Superior to Angels, Superior to Moses
The first major movement of Hebrews (chapters 1–4) establishes a two-part comparison. The Son is superior to the angels who mediated the Mosaic law (2:2), and he is superior to Moses himself. The argument from Scripture is dense. Psalm 2:7 ("You are my Son"), 2 Samuel 7:14 ("I will be to him a father"), and Psalm 110:1 ("Sit at my right hand") are marshaled to show that no angel was ever addressed this way. As William Lane observes, the catena of Old Testament texts in chapter 1 is not proof-texting but a carefully constructed demonstration that the entire prophetic tradition was moving toward this person (Hebrews, WBC, 1991). When the author turns to Moses, he does not diminish him — Moses was "faithful in all God's house" (3:2) — but the comparison clarifies: Moses was faithful as a servant, Christ as a Son over his own house.
The warning that interrupts this section (3:7–4:13) is sobering. The generation that heard God at Sinai fell in the wilderness because of unbelief. Kadesh Barnea, where Israel refused to enter the land and turned back, stands as a permanent theological monument: "they were unable to enter because of unbelief" (3:19). The author applies this directly to his readers: "Let us therefore strive to enter that rest, so that no one may fall by the same sort of disobedience" (4:11). Hearing without trusting is not neutral. F.F. Bruce notes that the "rest" language draws on Psalm 95 and reframes Canaan as a type of something greater — the eschatological rest that remains for the people of God (The Epistle to the Hebrews, NICNT, 1990).
We find the warning at Kadesh Barnea haunting in the best way. These were people who had witnessed the plagues of Egypt, the crossing of the Red Sea, the pillar of fire. They stood at the edge of the promised land. And they turned back because they were afraid. The letter is essentially saying: don't be those people. The greater revelation brings greater accountability.
The High Priest After the Order of Melchizedek
The theological heart of Hebrews is its sustained treatment of Christ as archiereus — high priest. The claim is audacious: Jesus, who was not a Levite and did not serve in the Jerusalem temple, is the true and final high priest. The argument moves through two phases. First, Hebrews 4:14–7:28 establishes his qualifications. He can sympathize with weakness because he was tempted in every way as we are, yet without sin (4:15). He was appointed by God, not self-appointed. And he holds his priesthood according to the order of Melchizedek.
Melchizedek is one of the strangest figures in the Bible — a priest-king who appears in Genesis 14 when Abraham returns from battle, receives a tithe from him, and blesses him. He has no genealogy. No recorded birth or death. He is simply there, fully formed, and then gone. The author of Hebrews describes him as "without father, without mother, without genealogy, having neither beginning of days nor end of life, but resembling the Son of God he continues a priest forever" (7:3). This is not saying Melchizedek literally had no parents — it's saying the record of Scripture presents him as if he didn't, and that typological silence is itself the point: a priest whose priesthood is not bounded by birth and death.
Craig Koester observes that the author reads this not as a curiosity of ancient history but as exegetical evidence embedded in the text of Scripture that God always intended a priesthood of a different, superior order (Hebrews, AB, 2001). The Levitical priests were many because they died; Christ "holds his priesthood permanently, because he continues forever" (7:24). Because Abraham paid tithes to Melchizedek, and because Levi was "in the loins of Abraham," the Levitical priesthood itself implicitly acknowledged its own inferiority. The argument is intricate, but the conclusion is clear: Christ's priesthood was always the destination the old order was pointing toward.
We keep coming back to Melchizedek — this mysterious figure who appears once in Genesis, is referenced in a single Psalm, and then suddenly becomes the lens through which the author of Hebrews reads the entire Levitical system. The Bible is doing something in that quiet Genesis passage that won't become visible for centuries. That's worth sitting with — the idea that God plants things in Scripture that will only be understood much later.
The New Covenant and the One Sacrifice
Chapters 8–10 bring the argument to its climax. The author quotes Jeremiah 31 at length — "I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel" — and concludes: "In speaking of a new covenant, he makes the first one obsolete. And what is becoming obsolete and growing old is ready to vanish away" (8:13). The old covenant was not fraudulent; it was typological. The tabernacle, the priesthood, the sacrifices — all were "a shadow of the good things to come" (10:1). The blood of bulls and goats could never actually take away sins. It could cover them ceremonially; it could point forward; but "it is impossible for the blood of bulls and goats to take away sins" (10:4). "Without the shedding of blood there is no forgiveness of sins" (9:22) — that principle was baked into the whole Levitical system from the beginning. The question the system itself raised, but could not answer, was: whose blood is sufficient?
Christ enters the true heavenly tabernacle — the diathēkē is ratified not with animal blood but with his own. The word apax (once for all) rings through these chapters like a bell: he offered himself once, his sacrifice is unrepeatable because it is permanently effective. "It is appointed for man to die once, and after that comes judgment" (9:27) — and Christ, in dying once, has met that appointment on behalf of those who are his. The response called for is bold approach: "Let us draw near with a true heart in full assurance of faith" (10:22). The Greek parrhēsia (confidence, boldness) is the posture of those who know the veil has been torn. Teleiōsis — completion, perfection — has been achieved. The Son has done what no priest or sacrifice could do.
The word apax — once for all — keeps stopping us. The sacrifices in the temple had to be repeated, day after day, year after year, the same rituals. That repetition was itself evidence that nothing had been finally resolved. But Christ's offering doesn't need to be repeated. It was enough, the first time and permanently. That's not just a theological point about ritual — it's a statement about the nature of what happened at the cross. One act. Complete. Sufficient. Unrepeatable.
Last updated: March 3, 2026.
Scripture quotations are from the ESV® Bible (The Holy Bible, English Standard Version®), © 2001 by Crossway, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers.