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		 Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
						


 collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
								 Robertson: Heb 1:1 - -- God ( ho theos  ).
This Epistle begins like Genesis and the Fourth Gospel with God, who is the Author of the old revelation in the prophets and of the...
Robertson: Heb 1:1 - -- God ( ho theos  ).
This Epistle begins like Genesis and the Fourth Gospel with God, who is the Author of the old revelation in the prophets and of the...
											God ( 
This Epistle begins like Genesis and the Fourth Gospel with God, who is the Author of the old revelation in the prophets and of the new in his Son. Heb 1:1-3 are a  proemium   (Delitzsch) or introduction to the whole Epistle. The periodic structure of the sentence (Heb 1:1-4) reminds one of Luk 1:1-4, Rom 1:1-7, 1Jo 1:1-4. The sentence could have concluded with 

 Robertson: Heb 1:1 - -- Having spoken ( lalēsas  ).
First aorist active participle of laleō , originally chattering of birds, then used of the highest form of speech as h...
Robertson: Heb 1:1 - -- Having spoken ( lalēsas  ).
First aorist active participle of laleō , originally chattering of birds, then used of the highest form of speech as h...
											Having spoken ( 
First aorist active participle of 

 Robertson: Heb 1:1 - -- Unto the fathers ( tois patrasin  ).
Dative case. The Old Testament worthies in general without "our"or "your"as in Joh 6:58; Joh 7:22; Rom 9:5.
Robertson: Heb 1:1 - -- Unto the fathers ( tois patrasin  ).
Dative case. The Old Testament worthies in general without "our"or "your"as in Joh 6:58; Joh 7:22; Rom 9:5.
											
										
 Robertson: Heb 1:1 - -- In the prophets ( en tois prophētais  ).
As the quickening power of their life (Westcott). So Heb 4:7.
Robertson: Heb 1:1 - -- In the prophets ( en tois prophētais  ).
As the quickening power of their life (Westcott). So Heb 4:7.
											In the prophets ( 
As the quickening power of their life (Westcott). So Heb 4:7.

 Robertson: Heb 1:1 - -- By divers portions ( polumerōs  ).
"In many portions."Adverb from late adjective polumerēs   (in papyri), both in  Vettius Valens , here only in N...
Robertson: Heb 1:1 - -- By divers portions ( polumerōs  ).
"In many portions."Adverb from late adjective polumerēs   (in papyri), both in  Vettius Valens , here only in N...
											By divers portions ( 
"In many portions."Adverb from late adjective 

 Robertson: Heb 1:1 - -- In divers manners ( polutropōs  ).
"In many ways."Adverb from old adjective polutropos , in Philo, only here in N.T. The two adverbs together are "a...
Robertson: Heb 1:1 - -- In divers manners ( polutropōs  ).
"In many ways."Adverb from old adjective polutropos , in Philo, only here in N.T. The two adverbs together are "a...
											In divers manners ( 
"In many ways."Adverb from old adjective 

 Robertson: Heb 1:2 - -- At the end of these days ( ep' eschatou tōn hēmerōn toutōn  ).
In contrast with palai   above.
Robertson: Heb 1:2 - -- At the end of these days ( ep' eschatou tōn hēmerōn toutōn  ).
In contrast with palai   above.
											At the end of these days ( 
In contrast with 

 Robertson: Heb 1:2 - -- Hath spoken ( elalēsen  ).
First aorist indicative of laleō , the same verb as above, "did speak"in a final and full revelation.
Robertson: Heb 1:2 - -- Hath spoken ( elalēsen  ).
First aorist indicative of laleō , the same verb as above, "did speak"in a final and full revelation.
											Hath spoken ( 
First aorist indicative of 

 Robertson: Heb 1:2 - -- In his Son ( en huiōi  ).
In sharp contrast to en tois prophētais . "The Old Testament slopes upward to Christ"(J. R. Sampey). No article or prono...
Robertson: Heb 1:2 - -- In his Son ( en huiōi  ).
In sharp contrast to en tois prophētais . "The Old Testament slopes upward to Christ"(J. R. Sampey). No article or prono...
											In his Son ( 
In sharp contrast to 

 Robertson: Heb 1:2 - -- Hath appointed ( ethēken  ).
First aorist (kappa aorist) active of tithēmi , a timeless aorist.
Robertson: Heb 1:2 - -- Hath appointed ( ethēken  ).
First aorist (kappa aorist) active of tithēmi , a timeless aorist.
											Hath appointed ( 
First aorist (kappa aorist) active of 

 Robertson: Heb 1:2 - -- Heir of all things ( klēronomon pantōn  ).
See Mar 12:6 for ho klēronomos   in Christ’ s parable, perhaps an allusion here to this parable ...
Robertson: Heb 1:2 - -- Heir of all things ( klēronomon pantōn  ).
See Mar 12:6 for ho klēronomos   in Christ’ s parable, perhaps an allusion here to this parable ...
											Heir of all things ( 
See Mar 12:6 for 

 Robertson: Heb 1:2 - -- Through whom ( di' hou  ).
The Son as Heir is also the Intermediate Agent (dia  ) in the work of creation as we have it in Col 1:16.; Joh 1:3.
Robertson: Heb 1:2 - -- Through whom ( di' hou  ).
The Son as Heir is also the Intermediate Agent (dia  ) in the work of creation as we have it in Col 1:16.; Joh 1:3.
											
										
 Robertson: Heb 1:2 - -- The worlds ( tous aiōnas  ).
"The ages"( secula  , Vulgate). See Heb 11:3 also where tous aiōnas   = ton kosmon   (the world) or the universe like...
Robertson: Heb 1:2 - -- The worlds ( tous aiōnas  ).
"The ages"( secula  , Vulgate). See Heb 11:3 also where tous aiōnas   = ton kosmon   (the world) or the universe like...
											The worlds ( 
"The ages"( secula  , Vulgate). See Heb 11:3 also where 
God
Both stages of the revelation were given by God.

 Vincent: Heb 1:1 - --  At sundry times ( πολυμερῶς )   
 Rend.  in   many   parts . N.T.o . o lxx, but πολυμερής  Wisd. 7:22. In the first stage of hi...
Vincent: Heb 1:1 - --  At sundry times ( πολυμερῶς )   
 Rend.  in   many   parts . N.T.o . o lxx, but πολυμερής  Wisd. 7:22. In the first stage of hi...
											 At sundry times ( 
 Rend.  in   many   parts . N.T.o . o lxx, but 

 Vincent: Heb 1:1 - --  In divers manners ( πολυτροπῶς )   
 Rend.  in   many   ways . N.T.o . lxx, 4 Macc. 3:21. This refers to the difference of the various re...
Vincent: Heb 1:1 - --  In divers manners ( πολυτροπῶς )   
 Rend.  in   many   ways . N.T.o . lxx, 4 Macc. 3:21. This refers to the difference of the various re...
											 In divers manners ( 
Rend. in many ways . N.T.o . lxx, 4 Macc. 3:21. This refers to the difference of the various revelations in contents and form. Not the different ways in which God imparted his revelations to the prophets, but the different ways in which he spoke by the prophets to the fathers: in one way through Moses, in another through Elijah, in others through Isaiah, Ezekiel, etc. At the founding of the Old Testament kingdom of God, the character of the revelation was elementary. Later it was of a character to appeal to a more matured spiritual sense, a deeper understanding and a higher conception of the law. The revelation differed according to the faithfulness or unfaithfulness of the covenant-people. Comp. Eph 3:10, the many-tinted wisdom of God , which is associated with this passage by Clement of Alexandria ( Strom . i. 4, 27). " Fitly, therefore, did the apostle call the wisdom of God many-tinted , as showing its power to benefit us in many parts and in many ways ."

 Vincent: Heb 1:1 - --  Spake ( λαλήσας )   
 See on Mat 28:18. Often in the Epistle of the announcement of the divine will by  men , as Heb 7:14; Heb 9:19; by  ang...
Vincent: Heb 1:1 - --  Spake ( λαλήσας )   
 See on Mat 28:18. Often in the Epistle of the announcement of the divine will by  men , as Heb 7:14; Heb 9:19; by  ang...
											 Spake ( 
See on Mat 28:18. Often in the Epistle of the announcement of the divine will by men , as Heb 7:14; Heb 9:19; by angels , as Heb 2:2; by God himself or Christ , as Heb 2:3; Heb 5:5; Heb 12:25. In Paul, almost always of men: once of Christ, 2Co 13:3; once of the Law, personified, Rom 3:9.

