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NOTES for Heb 13:1-16

Let brotherly love continue.
Be not forgetful to entertain strangers: for thereby some have entertained angels unawares.
Remember them that are in bonds, as bound with them; and them which suffer adversity, as being yourselves also in the body.
Marriage is honourable in all, and the bed undefiled: but whoremongers and adulterers God will judge.
Let your conversation be without covetousness; and be content with such things as ye have: for he hath said, I will never leave thee, nor forsake thee.
So that we may boldly say, The Lord is my helper, and I will not fear what man shall do unto me.
Remember them which have the rule over you, who have spoken unto you the word of God: whose faith follow, considering the end of their conversation.
Jesus Christ the same yesterday, and to day, and for ever.
Be not carried about with divers and strange doctrines. For it is a good thing that the heart be established with grace; not with meats, which have not profited them that have been occupied therein.
10 We have an altar, whereof they have no right to eat which serve the tabernacle.
11 For the bodies of those beasts, whose blood is brought into the sanctuary by the high priest for sin, are burned without the camp.
12 Wherefore Jesus also, that he might sanctify the people with his own blood, suffered without the gate.
13 Let us go forth therefore unto him without the camp, bearing his reproach.
14 For here have we no continuing city, but we seek one to come.
15 By him therefore let us offer the sacrifice of praise to God continually, that is, the fruit of our lips giving thanks to his name.
16 But to do good and to communicate forget not: for with such sacrifices God is well pleased.
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As if responding to the events of A.D. 70, the author of the letter speaks of the altar to which the "servants of the tabernacle," that is, representatives of the traditional Levitical priesthood, have no relation (v. 10). He mentions the practice of Yahwist sacrifices, according to which the meat of the purification sacrifice (except for the part burned on the altar and the part allotted to the priests) was burned away from the place of sacrifice (Leviticus, ch. 4). In the same way, according to him, after the defeat of Jerusalem and the Temple all Christians found themselves "outside the camp," which, however, should not trouble them: after all, Jesus Himself shed His blood for the salvation of the faithful in the same place, "outside the camp," beyond the walls of Jerusalem (vv. 11-14). Such is the essence of the purification sacrifice: it cleanses a person while at the same time depriving him of the sacrificial meal. So it happened with the people of God: after the defeat of the Temple, they were deprived of the sacrificial meal not for no reason, but while receiving the possibility of being cleansed by the blood which, for those who accepted Christ's sacrifice, became the blood of the new, messianic covenant.

For those who rejected the sacrifice, the catastrophe was only a catastrophe, without hope and without a way out. For the Christians who accepted it, it gave hope that the end of the earthly Jerusalem was not yet the end of the history of the people of God, that the history of the Kingdom continues, and that over the ruins of the earthly Jerusalem the outlines of another Jerusalem, the heavenly Jerusalem descending to earth, would soon appear. And while awaiting that day, the day of the triumph of the Kingdom and the Savior's return, the author of the letter calls his fellow believers not to betray the norms and foundations of Christian life that they had learned from the first generation of Christians (vv. 1-6). This especially concerns those foundations of spiritual life that the author's contemporaries learned from their mentors: during a spiritual crisis, "teachers" inevitably had to appear, and evidently really did appear, who wanted to revise them and adapt them to the spirit of the age. That is why, as can be seen, the author calls his readers not to forget the mentors who once helped them set out on the path leading to the Kingdom (v. 7). Indeed, Christ has not changed, just as the Kingdom itself has not changed (v. 8). And the main task of those walking in troubled times was not to turn aside from the path on which they had once set out.

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