The Doctrinal Center
of the Book of Hebrews
David
J. MacLeod
Dean of
the Graduate Program
The question of emphasis (or the
doctrinal center) of Hebrews, is
a
vital one.l It is generally agreed by interpreters of the
epistle that
the
author did have one "master idea"2 to which all other
sections
of
his theology are subordinate. It is important to establish the cen-
ter (or unifying idea, or major
theme) so that the theological mate-
rials of the epistle
may be arranged in a way that reflects the au-
thor's own emphasis.
Interpreters are not in agreement, however, as
to
what the doctrinal center of Hebrews is. There is disagreement
over
two questions: (1) What is the major theme of the doctrinal
sections
of the epistle? (2) Is the major theme of the doctrinal sec-
tions the major theme
of the entire epistle or is that to be found in
the
paraenetic sections (i.e., in the exhortations)? The
following
discussion
presents and evaluates the various proposals.
Proposals Stressing Theology
THE
HIGH PRIESTHOOD OF CHRIST
The traditional view, and the one most
widely held, is that the
epistle
finds its center (its "keystone"3) in the doctrine of the
high
1 William G. Johnsson,
"Issues in the Interpretation of Hebrews," Andrews Univer-
sity Seminary Studies 15 (1977): 176.
2 P. P. Saydon, "The Master-Idea of the Epistle to the
Hebrews," Melita Theologica
13
(1961): 19-26.
3 John H. A. Ebrard, "Exposition of the Epistle to the
Hebrews," trans. A. C.
291
priesthood
of Christ.4 The whole burden of the epistle, according to
Moule, can be
epitomized in two resounding uses of e@xomen: "we have
a
high priest, we have an altar: sanctuary and sacrifice are ours
(8:1;
13:10)."5 The doctrine
of Christ's priesthood is the author's
"central
category . . . which draws together the theology of the
Epistle
and gives it its distinctive character."6
Kendrick,
in Biblical Commentary on the New
Testament, ed. Hermann Olshausen, 6
vols.
(New York: Sheldon, Blakeman & Co., 1858), 6:472.
4 John Albert Bengel, New Testament
Word Studies, 2 vols., trans. Charlton T. Lewis
and
Marvin R. Vincent (
Rapids:
Kregel Publications, 1971), 2:630; Henry Alford, The Greek Testament, 4 vols.,
rev.
ed. (Chicago: Moody Press, 1958), 4:53; Ebrard,
"Exposition of the Epistle to the
Hebrews,"
p. 472; Franz Delitzsch, Commentary on the Epistle to the Hebrews, 2 vols.,
trans.
Thomas L. Kingsbury (
Klock & Klock, 1978), 1:322, 324; 2:16-18; A. B. Davidson, The Epistle to the Hebrews
(Edinburgh:
T. & T. Clark, 1882), pp. 33-34; Brooke Foss Westcot:,
The Epistle to the
Hebrews, 2d. ed. (
Eerdmans Publishing Co.,
1965), pp. 14, 70; Alexander Nairne, The Epistle of Priest-
hood (Edinburgh: T.
& T. Clark, 1913), p. 136; idem, The
Epistle to the Hebrews
(Cambridge:
University Press, 1917), p. xi; E. F. Scott, The Epistle to the Hebrews
(Edinburgh:
T. & T. Clark, 1922), pp. 70, 122, 135-36; James Moffatt,
A Critical and Ex-
egetical Commentary on the Epistle to the Hebrews, International
Critical Commen-
tary (Edinburgh: T.
& T. Clark, 1924), pp. xliv-xlv, liii, 8, 104; A.
T. Robertson, Word
Pictures in the
New Testament,
6 vols. (Nashville: Broadman Press, 1932), 5:350;
Theodore
H. Robinson, The Epistle to the Hebrews, The
Moffatt New Testament Com-
mentary (New York: Harper, 1933), pp. xviii,
106-7; Hugh Montefiore, The Epistle to
the Hebrews,
Black's New Testament Commentaries (
Black,
1964), pp. 16, 116; Jean Hering, The Epistle to the Hebrews, trans. A. W.
Heathcote and P. J. Allsock (London: Epworth Press, 1970), p. xi; Neil R.
Lightfoot, Je-
sus Christ Today (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1976),
pp. 37, 39; Leon Morris,
"Hebrews,"
in The Expositor's Bible Commentary (
ing House, 1981), 12:14; Alan Hugh McNeile, An
Introduction to the Study of the New
Testament, rev. C. S. C.
Williams (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1953), p. 227; Harris
Lachlan
MacNeill, The
Christology of the Epistle to the Hebrews (
sity of Chicago
Press, 1914), p. 40; J. P. Alexander, A
Priest For Ever (
(Chicago:
Moody Press, 1959), pp. 243, 253; F. Stagg, New
Testament Theology
(Nashville:
Broadman Press, 1962), p. 68; Gerhardus
Vos, "Hebrews, the Epistle of
the
Diatheke,"
Spiritual
Value of the Epistle to the Hebrews," Biblical
Review 15 (1930): 509; J. F.
Humphrey,
"The Christology of the Epistle to the Hebrews,"
Holborn Review 14 (October 1945): 429; T. W. Manson,
"The Problem of the Epistle to
the
Hebrews," Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 32 (September 1949): 6-7, 12; C. F.
D.
Moule, "Sanctuary and Sacrifice in the Church of
the New Testament," Journal of
Theological
Studies New Series
1 (1950): 37; S. Lewis Johnson, "Some Important Mis-
translations
in Hebrews," Bibliotheca Sacra
110 (1953): 28-29; Stephen S. Smalley,
The
Atonement in the Epistle to the Hebrews," Evangelical Quarterly 33 (1961): 36; W.
Harrington,
"The Priesthood of Christ," Doctrine and Life 14 (1964): 421; J. R.
Schaefer,
"The
Relationship between Priestly and Servant Messianism
in the Epistle to the He-
brews,"
Catholic Biblical Quarterly 30
(1968): 361; James Swetnam, "Form and Content
in
Hebrews 7-13," Biblica
55 (1974): 334.
5 Moule, "Sanctuary and Sacrifice in the Church of the
New Testament," p. 37.
6 Stephen S.
Smalley, "The Atonement in the Epistle to the Hebrews, p. 36.
The Doctrinal
Center of the Book of Hebrews 293
Three arguments favor the view that
Christ's high priesthood
is
the theological center of the epistle: (1) The author himself ex-
plicitly says so in 8:1:
"Now the main point [kefa<laion] in what is
being
said [toi?j legome<noij] is this: we
have such a high priest,
who
has taken His seat at the right hand of the throne of the
Majesty
in the heavens." The epistle centers, then, in the thought of
a
seated priest. "Understand all that this involves, and its message
is
fathomed."7 (2) The argument of the epistle is best understood
as a
development
of this theme. (3) The theme of priesthood and cult
"exerts
a modifying influence upon almost every detail" of the
author's
theology.8 By way of illustration the following examples
might
be cited: (1) The person of God is related to the sanctuary (8:1-
2).
(2) God's Son is described at length in priestly terminology. (3)
God's
angels are described as leitourgika> pneu<mata (1:14, lit.
"liturgic spirits"9). (4) Christ's work is
described in the language of
priestly
sacrifice (e.g., 9:12; 10:12). (5) The application of Christ's
work
is spoken of as forgiveness through blood (9:22). (6) God's
people
are described as those who in priestly fashion enter the holy
of
holies (10:19) and offer sacrifices of praise (13:15). (7) The author's
eschatology
is colored by the fact that he understands the messianic
ruler
of "the world to come" (2:5) to be a priest-king (cf. 7:1-2).
