<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> MELCHIZEDEK. </h2>
<p>Melchizedek is the most extraordinary person of whom we have any record.
Christ was born and Adam was made, but Melchizedek never began to be and
will never cease to exist. If the Bible were not such an intensely serious
book without a gleam of humor, except of the unconscious Hibernian kind,
we might conclude that Melchizedek was <i>nobody</i>, for the description
admirably suits that character. But the Bible does not play and must not
be played with. All its personages are <i>bona fide</i> realities, from
the Ancient of Days with white woolly hair on the throne of heaven to the
prophet Jonah who took three days' lodging in the belly of a whale.</p>
<p>The name Melchizedek means <i>king</i> of justice, being derived from <i>melec</i>,
a king, and <i>tzedec</i>, justice. When the gentleman bearing this name
is introduced to us in the fourteenth of Genesis, he is king of Salem,
which means peace. Salem was a city on the site of Zion.</p>
<p>Originally it was called Jebus, then Zadek, then Salem, and finally
Jerusalem. So says Rabbi Joseph Ben-Gorion. But other writers, no doubt
just as well informed, differ from him; and while the doctors disagree,
simple laymen may well hold their judgment in suspense; or, better still,
dismiss Jebus, Zadek, Salem, and Jerusalem, to the limbo of learned
trivialities. Counting the spots on a leopard, the quills on a porcupine,
or the hairs in a cat's whiskers, is just as amusing and quite as edifying
as most of the problems of divines and commentators.</p>
<p>When Abraham returned from a successful campaign, in which he defeated
five kings and their armies with three hundred and eighteen raw recruits,
Melchizedek came out to meet him with victuals and drink. These two
friends joined in the friendly office of <i>scratching</i> each other.
They were, in fact, a small mutual admiration society. Abraham, although
at other times a rank coward, was on this occasion a bold warrior laden
with spoil; and Melchizedek besides being King of Salem, was "the priest
of the most high God." "Bully for you, Abraham," said Melchizedek. "Bully
for you, Melchizedek," said Abraham. As usual, however, the priest got the
best of it, for the patriarch paid him tithes, which were a capital return
for his compliments. Genesis is a little confused, indeed; and what
scripture is not? "And he gave him tithes of all" is not very clear. It
reminds one of the West of England yokel, who gave his evidence on a case
of homicide in this way:</p>
<p>"He had a stick, and he had a stick; and he hit he, and he hit he. And if
he'd only hit he as hard as he hit he, he'd a' killed he, and not he he."</p>
<p>But we must not be too hard on Bibles and yokels. So long as we can get a
scintillation of their meaning we must be satisfied. Scripture, we may
take it, means that the <i>he</i> who paid tithes was Abraham, and the <i>him</i>
who received them was Melchizedek.</p>
<p>Now the book of Genesis is not an early, but a very late portion of the
Jewish scriptures, dating only a few centuries before Christ. And we may
depend on it that this little sentence about <i>tithes</i>, and perhaps
the whole story that leads up to it, was got up by the priests, to give
the authority of Abraham's name and the sanction of antiquity to an
institution which kept them in luxury at the expense of their neighbors.</p>
<p>Our view of the case is supported by the fact that Melchizedek's name does
not appear again in the whole of the Old Testament, except in the hundred
and tenth Psalm, where somebody or other (the parsons of course say
Christ) is called "a priest for ever after the order of Melchizedek."
Paul, or whoever wrote the Epistle to the Hebrews, works up this hint in
fine style. It would puzzle a lunatic, or a fortune-teller, or the
Archbishop of Canterbury, or God Almighty himself, to say what the Seventh
of Hebrews means. We give it up as an insoluble conundrum, and we observe
that every commentator with a grain of sense and honesty does the same.
But there is one luminous flash in the jumble of metaphysical darkness.
Melchizedek is described as "without father, without mother, without
descent, having neither beginning of days nor end of life." It will be
easy to recognise a gentleman of that description when you meet him. When
we <i>do</i> meet him we shall readily acknowledge him as our king and
priest, and pay him an income tax of two shillings in the pound; but until
then we warn all kings and priests off our doorsteps.</p>
<p>Jewish traditions say that Melchizedek was the son of Shem, and set apart
for the purpose of watching and burying Adam's carcase when it was
unshipped from the Ark. Some, however, maintain that he was of a celestial
race; while other (Christian) speculators have held that he was no less
than Jesus Christ himself, who put in an early appearance in Abraham's
days to keep the Jewish pot boiling. St. Athanasius tells a long-winded
story of Melchizedek and Abraham, which shows what stuff the early
Christians believed. According to the Talmud, Melchizedek composed the
hundred and tenth Psalm himself; and although he is without end of days,
his tomb was shown at Jerusalem in the time of Gemelli Oarrere the
traveller.</p>
<p>There was an heretical sect called the <i>Melchizedekiana</i> in the third
century. They held that Jesus Christ was, according to Hebrews, only of
the order of Melchizedek, and therefore that Melchizedek himself was the
more venerable. This heresy revived in Egypt after its suppression
elsewhere, and its adherents claimed that Melchizedek was the Holy Ghost.
The last time Melchizedek was heard of he was a London coster-monger's
donkey, but whether this was a real incarnation of the original
Melchizedek no one is able to decide, unless the Lord should again, as in
the case of Balaam's companion, "open the mouth of the ass" and inform the
world of the things that belong unto its peace.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />