| Who
was Melchizedek?
All we know of him is recorded in Genesis
14:18-20.
He is subsequently mentioned only once
in the Old Testament, in Psalms 110:4.
The typical significance of his history
is set forth in detail in the Epistle to the Hebrews,
in Hebrews 7:1-28.
The apostle there points out the superiority
of his priesthood to that of Aaron in these respects:
1. Even Abraham paid him tithes
2. he blessed Abraham
3. he is the type of a Priest who lives
for ever
4. Levi, yet unborn, paid him tithes
in the person of Abraham
5. The permanence of his priesthood
in Christ implied the the Levitical system
6. he was made priest not without an
oath
7. His priesthood can neither be transmitted
nor interrupted by death: "This man, because
he continueth ever, hath an unchangeable priesthood.”
The question as to who this mysterious
personage was has given rise to a great deal of modern
speculation.
It is an old tradition among the Jews
that he was Shem, the son of Noah, who may have survived
to this time.
Melchizedek was a Canaanite prince,
a worshipper of the true God, and in his peculiar
history and character an instructive type of our Lord,
the great High Priest (Heb 5:6,7 6:20).
One of the Amarna tablets is from Ebed-Tob,
king of Jerusalem, the successor of Melchizedek, in
which he claims the very attributes and dignity given
to Melchizedek in the Epistle to the Hebrews.
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