly. Where did he come from? How did Abraham know him? What was his status before God? (See Gen.14:18-20)

     I knew a man many years ago, who believed that (or at least wondered whether) Melchizedek was Noah’s son Shem. This sounds a bit oddball at first, but if you make calculations from the genealogical tables of Genesis 9, 10, and 11 (and assume there are no gaps), you will find that Shem outlived Abraham by 35 years. Even if this is a wrong understanding of the genealogies, it’s still true that Melchizedek was much greater than Abraham.

     The writer of Hebrews says “without father or mother, without genealogy, without beginning of days or end of life”, but then he goes on to say “this man”. To be “this man”, we really expect him to have a father and mother, so we may have to understand that they just weren’t recorded. This has been the usual explanation.

     On the other hand, maybe this was a theophany, and he really had no father or mother. (Heb.6:20-7:17). For Melchizedek to be “king of righteousness” (Heb.7:2) is almost too much to be true of any mere human. It reminds me of Abraham and the three “men” he met at Mamre (Gen.18:1-33) and Joshua and the “man” he met outside Jericho. (Joshua 5:13-15). In fact, Hebrews 7:8 says that Melchizedek “is declared to be living”; and verse 16 compares the life of Christ to the life of Melchizedek: “on the basis of the power of an indestructible life.” This seems to discount the possibility of Melchizedek’s being a simple mortal. And if “without beginning of days” also applies in actual fact to Melchizedek, he could only be a theophany of Christ Himself.

     The writer of Hebrews has drawn our hearts and minds out in wonder, first at a very great man; then we realize it is Jesus Himself and suddenly we worship! He has come to us out of eternity past, and He has “the power of an indestructible life” to carry us into a wonderful eternity to come.

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