Hebrews Lesson 91
NKJ
Isaiah 40:31 But those
who wait on the LORD Shall renew their strength; They shall mount up
with wings like eagles, They shall run and not be weary, They shall walk and
not faint.
Sunday night – this Sunday night - don’t forget 6 to7:30 Ike will be
teaching on how to study the Bible. I
think I heard a few rumors about people.
I heard something like – Homework!
Homework! What? What do you mean?
It is so funny. There is a
college that I won’t mention that offers a free course on how to study the
Bible. It is a great idea for recruiting
people. You come to college and we will
give you a free course on how to study the Bible. Everybody wants to study the Bible. They show up. They’ll have a class the first
night – maybe sixty, seventy people show up.
Then they get a homework assignment and they have to go home and open
their Bibles and think and study and learn how to eventually use Bible
dictionaries or encyclopedias.
About the time they get to the second or third class when their
assignments are turned back and they have 1’s and 2’s on them out of 10, they
begin to realize that studying the Bible isn’t a matter of closing your eyes in
prayer and saying, “Jesus teach me what it says” – and then write down whatever
comes to the front of their mind.
It is amazing how many people think that. It is amazing how many people think that if
you have the gift of pastor-teacher that you just automatically know Greek and
Hebrew. Somehow people get this idea. I know a guy who was – I mean this guy is
very smart and had a successful business career. He went to Dallas Seminary thinking he had
the gift – and he may have had the gift of pastor-teacher – but he had such a
tough time with first year Greek and he just assumed if you had the gift of
pastor-teacher you would automatically be able to learn Greek that he just
bailed out after that first semester.
Just because you have a spiritual gift of pastor- teacher (remember
that’s a communication gift, it is not a study gift) - some people don’t
realize that. They think if you have the
gift of pastor-teacher they’ll automatically like to study. Well, that’s not necessarily true. There are a lot of people who have the gift
of pastor-teacher who know that. You have
to learn how to study. Anybody can learn
how to study because the gift of studying isn’t a communication gift. So anyone can learn how to study the Bible
and it will improve your own Bible study and help you because the principles
for Bible study are basically the principles of learning how to read
intelligently and understand more fully and completely that which you
read. The principles in Bible study are
the same as reading anything – learning how to use dictionaries, encyclopedias,
learning how to do research, learning how to think through the vocabulary
verbiage of everything that you read. So
that’s a great thing that Ike is doing on Sunday night and you don’t want to
miss that. It will be a challenge as
technology is a challenge.
I remember (I think Ike told the same kind of story the other night)
after years and years of sitting in a congregation being taught the Word of God
word-by-word, line-upon-line, precept-upon-precept, isagogically,
categorically, exegetically, (the whole bit) and then sitting in an inductive
Bible study class my first two weeks at Dallas Seminary. I thought I was going to flunk out. That was the hardest thing I had ever had to
do because you had to – as you know because I have shown you once or twice what
real exegesis this is like - y’all never really been exposed to what lies
behind the Bible study which is that anybody who studies the text has to learn
how to just read and study and do inductive work. It is not a matter of top down – just because
I know systematic theology that I can automatically understand the
Scripture. It is the other way
around. It is the Scripture first, then
your theology - not theology and then understanding of Scripture. So it’s always kind of a rude awakening and
many of the people I knew who had a similar background to me had a tough time
those first two or three weeks.
Gradually we beat our heads against the walls long enough to where it
began to make sense. Then we could
figure out how to read the Scripture and understand it. It is not just a matter of some sort of
mystical heebie-jeebie, liver quiver, wait and the Holy Spirit is going to open
up flashing lights on the text and I am automatically going to see everything
and understand everything. It takes
time; it takes work; it takes thought.
But it’s fun. As one person
entitled their book on Bible study methods – It Is the Joy of Discovery.
Before we get started in our study this evening, let’s bow our heads
together, open in prayer and have a few moments of silent prayer to give you a
shot at using I John 1:9 if you need to and then I will open in prayer. Let us pray.
Open your Bibles to Hebrews – Hebrews briefly - Hebrews 7:9-10.
