The Fallible · Synthetic · Study Bible
Melchizedek Blesses Abram
Genesis 14:17–24 — Melchizedek Blesses Abram. Each verse below carries the full apparatus: the Berean Standard Bible, the vocalized original (tap any word), and a parsed breakdown of every term transcribed from the interlinear. Synthesized commentary, canonical threads, and the reading of Christ gather at the end, over the whole unit.
17After Abram returned from defeating Chedorlaomer and the kings allied with him, the king of Sodom went out to meet him in the Valley of Shaveh (that is, the King’s Valley).
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
’a·ḥă·rê šū·ḇōw mê·hak·kō·wṯ ’eṯ- kə·ḏå̄r- lå̄·ʿō·mɛr wə·’eṯ- ham·mə·lā·ḵîm ’ă·šer ’it·tōw me·leḵ- sə·ḏōm way·yê·ṣê liq·rā·ṯōw ’el- ‘ê·meq šā·wêh hū ham·me·leḵ ‘ê·meq
Literal — word-for-word from the original
After his turning-back from the smiting of Chedorlaomer and the kings who were with him, the king of Sodom went out to meet him at the Valley of Shaveh — that is, the King's Valley.
Where the English smooths the original
The slaughter. —Heb., the smiting, that is, the defeat of Chedorlaomer.Ellicott names the Hebrew behind BSB's smoothed "defeating."
the slaughter (perhaps too forcible an expression for mere defeat) of Chedorlaomer, and the kings that were with himPulpit cautions the other direction — the term may overstate a mere rout.
The dale of Shaveh is here explained by the "King's dale." This phrase occurs at a period long subsequent as the name of the valley in which Absalom reared his pillar 2 Samuel 18:18 . There is nothing to hinder the identity of the place, which must, according to the latter passage, have been not far from Jerusalem.Barnes ties Shaveh to the later King's Dale near Jerusalem — a basis for, but not proof of, the Salem=Jerusalem reading.
The meeting of the king of Sodom with Abram is here strangely interrupted by the story of the appearance of Melchizedek, and is resumed at Genesis 14:21 .Cambridge flags the literary seam the synthesis treats as the unit's hinge.
18Then Melchizedek king of Salem brought out bread and wine—since he was priest of God Most High—
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
ū·mal·kî- ṣe·ḏeq me·leḵ šā·lêm hō·w·ṣî le·ḥem wā·yā·yin wə·hū ḵō·hên lə·’êl ‘el·yō·wn
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And Melchizedek king of Salem brought out bread and wine — and he [was] priest of God Most High —
Where the English smooths the original
The כהן kohen, or priest, who is here mentioned for the first time in Scripture, was one who acted in sacred things on the part of others. He was a mediator between God and manBarnes marks the canon's first "priest."
It seems sufficiently evident that he was a mere man; but from whom he was descended, or who were his immediate parents or successors, God has not seen fit to inform us: nay, it is probable that God designedly concealed these things from us, that he might be the more perfect type of his eternal Son.Benson on the deliberate silence of the genealogy.
This king who was a type of the Saviour (Heb 7:1), came to bless God for the victory which had been won, and in the name of God to bless Abram, by whose arms it had been achievedJFB states the type-of-Christ reading plainly and grounds it in Hebrews 7.
a Canaanitish prince by whom the true faith was retained amid the gloom of surrounding heathenismPulpit's preferred identification — a real Canaanite king, not an angel or the Logos.
In the mention of bread and wine there is no idea of religious offerings. It is the gift of food to weary and famished soldiers.The restraining voice against over-reading the bread and wine.
For Abram and his soldiers refreshment, not to offer sacrifice.The Geneva gloss (h) on v.18, terse and emphatic.
