Alastair's Adversaria - Eight Lessons on the Psalms from the Book of Hebrews
Episode Date: June 30, 2025The following was published on the Theopolis website: https://theopolisinstitute.com/eight-lessons-on-the-psalms-from-the-book-of-hebrews/. Follow my Substack, the Anchored Argosy at https://argosy.s...ubstack.com/. See my latest podcasts at https://adversariapodcast.com/. If you have enjoyed my videos and podcasts, please tell your friends. If you are interested in supporting my videos and podcasts and my research more generally, please consider supporting my work on Patreon (www.patreon.com/zugzwanged), using my PayPal account (bit.ly/2RLaUcB), or by buying books for my research on Amazon (www.amazon.co.uk/hz/wishlist/ls/3…3O?ref_=wl_share). You can also listen to the audio of these episodes on iTunes: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/alastairs-adversaria/id1416351035.
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The following reflection is entitled Eight Lessons on the Psalms from the Book of Hebrews.
It was formerly published on the Anchored Agassi and on the Theopolis website.
No book is more quoted in Hebrews than the Psalter.
There are quotations and allusions to Psalms on virtually every page,
and many of the quotations are not passing references, but closely considered and repeatedly cited,
as the author of Hebrews develops his central arguments.
Much of Hebrews is exposition of the Psalms, not mere scattered illusion or citation.
Key passages from the Psalms for Hebrews include Psalm 2 verse 7.
I will tell of the decree, the Lord said to me,
You are my son, today I have begotten you.
This text is cited in both Hebrews 1 verse 5 and 5 verse 5,
which related to Christ's exaltation and appointment to his royal priestly office.
Psalm 102, verses 25 to 27, cited in Hebrews chapter 1,
verses 10 to 12, introduces an important theme for the book,
the expected eschatological reordering of all things,
a theme that becomes especially prominent in chapter 12.
Within it we might also hear an anticipation of Hebrews chapter 13 verse 8,
Jesus Christ is the same yesterday and today and forever.
Psalm 102, verse 2527 reads as follows,
Of old you laid the foundation of the earth,
and the heavens are the work of your hands.
They will perish, but you will remain.
They will all wear out like a garment.
You will change them like a robe, and they will pass away,
but you are the same, and your years have no end.
Two texts from Psalm 110, verses 1 and 4,
are given attention in the argument of Hebrew.
verse 1 reads,
The Lord said to my Lord, sit at my right hand until I make your enemies your footstool.
And verse 4 reads, The Lord has sworn and will not change his mind.
You are a priest forever after the order of Melchizedek.
The second text, which speaks of the enduring priesthood of Melchizedek,
provides the scriptural backdrop for the considerations of chapter 5 verses 6 to 10,
and chapter 6 verse 13 to chapter 7 verse 28.
psalm eight verses four to six comes to the foreground in chapter two verses five to nine where hebrews relates it to christ's incarnation and exaltation
what is man that you are mindful of him and the son of man that you care for him yet you have made him a little lower than the heavenly beings and crowned him with glory and honour you have given him dominion over the works of your hands you have put all things under his feet
hebrews riffs upon psalm ninety five verses seven to eleven in chapter three verse seven to chapter four verse eleven to-day if you hear his voice do not harden your hearts as at meribah as on the day at massa in the wilderness
when your fathers put me to the test and put me to the proof though they had seen my work for forty years i loathed that generation and said they are a people who go astray in their heart and they have not known my ways
therefore i swore in my wrath they shall not enter my rest psalm forty verses six and seven is deployed in a surprising way in chapter ten verse five to fourteen where it is related to christ's perfect self-offering
in sacrifice and offering you have not delighted but you have given me an open ear burnt offering and sin offering you have not required then i said behold i have come in the scroll of the book it has written of me
Alongside these more extensive uses of the Psalms are several other citations and allusions.
For instance, Psalm 22 verse 22 is cited in chapter 2 verses 11 and 12, Psalm 45 versus 6 and 7 in chapter 1,
verse 8 and 9, and Psalm 118 verse 6 in chapter 13 verse 6.
Even these, however, are not merely passing references, but provide indications of the remarkable way
that the author of Hebrews reads the Psalms.
There is no better way to learn how to read the scriptures
than by following the scripture's own example.
We can learn typological and Christological reading
of the Old Testament scriptures
from passages such as 1 Corinthians chapter 10,
extending such a pattern of reading to texts
beyond those referenced by Paul in that passage.
The books of John and Revelation offer an allegorical reading
of the Song of Songs,
and the book of Hebrews teaches us how to read the Psalms
in the light of Christ.
