Why a New Priest?

The author of Hebrews is at some pains to make it clear to us that we need a new priest and indeed a new priesthood. As I’ve noted in previous entries, he has specific characteristics he expects in this new priest. The heart of his argument for a new priesthood is contained in chapter 7. Note that he builds the basis for this argument in chapters 1-6, and that he discusses the actual impact of the new priesthood in chapters 8-10, but the argument in favor of the new priesthood is in chapter 7.

He has established to his satisfaction that Jesus is greater than the angels and greater than Moses. He has established that Jesus is able to empathize with us, because he is just like us. He is certain that Jesus is the new priest and that there is a new revelation now that is greater than the Torah. But he needs to find something there that points to a new order of priesthood. He finds that necessary “hook” in the story of Melchisedek in Genesis 14:18-20. A second reference to Melchizedek in Psalm 110 refers to an order of priesthood, and also helps relate the priesthood to royalty.

Melchizedek has one wonderful feature that is helpful to the argument for a new priesthood: He arrives on the scene without geneology, and disappears without record of his dath. Thus our author can use him as the type of an eternal priesthood. He is clearly not happy with the idea of a set of rituals that go round and round year after year, and at least to his way of thinking don’t finally accomplish anything. Oh, they help people along the way, but doesn’t it have to end somewhere? So he wants a priesthood that will not end, that is eternal by nature, because only such a priesthood can accomplish an eternal redemption, once and for all, that doesn’t need to be repeated. I’m intentionally redundant. That’s precisely what our author sounds like in chapter 7.

I’m going to discuss this some more in future entries. For now notice that the key to understanding how Melchizedek is used in Hebrews is the lack of genealogy along with no record of death. Combined with Psalm 110, “priest forever,” this makes the ideal type for his antitype of an eternal priesthood.

I suggest reading Genesis 14 and Psalm 110, followed by Hebrews 7 to fix this picture in your mind.

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