19and he blessed Abram and said: “Blessed be Abram by God Most High, Creator of heaven and earth,
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
way·ḇā·rə·ḵê·hū way·yō·mar bā·rūḵ ’aḇ·rām lə·’êl ‘el·yō·wn qō·nêh šā·ma·yim wā·’ā·reṣ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And he blessed him and said: Blessed be Abram by God Most High, Creator of heaven and earth,
Where the English smooths the original
Possessor. —Literally, creator, or framer. It is a poetical word, as are also those for “delivered” and “enemies.” The form of the blessing, moreover, is poetical, as it is arranged in parallel clauses.Ellicott on the poetic register of qō·nêh and the whole blessing.
he (i.e. Melchizedek ) blessed him, ( Abram,) which was one act of the priestly office.Poole identifies the blessing as a priestly function.
לְ after a passive verb indicating the efficient cause ( vide Gesenius, § 143, 2Pulpit on the grammar behind "blessed by" rather than "blessed of."
and herein typified Christ, who really blesses or confers blessings on all his people, even spiritual blessings, such as redemption, remission of sins, and justifying righteousness, adoption, and eternal lifeGill reads Melchizedek's blessing as a type of Christ's bestowal of spiritual blessing.
possessor of heaven and earth ] R.V. marg. maker . The word is poetical. It expresses the ideas of making, producing, creating, as in Deuteronomy 32:6 , Psalm 139:13 , Proverbs 8:22 .Cambridge on the semantic range of qânâh.
20and blessed be God Most High, who has delivered your enemies into your hand.” Then Abram gave Melchizedek a tenth of everything.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
ū·ḇā·rūḵ ’êl ‘el·yō·wn ’ă·šer- mig·gên ṣā·re·ḵā bə·yā·ḏe·ḵā way·yit·ten- lōw ma·‘ă·śêr mik·kōl
Literal — word-for-word from the original
and blessed be God Most High, who has delivered your enemies into your hand. And he gave him a tenth of everything.
Where the English smooths the original
he gave him tithes of all—Here is an evidence of Abram's piety, as well as of his valor; for it was to a priest or official mediator between God and him that Abram gave a tenth of the spoil—a token of his gratitude and in honor of a divine ordinance
Not Melchizedek gave to Abram, as some Jews foolishly understand it; for Abram swears that he would not keep nor take any of the recovered goods of the kings of SodomPoole fixes the direction of the tithe against a rabbinic reading.
who hath delivered - miggen , a word peculiar to poetry - nathan (cf. Proverbs 4:9 ; Hosea 11:8 )Pulpit on the rare poetic verb and its only two sibling occurrences.
Abram, the father of the Israelite people, performs symbolically an action which recognizes for future time their obligation to the sanctuary of Jerusalem.Cambridge reads the tithe as a symbolic anticipation of Jerusalem's sanctuary.
21The king of Sodom said to Abram, “Give me the people, but take the goods for yourself.”
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
me·leḵ- sə·ḏōm way·yō·mer ’el- ’aḇ·rām ten- lî han·ne·p̄eš qaḥ- wə·hā·rə·ḵuš lāḵ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And the king of Sodom said to Abram, Give me the souls, and the goods take for yourself.
Where the English smooths the original
Give me the souls, and take thou the substance — So the Hebrew reads it. Here he fairly begs the persons, but as freely bestows the goods on Abram.Benson on the literal "souls" behind "the people."
To this day it is the rule among the Arabs that, if a camp be plundered, anyone who recovers the booty gives up only the persons, and takes the rest for himself.Ellicott on the surviving war-custom that frames the offer.
this also shows, that the king of Sodom, though a Heathen prince, and perhaps a wicked man, yet had more regard to the persons of his subjects than to his own or their goods
22But Abram replied to the king of Sodom, “I have raised my hand to the LORD God Most High, Creator of heaven and earth,
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
’aḇ·rām way·yō·mer ’el- me·leḵ sə·ḏōm hă·rî·mō·ṯî yā·ḏî ’el- Yah·weh ’êl ‘el·yō·wn qō·nêh šā·ma·yim wā·’ā·reṣ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And Abram said to the king of Sodom, I have lifted my hand to the LORD, God Most High, Creator of heaven and earth,
Where the English smooths the original
Abram gives to God the same titles that Melchizedek had just now used. It is good to learn of others how to order our speech concerning God, and to imitate those who speak well in divine things.Benson on Abram echoing Melchizedek's titles.