THE
SONSHIP OF CHRIST
A second view, developed most fully by
Lidgett, is that the son-
ship
of Christ is the dominant theme of the epistle.10 The title ui[o<j
is
used 12 times11 of Christ and embraces the concepts of high priest
(7:3)
and incarnation (1:1-3) as well as the functions of revelation, cre-
ation (1:2),
mediation (4:14-16), and sacrifice (1:3). The sonship
of
Christ
can also be related to the doctrine of the people of God in that
they
are called "sons" (2:10). Though the theme of Christ's sonship is
7 Johnson,
"Some Important Mistranslations in Hebrews," p. 29; cf. Nairne, The
Epistle of
Priesthood,
p. 136.
8 Davidson, The Epistle to the Hebrews, pp. 33-34.
9 Dictionary of the Apostolic Church, s.v. "Angels," by A. J. Maclean, 1:59.
10 J. Scott Lidgett, Sonship and Salvation:
A Study of the Epistle to the Hebrews
(London:
Epworth Press, 1921), pp. 110-13, 254-55 and passim. Cf. George Milligan, The
Theology of the
Epistle to the Hebrews (
neapolis: James Family,
1978), pp. 66, 72.-73; Chester K. Lehman, Biblical
Theology, 2
vols.
(Scottdale, PA: Herald Press, 1974), 2:431-32; Vernon
H. Neufeld, The Earliest
Christian
Confessions, New Testament Tools and Studies, vol. 5 (
1963),
pp. 135-36; Donald Guthrie, The Letter to
the Hebrews, Tyndale New Testament
Commentaries
(Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1983),
pp. 46-59.
11
1:2, 5 (twice), 8; 3:6; 4:14; 5:5, 8; 6:6; 7:3, 28; 10:29.
294 Bibliotheca Sacra / July—September 1989
irnportant,12
it is not central. It seems preferable to understand it as
preparatory
or basic to the central theme, the high priesthood of
Christ.13
THE
SUPREMACY OF CHRIST
Another group of scholars has
concluded that the central or
"comprehensive
theme of the Epistle to the Hebrews is that of the
absolute
supremacy of Christ."14 It is true that there is an emphasis
in
Hebrews on Christ's exaltation (cf. 1:3; 8:1-2), yet this exaltation
is
linked by the author to Christ's installation and functions as
priest
(5:5-6, 10; 7:26-27).
THE
CONCEPT OF COVENANT
Not all interpreters have found the
author's theological center
in
the person or work of Christ. One writer, for example, has argued
that
the central concept of the epistle is that of covenant.15 He ar-
gued that besides
this concept being central in chapters 8-10, it is
also
central in the earlier chapters dealing with angels and Moses,
in
that the angels and Moses were mediators of the covenant.
Again it must be admitted that the
idea of covenant is an
important
one in the epistle. That it is not the doctrinal center,
however,
is demonstrated by the author's own assertion that priest-
hood
is foundational to covenant (cf. 7:11-12 where "Law" refers to
the
Mosaic Covenant).16
THE
FINALITY OF CHRIST
Beginning with A. B. Bruce, a number
of scholars have suggested
that
the central doctrinal thought of the epistle is the finality of
Christianity.17
The Levitical system failed to establish intimate
12 Davidson called
the idea of Christ's sonship "the fundamental
idea of the Epis-
tle" (The Epistle to the Hebrews, p. 79).
13 Cf. Ryrie, Biblical Theology of the New Testament,
p. 253.
14 Philip Edgecumbe Hughes, A
Commentary on the Epistle to the Hebrews (Grand
Rapids:
Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1977), pp. 2-4,
35-36; idem, "The Christol-
ogy of Hebrews," Southwestern Journal of Theology 28
(Fall 1985): 19-27. Also see
Charles
W. Carter, "Hebrews," in The
Wesleyan Bible Commentary, ed. Charles W.
Carter,
6 vols. (Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing
Co., 1964-69), 6:5-7; James
W.
