Greek Key Terms:
Context: Hebrews 10:19-22 provides climactic application following the author's extensive argument about Christ's superior sacrifice (chapters 7-10). After establishing that Christ's one offering perfects believers forever (10:14) unlike the repeated, ineffective Levitical sacrifices (10:1-4), the passage issues pastoral exhortation: "Therefore... let us draw near." The "confidence" (parrēsia) to enter the holy places rests entirely on "the blood of Jesus" (v. 19)—not human merit but divine provision. The imagery shifts from the old covenant's annual high priestly entry through the physical veil to the new covenant's perpetual access through Christ's flesh (the true veil). What was once restricted (only high priest, only once yearly, only with animal blood) now becomes accessible (all believers, continually, through Christ's blood). This is the peace-offering's ultimate fulfillment—confident approach to God's presence based on substitutionary sacrifice.
Connections:
Christological Connection: Hebrews 10:19-22's invitation to "draw near" with "confidence... by the blood of Jesus" consummates the peace-offering's purpose. Where Leviticus 3's shelamim allowed eating in the tabernacle courts, Christ provides access to the heavenly Holy of Holies. The peace-offering's blood, sprinkled on the altar, enabled fellowship in God's presence; Christ's blood, shed on the cross, opens the way "through the curtain, that is, his flesh" (v. 20). The shocking metaphor equates the temple veil—which barred access—with Christ's body—which grants access. What kept humans out (the veil) becomes the means of entrance (Christ's torn flesh). The peace-offering required continuous renewal; Christ's sacrifice is "new and living" (prosphaton kai zōsan)—perpetually fresh, never obsolete. The Day of Atonement's annual high priestly entry prefigured Christ who "entered once for all into the holy places... by means of his own blood, thus securing an eternal redemption" (Hebrews 9:12). The peace-offering's participants ate joyfully but couldn't penetrate the inner sanctuary; believers now "have confidence to enter the holy places" (v. 19)—not symbolically but genuinely, spiritually present where Christ ministers. The requirement of ceremonial cleanness for peace-offering participants finds fulfillment in hearts "sprinkled clean from an evil conscience" (v. 22) and bodies "washed with pure water"—comprehensive purification enabling comprehensive access. Where the peace-offering created temporary fellowship requiring repeated offerings, Christ's work provides permanent access: "For by a single offering he has perfected forever those who are being sanctified" (Hebrews 10:14). The great high priest (v. 21) who ministers in heaven secures what Aaron could only symbolize—unbroken communion between God and His people. The trajectory extends from Leviticus 3's peace-offering eaten in the outer courts, through Christ's torn flesh opening the way, to Revelation 22:4's beatific vision: "They will see his face"—the access Christ secured reaches consummation in eternal, unmediated fellowship with God.
Connection Method(s): Typology (Direct, Backward-Looking), Contrast — Christ's blood provides confident, permanent access to the heavenly Holy of Holies, surpassing the peace-offering's limited courtyard fellowship and the Day of Atonement's restricted annual entry.
Trajectory Table: 116 - Peace-Offering (Fellowship with God)