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- THE EPISTLE OF PAUL THE APOSTLE TO THE HEBREWS Chapter 7 - Verse 4
THE EPISTLE OF PAUL THE APOSTLE TO THE HEBREWS - Chapter 7 - Verse 4
Even the patriarch Abraham. One so great as he is acknowledged to have been. On the word patriarch, See Barnes "Ac 2:29".
It occurs only in Ac 2:29; 7:8,9, and in this place.
Gave the tenth of the spoils. See Barnes "Heb 7:2".
The argument here is, that Abraham acknowledged the superiority of Melchizedek by thus devoting the usual part of the spoils of war, or of what was possessed, to God by his hands, as the priest of the Most High. Instead of making a direct consecration by himself, he brought them to him as a minister of religion, and recognised in him one who had a higher official standing in the matter of religion than himself. The Greek word rendered spoils -- akroyinion -- means, literally, the top of the heap, from akron, top, and yin, heap. The Greeks were accustomed, after a battle, to collect the spoils together, and throw them into a pile, and then, before they were distributed, to take off a portion from the top, and devote it to the gods, Xen. Cyro. vii.6, 36; Herod. i.86, 90; viii.121, 122; Dion. Hal. ii. In like manner it was customary to place the harvest in a heap; and, as the first thing, to take off a portion from the top to consecrate as a thank-offering to God. The word then came to denote the first-fruits which were offered to God, and then the best of the spoils of battle. It has that sense here, and denotes the spoils or plunder which Abraham had taken of the discomfited kings.