Here is what the Hebrew writer has to say about Melchizedek. Part one
By oldhermit
I. Jesus, a High Priest Like Melchizedek, 6:20-8:6.
A. Who was Melchizedek?
There have been many speculations as to who exactly this Melchizedek was. The speculations range for the possible to the absurd. Here is a list of some of the speculations that have been offered by a number of sources. Some have suggested:
1. He was the pre-incarnate Christ. This is a popular idea though not a very good one.
2. He was the Holy Spirit.
3. He was an angel.
4. He was Enoch. By the time Abraham meets Melchizedek, Enoch had been gone for more than a thousand years.
5. He was Shem, the son of Noah. This is a possibility.
6. He was an extra-ordinary emanation of deity.
The only one of these speculation that bears any kind of merit is that he may have possibly been Shem the son of Noah. This is physically possible for Shem and Abraham are contemporaries. In fact, Shem did not die until after Isaac married. As far as any of the rest of the speculations as to the manner of being Melchizedek was, the Hebrew writer leaves no room for speculation. He was a man.
B. Melchizedek is not a proper name but a title. The ancient kings of pre-Israel Jerusalem were called the Tsedeks. Melchizedek is from Meleck meaning King and Tsedek meaning righteousness. Thus, king of righteousness. He was the King of Salem meaning peace. This Salem would later be called Jerusalem meaning foundation of peace. In Joshua 10:1 we encounter another Tsedek of Salem called Adoni-Tsedek meaning lord of righteousness. The difference between these to men is the deterioration of the worship from the time of Melch-Tsedek to Adoni-Tsedek.
C. The nature of Melchizedek – He was a man. “Now consider how great this man was....” The word man in not represented in the text either by ἄνθρωπος nor ἀνήρ. It is provided by the gender of the pronoun οὗτος which is nominative masculine, singular for "this one," thus, this man.
1. The fact that he is a High Priest of God demands that he is of the human race. In 5:1 we learn that every High Priest is taken from among men.
2. As a man, he had a genealogy. “Whose genealogy was not derived from them (the Levites).” This is written in the possessive which says that he had a genealogy but, that it was a genealogy that was not traced from the priestly tribe of Levi.
II. Melchizedek is Both King and Priest, 1-2.
Melchizedek is only one of many shadows of Christ in the Old Testament. He is the example of how the function of both offices can are fulfilled in one man. The two offices of king and priest are manifestly contrary to one another in as much as the administration of the one stands in stark opposition to the other. As king, he is the administrator of justice to the sinner. As priest, he is the administrator of mercy to the sinner. Mercy cannot satisfy the demands of justice for the sinner goes unpunished. On the other hand, when justice is administered to the sinner, there is a complete absence of mercy because the penalty for sin is death. So, how can both offices be effected in one man to render both justice and mercy at the same time?
A. As King, he renders the sentence of death to the sinner. “The person who sins, will die,” Ezekiel 18:20. Because the demand for justice must be met in order for God's holiness to be satisfied, someone must die for sin. It is God's justice that preserves his holiness so for God to allow sin to go unpunished is a violation of his nature.
B. As High Priest, he must supply mercy to the sinner for this is the function of the office. The sinner is guilty and it is imperative that the sin be punished but, as Priest, he must pardon the offender and allow him to go unpunished, 4:14-16. How then does he both demand justice and extend mercy to the sinner?
Jesus himself pays the penalty for all sin for all time for all men. Calvary is the satisfaction of God to extradite his justice on the sins of humanity. Thus, as High Priest, he is able to pardon those who will appropriate to themselves the blood of atonement, 2Thessalonians 1:8-9.
III. A High Priest Without Genealogy, 3.
A. “Without father, mother, or genealogy” - Like Jesus, Melchizedek does not receive his priesthood from a predecessor. In the Levitical system, the high priest was descended only through the line of Aaron.7, 1Chronicles 6:50-52 but, the office of the high priest was not passed on to Melchizedek by his father, nor did he in turn pass it on to his heir. In other words, his is a one-man-forever-priesthood.