 Vincent: Heb 1:1 - --  In time past ( πάλαι )   
 Better,  of   old . The time of the Old Testament revelation. It indicates a revelation, not only given, but comple...
Vincent: Heb 1:1 - --  In time past ( πάλαι )   
 Better,  of   old . The time of the Old Testament revelation. It indicates a revelation, not only given, but comple...
											 In time past ( 
Better, of old . The time of the Old Testament revelation. It indicates a revelation, not only given, but completed in the past.

 Vincent: Heb 1:1 - --  Unto the fathers ( τοῖς πατράσιν )   
 Thus absolutely, Joh 7:22; Rom 9:5; Rom 15:8. More commonly with  your  or  our .
Vincent: Heb 1:1 - --  Unto the fathers ( τοῖς πατράσιν )   
 Thus absolutely, Joh 7:22; Rom 9:5; Rom 15:8. More commonly with  your  or  our .
											
										
 Vincent: Heb 1:2 - --  In these last times ( ἐπ ' ἐσχάτου τῶν ἡμερῶν τούτων )   
 Lit.  at   the   last   of   these   days . The exac...
Vincent: Heb 1:2 - --  In these last times ( ἐπ ' ἐσχάτου τῶν ἡμερῶν τούτων )   
 Lit.  at   the   last   of   these   days . The exac...
											 In these last times ( 
 Lit.  at   the   last   of   these   days . The exact phrase only here; but comp 1Pe 1:20 and Jud 1:18. lxx, 

 Vincent: Heb 1:2 - --  Hath spoken unto us ( ἐλάλησεν ἡμῖν )   
 Rend.  spake , referring to the time of Christ's teaching in the flesh.  To   us  God s...
Vincent: Heb 1:2 - --  Hath spoken unto us ( ἐλάλησεν ἡμῖν )   
 Rend.  spake , referring to the time of Christ's teaching in the flesh.  To   us  God s...
											 Hath spoken unto us ( 
Rend. spake , referring to the time of Christ's teaching in the flesh. To us God spake as to the fathers of old.

 Vincent: Heb 1:2 - --  By his son ( ἐν υἱῷ )   
 Lit.  in   a   son . Note the absence of the article. Attention is directed, not to Christ's divine personalit...
Vincent: Heb 1:2 - --  By his son ( ἐν υἱῷ )   
 Lit.  in   a   son . Note the absence of the article. Attention is directed, not to Christ's divine personalit...
											 By his son ( 
 Lit.  in   a   son . Note the absence of the article. Attention is directed, not to Christ's divine personality, but to his filial relation. While the former revelation was given through a definite class,  the  prophets, the new revelation is given through one who is a son as distinguished from a prophet. He belongs to another category. The revelation was a  son-revelation . See Heb 2:10-18. Christ's high priesthood is the central fact of the epistle, and his sonship is bound up with his priesthood. See Heb 5:5. For a similar use of 

 Vincent: Heb 1:2 - --  Whom he hath appointed heir of all things ( ὃν ἔθηκεν κληρονόμον πάντων )   
 For ἔθηκεν  appointed , s...
Vincent: Heb 1:2 - --  Whom he hath appointed heir of all things ( ὃν ἔθηκεν κληρονόμον πάντων )   
 For ἔθηκεν  appointed , s...
											 Whom he hath appointed heir of all things ( 
 For 

 Vincent: Heb 1:2 - --  By whom also he made the worlds ( δι ' οὗ καὶ ἐποίησεν τοὺς αἰῶνας )   
 Διὰ  commonly expresses second...
Vincent: Heb 1:2 - --  By whom also he made the worlds ( δι ' οὗ καὶ ἐποίησεν τοὺς αἰῶνας )   
 Διὰ  commonly expresses second...
											 By whom also he made the worlds ( 
 
 Wesley: Heb 1:1 - -- The creation was revealed in the time of Adam; the last judgment, in the time of Enoch: and so at various times, and in various degrees, more explicit...
Wesley: Heb 1:1 - -- The creation was revealed in the time of Adam; the last judgment, in the time of Enoch: and so at various times, and in various degrees, more explicit...
											The creation was revealed in the time of Adam; the last judgment, in the time of Enoch: and so at various times, and in various degrees, more explicit knowledge was given.

