The wounded soldier sat alone waiting in anticipation. He had recently returned home from the battle lines where the darkness of foxholes and trenches had been his only protection from the enemy’s concerted efforts to destroy him. He was thankful for being rescued, and he was anxious to see his beloved. When the door to his hospital room opened, shadows entered and danced on the wall opposite him. His heart raced. He stood. He stared. As the shapes became more distinct, he ran toward them excitedly. When the woman appeared, she saw her wounded husband embracing the shadows. She called his name, but he would not let go of the wall. She said it was time to go home, but he preferred to zealously cling to the shadows rather than turn and face and embrace reality.
Were we to witness something pathetic like this, it would make us feel very sad. We would conclude that PTSD had claimed yet another victim. Nobody in his right mind would choose to embrace shadows over the actual person.
Perhaps this opening scene gives us some insight into Paul’s concern for Israel. He had great sorrow and continual grief in his heart for his kinsmen according to the flesh (Rom. 9:2,3). They had had such an advantage and so much potential. To them belonged “the glory, the covenants, the giving of the Law, the service of God, and the promises” (v 4). Indeed, because of these things they had “a zeal for God, but not according to knowledge. For they being ignorant of God’s righteousness, and seeking to establish their own righteousness, [had] not submitted to the righteousness of God” (10:2,3). Paul said his “heart’s desire and prayer to God for Israel [was] that they may be saved” (v 1); but to submit to the righteousness of God and be saved, they would need to let go of the shadows and embrace Jesus (cf. vv 9,10).
The word shadow is used in Scripture in a variety of ways. It can be used negatively or positively. For example, it is sometimes used negatively in connection with darkness or the specter of death. “Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil for You are with me” (Ps. 23:4). It is used somewhat neutrally to speak of things that are fleeting in contrast to that which is enduring. It is also used positively in reference to finding relief or comfort in the shadow (i.e. shade) of a tree or tent (e.g. Jonah as he camped outside Nineveh). Likewise, it is used positively of protection as David prayed to God, “in the shadow of Your wings, I will make my refuge” (Ps. 57:1).
However, in all of these uses (whether literally or figuratively, positively or negatively), there is something more substantial which is understood to be casting the shadow. Indeed, it is actually this substantial something that casts the shadow which we embrace or fear and for which we are either thankful or not. This becomes especially important for us to understand when we come to Christ and His covenant. In the New Testament, shadow is used in all of the ways mentioned above. Let’s consider how it is specifically used in relation to the old and new covenants.
The book of Hebrews was written to encourage Christians to remain faithful to Jesus even in the midst of intense social pressures and persecution meant to cause them to renounce Christ. To do this, Hebrews emphasizes the superiority of Christ over all things and the truth that He is the fulfillment of the law and the prophets which foretold His coming. Having talked about Jesus being a high priest after the order of Melchizedek, the primary point of the writer of Hebrews is to remind saints that “we have such a High Priest” in Jesus and that He is a minister of “the true tabernacle” built by God and not by man (Heb. 8:1,2).
It is interesting that we are prone to think in opposite ways. We tend to imagine that material things are real and that spiritual things are not. The Hebrews author observes that the tabernacle built by Moses “according to the pattern shown [him] on the mountain” was a “copy and shadow” of heavenly things (v 5). The word copy implies that it was a representation of but was not the original or actual. Just as a shadow is real but is not the reality of that which casts it, even so the earthly tabernacle (and all that was attached to it) was real but was not the reality of that which it foreshadowed.
Essentially the tabernacle was a visual aid to illustrate the presence of God among His people. Yet, since it was only a shadow, neither it nor its priests, sacrifices, or the covenant attached to it could actually accomplish the remission of sins and the restoration of fellowship with God. “Christ came…with the greater and more perfect tabernacle not made with hands” (9:11). He came not with the shadows of animal sacrifices to atone for our sins “but with His own blood He entered the Most Holy Place once for all, having obtained eternal redemption” (v 12). If the copies required the shedding of blood, then the better things under the better covenant required the better sacrifice of Jesus Christ (v 23). He did not go into “the holy places made with hands, which are copies of the true, but into heaven itself, now to appear in the presence of God for us” (v 24).
We are explicitly told that “the law, having a shadow of the good things to come, and not the very image of the things, can never…make those who approach perfect” (10:1). Since “it is not possible for the blood of bulls and goats to take away sin” (v 4), Jesus offered Himself and “by one offering He has perfected forever those who are being sanctified” (v 14). Jesus has actually accomplished what the first covenant merely foreshadowed which effectively makes the first covenant obsolete (8:13). Therefore, why would we hold fast to shadows of the One who has come in the flesh?
When the apostle Paul wrote to the brethren in Colossae, he was concerned that they not be taken captive by the philosophies and persuasive but deceitful words that were according to the traditions of men (Col. 2:4-8). He warned them not to let anyone judge them “in food or in drink, or regarding a festival or a new moon or sabbaths” (v 16). These he described as “a shadow of things to come, but the substance is of Christ” (v 17). Paul was concerned that—instead of holding fast to Christ as head—some were being deceived by the doctrines and practices of men and were embracing shadows in submitting to vain rituals, traditions, and doctrines that had the appearance of spirituality and humility but which were of no value against carnality and were themselves fleshly.
So, too, 21st century saints must beware of: 1) being conformed to this world (Rom. 12:1) rather than being conformed to the image of Christ (8:29), 2) being deceived by blending worldly religious philosophy with Christ (syncretism) and thereby being unequally yoked with that which is contrary to Christ (2 Cor. 6:14-16), and 3) imagining heightened spirituality by incorporating obsolete shadows as rituals in our worship of and service to Christ. So many of the traditions which have accumulated over two millennia are borrowed from the shadows of Judaism (sanctuaries, altars, priests, vestments, clergy/laity distinctions, burning of incense, instrumental music, holy days, dietary laws, etc.). Their practices are imagined to be justified by pointing to that which is now obsolete and as out of place in our spiritual service as is fleshly circumcision. Instead of embracing shadows, let’s turn toward the light and embrace Jesus Christ.
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