A detailed treatment of the reading of the Psalms in the book of Hebrews
would take longer than I have here.
Daniel Stevens' recent book, Songs of the Sun,
reading the Psalms with the author of Hebrews,
fleshes out much of this.
Rather than handling each text individually,
I want to make a few general points
about how Hebrews teaches us to read the Psalms.
First, the Psalms are fulfilled in Christ.
Hebrews presents Christ as the one in whom the Psalm.
Psalms are fulfilled. The Salter opens with a pair of Psalms that establish core themes of the book.
Several New Testament authors reference or allude to Psalm 2 relating it to Christ's exaltation.
In Acts chapter 4 verses 24 to 28, the apostles present the gathering of the rulers and the crowds
against Jesus in the crucifixion as the fulfillment of Psalm 2 verses 1 and 2.
And when they heard it, they lifted their voices together to God and said,
sovereign lord who made the heaven and the earth and the sea and everything in them who threw the mouth of our father david your servant said by the holy spirit why did the gentiles rage and the people's plot in vain the kings of the earth set themselves and the rulers were gathered together against the lord and against his anointed
for truly in this city there were gathered together against your holy servant jesus whom you anointed both herod and pontius pilate along with the gentiles and the peoples of israel to do whatever your hand and your plan had predestined to take place
hebrews chapter one verse five and five verse five both relates psalm two verse seven to the exaltation of christ much as acts chapter thirteen verse thirty three sees its fulfilment in the resurrection
There are various allusions to Psalm 2 in the Book of Revelation, of course,
most notably in passages such as chapter 2 verses 26 and 27,
chapter 12 verse 5, and 19 verse 15,
which present Christ as the divinely appointed Messiah in Psalm 2,
who rules with the rod of iron.
That the author of Hebrews quotes several verses of various Psalms
suggests that he is not merely cherry-picking
de-contextualized scriptures that can be applied to Jesus,
but that a more consistent reading of the book of Psalms in the light of Christ
undergirds his use of specific verses and passages.
For instance, both verses 1 and 4 of Psalm 110 are cited in different parts of Hebrews,
chapter 1 verse 13 and 5 verse 6.
Likewise, the extensive use of Psalms like Psalm 110 in various parts of the New Testament
suggests that such readings were not idiosyncratic but common in the early church.
The Christological reading of the Psalms in Hebrews also includes a passage like Psalm 8 verses 4 to 6,
which is generally read as referring to humanity more broadly.
Hebrews, however, referencing this text in chapter 2 verses 5 to 8, treats the passage as relating to Christ most fully.
I think it is helpful here to recall that Psalm 8 is a Psalm of David and that, in being raised to the throne,
David is a representative man enjoying something of the dominion to which man was appointed in Genesis
1, verse 26 to 28. This makes the move to Jesus as the representative man, in whom humanity's destiny
is realised, an entirely natural one. Second, Christ is addressed in the Psalms. In Matthew chapter 22
verses 41 to 45, Jesus argued with the Pharisees from Psalm 110 verse 1, arguing that David's son could not have been the figure addressed in the opening verse of the Psalm, as David called him Lord.
Hebrews approaches the Psalms in a similar manner, attentive to the different implied speakers of its words and those being addressed.
Jesus is the one of whom Psalm 110 verse 1 is spoken, sit at my right hand until I make your enemies your footstom.
Hebrews chapter 1 verse 13. Hebrews makes similar points about other texts from the Psalms,
especially in the opening chapter. In that opening chapter, we see Jesus being addressed in Psalm 2
verse 7, in verse 5, Psalm 45 versus 6 and 7 in verses 8 and 9, and Psalm 102 verses 25 to 27 in verses 10 to 12.
The author of Hebrews traces a line of biblical reflection here. He moves from the
exaltation of the sun, Psalm 2 verse 7, to the declaration of his sonship in the words of the
Davidic covenant, but as the archetype of which David's throne was the ectype, 2 Samuel chapter 7
14, to the worship due to him by the angels, Giseronomy chapter 32 verse 43, to the enduring
and superior character of his throne from Psalm 45, with its themes of royal marriage and
enthronement. Psalm 102
verses 25 to 27
follows this line of biblical
reflection, perhaps connected to the
preceding reference from Psalm 45
by the unreferenced association
of Psalm 102 verse 12
with chapter 45
verse 6, but you, O Lord,
are enthroned forever. Perhaps
he also sees, as James Bejohn
has noted, a significant shift
from Lord to God in Psalm
102 verse 24,
suggesting a change in speaker or
As the themes introduced by Psalm 102's treatment of the transformation of the heavens and the earth
are taken up again in Chapter 12, the use of the quotation from Psalm 102 in Hebrews 1 frames the
book's eschatological themes by the supremacy and unchanging character of Christ. Jesus Christ is the same
yesterday and today and forever. Chapter 13, verse 8. Third, Christ is the chief speaker of the Salter.