Thompson, "The Underlying Unity of Hebrews," Restoration Quarterly 18 (1975):
132.
15 H. A. A.
Kennedy, The Theology of the Epistles
(London: Duckworth Press, 1919),
pp.
195, 201.
16 Moffatt, A Critical
and Exegetical Commentary on the Epistle to the Hebrews, p.
x1;
Milligan, The Theology of the Epistle to
the Hebrews, p. 71.
17 Dictionary of the Bible (Hastings), s.v. "Hebrews, Epistle to," by A. B. Bruce,
The Doctrinal
Center of the Book of Hebrews 295
relations
between God and man. It is therefore inferior to Christian-
ity, which has done that very thing.18
The problem with this view is that it
fails to distinguish be-
tween the purpose of
the epistle and its doctrinal center.19 It must be
conceded
that one of the author's main purposes20 is to establish the
superiority
and finality of Christianity. He does this by writing an
epistle,
the theology of which centers in the person and work of
Christ
as High Priest.
THE
SPATIAL DUALISM OF TWO WORLDS
Other interpreters of the epistle see
the epistle's center ("the
fundamentally
important fact") as being in the Philonic idea
of two
worlds:
the real heavenly world of spiritual reality and the physi-
cal
universe which is its shadow or copy.21 In adopting this per-
spective, it is
asserted, the author abandoned the eschatological
dualism
of two successive ages for a spatial dualism of two coexis-
tent,
superimposed worlds.22
This thesis must be rejected for two
reasons: (1) The language in
Hebrews
is eschatological and not Philonic or Platonic,23
and (2) the
2:327-28;
Moffatt, A
Critical and Exegetical Commentary on the Epistle to the He-
brews, p. xxiv;
Thomas Hewitt, The Epistle to the
Hebrews, Tyndale New Testament
Commentaries
(Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1960),
p. 40; F. F.
Bruce,
The Epistle to the Hebrews, The New
International Commentary on the New
Testament
(Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1964),
pp. lii, 1; idem,
The Defence of the Gospel in the New Testament (
Publishing
Co., 1959), pp. 88-97; George Barker Stevens, The Theology of the New Tes-
tament, 2d ed. (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark,
1918), p. 490; Donald Medford Stine, "The
Finality
of the Christian Faith: A Study of the Unfolding Argument of the Epistle to
the
Hebrews, Chapters 1-7" (ThD diss., Princeton
Theological Seminary, 1964), pp. 2-
3;
Richard N. Longenecker, Biblical Exegesis in the Apostolic Period (
Wm.
B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1975), pp. 174-75; James
B. Green, "Christianity: The
Ultimate
Religion," Christianity Today,
July 20, 1959, pp. 3-5; George B. Caird, "The
Exegetical
Method of the Epistle to the Hebrews," Canadian
Journal of Theology 5
(1959):
47-49.
18 A. B. Bruce,
"Hebrews, Epistle to," p. 327. Caird's
approach varied somewhat
from
that of Bruce in that he viewed the author's main thesis as not so much an apolo-
getic against Judaism
as an assertion that the Old Testament was an avowedly incom-
plete work (pp. 47,
49).
19 Saydon, "The Master-Idea of the Epistle to the
Hebrews," p. 21.
20 Henry C. Thiessen, Introduction
to the New Testament (
Eerdmans Publishing Co.,
1943), p. 304.
21 F. D. V. Narborough, The
Epistle to the Hebrews, The Clarendon Bible (
Clarendon
Press, 1930), p. 43; A. S. Peake, Hebrews, The Century Bible (
Jock,
n.d.), pp. 16-22. For further discussion see George
E. Ladd, A Theology of the New
Testament (Grand Rapids:
Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1974), pp. 572-77; E.
F.
Scott,
The Epistle to the Hebrews, pp.
102-21.
22 Jean Hering, The Epistle
to the Hebrews, p. xii.