In this conjunction of names Abram solemnly and expressly identifies the God of himself and of Melkizedec in the presence of the king of Sodom. The Most High God of Melkizedec is the God of the first chapter of Genesis, and the Yahweh of Adam, Noah, and Abram.
having his heart struck with those just and glorious representations of God, and awed with a sense of such a glorious Being, and being forward to learn and retain everything that tended to make for the glory of God.Gill on why Abram adopts Melchizedek's very titles in his oath.
The LXX and Syriac Peshitto omit “Jehovah.” The Sam. reads ha-Elohim for “Jehovah.” Abram takes his oath in the name of the God of Melchizedek whom a later scribe probably identified with Jehovah.Cambridge records the textual variants on the divine name.
23that I will not accept even a thread, or a strap of a sandal, or anything that belongs to you, lest you should say, ‘I have made Abram rich.’
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
’im- wə·’im- ’eq·qaḥ wə·‘aḏ mi·ḥūṭ śə·rō·wḵ- na·‘al mik·kāl ’ă·šer- lāḵ wə·lō ṯō·mar ’ă·nî ’aḇ·rām ’eṯ- he·‘ĕ·šar·tî
Literal — word-for-word from the original
if from a thread to a strap of a sandal, and if I take anything that is yours — so that you cannot say, I have made Abram rich.
Where the English smooths the original
He accompanies his refusal with a good reason, Lest thou shouldest say, I have made Abram rich: which would reflect upon the promise promise and covenant of God, as if He would not have enriched Abraham without the spoils of Sodom.Henry's transcription preserves the doubled "promise promise" of the public-domain text.
That I will not take; Heb. If I shall take. Understand, God do so and so to me, which is expressed 1 Samuel 14:44 . A defective manner of swearing used amongst the Hebrews, either to maintain the reverence of oaths, and the dread of perjury, seeing they were afraid so much as to mention the curse which they meantPoole on the suppressed self-curse behind the particle ʼim.
from a thread used in sewing garments to, a shoelatchet, or the string which fastens the shoes to the foot, the least belonging to that; or from the hair lace of the head, to the shoelatchet of the foot; that is, he would take nothing of his from head to footGill unpacks the thread-to-sandal merism as "nothing from head to foot."
The fact that Abram has already ( Genesis 14:20 ) given to Melchizedek a tithe of all the spoil, strictly speaking, conflicts with his refusal, in this verse, to take any share of the spoil.Cambridge names the internal tension the apparatus discusses.
24I will accept nothing but what my men have eaten and the share for the men who went with me—Aner, Eshcol, and Mamre. They may take their portion.”
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
bil·‘ā·ḏay raq ’ă·šer han·nə·‘ā·rîm ’ā·ḵə·lū wə·ḥê·leq hā·’ă·nā·šîm ’ă·šer hā·lə·ḵū ’it·tî ‘ā·nêr ’eš·kōl ū·mam·rê hêm yiq·ḥū ḥel·qām
Literal — word-for-word from the original
Nothing for me — only what the young men have eaten, and the share of the men who went with me: Aner, Eshcol, and Mamre — they may take their portion.
Where the English smooths the original
The young men . . . the men which went with me. —The former are Abram’s 318 servants, and they are to take only their food. The latter are the Amorites, and they are to have their fair share of the spoil.Ellicott distinguishes Abram's servants from his allies.
a primitive word (cf. Sanscrit, nara , man; nari , nari , woman; Zend., naere ; Greek, ἀνήρ ), applied to a new-born child (Exodus 2:26; 1 Samuel 4:21 ), a youth of about twenty ( Genesis 34:19 ; Genesis 41:15 ), a servant, like παῖς ( Genesis 37:2 ; 2 Kings 5:50), a common soldierPulpit's word-study of naʻar across its range from infant to soldier.
though he might and did give away his own right, he could not give away other men’s.Poole on the limit of Abram's renunciation.
he abridged himself of rights and privileges that belonged unto him, which he might do, and thereby showed his great generosity, and that it was not covetousness but kindness that moved him to do what he did; yet he did not take upon him to abridge the rights and privileges of others
The verse-by-verse work is done. What follows gathers the whole unit. All three layers below are machine-generated (⚙). Weigh them; they have no authority.
