Charles Ellicott Commentary


Charles Ellicott Commentary
"ye also, as living stones, are built up a spiritual house, to be a holy priesthood, to offer up spiritual sacrifices, acceptable to God through Jesus Christ." ā 1 Peter 2:5 (ASV)
You also, as lively stones, are built up.āThis is true enough: they were in the process of being built up. However, it suits the exhortatory character of the whole Epistle better to take it (one interpretation is as grammatical as the other) in the imperative sense: Be you also as living stones built up. The rendering ālively,ā instead of āliving,ā as in 1 Peter 2:4, is arbitrary, as the Greek is precisely the same. The intention is to show the complete conformation of believers to Him who is the type and model for humanity. āBuilt up,ā too, only expresses a part of the Greek word, which implies ābuilt up upon Him.ā
A spiritual house.āThe epithet is supplied, just as in āliving stone,ā to make it abundantly clear that the language is figurative. In the first three verses of the chapter, these Hebrew Christians were treated individually, as so many babes, to grow up into an ideal freedom of soul. Here they are treated collectively (of course, along with the Gentile Christians), as so many stones, incomplete and meaningless in themselves, by arrangement and cemented union to rise into an ideal house of God.
St. Peter does not distinctly say that the āhouseā is a temple (for the word āspiritualā is only the opposite of āmaterialā), but the context makes it plain that this is the case. The temple is, however, regarded not in its capacity as a place for worship so much as a place for Divine indwelling. āThe spiritual house,ā says Leighton truly, āis the palace of the Great King. The Hebrew word for palace and temple is one.ā
The reason for introducing this figure seems to be to console the Hebrews for their vanishing privileges in the temple at Jerusalem. They are being taught to recognize that they themselves, in their union with one another and with Jesus Christ, are the true abode of the Most High. The Christian substitution of something else instead of the Jerusalem Temple was one of the greatest stumbling blocks to the Hebrews from the very first (John 2:21; Acts 7:48; Acts 21:28; compare also to Hebrews 9:8; Hebrews 9:11).
All history is the process of building up a āspiritual palaceā out of a regenerate humanity, so that, in the end, the Father Himself may occupy it. This follows from the fact that the Incarnate Son is described as a part of the Temple.
Even through the Incarnationāat least so far as it has yet taken effectācreation has not become as completely pervaded and filled with the Deity as it is destined to be when the āpalaceā is finished (See 1 Corinthians 15:28). The idea of the Eternal Son occupying such a relation to the Father on one hand, and to humanity and creation on the other, is really the same as when He is called (by an entirely different metaphor) the firstborn of all creation (Colossians 1:15).
An holy priesthood.āāBeing living stones,ā says Bengel, āthey can be priests as well.ā They not only compose the Temple, but minister in it. By becoming Christians, they are cut off from neither Temple nor hierarchy, nor sacrifice; all are at hand, and they themselves are all. The old priesthood, like the old Temple, has āhad its day, and ceased to be.ā
Note, though, that the Apostle is not dwelling on the individual priesthood of each (though that is involved), but on the hierarchical order of the whole company of Christians: they are an organized body or college of priests, a new seed of Aaron or Levi .
The very word implies that all Christians do not have an equal degree of priesthood. And this new priesthood, like the old, is no profane, intruding priesthood like that of Korah (Jude 1:11), but āholyāāi.e., consecrated, validly admitted to its work.
The way this new metaphor is suddenly introducedāāto whom coming, be built up upon Him . . . to be an holy priesthoodāāimplies that Jesus Christ is the High Priest just as much as it implies His being Corner Stone. The Incarnate Son heads the adoration offered to the Father by creation, just as He binds creation into a palace for the Fatherās indwelling.
To offer up spiritual sacrifices.āThe new priesthood is not merely nominal; it is no sinecure. No one is a priest who does not offer sacrifices (Hebrews 8:3). But the sacrifices of the new hierarchy are āspiritualāāi.e., not material, not sacrifices of bulls and goats and lambs. What, then, do the sacrifices consist of? If our priesthood is modeled on that of Jesus Christ, as is here implied, it consists mainly (Calvin points this out) of the sacrifice of self, of the will; then, in a minor degree, of words and acts of worship, thanks and praise .
But to constitute a true priesthood and true sacrifices after the model of Jesus Christ, these sacrifices are offered up on behalf of others (See Hebrews 5:1, and 1 John 3:16). The primary understanding of the priesthood of all believers is not that a mediatorial system is abolished, but that the mediatorial system is extended: whereas, before, only Aaronās sons were recognized as mediators and intercessors, now all Israel, all the spiritual Israel, all people everywhere are called to be mediators and intercessors between each other and God.
By (or, through) Jesus Christ.āThe name again, not the title only. We all help one another to present one anotherās prayers and praises, which pass through the lips of many priests; but for them to be acceptable, they must be presented finally through the lips of the Great High Priest. He, in His perfect sympathy with all people, must make the sacrifice His own. We must unite our sacrifices with Hisāthe Advocate with the Father, the Propitiation for our sinsāor our sacrifice will be as irregular and offensive as if some Canaanite had taken it upon himself to intrude into the Holy of Holies on Atonement Day (See Hebrews 10:19-25, especially 1 Peter 2:21).