| The Berean Expositor
Volume 16 - Page 45 of 151 Index | Zoom | |
g | Sanctified through one offering.
f | The body of Jesus Christ.
B | 5-10. | f1 | The priest standing.
g1 | The repeated sacrifice.
h1 | Never take away sins.
g1 | Christ's one sacrifice.
h1 | For sins.
f1 | He sat down.
A | 1-4. | a | By one offering.
b | Perfect for ever.
c | Them that are sanctified.
e | Argument from remembrance of sins.
d | Argument from cessation of offerings.
"For the law having a shadow of good things to come and not the very image of the
things" (10: 1).
The Syriac version interprets this clause, "For the law, a shadow was in it, not the
substance itself". Just as in Col. 2: 17 "the shadow" is in antithesis to the "body of
Christ", so here the "shadow" is in contrast with the "very image", the reality itself. That
which cast its shadow in the law is the real thing. Every sacrifice offered upon Israel's
altar was a foreshadowing of the one and only acceptable offering of Christ.
"Can never with those sacrifices which they offered year by year" (10: 1).
The inability of the sacrifices of the law is associated with their repetition, a feature
which is enlarged upon in the next verse. The feature that is most important in this verse
and which shows up prominently in the structure, viz., A | b, is hidden in the A.V.
word "continually". The English reader sees in it but an extension of the words "year by
year". The Greek reads eis to dienekes, "unto the unbroken continuance". The phrase
does not occur outside the epistle to the Hebrews, and in that epistle it occurs four times:-
"Abideth a priest continually" (7: 3).
"They offered year by year continually" (10: 1).
"One sacrifice for sins for ever" (10: 12).
"For by one offering He hath perfected for ever" (10: 14).
It will be seen that the phrase is used in connection with the vital theme of the epistle.
The Melchisedec priesthood is "for unbroken continuance", unbroken by death, as was
the case with every other priest. In connection with 10: 1 a complete balance is
discovered in verse 14, "perfected unto unbroken continuance". The verse therefore
reads thus:--
"For the law having a shadow of the good things about to be, not the very image of the
things, can never with those annual sacrifices which they offer, perfect unto unbroken
continuance those who draw near."
The English word "continually" bears two distinct meanings. (1) Frequently,
repeatedly; (2) Permanently. The translation given in the A.V. of 10: 1 uses the word