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Study Chapter · XIII

Melchizedek

The Priest Without a Genealogy

A man appears in Genesis 14 for three verses, blesses Abraham, accepts a tenth of the spoils, and disappears. He has no recorded genealogy. He's not from the line of Aaron (which won't exist for 400+ years). He is king of Salem (probably Jerusalem) and priest of God Most High (El

A man appears in Genesis 14 for three verses, blesses Abraham, accepts a tenth of the spoils, and disappears. He has no recorded genealogy. He's not from the line of Aaron (which won't exist for 400+ years). He is king of Salem (probably Jerusalem) and priest of God Most High (El Elyon). His name means "King of Righteousness." His title means "King of Peace."

Until Psalm 110:4 — a Davidic psalm:

David, writing prophetically about his "Lord" (Ps 110:1 — the verse Jesus uses to stump the Pharisees in Matt 22:41–46), says this Lord will have a priesthood — but not from Aaron's line. David himself was from Judah, not Levi; kings were not priests. Instead: after the order of Melchizedek. A different priestly line. An older one.

Then silence for another 1,000 years. Until Hebrews 5–7, where the author builds an entire theology of Christ's priesthood on this obscure figure.

Nearby chapters

XII. The Seventy Sevens of Daniel
The Most Precise Messianic Chronology
XIV. "The Day of the Lord"
One Day, Many Comings
XI. The Second-Temple World the New Testament Breathes
XV. The Trinity in the Old Testament
Already There Before the New