23 A discussion of
the supposed Philonism in Hebrews is beyond the scope
of this
296 Bibliotheca Sacra / July—September 1989
author
himself states that his theological center is Christ's priest-
hood
(8:1).
THE
ESCHATOLOGICAL DUALISM OF TWO AGES
Approaching the epistle from yet
another angle, some have con-
cluded that
eschatology "is the determining element."24 The lan-
guage of shadow and
substance in passages such as 8:5 and 9:23 is the
language
not of Plato but of history and eschatology.25 The priestly
ministry
of Old Testament times was typical of the ministry ful-
filled
by Jesus Christ. Proponents of this view also point out that
there
is a futuristic eschatology in Hebrews as well as a "realized" one.
It must be acknowledged that a
recognition of the author's eschat-
ological concerns has
restored a balance to the study of the epistle. It
is
an overstatement, however, to assert that eschatology is central.
Proposals
Stressing Paraenesis
THE
CHRISTIAN LIFE AS PILGRIMAGE
In 1938 Kasemann
presented his thesis that "the principal motif"
in
the letter to the Hebrews is "the wandering of the people of God."26
Though
not the first to focus on the pilgrim motif in Hebrews,27 Kase-
mann was the first
recognized scholar to do so, and his thesis has been
so
influential that for many modern interpreters the center is now to be
found
in the epistle's paraeneses and not its theological
expositions.28
article.
The view is ably refuted by Ronald Williamson in his Philo and the Epistle to
the Hebrews, Arbeiten zur Literatur
and Geschichte des hellenistischen Judentums,
vol.
4 (Leiden: E. J. Brill, 1970). Cf. also Alan M. Fairhurst,
"Hellenistic Influence in
the
Epistle to the Hebrews," Tyndale
Bulletin 7/8 (July 1961): 17-27; Ronald
Williamson,
"Platonism and Hebrews," Scottish
Journal of Theology 16 (1963): 415-24;
L.
D. Hurst, "How 'Platonic' Are Heb. 8:5 and 9:23-24?" Journal of Theological Studies
34
(1983): 156-68; idem, "Eschatology and 'Platonism' in the Epistle to the
Hebrews,"
Society of
Biblical Literature 1984 Seminar Papers, pp. 41-74; Ronald Nash, Chris-
tianity and the Hellenistic World (
1984),
pp. 89-112.
24 C. K. Barrett,
"The Eschatology of the Epistle to the Hebrews," in The Background
of the New
Testament and Its Eschatology, ed. W. D. Davies and D. Daube
(Cambridge:
University Press, 1956), p. 366. Cf. also William Robinson, The
Eschatology of
the Epistle to the Hebrews (Birmingham: Overdale
College, 1950), pp.
1-20;
Ladd, A Theology of the New Testament,
pp. 572-77.
25 Cf. Robinson, The Eschatology of the Epistle to the
Hebrews, p. 7.
26 Ernst Kasemann, The Wandering
People of God: An Investigation of the Letter to
the Hebrews, trans. Ray A.
Harrisville and Irving L. Sandberg (
Publishing
House, 1984).
27 Cf. for
example, the popular exposition by Philip Mauro, God's Pilgrims: Their
Dangers, Their
Resources, Their Rewards, rev. ed. (
House,
1918).
28 For comments on
the influence of Kasemann, see E. Grasser, "Der Hebraerbrief 1938-
The Doctrinal
Center of the Book of Hebrews 297
Kasemann's
work has been modified somewhat by later writ-
ers.29
Yet a number of observations30 would confirm the fact that he
has
drawn attention to a key theme of the epistle: (1) The overall
thrust
of 3:7-4:13 (the wanderings of
implicitly
supports the idea of a pilgrimage.31 (2) The portrayal of
Jesus
as a]rxhgo<j
("Pioneer" or "Pathfinder," 2:10, 12:2) and pro<-
dromoj
("Forerunner," 6:20) fits the theme. (3) The thrust of chapter
11
with its explicit pilgrimage terminology32 is that God's people
are
aliens in this world on a pilgrimage to the heavenly homeland.