We won’t be there very long. It
has been – I don’t know. What’s it
been? 3 weeks - 4 weeks since we were
last in Hebrews. Last time was right
before I went to
As we have come to this last section and as a communicator sometimes I
wrestle with this because I am teaching Hebrews. But, within Hebrews, within
any book you run into particular verses or topics or allusions to doctrines
that are very important to just understanding the flow of the author’s
thought. You can come to a passage
where the writer throws out a word like justification or propitiation or sin or
any number of things and you know that it is integral to understanding that
verse, that paragraph, or that promise; but that it’s not necessarily a concept
that people really understand. So you
have to stop and pause and almost lose the flow of thought in your study of the
book just to focus in on this topic or this doctrine or this one particular
thing.
We landed on two verses in Hebrews 7:9-10 that are at the heart of the
discussion on two very important topics or doctrines. One of those had to do with the origin and
transmission of the soul. The other one
that is always paired with it, always connected to it, has to do with the
origin and transmission of the sin nature, Adam's original sin. So, both of these flow out of a certain
understanding of these two verses.
NKJ
Hebrews 7:9 Even Levi,
who receives tithes, paid tithes through Abraham, so to speak,
I have corrected the translation here based on the Greek because even
though most of the translations indicate the fact that you have a manner of
speaking or any figure of speech something like that they throw it at the end
of verse 9 so it kind of hides itself between verse 9 and verse 10. But, in the Greek this phrase is at the
beginning.
That is one of those things for those who are working on observations on
Sunday night. That is what an
observation is – is that this word is at the beginning of the sentence so it is
in the emphatic position. That is an
observation to make.
So at the very beginning of the sentence the writer says, “In a manner
of speaking,” or “or in a figure of speech.”
So right away we know he is not talking literally. He is using an analogy. He says,
“Even Levi, who receives tithes.”
He can’t be talking about the person, the individual of Levi because
Levi as a person, one of the 12 sons of Jacob, never received tithes from
anybody. He was the progenitor of the
Levitical tribe, but it wasn’t until several generations later that the
priesthood was established at
“Even Levi, who receives tithes.”
That is the Levitical descendents were the ones who collected the three
different tithes in
receives tithes, paid tithes through Abraham,
Now none of them were there. Abraham was the head of the new Jewish race
that God had called out - the new Jewish people. It was Abraham, then Isaac,
then Jacob and Levi. So Levi is the
third generation. Levi was not
present. He was born a couple of hundred
years after the events described in Genesis 14 when Abraham took his servants,
defeated the armies of the four kings of the east and then brought the plunder
back to Jerusalem, met with Melchizedek the high priest, and gave 10% (a tithe)
of that to Melchizedek. But he is making
a point. The point in the flow of the
argument here as I have stated numerous times now is simply that if Abraham was
subordinate to Melchizedek, then any of Abraham’s descendents would also have
been subordinate to Melchizedek.
However since the early Middle Ages and sometimes I wish we were free of
all theological influence from the early Middle Ages but not all of it was
bad. There was a lot that was bad based
upon the allegorical hermeneutic that was used and various other problems. There was a theological development that
occurred from a man that some considered being one of the greatest theologians
of all time. The Protestants call him
Augustine (pronounced with a “teen”).
The Roman Catholics call him Augustine (pronounced with a “tin”). He was the Bishop of Hippo which was located
in
In fact, when Luther who was an Augustinian monk… They later developed
an order of monastics called the Augustinian order. Now Augustine did not found that order. I go back and forth because I did my master’s
work at the
Luther was an Augustinian monk.
Initially what Luther is simply trying to do in the Reformation is to
get the Roman Catholic Church to go back to Augustinian theology which he
thought was the benchmark of orthodoxy.
But as he studies the Scripture more as you move through 1516 towards
1517 and Luther begins to write a commentary on Romans and he is studying Galatians
and he comes to understand the doctrine of justification by faith alone, that
it is not based on works at all.
Initially it is this influence of Augustine.