AI synthesis — woven from the public-domain voices above and the original text; generated and fallible.
The unit opens and closes with the king of Sodom. He goes out to meet Abram (way·yê·ṣê liq·rā·ṯōw, v.17) returning from "the smiting" (mê·hak·kō·wṯ) of Chedorlaomer — Ellicott names the Hebrew bluntly: "the smiting, that is, the defeat." But the meeting is suspended for three verses. The Cambridge Bible states it plainly: "The meeting of the king of Sodom with Abram is here strangely interrupted by the story of the appearance of Melchizedek, and is resumed at Genesis 14:21"; v.21 then "resumes the narrative of Genesis 14:17. The incident of Melchizedek is parenthetical." The synthesis takes this literary seam not as a flaw but as the unit's architecture: two kings approach one man. Sodom offers a transaction; Salem offers a blessing. The whole theology of the passage hangs on which king Abram receives — and from which he will not take "a thread" (v.23). This framing is the synthesis's own reading of the structure the Cambridge Bible describes.
One verse introduces a man who will echo across a thousand years of Scripture. Malkîy-Tsedeq (H4442) and Shâlêm (H8004) each occur in only two verses of the entire Hebrew Bible — both, by the Verifier's count, returning at Psalm 110:4 and Psalm 76:2 respectively. He is the first kôhên (priest, H3548) named in Scripture, and Barnes marks the weight: "the kohen, or priest, who is here mentioned for the first time in Scripture, was one who acted in sacred things on the part of others. He was a mediator between God and man." Benson reads the famous silence as deliberate: "it is probable that God designedly concealed these things from us, that he might be the more perfect type of his eternal Son." Over the bread and wine (le·ḥem wā·yā·yin) the voices divide, and the synthesis keeps the division open: the Geneva Study Bible insists they are "For Abram and his soldiers refreshment, not to offer sacrifice," and Cambridge agrees — "there is no idea of religious offerings" — while Henry and Barnes hear an anticipation of "the memorials of his body and blood." The synthesis records the dispute rather than resolving it; the text itself says only that a priest brought them out.
The benediction is poetry. Ellicott: "It is a poetical word, as are also those for 'delivered' and 'enemies.' The form of the blessing, moreover, is poetical, as it is arranged in parallel clauses." The root bârak (H1288, "to kneel") sounds three times — Melchizedek blesses Abram (way·ḇā·rə·ḵê·hū, v.19), pronounces "bā·rūḵ Abram" (v.19), then "ū·ḇā·rūḵ God Most High" (v.20). Poole notes the first is strictly priestly: "which was one act of the priestly office." God is named qō·nêh (H7069) "of heaven and earth" — a word the Pulpit Commentary says "combines the meanings of κτίζειν and κτᾶσθαι," both Creator and Possessor, which Cambridge glosses through Deut 32:6, Ps 139:13, Prov 8:22. The second blessing thanks the God who mig·gên (H4042, the rare poetic "shielded/delivered") the enemies into Abram's hand. Then the tithe: the Hebrew leaves the subject unstated, but Poole rules out the rabbinic inversion — "Not Melchizedek gave to Abram, as some Jews foolishly understand it" — and Cambridge reads it forward: "Abram... performs symbolically an action which recognizes for future time their obligation to the sanctuary of Jerusalem."