(4)
In chapter 12 the references to
exhortations
to endurance (12:1, 3, 15-17, 25) relate to the imagery of
pilgrimage.
(5) In chapter 13 the ideas of "the city which is to
come"
(13:14) and the ill treatment of God's people "outside the
camp"
(13:13) suggest the foreignness of Christians in this world.
In short, the theme of the pilgrimage
of God's people to their
eschatological
homeland ties together the paraenetic sections of
1963,"
Theologische Rundschau 30
(1964): 197-99; idem, "Das wandernde Gottesvolk
zum Basismotiv
des Hebraerbriefes," Zeitschrift fur die
senschaft 77 (1986):
160-79; M. R. Hillmer, "Priesthood and
Pilgrimage: Hebrews in
Recent
Research," Theological Bulletin:
68-69;
Johnsson, "Issues in the Interpretation of
Hebrews," p. 176, n. 45 and p. 180. Also
see
C. K. Barrett, "The Eschatology of the Epistle to the Hebrews," pp.
363-93; R.
Bultmann, Theology of the New Testament, trans. K.
Grobel, 2 vols. (
ner's, 1951, 1955),
1:100; Robert Jewett, Letter to Pilgrims
(
1981),
pp. 1-2; William G. Johnsson, "The Pilgrimage Motif
in the Book of Hebrews,"
Journal of
Biblical Literature
97 (1978): 239-51.
29 Two needed
modifications stand out: (1) Kasemann's conviction
that the wander-
ing motif finds its background in
Gnosticism is in error (The Wandering People, pp. 67-
96,
101-17). On Gnosticism in the New Testament and in Hebrews in particular, see
Edwin
Yamauchi, Pre-Christian Gnosticism (
lishing
altered
to "pilgrimage." Kasemann used Wanderschaft, not terms for pilgrimage
(Pilgerfahrt or Wallfahrt). Later
proponents of Kasemann's views have stressed pil-
grimage, not wandering.
Cf. Johnsson, "The Pilgrimage Motif in the Book
of Hebrews,"
p.
243; Barrett, "The Eschatology of the Epistle to the Hebrews," pp.
376-83.
30
Johnsson, "The
Pilgrimage Motif in the Book of Hebrews," pp. 239-41, 247-50.
31 Citing a study
of the Muslim hajj by H. B. Partin ("The Muslim Pilgrimage: Journey
to
the Center" [PhD diss.,
Motif
in the Book of Hebrews," pp. 244-46) suggested that a pilgrimage has four
essential
ingredients, each of which is found in Hebrews: (1) it entails a separation, a
leaving
home, (2) it involves a journey to a sacred place, (3) it is made for a fixed
purpose,
and (4) it involves hardship.
32 Paroike<w
(11:9, "to inhabit, live as a stranger"), a]llo<trioj (11:9,
"strange, alien,
hostile"),
e]kde<xomai (11:10,
"to expect, wait"), po<rrwqen (11:13, "from
a distance"),
ce<noj (11:13,
"stranger, alien"), parepi<dhmoj (11:13,
"exile, stranger"), patri<j
(11:14,
"homeland,
fatherland"), po<lij (11:16,
"city"), misqapodosi<a
(11:26, "reward"),
perie<rxomai (11:37,
"go around, go from place to place"), plana<w (11:38, "to
wander"),
and
e]paggeli<a (11:13, 39,
"promise"). Cf. Johnsson, "The
Pilgrimage Motif in the Book
of
Hebrews," p. 241.
298 Bibliotheca Sacra / July–September 1989
Hebrews.
