C
CollegeKid
Guest
I’ve noticed more and more lately that I end up doing double-takes when I’m reading the NAB endnotes on particular sections of the gospels or the epistles because, for example, the explanation of Luke’s narrative of the institution of the Eucharist sounds like it was written by James White. The latest transgression:
I had always taken Hebrews 13:10 to refer to the Eucharist (“We have an altar from which those who serve at the tabernacle have no right to eat”).
Not so, according to the NAB: “This does not refer to the Eucharist, which is never clearly mentioned in Heb., but to the sacrifice of Christ.”
The Eucharist is the Sacrifice of Christ. We eat the Eucharist. If the author of Hebrews wasn’t referring to the Eucharist, why would he go to the trouble of asserting that “those who serve at the tabernacle,” the Jewish priests, " have no right to eat" from this “altar”? Am I missing something?
I had always taken Hebrews 13:10 to refer to the Eucharist (“We have an altar from which those who serve at the tabernacle have no right to eat”).
Not so, according to the NAB: “This does not refer to the Eucharist, which is never clearly mentioned in Heb., but to the sacrifice of Christ.”
The Eucharist is the Sacrifice of Christ. We eat the Eucharist. If the author of Hebrews wasn’t referring to the Eucharist, why would he go to the trouble of asserting that “those who serve at the tabernacle,” the Jewish priests, " have no right to eat" from this “altar”? Am I missing something?