Sunday, July 12, 2020

Melchizedek the Married Priest-King


"You are a priest forever in the line of Melchizedek."


Melchizedek means "King of Righteousness"


If Melchizedek is Shem, as Jewish tradition & the Fathers of the Church & solid modern Catholic biblical scholars like Scott Hahn and John Bergsma assert, then the priesthood of Jesus Christ (as affirmed in the Letter to the Hebrews) literally and historically has roots in the MARRIED priesthood of Melchizedek.

Shem is the first-born son of Noah: "When Noah was five hundred years old, he became the father of Shem, Ham and Japheth" (Gen. 5:32).

"The descendants of Shem were Elam, Asshur, Arpachshad, Lud, and Aram" (1 Chronicles 1:17a).  <--- Shem had sons and thus logically would have been married to beget sons in this verse and theologically would be the foundation of a married Catholic priesthood in the Latin rite.  

[If one were to even insist the theological foundation of the married priesthood goes to Adam, from where Shem / Melchizedek comes (outside the scope of this writing here for now), that would be acceptable as well.]

"Shem, Arpachshad, Shelah, Eber, Peleg, Reu, Serug, Nahor, Terah, Abram, who was Abraham.  The sons of Abraham were Isaac and Ishmael" (1 Chronicles 1:24-28).


Adam ---> Noah ---> Shem / Melchizedek ---> Abraham   ---> St. Joseph ---> Jesus of Nazareth


EXCERPT:

...

First, who is Melchizedek? Why does this man styled as the “King of Salem” and whose name means “King of Righteousness”[3] only appear once in the book of Genesis for a brief encounter with Abraham, never to appear again? Well, the reader may be surprised to know that Melchizedek does appear more than once in the book of Genesis; in fact, he appears earlier in the book of Genesis, albeit under a different name. For Melchizedek actually makes his first appearance not as the righteous priest-king of Salem, but rather as the firstborn son of Noah the Patriarch, whose name is Shem.[4]

How do we know that Melchizedek is the same person as Shem? We know this most recently from the consensus of modern Catholic biblical scholars such as Scott Hahn,[5] John Bergsma,[6] Brant Pitre,[7] and Steven Smith.[8] Moreover, the ancient Jewish tradition almost unanimously identified Shem and Melchizedek as the same person;[9] for both the Targums — which were the ancient translations of the Jewish Scriptures into Aramaic, the language that the Jews spoke during the time of Jesus — and the later rabbinic tradition both regularly and consistently identify Shem and Melchizedek as being the same person.[10] Further, the Christian tradition — which is made up of the Fathers of the Church and of the Scholastic Theologians — was nearly just as unanimous as the Jewish tradition was on this point of the identity of Shem-Melchizedek.[11] Among the various Church Fathers that identified Shem with Melchizedek,[12] we have Saint Jerome who supported the thesis that Shem is Melchizedek,[13] and also Saint Ephrem the Syrian who also accepted this position, writing the following:

This Melchizedek is Shem, who became a king due to his greatness; he was the head of fourteen nations. In addition, “he was a priest.” He received [his priesthood] from Noah, his father, through the rites of succession. Shem lived not only to the time of Abraham, as Scripture says, but even to [the time of] Jacob and Esau.[14]

Further, the eminent Scholastic Theologian Saint Thomas Aquinas also accepted the tradition that Shem is Melchizedek in his commentary on Saint Paul’s Letter to the Hebrews. Here, the Angelic Doctor writes that:

For so the Scripture names [Melchizedek] in Genesis (Gen 14:18), where his history, which the Apostle supposes here, is recorded. According to a Gloss, the Hebrews say that this was Shem, the first-born of Noah, and when Abraham obtained the victory, he was 390 or 309 years old and met Abraham, his nephew.[15]

Lastly, the Glossa Ordinaria — which was the medieval compendium or collection of the various glosses or commentaries of the Church Fathers on Scripture — also affirms the identification of Shem with Melchizedek, writing that “the Hebrews say this Melchizedek was Shem son of Noah, who lived until Isaac.”[16] The Christian tradition’s possible unanimity or consensus on this topic is a particularly compelling point about the identity of Shem-Melchizedek, given the unanimity of the Fathers.   

...


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Other sources (Catholic & non-Catholic):

John Bergsma & John Pitre, A Catholic Introduction to the Bible: The Old Testament (Ignatius Press, 2018): https://www.amazon.com/Catholic-Introduction-Bible-Old-Testament/dp/1586177222?asin=B07H46F524&revisionId=1e5c2668&format=1&depth=2

"Joseph, a Priest According to the Order of Melchizedek" b
y
 Joshua Francis Filipetto
 -
May 27, 2022 https://catholicinsight.com/joseph-a-priest-according-to-the-order-of-melchizedek/ (downloaded on 1/28/2023)

Arguments for and against: https://amazingbibletimeline.com/blog/melchizedek-and-shem/

Msgr. Charles Pope (does not favor married priests in Latin rite): https://cathstan.org/posts/who-was-melchizedek 

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