So much of his theology even though – let’s say (start over here) here
is biblical truth. During the period
from about 500 up through 1500 the – let’s use a vertical display. Let’s say here is biblical truth. There is the departure from biblical truth
and apostasy (falling away from the truth) during the Middle Ages where it gets
extremely distorted and perverted. By
the 14th and 15th centuries you are down here. Luther makes major changes and he gets up to
here. Where he makes his big shift is at
the most important area which is in the soteriological doctrines. But in ecclesiology he is still not very far
away from
So it’s only as the decades go by as you go through the 16th
century - 1520, 1530, get down to about 1560.
Then other men come along, the second generation of reformers, and they
begin to more consistently apply this concept of literal interpretation and
sola Scriptura to various theological areas so that by the time you have the
shift to the next century in the early 1600’s, you begin to have men going back
to a literal view of prophecy and becoming pre-millenialists. That is what you study in the history of
doctrine. The history of theology is how
these movements change and are affected.
So when Augustine came along and read this as he was trying to deal with
the transmission of the sin nature,
he developed a view that became known as seminalism – that the entire human
race was physically and actually within Adam when Adam sinned so that with
Adam’s sin the whole human race is also sinning. It is not representational. It is not federal. That is a term that comes along later on. It is based on Hebrews 7:9-10. This also affects the view of the origin and
transmission of the soul, the view we studied as traducianism. So this verse becomes a key verse for both of
those. Both of those aspects, both of
those understandings of the origin and transmission of the soul and the origin and
transmission of the sin nature, are connected to one another. So that is why I am taking the time in a
number of different lessons to go through these things and try to explain them
a little more clearly. The idea that the
totality of man including the soul originates through physical means, it
transmitted physically all of man, immaterial, material, is called
traducianism. That was originated by an early church father in the 3rd
century by the name of Tertullian. What
most people don’t point out is that Tertullian was a thorough materialist. He believed that there was no immaterial part
of man. It was all material.
Then we studied the theology of creationism that came along. That is the idea that the physical body is
transmitted mediately through procreation, but that the soul was independently
created and imparted by God at birth.
That became known as creationism.
Creationism is usually associated with a federal view of the transmission
of the sin nature. We will get into that
a little later. And seminalism and
traducianism go together. I pointed out
in the last lesson that often in theology you find people polarized.
You will hear one theologian and he’ll say. “This is the way it is.”
He will outline various verses to support his position.
Somebody else comes along and says, “Here is the other position and here
are 3 or 4 verses to support it.”
Sometimes they are both emphasizing things and there is a way to pull
them together. There are different
aspects that are true about one; other aspects that are true about the
other. So the idea that the sin nature
is transmitted physically and that not merely is the sin nature transmitted
physically but the corruption and the guilt of Adam's original sin is
transmitted physically is known as seminalism.
This is the view that in Romans
NKJ
Romans
How does sin enter the world?
and death through sin, and thus death spread to all
men, because all sinned –
How does death, the condemnation of Adam’s sin, how does that spread to
all men? Is this done physically? Was the human race seminally present or was
Adam the representative head?
One of the proponents of seminalism was the 19th century
Calvinist reformed theologian by the name of William G T Shedd who is quoted
quite frequently as are many others in Lewis Sperry Chafer’s Systematic Theology. I took the time to go through some of Shedd’s
today. Shedd explains Romans 5:12 by
saying:
In this case Adam and his
posterity existed together and sinned together as a unity. The posterity (that would be us) would not
vicariously be represented in the first sin because representation implies the
absence of the party represented. But
they sinned the first sin being seminally existent and present and this first
sin is deservedly imputed to them because in this generic matter it was
committed by them.
That is his explanation of seminalism.
I have defined seminalism as “that the entire human race, body and soul,
was genetically present in Adam”. Then I
go on to add that “it is usually connected to the traducianist view of the
soul”.
Now Shedd who is a seminalist describes federalism the following
way. He says:
In this case Adam as an
individual distinct from Eve and distinct from his posterity whom in respect to
the soul, he did not seminally include sinned representatively and vicariously
(that is as a substitute) for his non-existent and absent posterity as their
vicar and representative. He disobeyed
the
This is where I think he makes his logical flaw.