 Wesley: Heb 1:1 - -- In visions, in dreams, and by revelations of various kinds. Both these are opposed to the one entire and perfect revelation which he has made to us by...
Wesley: Heb 1:1 - -- In visions, in dreams, and by revelations of various kinds. Both these are opposed to the one entire and perfect revelation which he has made to us by...
											In visions, in dreams, and by revelations of various kinds. Both these are opposed to the one entire and perfect revelation which he has made to us by Jesus Christ. The very number of the prophets showed that they prophesied only "in part." Of old - There were no prophets for a large tract of time before Christ came, that the great Prophet might be the more earnestly expected.

A part is put for the whole; implying every kind of divine communication.

 Wesley: Heb 1:1 - -- The mention of whom is a virtual declaration that the apostle received the whole Old Testament, and was not about to advance any doctrine in contradic...
Wesley: Heb 1:1 - -- The mention of whom is a virtual declaration that the apostle received the whole Old Testament, and was not about to advance any doctrine in contradic...
											The mention of whom is a virtual declaration that the apostle received the whole Old Testament, and was not about to advance any doctrine in contradiction to it.

Intimating that no other revelation is to be expected.

All things, and in the most perfect manner.

 Wesley: Heb 1:1 - -- Alone. The Son spake by the apostles. The majesty of the Son of God is proposed, Absolutely, by the very name of Son, Heb 1:1, and by three glorious p...
Wesley: Heb 1:1 - -- Alone. The Son spake by the apostles. The majesty of the Son of God is proposed, Absolutely, by the very name of Son, Heb 1:1, and by three glorious p...
											Alone. The Son spake by the apostles. The majesty of the Son of God is proposed, Absolutely, by the very name of Son, Heb 1:1, and by three glorious predicates, - "whom he hath appointed," "by whom he made," who "sat down;" whereby he is described from the beginning to the consummation of all things, Heb 1:2-3 Comparatively to angels, Heb 1:4. The proof of this proposition immediately follows: the name of Son being proved, Heb 1:5; his being "heir of all things," Heb 1:6-9; his making the worlds, Heb 1:10-12 his sitting at God's right hand, Heb 1:13, &c.

 Wesley: Heb 1:2 - -- After the name of Son, his inheritance is mentioned. God appointed him the heir long before he made the worlds, Eph 3:11; Pro 8:22, &c. The Son is the...
Wesley: Heb 1:2 - -- After the name of Son, his inheritance is mentioned. God appointed him the heir long before he made the worlds, Eph 3:11; Pro 8:22, &c. The Son is the...
											
										
 Wesley: Heb 1:2 - -- Therefore the Son was before all worlds. His glory reaches from everlasting to everlasting, though God spake by him to us only "in these last days."
Wesley: Heb 1:2 - -- Therefore the Son was before all worlds. His glory reaches from everlasting to everlasting, though God spake by him to us only "in these last days."
											Therefore the Son was before all worlds. His glory reaches from everlasting to everlasting, though God spake by him to us only "in these last days."
 JFB: Heb 1:1 - -- Greek, "in many portions." All was not revealed to each one prophet; but one received one portion of revelation, and another another. To Noah the quar...
JFB: Heb 1:1 - -- Greek, "in many portions." All was not revealed to each one prophet; but one received one portion of revelation, and another another. To Noah the quar...
											Greek, "in many portions." All was not revealed to each one prophet; but one received one portion of revelation, and another another. To Noah the quarter of the world to which Messiah should belong was revealed; to Abraham, the nation; to Jacob, the tribe; to David and Isaiah, the family; to Micah, the town of nativity; to Daniel, the exact time; to Malachi, the coming of His forerunner, and His second advent; through Jonah, His burial and resurrection; through Isaiah and Hosea, His resurrection. Each only knew in part; but when that which was perfect came in Messiah, that which was in part was done away (1Co 13:12).

 JFB: Heb 1:1 - -- For example, internal suggestions, audible voices, the Urim and Thummim, dreams, and visions. "In one way He was seen by Abraham, in another by Moses,...
JFB: Heb 1:1 - -- For example, internal suggestions, audible voices, the Urim and Thummim, dreams, and visions. "In one way He was seen by Abraham, in another by Moses,...
											For example, internal suggestions, audible voices, the Urim and Thummim, dreams, and visions. "In one way He was seen by Abraham, in another by Moses, in another by Elias, and in another by Micah; Isaiah, Daniel, and Ezekiel, beheld different forms" [THEODORET]. (Compare Num 12:6-8). The Old Testament revelations were fragmentary in substance, and manifold in form; the very multitude of prophets shows that they prophesied only in part. In Christ, the revelation of God is full, not in shifting hues of separated color, but Himself the pure light, uniting in His one person the whole spectrum (Heb 1:3).