In Hebrews chapter 10 verses 5 to 7, the author of Hebrews places the words of Psalm 40 verses 6 and 7 upon the lips of Christ as he came into the world.
The psalmist's words are read as applying chiefly to Christ's incarnation.
In singing the Psalms, we borrow the words of psalmist, chiefly David, to speak of our own experiences.
Especially when singing the Psalms of David, the identity of the psalmist might itself be important for our singing of them.
as the anointed king the destiny of the people is to be realized in david and his seed david's own personal struggles are paradigmatic for others and importantly david's words anticipate and strain towards their full realization in his greater son
The New Testament presents the words of the Psalms as principally being the words of Christ.
They are inspired by the spirit of Christ.
As David speaks of his experience, by the spirit he prophetically anticipates Christ.
David's representative character is eclipsed by the far more representative character of Christ,
and Jesus is the paradigmatic righteous suffering king that David foreshadows.
The Psalter begins with the portrayal of the righteous man.
who meditates upon God's Lord day and night,
and with the faithful king that the Lord has established over the nations on Zion's Hill.
Both these figures are anticipated in David,
the sweet psalmist of Israel, yet only fully realized in Christ.
Psalm 40 is a great example of the hermeneutic that this implies in action.
The figure of the faithful suffering king is ultimately seen in Christ's taking of flesh and his self-offering.
Fourth, Christ is the ground and the paradigm of the new covenant.
The Old Testament scriptures anticipated the time when the resistance of the people's hearts to the law of God would be overcome, as the Lord would place his law within their hearts.
We see this foretold in places like Deuteronomy chapter 30 verse 6, Jeremiah chapter 31 verse 33, Ezekiel chapter 11 versus 19 and 20, and chapter 36 and 20.
When reading the Psalms, we have an anticipation of this new covenant reality in the figure of the Psalmist,
who meditates upon and delights in the law of God and treasures it in his heart.
His delight is in the law of the Lord, and on his law he meditates day and night, Psalm 1, verse 2.
The mouth of the righteous utters wisdom, and his tongue speaks justice.
The law of his God is in his heart, his steps do not slip.
37 verses 30 and 31 with my whole heart i seek you let me not wander from your commandments i have stored up your word in my heart that i might not sin against you psalm 119 verses 10 and 11
the law of the lord is perfect reviving the soul the testimony of the lord is sure making wise the simple the precepts of the lord are right rejoicing the heart the commandment of the lord is pure
enlightening the eyes, the fear of the Lord is clean, enduring forever.
The rules of the Lord are true and righteous altogether.
More to be desired are they than gold, even much fine gold.
Sweater also than honey and drippings of the honeycomb.
Psalm 19, verses 7 to 10.
Notably, the author of Hebrews concludes his quotation of Psalm 40,
just before verse 8, which reads,
I delight to do your will, oh my God.
Your law is within my heart.
Like cutting off a familiar piece of music before the end of a passage, though unsounded,
the unplayed notes still hang in the air.
That Hebrews immediately moves to discussing Jeremiah chapter 31 verse 33's promise of the new covenant
and the law written on the heart is no accident.
Christ is the man of the new covenant, the man with God's law in his heart,
who renders true and perfect obedience to God.
He is the one in whom the words of the Psalms discover their true speaker.
His coming is the new covenant arriving in person.
And as the words of Psalm 40 are taken up by Christ to describe his incarnation and self-giving,
not only is the ground of the new covenant revealed,
but also the exemplary character of Christ as the founder and perfector of faith,
Hebrews chapter 12 verse 2, who is the pattern and the realization of the obedience
to which we are called and in which we are formed.
The Psalms so read will also come into their own as the natural expression of the new covenant.
What does it look like to have the law written on your heart,
singing Psalms in which you express your delight in, meditation upon, and treasuring of God's law?
Be filled with the Spirit, addressing one another in Psalms and hymns and spiritual songs,
singing and making melody to the Lord with your heart, Ephesians chapter 5.
verses 18 and 19. Let the Word of Christ dwell in you richly, teaching and admonishing one another in all
wisdom, singing Psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, with thankfulness in your hearts to God. Colossians
3 verse 16. Fifth, the words of the Salter speak directly into our situation. In one of the most
challenging passages of the New Testament, the author of Hebrews charges and exhorts the hearers of his
epistle, using the words of Psalm 95, verses 7 to 11. For most of chapters 3 and 4 of the book,
he expounds and addresses the Psalm to their situation. The Psalm, which looks back to the rebellions of
Israel in the wilderness, and chiefly to their refusal to enter the promised land, is directly
applied to Christians who might be tempted to turn back when facing growing persecution.