As convincing as this thesis is, however, the fact that it
fails
to incorporate adequately the motifs of priesthood and cultus33
means
that it must be rejected as the epistle's theological center.34
THE
THEOLOGY OF WORLD
Manson also stressed paraenesis in his study of Hebrews. He
agreed
with earlier interpreters that the epistle emphasizes the fi-
nality of Christianity
and the doctrine of Christ's priesthood. These
doctrines,
Manson asserted, are not so much argued by the author as
they
are assumed. There is a "givenness" to them
that is shared by
author
and reader alike. Instead of calling his readers to advance in
doctrine,
he called them to resume once more the eschatological
journey
of life. He sought to pull them away from the protection of
Judaism
to a recognition of the theology of the world mission of
Christianity.35
Manson has failed to convince the
majority of scholars that this
is
the author's purpose. His assumption that the theology of final-
ity and priesthood are
"givens" shared by author and reader alike
does
not do justice to the author's eloquent apologetic in favor of this
theology.
THE
PERSEVERANCE IN THE FAITH
Noting that the author of Hebrews
called his epistle lo<goj
paraklh<sewj ("a word
of exhortation," 13:22), Saydon has argued
that
perseverance in the Christian faith is the "master idea" in the
epistle.36
It must be conceded that his readers' perseverance in the
faith
is a major concern of the author. However, to say that perse-
verance is the
doctrinal center is misleading. Saydon has confused
one
of the author's purposes with his doctrinal center.
THE
PERSEVERANCE IN "POSTAPOSTOLIC" FAITH
Still another thesis was proposed by
Grasser, who argued that
the
pi<stij
("faith") word group served as the index to the theology
of
Hebrews.37 The author of Hebrews was interpreting Christianity
33 As used in this
article the term "cultus" refers to the
worship apparatus of ancient
34 William G. Johnsson, "The Cultus of
Hebrews in Twentieth-Century Scholarship,"
Expository Times 89 (1978): 105.
35 William Manson,
The Epistle to the Hebrews (
1951),
pp. 6-7, 24.
36 Saydon, "The Master-Idea of the Epistle to the
Hebrews," pp. 19-26; cf. George
Salmon,
"The Keynote of the Epistle to the Hebrews," The Expositor, 2d Series 3
(1882):
81-93.
37 Erich M. R.
Grasser, Der Glaube im Hebreierbrief (
The Doctrinal
Center of the Book of Hebrews 299
for
Christians living in the "early catholic" era. Faith to these
Christians
was no longer personal faith directed toward Christ as in
the
Pauline era when there was a tension between the "already" but
"not
yet" of eschatology. To the author of the epistle faith was more
of
a generalized, depersonalized perseverance in the Christian com-
munity;
it was a moral quality or virtue. For Grasser the "already"
of
eschatology is played down, and the "not yet" has lost all sense of
imminency.
The following objections argue against
Grasser's view. (1) Of the
41
occurrences of the pi<stij word group, not
one falls outside the
epistle's
paraenetic sections; of the 32 occurrences of pi<stij alone,
only
6 occur outside chapter 11. This distribution hardly suggests
that
pi<stij is an index to
the author's theology. (2) The
depersonalized,
collective view of faith assumed by Grasser is over-
drawn.
The Christian's relationship to the high priest and the idea
of
heroic loyalty to the great pioneer of the faith suggest individu-
alistic elements to
faith. (3) Grasser dismissed too lightly the evi-
dence for a date for
the epistle that precedes A.D. 70. (4) The author
of
Hebrews did not do away with the "already" but "not yet"
tension
of
early Christian eschatology. He emphasized both the "already"
(e.g.,
present forgiveness through the New Covenant and a present
access
through a high priest who has fulfilled the Old Testament:
priestly
typology) and the imminent "not yet" (e.g., 9:28; 10:37).