 JFB: Heb 1:1 - -- The expression usual for a Jew to employ in addressing Jews. So Matthew, a Jew writing especially for Jews, quotes Scripture, not by the formula, "It ...
JFB: Heb 1:1 - -- The expression usual for a Jew to employ in addressing Jews. So Matthew, a Jew writing especially for Jews, quotes Scripture, not by the formula, "It ...
											The expression usual for a Jew to employ in addressing Jews. So Matthew, a Jew writing especially for Jews, quotes Scripture, not by the formula, "It is written," but "said," &c.

 JFB: Heb 1:1 - -- From Malachi, the last of the Old Testament prophets, for four hundred years, there had arisen no prophet, in order that the Son might be the more an ...
JFB: Heb 1:1 - -- From Malachi, the last of the Old Testament prophets, for four hundred years, there had arisen no prophet, in order that the Son might be the more an ...
											
										
 JFB: Heb 1:1 - -- Greek, "in." A mortal king speaks by his ambassador, not (as the King of kings) in his ambassador. The Son is the last and highest manifestation of Go...
JFB: Heb 1:1 - -- Greek, "in." A mortal king speaks by his ambassador, not (as the King of kings) in his ambassador. The Son is the last and highest manifestation of Go...
											Greek, "in." A mortal king speaks by his ambassador, not (as the King of kings) in his ambassador. The Son is the last and highest manifestation of God (Mat 21:34, Mat 21:37); not merely a measure, as in the prophets, but the fulness of the Spirit of God dwelling in Him bodily (Joh 1:16; Joh 3:34; Col 2:9). Thus he answers the Jewish objection drawn from their prophets. Jesus is the end of all prophecy (Rev 19:10), and of the law of Moses (Joh 1:17; Joh 5:46).

 JFB: Heb 1:2 - -- In the oldest manuscripts the Greek is. "At the last part of these days." The Rabbins divided the whole of time into "this age," or "world," and "the ...
JFB: Heb 1:2 - -- In the oldest manuscripts the Greek is. "At the last part of these days." The Rabbins divided the whole of time into "this age," or "world," and "the ...
											In the oldest manuscripts the Greek is. "At the last part of these days." The Rabbins divided the whole of time into "this age," or "world," and "the age to come" (Heb 2:5; Heb 6:5). The days of Messiah were the transition period or "last part of these days" (in contrast to "in times past"), the close of the existing dispensation, and beginning of the final dispensation of which Christ's second coming shall be the crowning consummation.

 JFB: Heb 1:2 - -- Greek, "IN (His) Son" (Joh 14:10). The true "Prophet" of God. "His majesty is set forth: (1) Absolutely by the very name "Son," and by three glorious ...
JFB: Heb 1:2 - -- Greek, "IN (His) Son" (Joh 14:10). The true "Prophet" of God. "His majesty is set forth: (1) Absolutely by the very name "Son," and by three glorious ...
											Greek, "IN (His) Son" (Joh 14:10). The true "Prophet" of God. "His majesty is set forth: (1) Absolutely by the very name "Son," and by three glorious predicates, "whom He hath appointed," "by whom He made the worlds," "who sat down on the right hand of the Majesty on high;" thus His course is described from the beginning of all things till he reached the goal (Heb 1:2-3). (2) Relatively, in comparison with the angels, Heb 1:4; the confirmation of this follows, and the very name "Son" is proved at Heb 1:5; the "heirship," Heb 1:6-9; the "making the worlds," Heb 1:10-12; the "sitting at the right hand" of God, Heb 1:13-14." His being made heir follows His sonship, and preceded His making the worlds (Pro 8:22-23; Eph 3:11). As the first begotten, He is heir of the universe (Heb 1:6), which He made instrumentally, Heb 11:3, where "by the Word of God" answers to "by whom"' (the Son of God) here (Joh 1:3). Christ was "appointed" (in God's eternal counsel) to creation as an office; and the universe so created was assigned to Him as a kingdom. He is "heir of all things" by right of creation, and especially by right of redemption. The promise to Abraham that he should be heir of the world had its fulfilment, and will have it still more fully, in Christ (Rom 4:13; Gal 3:16; Gal 4:7).