To Sodom, Abram answers with an oath already sworn: hă·rî·mō·ṯî yā·ḏî, "I have lifted my hand" (v.22), to Yahweh ʼêl ʿelyôn — and here the universal Most High of Melchizedek and the covenant LORD of Abram are declared one God. Benson: "Abram gives to God the same titles that Melchizedek had just now used." Barnes presses the identification: "The Most High God of Melkizedec is the God of the first chapter of Genesis, and the Yahweh of Adam, Noah, and Abram." The synthesis flags, with Cambridge, that "the LXX and Syriac Peshitto omit 'Jehovah'" — a textual honesty the unit owes. Abram's vow is a clipped self-imprecation: Poole calls ʼim (v.23) "a defective manner of swearing... they were afraid so much as to mention the curse which they meant." He will not take "from a thread (mi·ḥūṭ) to a strap of a sandal (śə·rō·wḵ na·ʿal)" — and sᵉrôwk appears in only one other verse (Isa 5:27). The reason is theological: "lest thou shouldest say, I have made Abram rich" (he·ʿĕ·šar·tî) — Henry hears that this "would reflect upon the promise and covenant of God." Yet the disinterest has a boundary: Abram secures his allies' portion, for, as Poole says, "though he might and did give away his own right, he could not give away other men's."
Read under Sola Scriptura, this unit stages a choice between two kingdoms by staging a choice between two kings. Sodom comes to take a transaction; Salem comes to give a blessing. Abram, the man God has called to be a blessing to all families of the earth, will receive bread, wine, and benediction from a priest of the Most High God, and will pay him a tenth — but he will not take so much as a sandal-strap from the king of the doomed city, lest any wealth of his be traceable to Sodom rather than to the LORD. The fallible synthesis offered here is this: the passage is less about who Melchizedek was — a question the text deliberately leaves unanswered — than about whose hand Abram's wealth comes from. The lifted hand of v.22 answers the outstretched hand of v.21. Abram's empty hand before Sodom is the same faith as his full tithe before Salem: both confess that the Possessor of heaven and earth, not the spoils of war, is the source of every good. The Melchizedek typology that Psalm 110 and Hebrews 7 will build is real and ancient — but it rests on this foundation, that the father of the faithful would rather stay poor than let a wicked king boast a claim on the promises of God. This is the tool's reading, offered to be tested against the Word, not in place of it.
The lifted hand that swears to take nothing from Sodom is the same faith as the open hand that tithes everything to Salem. (a synthesis reading, not Scripture)
AI-generated connections. Each carries a verification badge with a recorded basis; contested links are flagged.
The name Malkîy-Tsedeq (H4442) occurs in only two verses in the whole Hebrew Bible: here and Psalm 110:4, where David's Lord is sworn "a priest forever after the order of Melchizedek." The Verifier records both the rare proper name (freq 2) and the shared word kôhên (priest, H3548) as the basis. Because Melchizedek appears in only this one narrative, every later Israelite use of his name reaches back to Genesis 14. Cambridge: "Psalm 110:4 is evidently based upon the present passage."
Genesis 14:18 · Psalm 110:4
basis: shared rare lexeme H4442 Malkîy-Tsedeq (freq 2 verses — this and Ps 110:4) plus H3548 kôhên (priest); Verifier-computed. Tiered verbal because Ps 110:4 reaches back to this sole Melchizedek narrative by name.
The place-name Shâlêm (H8004) likewise occurs in only two verses: here, as Melchizedek's seat, and Psalm 76:2 — "In Salem also is his tabernacle, and his dwelling place in Zion" — where Salem stands in poetic parallel to Zion. Keil, Barnes, Cambridge, and Pulpit all argue the identification with Jerusalem on this basis; Barnes calls Salem "an ancient name of Jerusalem." The rarity of the name (freq 2) makes the link verbal, not merely thematic; the geographic identification of Salem with Jerusalem is a scholarly judgment the synthesis does not assert beyond the shared lexeme.
Genesis 14:18 · Psalm 76:2
basis: shared rare lexeme H8004 Shâlêm (freq 2 verses — this and Ps 76:2); Verifier-computed. The Salem=Jerusalem geography is a separate, non-asserted scholarly claim.
