Sunday, December 25, 2022

David M. Moffitt on Hebrews 7:25

  

Hebrews, I suggest, understands these Levitical concepts and reflects on the new covenant and its high priest and sacrifice in terms that cohere with—are even informed by—the old covenant and its priests and sacrifices. Because Jesus ascended into the heavenly holy of holies and remains there, it follows for the author that Jesus is the high priest who can guarantee that the new covenant relationship is perpetually maintained, something no earthly high priest could do because of death and because the law never brought about perfection. The law, in other words, never made it possible for someone to enter the earthly holy of holies and remain there in God’s presence, to say nothing of making it possible for a high priest to pass through the heavens and remain in the heavenly holy of holies. Moreover, as Hebrews 7:25 states, because Jesus is the high priest who always lives and is always at God’s right hand, he is always able to intercede for his people and so is able to save them completely (εις το παντελες).

 

The logic of Hebrews 7:25 implies that, if Jesus were not actively interceding for his people, their complete salvation would not be possible. Yet this implication suggests another: Jesus’s followers need ongoing atonement. The very work that the high priests on earth could do only once a year is done by Jesus perpetually. In contrast to the old covenant high priests, who were prevented by death from remaining in their office, Jesus, because of his resurrection, is able to not only serve as the heavenly high priest but to do so without interruption. Thus, Jesus’ high-priestly ministry beings a level of purity and forgiveness that exceeds that of the old covenant. Jesus’s ministry ensures that the new covenant relationship is fully maintained. Because he is in himself both high priest and sacrificial offering, his very presence in the Father’s presence secures the covenant relationship and ensures the salvation of its members. (David M. Moffitt, Rethinking the Atonement: New Perspectives on Jesus’s Death, Resurrection, and Ascension [Grand Rapids, Mich.: Baker Academic, 2022], 147-48)

 

Given that Hebrews views salvation not as something one presently possesses but as something one receives in the future (e.g., 1:14; 9:28), Jesus’s continual intercession appears to be an essential part of his work that ensures that his people will be fully saved—they will successfully enter the promised inheritance. In all probability, this full salvation has to do with all God’s people being resurrected when they are all made perfect together (11:39-40). (Ibid., 148 n. 30)

 

Milligan recognized this, too, writing with respect to Jesus’ heavenly session:

 

What is [Jesus] about [i.e., doing]? He is not simply interceding on the strength of a past gift or sacrifice. He is presenting an offering on which his intercession is based, and in which it is involved. The idea of offering . . . cannot be separated form the action of our Lord after His Ascension, unless we also separate the thought of offering from what was done by the high-priest of Israel in the innermost sanctuary of his people. Such a separation the ceremonial of the law does not permit. The Jewish high-priest ministered in that sanctuary with more than the recollection or the merit of an offering already made. He had to sprinkle on the mercy-seat and before the veil the blood which he carried in along with him; he had to complete the reconciliation of Israel to God . . . And all of this was part of the offering, not merely something done after the offering was ended . . . As, therefore, the Jewish priest continued his work of offering after he had gone within the veil, so, in similar circumstances, we must connect with [Jesus] in whom the economy of Judaism is fulfilled the idea of offering. (Ascension and Heavenly Priesthood of Our Lord, 122-23) (Ibid., 149 n. 32)

 

Hebrews it not a unique witness in the New Testament to Jesus’s ongoing work of forgiveness and purification for his people in the Father’s presence. The idea appears in 1 John 1:7-2:2 as well. The collocation of Jesus’ blood, confession of sin, forgiveness of sins, and purification in 1:7-9 suggests the author reflects on Jesus’s ongoing work of forgiveness and purification in terms of Jewish sacrificial categories. That the author thinks believers need on-going forgiveness and purification from sins becomes particularly clear in 2:1. He states there that he is writing to believers (“my little children”) in order to encourage them not to sin, the obvious aim or ideal. If, however, they do sin, their sins can be dealt with by means of Jesus’s ongoing advocacy for them before the Father. This ongoing advocacy is possible because the author suggests in 2:2, Jesus is the atoning sacrifice (ιλασμος) for their sins. The point appears to be that Jesus is the advocate who can intercede for his people when they sin because he is the atoning sacrifice for their sins who is alive and with the Father right now. This looks remarkably like the nations of Jesus’s high-priestly ministry and ongoing work of covenant maintenance that one finds in Hebrews. (Ibid., 156 n. 47)