SIR ROBERT ANDERSON
Secret Service
Theologian
TYPES IN HEBREWS
APPENDIX 2
THE DOCTRINE OF THE
BLOOD
THAT strange phase of teaching about "the blood of
Christ," of which Bengel is the most distinguished of modern exponents, cannot
be ignored in studying Hebrews. His treatise on this subject on Hebrews 12 in
the "Gnomon of the New Testament" is painful reading to most of us. He argues
that "not even a drop" of the Saviours blood remained in His body: and
that His blood after being shed was free from all corruption (Peter 1:18, 19).
And among his further theses are the following: - "It cannot be affirmed that
the blood which was. shed was again put into the veins of the Lords
body." "At the time of the Ascension the blood separated from the body was
carried into heaven." And "the blood of Jesus Christ always remains blood
shed." Under this thesis he says: "The condition of the blood shed is
perpetual. Jesus Himself is in heaven, and His body is also there; so too is
His blood in heaven; but His blood is not now in His body." This material blood
was sprinkled upon the mercy-seat in heaven; and if I understand Bengel aright,
the sprinkling is repeated from time to time, as in the case of the Leviticus
type.
To understand Christian truth, I once again repeat, we need to know
the language in which it has been revealed. And that language is supplied by
the divine religion of Old Testament typology. Bengels appeal, therefore,
to Patristic authority counts for nothing; for the Fathers neglected the study
of that language, and their "blood" theology was leavened by the doctrines and
practices of the cults of classic paganism (See earlier in this work). The
pagan doctrine of washing in blood, so abhorrent to Judaism and so utterly
foreign to Christianity,1 was the counterpart of the pagan figment that water
could wash the soul from sin. In Scripture washing is always and only with
water. And when used in a doctrinal sense the figure means clearing ourselves
in a practical way from evil. When, ex. gr., Ananias said to Paul, "Wash away
thy sins," he was using a figure which any Jew would understand: "Arise and be
baptized, and turn away from your past evil life." And the Apostles words
to the Corinthians, "You washed yourselves" (1 Corinthians 6:11) had precisely
the same meaning. But "the water of purification" of Numbers 19 owed its
typical efficacy to having flowed over the ashes of the sin-offering; and when
sprinkled on the sinner it renewed to him the benefits of the sacrifice. And
the sprinkling of the blood is to be interpreted in the same way. The Israelite
thus obtained the benefits of a sacrifice accomplished.
If Christ had
re-entered heaven in virtue of His Deity, He must have stood apart from His
people. But having entered there in virtue of His blood - that is, of the death
by which He put away sin - He is there by a title that He can share with His
people. Therefore is it that He is the mercy-seat - the meeting-place between
God and men. Twice only does this word occur in the New Testament: in Hebrews
9:5 it refers to the typical "propitiatory," and in Romans 3:25 to Christ
Himself, the antitype. To suppose, as Bengels theory implies, that there
is a coffer of some sort in heaven on which Christ sprinkles His material
blood, is a vagary of exegesis which is as deplorable as it is amazing.
The
truth or error of that exegesis is easily tested. "Almost all things are by the
law purged with blood": that is, by having sacrificial blood sprinkled upon
them. Now this blood-sprinkling must have the same significance in every case.
Nothing that we deem holy can be sanctified save by the reality - whatever it
be - intended by that figure. But let us confine ourselves here to the two
great types above mentioned. We are redeemed by the reality typified by the
sprinkled blood of the paschal lamb, and sanctified by the sprinkled blood of
the covenant sacrifice (Exodus 12 and 24). Does this mean that "the material
blood of Christ is sprinkled upon us sinful men?" The question has only to be
stated to expose its error. We are redeemed and sanctified when we receive by
faith in Christ the "merits" of His death for us.
"The blood is all one
with the life" (Leviticus 17:14, R.V.). Blood shed, therefore, typifies life
laid down and lost. In plain words "blood" is a figurative expression
symbolizing death. But if, as Bengel holds, "blood" is to be taken literally in
Hebrews 13-20, it must be so construed also in 10:19. And if the material blood
of Christ be meant in 9:12, it must have the same meaning in verse 14. That
passage is specially important. The words of verse 12 are, "Neither by the
blood of goats and calves, but by His own blood, He entered in once for all
into the holy place, having obtained eternal redemption." It is not the Priest
going in to make atonement - to finish an unfinished work - but the Mediator
going in on the ground of a work finished and complete. It has been overlooked
that the types of Leviticus 16 Exodus 24 are blended in verse 12, and that the
prominence is given, not to the sin-offering, but to the "calves and goats"
(See verse 19) of the covenant sacrifice (See earlier in this work). When Moses
went up to God in Exodus 24, he entered the Divine presence by the blood, as
really as Aaron did when he passed within the veil. For no other way of
approach is possible.
Appendix 3
Literature | Photos | Links | Home