The rest of the Psalm, which refers to the promised land from which the unfaithful Israelites were
excluded in Numbers chapter 14 versus 2038 is applied to the rest of the new covenant and also related to the rest of God
established at the first Sabbath of creation the Christians hearing the book being read need to press forward with a sense of urgency
not wanting to miss out on what God has in store for them entrance into the true promised land see Hebrews chapter 11 verses 13 to 16
and the completion of human labours in Christ,
who realises the original rest and dominion held out to Adam.
Like 1 Corinthians 10 verse 11.
Now these things happen to them as an example,
but they were written down for our instruction
on whom the end of the ages has come.
The author of Hebrews implies a typological reading of Israel's experience,
which foreshadows that of the church,
and consequently can speak directly into the church's experience.
sixth christ leads the worship of his people one of the most striking uses of a psalm in hebrews is seen in chapter two verse twelve which quotes the words of psalm twenty two verse twenty two i will tell of your name to my brothers in the midst of the congregation i will praise you
hebrews uses this verse to prove christ's kinship with those whom he redeems he is not ashamed to call them brothers chapter two verse eleven once again the choice of psalm here is no
noteworthy. While only one verse of it is quoted, Psalm 22 was a prominent messianic Psalm for the
early church and is clearly referenced within the crucifixion narratives of the Gospels,
with its words on the mouths of Jesus, the crowd and the evangelists. Most famously,
its opening words are on Jesus' lips on the cross. My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?
Matthew chapter 27, verse 46, and Mark chapter 15, verse 34. The taunt of the markers,
in Psalm 22, verse 7 and 8, is on the mouth of the passers-by in Matthew chapter 27,
verses 39 to 43. The division of garments mentioned in Psalm 22 verse 18 is recorded as a narrative
event in Matthew chapter 27 verse 35. Any attentive reader of Matthew's crucifixion account in particular
should recognize it as Christological commentary on Psalm 22. When the New Testament cites the old,
typically not hear its citations as isolated references. So often New Testament citations of the old
are calculated to evoke wider passages and their associations. When reading Hebrews chapter 2 verse 12,
where the psalmist of Psalm 22 declares his praise for his deliverance in the midst of his brethren,
we should probably hear the entire narrative of the Psalm in the background. We might also hear an allusion
to Psalm 22 verse 24 in Hebrews chapter 5
5 verse 7. The deployment of this reference follows the description of Christ
as the man who tasted death for everyone, chapter 2 verse 9.
Christ singing in the midst of the congregation of his brethren is a triumphant manifestation
of the fruit of his redemption. As Christ leads his people in song,
his own vindication is being declared and the spoils of his victory displayed.
I have considered the attention that the author of
of Hebrews gives to the speakers in the Psalms and the fact that the voice of Christ is the chief of
its voices. Colossians chapter 3 verse 16 quoted above might also suggest a close connection
between Christ's speech and the words of the Psalms. When we sing the Psalms, we take the words
of Christ within and make them our own. Yet these words do not cease to be Christ's, and our singing
of the Psalms can be a form of his dwelling in and singing through us. In a wonderful show,
short book, From Silence to Song, the Davidic Liturgical Revolution, Peter Lightheart
observes the way that the worship of Israel was described in places like 1st Chronicles
chapter 25 verse 2 and 2nd Chronicles chapter 7 verse 6 as David's worship ministered by the
Levites. Lightheart writes, on the one hand the musicians performed under the hand of David.
On the other hand, David himself praised Yahweh by their hand. Levitical praise is the king's
song before his father, even if it is performed by Levites. And it was David's song, even though David
was not present. Lightheart proceeds to connect this with the use of Psalm 22 verse 22 in Hebrews 2,
suggesting that it presents Christ as the one who leads the worship of his people. He writes,
gathered for worship, united in song, the body of Christ along with the head, is Christ offering
praise to his father. The greater David gives praise by our,
hand. Seventh, we take the words of the Psalms as our own. The final citation of a Psalm in Hebrews is found
in chapter 13, verse 6, which quotes Psalm 118 verse 6. The Lord is on my side, I will not fear. What can man
do to me? Psalm 118 tells a story of the Psalmist's distress and the Lord's deliverance,
leading to a glorious expression of praise. The Lord rescues the Psalmist from death. The Lord
and from his adversaries, and the psalmist praises him for his goodness.
