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Unity in Our Great High Priest guides reflection on Psalm 133
Summary
An Ordained Servant Online essay (February 2026) by John V. Fesko reads Psalm 133 through the images of Aaron's anointing and the dew of Hermon, arguing that Christ as the great High Priest and the outpouring of the Holy Spirit are the basis of the church's unity.
Content
An Ordained Servant Online essay published in February 2026 by John V. Fesko examines Psalm 133 and its images of Aaron's anointing and the dew of Hermon. The piece traces how those images point forward to Christ as the great High Priest and to the outpouring of the Holy Spirit. Fesko situates Psalm 133 amid Psalms 132–134 and earlier covenant promises to David. He emphasizes that the Spirit, poured out from Christ, is the bond that brings unity to the church.
Key points:
- Psalm 133 uses the anointing of Aaron and the dew of Hermon as imagery for blessed, gathered life and unity in Israel.
- Aaron's garments bore the names of Israel's tribes and symbolized a representative who carried the people before God.
- The essay connects Aaron's anointing to the Father's anointing of Christ with the Holy Spirit, and then to the Spirit's pouring out upon the church.
- The author cites biblical passages (for example, Hebrews, Acts, Ephesians, Romans) and historical sources (Charles Hodge, the Heidelberg Catechism) to support the argument.
- Published by Ordained Servant Online in February 2026, the piece originated in a sermon delivered at the 91st General Assembly of the Orthodox Presbyterian Church and is authored by John V. Fesko, a minister and theology professor.
Summary:
Fesko frames church unity as grounded in Christ's high-priestly work and in the Spirit's outpouring rather than in programs or social identities. The essay brings biblical, theological, and historical threads together to show how the anointing image points from Aaron to Christ and then to the church. Undetermined at this time.