B. “Having neither beginning of days nor end of life.” In this there are three possibilities.
1. That this refers to the person of Melchizedek the man. Some argue from this that Melchizedek was not a man but some supernatural being who was neither born of human parents not had a beginning or end of life. But, as the text says, he was a man and as such, he had a past, 6. Some view this with the preceding statement as simply a Hebraism which stresses the obscurity of his genealogy and posterity. Perhaps.
2. That this refers not to the man himself but to his priesthood. This priesthood is unlike that of the Levitical system. We can look back at Sinai and see where the Levitical priesthood had its beginning of days with the anointing of Aaron and his sons, Exodus 28:1ff. We can then look forward from there to the cross and see where this priesthood saw its end of life. Now, a new and greater covenant is inaugurated in Jesus “according to a the power of an endless life.” But, this may not apply to just the priesthood apart from the man because this is a one man priesthood and apart from the man there is no priesthood.
3. That this refers to the man as a high priest. As a man he had a beginning of days and an end of life. As high priest, he has neither but remains a priest continually. This contrasts the priests of the Levitical system whose “beginning of days” began at the age of twenty-five when they began to serve as priests. They reached their “end of life” at the age of fifty when they completed their appointed time of priestly service, Numbers 8:24-25.
C. “But made like the Son of God.” Here, the order is reversed. In 6:20, Christ is presented as a High Priest after the order of Melchizedek. Now, Melchizedek is said to be a High Priest who was made like the Son of God. Like everything else that is type, Melchizedek is the shadow of the reality. This is like the building of the tabernacle in Exodus 25:40 being built according to the “pattern shown to you on the mountain.” Everything that is shadow must be patterned according to the substance it represents. The substance ALWAYS precedes the type. It must reflect the reality. Jesus is not a type of himself. The reality can never serve as the representation or shadow.
D. He “remains a priest continually.” His priesthood is uninterrupted even by death. He leaves his office to no one else. Although Melchizedek has been dead for many centuries, he is still the central figure in the one man forever priesthood. Like the Son of God, he carries his priest beyond the grave. His priesthood, in contrast to that of the Levites is not bound by the physical - “not according to the law of fleshly commandment,” 15-16. This fleshly commandment says that the Levitical priest must end his days of service at the age of 50. The High Priest ended his days of service at his death. In contrast, the priesthood of Melchizedek is greater. He continues as the High Priest of his priesthood even though he is dead, 8. Jesus cannot occupy two existing priestly offices. Since both high priests exist forever what would this have to say about the theory that Jesus was Melchizedek?
IV. The Greatness of Melchizedek, 1-10.
A. As priest, Melchizedek was greater than the patriarch Abraham, 1-4. In Genesis 14, Abraham had just finished demonstrating his own greatness among men in the defeat of Chedolaomer and the three kings who were with him. No other armies had been able to stand against this king of Elam yet, Abraham destroyed him using 318 trained servants and the accompaniment of the combined forces of Mamre, Eschol, and Aner – the Amorite brothers. The fact that Melchizedek came out to meet Abraham after his victory bringing bread and wine itself speaks of Abraham's greatness. Even Melchizedek, who is the greater, pays honor to the patriarch. But, as verse 7 says, "the lesser is blessed by the greater." The fact of Melchizedek's greatness in demonstrated in two ways.
1. Abraham, under no legal obligation to do so, payed tithes to Melchizedek giving him one tent of the Abraham's share of the spoils. Melchizedek does not come out for the purpose of collecting anything from Abraham but to honor and bless him. Abraham, of his own accord, gives one tenth to Melchizedek.
2. Melchizedek bless Abraham, Genesis 14:19-20.
a. Thanks, praise, and congratulations were given to Abraham for his victory. In this, Melchizedek recognized Abraham as belonging to the Most High God.
b. Thanks, praise, and glorification were also given to God as the causative agent of the victory.
* God is the Most High Preeminent one.
* God is the possessor of heaven and earth.
* God is the deliver of the enemy.
B. As priest, Melchizedek is greater than Levi, 5-10.
1. The Levites had a legal right to receive tithes. This was the priests portion. This was needed for the support of the priests and the upkeep of the temple. Out of this also the priests provided the blood sacrifice for the poorest among the people.
2. Yet through Abraham, Levi is represented as having paid tithes himself to Melchizedek.