Abram's idiom of the smallest worthless thing, śə·rō·wḵ na·ʿal ("thong of a sandal"), uses sᵉrôwk (H8288), a word found in only two verses. Its sole sibling is Isaiah 5:27, describing an army so ready that "neither shall the latchet of their shoes be broken." The shared rare lexeme (freq 2) is a genuine verbal hook; the synthesis notes plainly that the sense diverges — here the strap marks the least valuable thing Abram refuses, there the unbroken strap marks the readiness of God's instrument of judgment. The verbal hook is exact; this is a shared rare word, not a quotation or allusion, and the thematic application is the synthesis's own.
Genesis 14:23 · Isaiah 5:27
basis: shared rare lexeme H8288 sᵉrôwk (freq 2 verses — this and Isa 5:27) plus H5275 naʻal; Verifier-computed. Tiered verbal on rarity alone; there is NO quotation or allusion claim — the two senses diverge.
Melchizedek's blessing thanks God "who hath mig·gên (H4042) thine enemies into thy hand." This rare poetic verb — "to shield," hence "to deliver up" — occurs in only three verses: here, Proverbs 4:9 (wisdom shall "deliver" a crown of glory), and Hosea 11:8 ("How shall I deliver thee, Israel?"). The Pulpit Commentary explicitly cross-references both. The Verifier reports the shared lexeme; but because mâgan is a poetic verb of handing-over rather than a quotation, the synthesis deliberately DOWNGRADES this from the Verifier's mechanical "verbal" to structural/thematic — a shared motif, not an allusion.
Genesis 14:20 · Hosea 11:8 · Proverbs 4:9
basis: shared rare poetic lexeme H4042 mâgan (freq 3 verses — this, Hos 11:8, Prov 4:9); Verifier returns 'verbal' on the token, DOWNGRADED here to thematic because it is a common poetic verb, not a quotation.
Abram's confederate ʻÂnêr (H6063, "Aner") shares its rare name with a Levitical place in 1 Chronicles 6:70, and "Eshcol" (H812) with the Valley of Eshcol (Num 13:24; 32:9; Deut 1:24). The Verifier flags the shared proper names, but here a man's name in Genesis and a place-name in Chronicles or Numbers are homonyms with no shared pattern, motif, or argument between the passages. There is nothing thematic or typological to claim — so rather than overstate it as a "thematic" thread, the synthesis flags it: a bare verbal coincidence of proper names, recorded honestly and pressed no further.
Genesis 14:24 · 1 Chronicles 6:70
basis: Verifier reports shared proper name H6063 ʻÂnêr (freq 3) / H812 ʼEshkôl (freq 6), but these are homonymous person- and place-names with NO shared motif or argument; DOWNGRADED from the draft's 'thematic' to flagged — a name coincidence, not a real connection.
Hebrews 7 builds its entire argument for a priesthood superior to Aaron's on this narrative — Melchizedek "without father, without mother, without genealogy" (Heb 7:3), "king of righteousness" and "king of peace" (Heb 7:2), who blessed Abraham and received his tithe. Keil calls the Genesis figure "a type of the God-King and eternal High Priest Jesus Christ; a thought which is expanded in Hebrews 7 on the basis of this account," and Benson reads the silenced genealogy as God's design "that he might be the more perfect type of his eternal Son." But this is a cross-Testament link: Greek Hebrews and Hebrew Genesis share no Strong's number, and the Verifier returns no shared original-language lexeme. The connection is the New Testament's own typological reading, not a verbal quotation — and because the provenance of the Hebrews exposition has been historically debated, the synthesis flags it for the reader to verify against Hebrews 7 directly.
Genesis 14:18 · Genesis 14:19 · Genesis 14:20 · Hebrews 7:1
basis: Verifier returns NO shared original-language lexeme (Greek↔Hebrew cannot share Strong's); the link is the NT author's typological argument in Hebrews 7, not a verbal quotation — flagged so the reader checks Hebrews 7 itself.
AI-generated reading; weigh it against the text.