It is another psalm that is read as messianic in the New Testament,
especially in the words of verse 22.
The stone that the builders rejected has become the cornerstone,
which is related to Christ in Matthew chapter 21 verse 42,
Mark chapter 12 verse 10, Luke chapter 20 verse 17, Acts chapter 4 verse 11,
and 1st Peter chapter 2 verses 6 and 7.
The words of verse 26 of the Psalm,
Blessed as he who comes in the name of the Lord are also famously quoted in the gospel's accounts of the triumphal entry.
Matthew chapter 21 verse 9, Mark chapter 11 verse 9, John chapter 12 verse 13, and in Jesus' words of judgment upon Jerusalem,
Matthew chapter 23 verse 39 and Luke chapter 13 verse 35.
In the use of Psalm 118 verse 6, Hebrews plots the experience of the embattled hearers of his epistle
unto the story of the Psalm.
The confidence of the Psalmist expressed in the quoted verse
draws upon all the messianic themes within the original Psalm
and their fulfillment in Christ,
and upon the pattern of redemption the Psalm describes.
In Hebrews 13 verse 6,
we are invited to take the words of the Psalm as our own,
declaring them with assurance and confidence.
The Psalms understood in such a way
are the form that God has given us
in which we can express our joyful,
response to his redemption and victory, and strengthened by the confidence expressed in the
Psalm, we will be assisted to live in light of the reality it proclaims. In Psalms as Torah,
reading biblical song ethically, Gordon Wenham speaks of the power of prayed ethics. To pray or
better to sing, Psalms is self-involving and performative. He writes,
In praying the Psalms, one is actively committing oneself to following the God-approved life.
This is different from just listening to laws or edifying stories.
It is an action akin to reciting the creed or singing a hymn.
It involves strong commitment, and this is why I think that the Psalms have been so influential
in molding Jewish and Christian ethics in the past, and why as scholars we should again study them for their ethical content.
when Hebrews tells its hearers to declare the words of Psalm 118 verse 6 with confidence,
it is charging and equipping them to commit themselves to a certain posture.
In this, among other ways, taking the words of the Psalms as our own,
assists us in living faithfully as Christians, and conforms us to Christ,
whose words they are.
8th, the Psalms are our sacrifice of praise.
Sacrifice is, of course, a central theme of the book of Hebrews,
In Christ, the sacrifices of the old covenant, which could never take away sins, are fulfilled in a once-for-all sacrifice that forgives sins, perfects worshippers, and opens a new and living way into the presence of God.
Consequently, there is no need for a continued offering for sin.
However, although we no longer offer bulls, goats and other animal sacrifices, sacrificial practices remain central in the life of the church.
In contrast to the understanding of much Christian theology, in Leviticus, sacrifice did not focus upon the act of killing sacrificial animals.
Rather, the central acts of sacrifice were actions with the blood of the sacrificial animal, the ascending of the sacrifice in fire, and communion meals.
Such patterns remain in the worship of the church, even though they are now humanized.
Christ's blood is ritually applied to us in baptism and in continued confession and absolution of sins.
When Hebrews says that we have an altar from which we have an exclusive right to eat in chapter 13 verse 10,
we should hear a reference to the celebration of the supper where Christ offers us his body and blood.
In describing the sacrificial worship of the new covenant at the conclusion of the book,
the author of Hebrews broadens the application of principles of sacrifice.
We participate in the sacrifice of Christ as we eat from the altar outside the camp,
and we also do good to and share what we have with others,
for such sacrifices are pleasing to God, chapter 13, verse 16.
Through Christ we also continually offer up a sacrifice of praise to God,
that is the fruit of lips that acknowledge his name, chapter 13, verse 15.
As Lightheart observes in from silence to song,
Already in the Old Covenant, animal sacrifice was being progressively more humanized through the addition of music and song, especially by David.
The place of song and particularly Psalms in Christian worship should be understood accordingly.
Song can memorialize the deeds of the Lord, just as sacrifices could act as memorials.
Song can represent the offering of the worshipper in true and joyful commitment of heart,
the sort of offering described in Psalm 40 verses 6 to 8.
Most importantly, considering what we have discussed to this point, singing Psalms can be a form of union with the risen and exalted Jesus Christ,
the fruit of lips that acknowledge God's name, spring forth from and articulate transformed hearts that have his law written within them,
and this was always the sacrifice that God most desired.
God desired the wholehearted offering of the true embodied worshipper,
an offering that is finally given in Christ, as we see in Hebrews chapter 10.
verses 5 to 14. In Christ's self-offering, our offering of ourselves in him is made possible.
As we sing the Psalms, nothing less than this should be our animating vision.
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