Genesis 14 — Melchizedek, Priest of the Most High
Four kings conquer five and carry off Lot. Abram pursues with 318 trained servants, defeats the kings, and rescues Lot. Returning, he is met by Melchizedek, king of Salem and priest of the Most High God, who blesses Abram. Abram tithes a tenth of all to him.
“And Melchizedek king of Salem brought forth bread and wine: and he was the priest of the most high God.”
— Genesis 14:18
- v.1-12 The war of nine kings; Lot taken captive
- v.13-16 Abram's rescue of Lot with 318 servants
- v.17-20 The appearance and blessing of Melchizedek
- v.21-24 Abram refuses the king of Sodom's spoil
Melchizedek — king of righteousness. King of Salem — king of peace (Hebrews 7:2). He appears suddenly, without recorded ancestry, blesses Abram, receives a tithe, and vanishes from the narrative.
He brings bread and wine — the elements that would later mark the new covenant meal (Matthew 26:26-29). The connection is intentional; Hebrews 7 builds an entire theology of Christ's eternal priesthood on this brief appearance.
Most Bible students see Melchizedek as a Christophany — a pre-incarnate appearance of Christ. Hebrews 7:3 describes him as "made like unto the Son of God." Whether person or type, his function is unmistakable.
The "Most High God" — El Elyon. The name emphasizes God's supreme rule over all things. Even the kings Abram had just defeated served lesser gods; the only God who rules all is the Most High.
"Possessor of heaven and earth" — the same God who promised Abram the land is the One who owns it all. Abram's inheritance is no small thing; it flows from the Owner of everything.
The first tithe in Scripture. Abram gives a tenth of the spoil to Melchizedek — before any Mosaic law required it. Tithing predates the law; it is a creation-order principle of acknowledgment.
Hebrews 7:4-10 builds on this — Abram, the father of the faithful, tithed to Melchizedek, which establishes the superior priesthood of Melchizedek (and through him, Christ) over the Levitical line.
Abram refuses the king of Sodom's reward. He had clearly anticipated the offer and pre-committed — I have lifted up my hand (past tense). He made the vow in advance, before the moment of temptation arrived.
A model for the believer. Decide in advance, in the cold light of clear thinking, what you will accept and what you will not. Decisions made under pressure are usually worse than decisions made before pressure.
Abram refused even a thread. The principle is uncompromising — when something might compromise the testimony that the Lord has blessed you, refuse it utterly.
There are gifts that come at hidden cost. The world will often want to take credit for the believer's prosperity. Abram protected his testimony at the cost of considerable wealth.
Pre-commit. Decide before the moment what you will not accept, what you will not say, what you will not do — and lift up your hand to the Lord on it. When the moment of temptation comes, the decision has already been made.
Hebrews 7 makes the connection unmistakable — Melchizedek is the Old Testament type whose priesthood points to Christ's. Eternal, royal, and kingly, blessing the patriarch himself, bread and wine in his hand. Every Lord's Supper since has been the bread and wine of the priest after the order of Melchizedek.
Abram's 318 servants are trained — Hebrew chanik, a technical term meaning prepared or initiated. Abram had quietly built a household force capable of military action, even while living as a sojourner.
Lot had separated from Abram in chapter 13 to choose his own way. Yet Abram risks his life to rescue him. Family obligation outweighs the offense. This is grace before grace was a doctrine.