The Berean Expositor
Volume 42 - Page 181 of 259
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repetition, failed to touch the conscience. He said, "Lo, I come", and coming, set aside
all types and shadows by the offering of Himself.
A blessed change.
A new section is introduced with verse 11 and opens with the words "But Christ".
Dispensational and doctrinal changes are introduced by some such expression in other
places. For example, in Acts 17: 30:
"And the times of this ignorance God winked at; BUT NOW commandeth all men
every where to repent."
So, in Rom. 3: 21, when the Apostle had brought the whole world in guilty before
God, with no hope of righteousness in themselves, he then introduces the wondrous
provision of grace with the words:
"BUT NOW the righteousness of God without the law is manifested."
Both the doctrinal and dispensational portions of Eph. 2: are marked in the same
way:
"BUT GOD Who is rich in mercy . . . . . hath quickened us (made us alive)" (4, 5).
"BUT NOW in Christ Jesus . . . . . made nigh" (13).
When the Apostle had clearly shown both the weakness and unprofitableness of the
dispensation of type and shadow, he swings the door of the new dispensation upon the
same hinges, "BUT CHRIST:
"But Christ being come an High Priest of good things to come" (Heb. 9: 11).
The good things to come must not be interpreted only of the new life and the glory yet
to be; they include, and perhaps principally refer to, the dispensational change which set
aside the types and shadows, and provide the antitype, Christ. This may be seen by
consulting Heb. 10: 1:
"For the law having a shadow of good things to come, and not the very image of the
things."
We remember the opening words of chapter 8:, and that the "principal thing" is a
seated Priest in a heavenly sanctuary. This important fact is again prominent. We have
such an High Priest of good things to come, in contrast with those priests whose ministry
was confined to shadows.  At 9: 11 we have the subject of 9: 1-5 resumed in the
words, "By a greater and more perfect Tabernacle". Not only is this Tabernacle "greater
and more perfect", it is "not of this creation", for so the word rendered "building" should
be translated. The use of this word "creation" is noteworthy, for in II Cor. 3:-5: the
New Covenant is linked with the new creation, and both with the reconciliation. Israel
were a people of types, and in this they foreshadow the purpose of the ages.