Undeservedly or
gratuitously
In other words that the rest of the human race in his view (because he
doesn’t agree with federalism) he says, “All you are doing is undeservedly
imputing
Now the solution that I am going to teach and develop is that there are
elements of both that are true. Christ
is physically and genetically related to the entire human race and the entire
human race is viewed as an integral whole in that sense. That is why the Second Person of the Trinity
had to become a human being and an angel couldn’t die for us even though an
angel would be righteous; but, a human being had to die for us because there is
this genetic thing that ties the whole human race together. Whereas you don’t have salvation of that type
among the angels because among the angels there is no genetic unity. Each angel is created individually. They don’t marry and produce baby
angels. You didn’t start off with two
angels and then they got married and procreated and made other angels so that
there is a genetic unity among the angels.
They are all different. So you couldn’t come up with an angel that was
genetically related to all the angels that could die for the other angels.
God’s plan for man was that there would be this genetic unity so that one human
being could die for the rest. So there
is clearly a seminal or genetic connection that is important.
But Jesus dies as our substitute.
The term there is vicarious substitute.
That is usually where we see the term vicarious and because of the
priestly idea in the Roman Catholic Church that sort of bled over into the
Anglican Church in
The pope wouldn’t give him a divorce so he said, “Well, I will start my
own church.”
Remember Henry VIII is the one who earlier had written a rebuttal. He was brilliant. He wrote a rebuttal of Luther to Luther’s
position on justification by faith alone for which the pope gave the king, the
monarch of
So Henry decides he wants to get a divorce. So because he wanted a divorce, you have a
top down reformation in
But when you take western civilization taught by a secular atheist who
doesn’t know anything about church history and hates Christianity what they
will tell you is that it didn’t have anything to do - he will completely ignore
the dimension of theology and theological shift that was already occurring from
the bottom up in
Now I got off on the Anglican Church and forgot why I ran down that
anacoluthon…Oh, I know why – because they called their pastors vicars. They got that from a holdover from the
Catholic Church. Why? Because this view of the priest as a
substitute. You will see that in
reference to Anglican pastors. They call
them the vicars. In the Roman Catholic
Church the pope is called the Vicar of Christ.
It is the idea of a representative or substitute. So when I read the quote from Shedd twice he
used the term “vicarious”. I recognize that
it is not a term that most people use in their everyday vocabulary. I won’t embarrass anybody and say, “How many
people have used that word in the last year?” but I bet no hands would go up,
except for maybe one or two of you. I
got a couple of dirty looks when I said that so I knew somebody had used that
word.
So Shedd says that his basic thing is that Adam can’t be simply a vicar,
a representative of the rest of human race. So he rejects out of hand the whole
idea of federal theology. Now there is
another kinky little twist that comes into this theologically. And that is that federal headship by some
people seems to be linked inextricably to covenant theology. However people in the reformed position are
either seminalists or federalists and they are all covenant theologians. So I
don’t know why I have seen this within the last 50 or 60 years that the federal
representative idea seems to be always linked.
It seems like somebody comes up with an idea and then they teach it and
they are a known name.
The next thing you know everybody else is teaching that and nobody goes
back and says, “Wait a minute. What is
the basis for that?”
So we have federalism which is the view that Adam stood as the head and
the representative of the human race. Adam’s
decisions were on behalf of all humanity.
He is the designated representative.
I think both are true – that he is physically related to everyone and so
there is a physical dimension to the transmission of sin in terms of the sin
nature and there is a federal representative concept that his sin is the basis
for the imputation of Adam’s original sin to the physically transmitted
corruption or what we also call the sin nature.
So that is how they link together.
There are elements of both that are true.
The issue is on Adam's original sin which is a technical term for the
first act of willful disobedience to God committed by the first man (meaning
male human, Adam) in the Garden of Eden.
It wasn’t Eve’s disobedience that caused it. The only thing that affected was her. But, Adam’s sin affected him and all of his
progeny.
Let’s look at this chart. I broke
this out. I got this out of a Moody
Handbook of Theology. I
thought it was a nice helpful little chart -
Moody Handbook of Theology edited by Paul Enns.
It gives you these views. There
are actually four views. I have only
talked about the two views of seminalism and federalism, but there are actually
four.