THE
ACQUISITION OF GOD'S PROMISE
According to Buchanan the "basic
message" of Hebrews is "how
to
acquire the fulfillment of the promise God made with Abraham."38
Buchanan,
as much as any modern commentator, has drawn attention
to
the importance of the promise of the land to Abraham and all be-
lievers. Jesus has made
the fulfillment of the promises possible, and
Christians
are exhorted to be faithful "so that the precious reward
might
not be missed." As significant as this theme is, however, it does
not
seem to incorporate adequately the priestly motif of the author.
1965).
For a summary and evaluation of Grasser's work the present writer is indebted
to
the following: Graham Hughes, Hebrews and
Hermeneutics (
bridge
University Press, 1979), pp. 137-42, 193-96; D. B. Bronson, review of Der Glaube
im Hebraerbrief, by Erich M. R.
Grasser, in Journal of Biblical
Literature 84 (1965): 458-
59;
C. F. D. Moule, review of Der Glaube im Hebraerbrief, by Erich M. R. Grasser, in
Journal of
Theological Studies
17 (1966): 147-50.
38 George W.
Buchanan, Hebrews, The Anchor Bible (
promise
the center of its message of grace and hope in some 18 references (Heb. 6:17-
18)"
("The Old Promise and the New Covenant: Jeremiah 31:31-34," Journal of the
Evangelical
Theological Society 15
[Winter 19721: 13). For Kaiser the promise included
the
gospel, the spiritual seed, the blessings of the second coming of Christ, and
the
eternal
state.
300 Bibliotheca Sacra / July–September 1989
Conclusion
The expository sections of Hebrews
center on the doctrine of the
high
priesthood of Christ. The paraenetic sections, on the
other
hand,
are dominated by the pilgrimage motif.39 Two questions pre-
sent
themselves: Which of the two themes is central to the epistle
as
a whole? How are the two to be integrated? Attempting to
answer
the first question is almost futile. The two themes are not
vals; they belong
together. "The doctrine leads to the exhortations,
the
exhortations are based on the doctrine."40 Nevertheless the au-
thor's assertion in
8:1 leads to the conclusion that the high priest-
hood
of Jesus Christ is the controlling theme of the epistle.
As for the second question it has been
suggested41 that the two
themes
are easily integrated if it is remembered that God's pilgrim
people
are a "cultic [or priestly] community on the move." These
pilgrims
on their way to the promised rest are "sanctified,"
"perfected,"
and "purified." They have the priestly privilege of
access
to God's tabernacle through Jesus their High Priest. With
such
a High Priest they can and should persevere (cf. 2:18; 4:16).
In summary, the doctrines of Christ's
high priesthood and the
pilgrimage
of God's people dominate respectively the expository
and
paraenetic sections.42 The theme of Christ
as High Priest, how-
ever,
is central to the epistle as a whole.
39 Johnsson ("The Pilgrimage Motif in the Book of
Hebrews," pp. 249-50) has ob-
served
that man's "problem" is different in the expositions and paraeneses. In the for-
mer his problem is defilement which
bars him from access to God. In the latter it is
unfaithfulness
which results in a failure to enter the Promised Land.
40 N. A. Dahl,
"A New and
10:19-25,"
Interpretation 5 (1951): 401. The
subtle Scottish thinker "Rabbi" Duncan
once
quipped of Jonathan Edwards, "His doctrine was all application, and his appli-
cation was all
doctrine" (quoted by Alexander, A
Priest For Ever, p. 178).
41
Johnsson, "The
Pilgrimage Motif in the Book of Hebrews," p. 249.
42
"By
way of summary, it must be stressed that the high priestly christology
of He-
brews
does not serve speculative but paraenetical
interests" (The New International
Dictionary of
New Testament Theology, s.v. "Priest,"
by J. Baehr, 3:34). "And though
we
have preferred to keep the doctrinal exposition in the foreground, it is
readily ad-
mitted
that the writer's chief interest in his great theme is the effect it will have
upon
those to whom it is presented" (Milligan, The Theology of the Epistle to the He-
brews, p. 59).
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