Melchizedek is at once melek (king) and kôhên (priest, H3548), a combination Israel's own law forbade — kings from Judah, priests from Levi, never the same man until the Maccabees (so Cambridge). Hebrews 7 reads this anomaly as the deliberate shape of a higher priesthood, fulfilled in Christ, who is both King of Zion and Priest forever. The PD voices are nearly unanimous: Jamieson, Fausset & Brown call him plainly "a type of the Saviour (Heb 7:1)"; Keil, Ellicott, Gill, and Cambridge concur. The figural reading is ancient and widely held — Psalm 110:4 itself already turns Genesis 14 messianic centuries before the New Testament, and the universality of the priesthood (Ellicott: "limited by no external ordinances, and attached to no particular race or people") is its enduring point.
Genesis 14:18 · Psalm 110:4 · Hebrews 7:1
That Melchizedek brought out (hō·w·ṣî, H3318) bread and wine has, since the early church, been read as a foreshadowing of the Lord's Supper — though the synthesis marks this as the more contested of the two Christ-readings. Henry: "it is remarkable that Christ appointed the same as the memorials of his body and blood, which are meat and drink indeed to the soul." Barnes traces bread and wine from the tabernacle table through the Passover to the cup of John 6. Yet Geneva and Cambridge expressly deny any sacrificial sense ("refreshment, not to offer sacrifice"; "there is no idea of religious offerings"). The typology is ancient and widely held in Christian exegesis; the narrower claim that the gift was itself a sacrifice is disputed, and the synthesis preserves both poles rather than choosing.
Genesis 14:18 · Matthew 26:26 · Hebrews 7:1
The biblical text is the Berean Standard Bible (BSB), public domain (CC0). Hebrew/Greek text, transliteration, morphology and Strong’s are transcribed from the Berean interlinear (CC0) + Strong’s lexicons (PD); the literal renderings, divergence notes, word notes and all synthesis are this tool’s own work (⚙) — fallible; verify them.
Named voices, quoted verbatim from public-domain works:
Four honesty notes specific to this unit. 1. The Melchizedek seam. The Cambridge Bible argues the Melchizedek passage (vv.18-20) was "introduced from a distinct source of tradition," pointing to the narrative interruption between v.17 and v.21 and to the apparent tension between the tithe of v.20 and the refusal of all spoil in v.23. The synthesis does not adjudicate this source-critical claim; it records the literary seam (which all the PD voices observe) and the internal tension (which Cambridge names) without asserting a documentary conclusion. 2. The divine name in v.22. The Masoretic Text reads Yahweh El Elyon; the LXX and Peshitta omit "Jehovah," and the Samaritan Pentateuch reads ha-Elohim. The synthesis follows the BSB/MT but flags the variant, since the identification of Melchizedek's El Elyon with the covenant LORD turns on this word. 3. Cross-Testament links cannot be verbal. The strongest theological connection in this unit — to Hebrews 7 — shares no Strong's lexeme with the Hebrew, because Greek and Hebrew use separate numbering. Every Genesis-to-Hebrews thread here is therefore tiered typological or flagged, never "verbal," and rests on the New Testament author's own argument rather than on a computed verbal basis. 4. Where the Verifier over-fires. The Verifier mechanically returned "verbal / quotation — confirmed" for two links the editor has downgraded by hand: mâgan (v.20 → Hos 11:8, Prov 4:9) is a shared poetic verb, not a quotation, and is tiered structural/thematic; and the Aner/Eshcol name-matches (v.24 → 1 Chr 6:70, Num 13:24) are homonymous person- and place-names with no shared motif, and are flagged rather than presented as a thread. The remaining Hebrew-to-Hebrew threads (Ps 110:4, Ps 76:2, Isa 5:27) are Verifier-confirmed on rare shared lexemes; even the Isaiah link is a rare-word hook, not an allusion. The Christ-readings are marked for attestation, not asserted as proof.
✦ = human, public-domain source, quoted and named. ⚙ = machine synthesis, to be verified. Flagged cross-references are left visible on purpose — the verifier working in the open. “Search the Scriptures daily, whether those things were so.” (Acts 17:11)