- Home
- Books
- Albert Barnes
- Barnes New Testament Notes
- THE EPISTLE OF PAUL THE APOSTLE TO THE HEBREWS Chapter 12 - Verse 18
THE EPISTLE OF PAUL THE APOSTLE TO THE HEBREWS - Chapter 12 - Verse 18
The mount that might be touched. Mount Sinai. The meaning here is, that that mountain was palpable, material, touchable -- in contradistinction from the Mount Zion to which the church had now come, which is above the reach of the external senses, Heb 12:22. The apostle does not mean that it was permitted to the Israelites to touch Mount Sinai -- for this was strictly forbidden, Ex 19:12; but he evidently alludes to that prohibition, and means to say that a command forbidding them to "touch" the mountain, implied that it was a material or palpable object. The sense of the passage is, that every circumstance that occurred there was fitted to fill the soul with terror. Everything accompanying the giving of the law, the setting of bounds around the mountain which they might not pass, and the darkness and tempest on the mountain itself, was adapted to overawe the soul. The phrase, "the touchable mountain" -- if such a phrase is proper -- would express the meaning of the apostle here. The "Mount Zion" to which the church now has come, is of a different character. It is not thus visible and palpable. It is not enveloped in smoke and flame, and the thunders of the Almighty do not roll and re-echo among its lofty peaks as at Horeb; yet it presents stronger motives to perseverance in the service of God.
And that burned with fire. Ex 19:18. Comp. De 4:11; 33:2.
Nor unto blackness, and darkness, and tempest. See Ex 19:16.
{*} "voice" "sound" {a} "which voice" Ex 20:18,19