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by Herbert W. Armstrong
Copyright © 1956, 1972
Ambassador College
All Rights Reserved Printed U.S.A.
FEW MYSTERIES
of the Bible have attracted more interest than the mystery of the
identity of Melchizedek. Who is he?
You will read in Hebrews 6:19-20 that Jesus Christ,
after His resurrection, is High Priest "after the order of
Melchizedek." The plainer English of the Moffatt translation words it:
". . with the rank of" that is, equal status with "Melchizedek."
Melchizedek Was
God's Priest
First, notice from both Old and New Testaments that the
man of mystery, Melchizedek, was a priest of the Most High God. Turn
now to the account in Genesis 14. During the war between a number of
ancient city-states in Canaan and Mesopotamia, Abraham's nephew Lot had
been captured. He and his family and goods were carted off.
One of their number escaped and brought the news to
Abraham, who armed 318 of his own servants and pursued the invaders to
what was later named Dan and beyond. Abraham rescued Lot and his family
and returned them safely to the Canaanite cities.
On Abraham's return a man of mystery bursts upon the
scene. Abraham was ministered to by Melchizedek.
Here is the account:
"And Melchizedek king of Salem brought out bread and
wine; he was priest of God Most High. And he [Melchizedek] blessed him
[Abraham] and said, 'Blessed be Abram by God Most High, maker of heaven
and earth; and blessed be God Most High, who has delivered your enemies
into your hand!' And Abram gave him [Melchizedek] a tenth of
everything" that is, a tithe of all, for a tithe means a tenth (Genesis
14:18-20, RSV).
Notice that Melchizedek was king of Salem. That is the
city of Jerusalem. "Salem" comes from the Hebrew word meaning "peace."
That would make Melchizedek the "King of Peace" (Heb. 7:2). The Hebrew
name Melchizedek itself means "King of Righteousness" (Heb. 7:2). The
same individual is mentioned in Psalm 110:4. Speaking prophetically of
Christ, David stated: "The Eternal hath sworn, and will not repent,
Thou art a priest forever after the order of Melchizedek." This verse
is quoted again in Hebrews 5:6, 10.
Before we turn to Hebrews for the identification of
Melchizedek, re-member that this mystery figure is a mystery only to
us. Abraham and the King of wicked Sodom knew exactly who he was. They
must have seen him before. He could not have been a Canaanite, for they
were steeped in pagan customs. And furthermore Canaan was a descendant
of Ham, whereas God basically chose the descendants of Shem to
accomplish His work.
Then who is the mystery man Melchizedek?
One other hint before we proceed. The land of Canaan
from ancient time, before the days of Moses, was known among the
Gentiles as "the divine land" the Holy land" the land of the place of
worship!" Why? Was there someone in the Holy Land who was divine, holy,
worthy of worship?
The Mystery Clears
Coming to Hebrews 7, we find Melchizedek identified:
"For this Melchizedek, king of Salem, priest of the most
high God, who met Abraham returning from the slaughter of the kings,
and blessed him; to whom also Abraham gave a tenth part of all; first
being by interpretation King of righteousness, and after that also King
of Salem, which is, King of peace" (Heb. 7:1-2).
Since God names individuals what they are, that, then is
what this man is.. "King of Righteousness."
Think of it! King of Righteousness.
Jesus Himself said: "There is none good but one, that
is, God" (Matt. 19:17). Human self-righteousness is, before God, as
filthy rags. None can be righteous but God or one made righteous by
God's power or Christ in a person! And certainly none but One of the
Godhead the divine Kingdom of God could be King of Righteousness. Such
an expression, applied to any but God, would be blasphemous. Why?
Righteousness is obedience to God's Law. Since God made
all laws (James 4:12), He is Supreme Ruler or King. He determines what
righteousness is. "All thy commandments are righteousness" (Psalm
119:172). When speaking of one of the points of that Law, Jesus placed
Himself superior to it. He is Lord of the Sabbath (Mark 2:28). No man
is Lord or King over God's Law. Only God could be! All human beings
have sinned and broken that Law of righteousness (Romans 3:23).
To continue with Hebrews 7. Note, too, that this man was
King of peace. "Salem" from which Jerusalem was named means "peace."
And remember, Jesus is called the Prince of peace! No human being could
be King of Peace. Men know not the way of peace. Read Romans 3:10 and
17: "There is none righteous, no, not one.... And the way of peace have
they not known."
Observe further: Melchizedek was "without mother,
without father, without descent," or as the Phillips translation
renders it: "He had no father or mother and no family tree." He was not
born as human beings are. He was without father and mother. This does
not mean that Melchizedek's records of birth were lost. Without such
records human priests could not serve (Ezra 2:62). But here Melchizedek
had no genealogy. He must not have been an ordinary mortal. He had no
descent or pedigree from another, but was self-existent. Notice Paul's
own inspired interpretation of this fact: "Having neither beginning of
days, nor end of life" (Heb. 7:3). Therefore He has always existed from
eternity! He was not even created, like angels. But He is now eternally
self-existing. And that is true only of GOD deity, not humanity!
Not the Father Nor
the Holy Spirit
Yet Melchizedek cannot be God the Father. He was the
"priest of that Most High God." Scripture says no man has ever seen the
Father (John 1:18, 5:37), but Abraham saw Melchizedek. He cannot be God
the Father, but rather, "made like unto the Son of God; abideth a
priest continually" (Heb. 7:3).
And there it is! In the days of Abraham, He was not the
Son of God, for He had not yet been born of the virgin Mary but He was
made like unto the Son of God in His manifestation to the ancients.
Notice again: Melchizedek, this scripture reveals,
abides that is, remains permanently, continually, a priest. God the
Father is not the Priest of God, but Christ the Son is! Yet, in the
days when the Apostle Paul lived and wrote, shortly after Jesus
ascended to heaven as High Priest, the scripture states that even then
Melchizedek "abideth "which means does now abide-"a priest
continually." The Moffatt translation states it: "continues to be
priest permanently" even while Jesus Christ is High Priest!
And notice that the order of Christ's Priesthood is
named after Melchizedek. It is the High Priest's name that is placed
upon an order just as Aaron's name was upon the Aaronic priesthood.
Thus Melchizedek was then High Priest, in Paul's day, and even now, and
He will rule forever! And at the same time Christ was, is today, and
shall be forever High Priest!
Are there two High Priests'? No! Impossible! The
conclusion is inescapable. Contrary to many cherished man-thought-out
ideas, Melchizedek and Christ are one and the same! Some people have
stumbled on the statement that Melchizedek has no "end of life." They
contend that since Christ died, He had an end of life! If that be true
then Christ is still dead! But Christ is not dead. He is alive. It was
not possible for Christ to be held by death (Acts 2:24). Melchizedek
would never have fulfilled His office of High Priest if He had not died
for the sins of the people and risen again. It is the function of the
High Priest to lead the way to salvation.
Indeed, Jesus Christ is the author and finisher of our
salvation (Heb. 5:9; 12:2). He is "called of God an high priest after
the order of Melchizedec" (Heb. 5:10).
And no wonder. Melchizedek and Christ are one and the
same Per-son!
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