Depravity has to do with the
fact that man is not holy or righteous, but he is depraved. He has been affected by sin and
corrupted. The word total means that
depravity extends to every aspect of his being and his person. It doesn’t mean that he is as depraved as he
could be, but that every aspect of his being is equally depraved. Of course people are not as bad as they could
be. People can do good. Jesus told his disciples:
NKJ Matthew
Because they are fallen
creatures
know how to
give good gifts to your children…
Even though you have a fallen
nature, you are evil, you are corrupt; you can do relative good. But it is not a good that can merit God’s
approval. So the Arminian view is that
depravity is not total. They are sick;
they are not dead. People received a
corrupt nature from Adam, but they don’t receive his guilt or culpability. Modern adherents to this view are Methodists,
Wesleyans, Pentecostals, Holiness groups, charismatics,
The key verse, the key passage that has to be exegeted in relationship
to this that is always referred to in conjunction with the passage in Hebrews 7
is Romans 5:12-21. So we are going to
take a few weeks to work our way through this very, very important passage.
Romans
NKJ
Romans
Now let me make a couple of observations for those of you who are trying
to learn how to study the Bible under Ike because I know that some of you are
trying to figure out what an observation is.
An observation is saying – this is a conclusion. It has a therefore at the beginning. Whenever you see a therefore you see what it
is there for. Therefore means it is a
conclusion of something.
Then the next word is “just as.”
That tells you there is a comparison that is being made, or a
contrast. Ike will talk about groupings
in comparison contrast things like that.
just as through one man sin entered the world, and
death through sin, and thus
What is thus? Thus indicates
another inference or conclusion.
and thus death spread to all men,
Why? Because. Now you have a causal statement. So you have a number of little terms in there
that are very important to spot.
Dr. Johnson who was the head of the Greek Department at
So this passage starts off with a therefore, but it is not your normally
expected particle of inference which is oun. It is the phrase dia touto in the
Greek which literally means for this reason or through this reason, on this
ground. It describes the ground, the
motive or the cause of something. So
what is the something that this is the ground of? Is this concluding what he has been saying in
Romans 5 or is this concluding what he is saying in the broader section of
Romans 1:18 -5:11?
That is another thing that those of you who are taking the Bible study
methods have to deal with when you deal with context. How does this fit in a
broader context? This comes (Romans
Therefore,
just as through one man sin entered the world,
He is excited. He builds this
comparison. He is so excited. As he gets into it he realizes, “Wait a
minute. I need to expand on this a
little bit.”
So he takes verses 13 and 14 to go down a rabbit trail called an
anacoluthon. He kind of sidesteps to
explain himself a little more fully.
Then he decides he didn’t do a good enough job. He is so excited that he comes back in 15,
16, and 17 and he does it again. So
twice he explains himself to get across the first part of this comparison. You never get the second part of the
comparison until you get down to verse 18.
Then he has to start all over again.
In
NKJ Romans
See the “as through”? That’s
parallel to what he says here.
even
so through one Man's righteous act the free gift came to all men,
resulting in justification of life.
That’s the other side of the comparison.
He is going to draw this contrast and comparison between the way sin
enters the world through Adam and the way sin is paid for by the Second Adam,
Jesus Christ. But in between he has to
make sure people really understand what he is talking about.
This is a tough little passage to deal with because he is excited. He jumps around. He stops and starts up somewhere else which
is called an aposiopesis. (Don’t you
just love these fun words? You never
heard them in any literature class you took, but in Bible study methods you get
to learn all these great things.) He
stops abruptly because he is so pent up with so much to say and then he jumps
to something else to fully explain it.
There is a loss of transition there that is represented in the
translation by that double hyphen that’s there.
The translators recognize that verses 13 and 14 are really an expansion
and development of what he has been trying to say.
So he starts off saying, “Because of everything I have said up to this
point...”
So this section is going to amplify or expand on the entire previous
section and it gives a conclusion for the first section of the epistle.
