DEVOTION
TO HEBREWS
TO HIM WHO IS GREATER
Heb 7:4-10
4 Just think how great he was:
Even the patriarch Abraham gave him a tenth of the plunder! 5 Now the law
requires the descendants of Levi who become priests to collect a tenth from the
people — that is, their brothers — even though their brothers are descended
from Abraham. 6 This man, however, did not trace his descent from Levi, yet he
collected a tenth from Abraham and , blessed him who had the promises. 7 And
without doubt the lesser person is blessed by the greater. 8 In the one case,
the tenth is collected by men who die; but in the other case, by him who is
declared to be living. 9 One might even say that Levi, who collects the tenth,
paid the tenth through Abraham, 10 because when Melchizedek met Abraham, Levi
was still in the body of his ancestor.
NIV
We are still in this argument the
author is making about the supremacy of Jesus as he uses Melchizedek as greater
to Levi who represents the law. Once again, we are faced with grace that is
greater than law. However, in this part of the argument the author is using the
paying of a tenth and that Levi, still being in the body of Abraham paid a tenth
to him who is without beginning or end of life. We know this is not about making
our tithe a law, as many churches have sort of done by default. Our tithe is in
some sense a tenth of our spoils of war, as we are out in the world fighting for
our position in the world. We fight to gain our income in a sense, so it is our
spoils of war. However, the point here is that we should not make the tithe
into a law, it should be given out of love. We do not give to the church for it is
not greater then us. We are a descendant of God, because we have been given the
right to be called children of God. However, we give our tenth to He who is
greater then we are, who is God. Yet, in reality we give it to the church and
for the most part it is used to support the administration and upkeep of the
church. Nevertheless, this has no meaning within this argument the author is
making. The whole point is that Jesus is greater than the law, in fact, Jesus
is superior to all things, and that we need to live by grace which comes
through faith in Jesus, rather than being bogged down in laws of our own making.
Because Jesus fulfilled all the law, and because we live in Jesus, just as Levi was
living in Abraham while he paid the tenth to Him who is greater, we have
fulfilled the law. Because we have fulfilled the law, we can truly live in grace,
for Jesus is grace personified. We can look at the law, as a mirror which shows
that our life is dirty, and then we have grace as the soap that cleanses us so
we are clean as the fresh driven snow, without spot or blemish, holy and
blameless in the sight of God. Why then would we want to return to a law-based
life, as those Jews were considering? We wonder if we have established our
rules to live by as a substitute for living by faith. Have we turned our faith
into a life of works, driven by the need to prove how good a Christian we are? Have
we turned works into a law and forgot about our faith, our living in Christ, and
because we are in Him we are righteous in the sight of God, and so we live by
faith, and we serve Him who is greater then we are. But let us not turn our
service to Him, to His kingdom into a law other than a law of love. Everything
we do for the benefit of the kingdom comes from our love for Jesus.
1 comment:
Amen
Post a Comment