Then the next phrase indicates that he is building on a comparison. He says “hosper” in the Greek – just as. He is going to compare two things. When you see that you expect to have two
different parts to this comparison contrast, but you only have one in
It says and he uses the word anthropos rather that Adam here. He
later identifies in verse 14. We know it
is Adam for sure. But here he uses the
generic anthropos which speaks of the human being.
through one man sin entered the world
Here we have the Greek word hamartia. You have the noun twice. You have the verb hamartano once. But they all have the idea of missing the
mark. The mark is the righteous standard
of God. That is what sin is. Sin is not a violation of your parent’s
rules. It is not a violation of your
friend’s rules. It is not a violation of
school rules or company policy. Sin is a
violation of God’s character. That’s why in Psalm 51 when David confesses his
sin of adultery with Bathsheba, the murder of Uriah the Hittite, he certainly
hurt a lot of people. His sin had
enormous consequences for numerous people.
But he says to God, “Against thee and thee only have I sinned.”
Why? Because sin by definition is
a violation of God’s character, not anybody else’s. So sin isn’t defined by its impact on human
relations or human standards, but divine standards. So it is through one man that sin enters the
world. Now we will have to come back and
talk about that a little bit because in the singular here it’s not talking
about personal sin which would be a plural as much as it is talking about the
principle of sin, i.e. the sin nature – this constitutional corruption and
guilt that not only changed Adam but changes all of his progeny so that not
only does Adam become spiritually dead; but all of his progeny are born
spiritually dead but physically alive.
Now this is one of several words that are used in the Bible for sin.
I just have time to run through two or three of them tonight. I am going to come back with a complete list
of Hebrews terms for sin as well as Greek words for sin. These four that I am giving you tonight hamartia
being the first give you an idea. All
are used in this passage, Romans 5:12-21.
So these are four words, four synonyms for sin that are all used in
Romans 5.
Now let’s just have about 5 or 6 points before we finish up just in
terms of the introduction of this concept.
I was going to spend a little more time on that tonight. I am not now. We are out of time. It is sad.
We live in an era when theologians have come up with a lot of reasons
why (I don’t think they hold water at all.) Ezekiel 28 and Isaiah 14 don’t
refer to the fall of Satan. This has
theological implications that are very discomforting, but also exegetical
problems and some other things. It is
sort of a pop thing to do.
What probably happened is two or three professors who didn’t know each
other went off and they studied in
And they were somewhat impressed with his argument and they came
back. So they wrote a commentary on
Isaiah and said, “That this doesn’t refer to Satan at all. It refers to some mythological being.”
Somebody picked that up and said, “Oh that sounds so scholarly. I am so impressed.”
Then they put it into a study Bible.
Ryrie Study Bible and Scofield Study Bible are about the only ones I
know that are left (the Hayse Study Bible) that still hold to Isaiah 14,
Ezekiel 28 as referring to the fall of Satan.
So if you have got the NIV or you’ve got the Thomas Nelson Study Bible or
you have the NEP Bible or any of these others they will probably have in their
study notes that this really doesn’t refer to the fall of Satan, although some
believe that. It is like we are just a
bunch of ante-deluvian Neanderthals who still believe in stuff like that.
A number of years ago I read a fabulous PhD dissertation written by an
individual who did a very good job of utilizing all of the Semitic languages
and researching every known myth of the ancient Near East – Canaanite myths,
Acadian myths, - and he came back and said,
“There is no myth that even bears a resemblance to this.”
Not only that, but the eternal exegetical evidence of Isaiah 14 and
Ezekiel 28 clearly indicates that this is a supernatural being. No human being could ever fit this. This can’t be dismissed as metaphor or
hyperbole or any of the other things that people try to come up with simply
because the evidence for that isn’t there.
So the first sin in the universe is Satan.
NKJ Genesis
Not 900 years later, but in
the day you eat it.
you shall
surely die."
This is not physical death is
substantiated in Ephesians 2:1-2 where in Ephesians 2:1 Paul says:
NKJ Ephesians
2:1 And you He made alive, who were dead in
trespasses and sins,
So this death is a spiritual
death (not a physical death) because he is talking to the Ephesians who at one
time were physically alive but were dead.
They had to be made alive. That
is why you have to be regenerated. It is
because you were previously spiritually dead.
That is not just a theological term or nomenclature. It refers to the fact that something was lost
when Adam sinned, something that is gained and acquired at regeneration and
something that enables us to have eternal life and be justified.
So that is a little more introduction on seminalism and federalism. We have begun our study of Romans 5:12 and
following. We will continue that next
week.
With our heads bowed and our eyes closed…