 JFB: Heb 1:2 - -- The inferior and the superior worlds (Col 1:16). Literally, "ages" with all things and persons belonging to them; the universe, including all space an...
JFB: Heb 1:2 - -- The inferior and the superior worlds (Col 1:16). Literally, "ages" with all things and persons belonging to them; the universe, including all space an...
											The inferior and the superior worlds (Col 1:16). Literally, "ages" with all things and persons belonging to them; the universe, including all space and ages of time, and all material and spiritual existences. The Greek implies, He not only appointed His Son heir of all things before creation, but He also (better than "also He") made by Him the worlds.
 Clarke: Heb 1:1 - --  God, who at sundry times and in divers manners -  We can scarcely conceive any thing more dignified than the opening of this epistle; the sentiments ...
Clarke: Heb 1:1 - --  God, who at sundry times and in divers manners -  We can scarcely conceive any thing more dignified than the opening of this epistle; the sentiments ...
											God, who at sundry times and in divers manners - We can scarcely conceive any thing more dignified than the opening of this epistle; the sentiments are exceedingly elevated, and the language, harmony itself! The infinite God is at once produced to view, not in any of those attributes which are essential to the Divine nature, but in the manifestations of his love to the world, by giving a revelation of his will relative to the salvation of mankind, and thus preparing the way, through a long train of years, for the introduction of that most glorious Being, his own Son. This Son, in the fullness of time, was manifested in the flesh that he might complete all vision and prophecy, supply all that was wanting to perfect the great scheme of revelation for the instruction of the world, and then die to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself. The description which he gives of this glorious personage is elevated beyond all comparison. Even in his humiliation, his suffering of death excepted, he is infinitely exalted above all the angelic host, is the object of their unceasing adoration, is permanent on his eternal throne at the right hand of the Father, and from him they all receive their commands to minister to those whom he has redeemed by his blood. in short, this first chapter, which may be considered the introduction to the whole epistle is, for importance of subject, dignity of expression, harmony and energy of language, compression and yet distinctness of ideas, equal, if not superior, to any other part of the New Testament

 Clarke: Heb 1:1 - --  Sundry times -   Πολυμερως, from  πολυς, many, and  μερος, a part; giving portions of revelation at different times
Clarke: Heb 1:1 - --  Sundry times -   Πολυμερως, from  πολυς, many, and  μερος, a part; giving portions of revelation at different times
											 Sundry times -  

 Clarke: Heb 1:1 - --  Divers manners -   Πολυτροπως, from  πολυς, many, and  τροπος, a manner, turn, or form of speech; hence trope, a figure in rheto...
Clarke: Heb 1:1 - --  Divers manners -   Πολυτροπως, from  πολυς, many, and  τροπος, a manner, turn, or form of speech; hence trope, a figure in rheto...
											 Divers manners -  
But it is better to consider, with Kypke, that the words are rather intended to point out the imperfect state of Divine revelation under the Old Testament; it was not complete, nor can it without the New be considered a sufficiently ample discovery of the Divine will. Under the Old Testament, revelations were made 
One great object of the apostle is, to put the simplicity of the Christian system in opposition to the complex nature of the Mosaic economy; and also to show that what the law could not do because it was weak through the flesh, Jesus has accomplished by the merit of his death, and the energy of his Spirit
Maximus Tyrius, Diss. 1, page 7, has a passage where the very words employed by the apostle are found, and evidently used nearly in the same sense: 
A similar form of expression the same writer employs in Diss. 15, page 171: "The city which is governed by the mob, 
1. God spake unto the faithful under the Old Testament by Moses and the prophets, worthy servants, yet servants; now the Son is much better than a servant, Heb 1:4
2. Whereas the body of the Old Testament was long in compiling, being about a thousand years from Moses to Malachi; and God spake unto the fathers by piecemeal, one while raising up one prophet, another while another, now sending them one parcel of prophecy or history, then another; but when Christ came, all was brought to perfection in one age; the apostles and evangelists were alive, some of them, when every part of the New Testament was completely finished
3. The Old Testament was delivered by God in divers manners, both in utterance and manifestation; but the delivery of the Gospel was in a more simple manner; for, although there are various penmen, yet the subject is the same, and treated with nearly the same phraseology throughout; James, Jude, and the Apocalypse excepted. See Leigh.

 Clarke: Heb 1:2 - --  Last days -  The Gospel dispensation, called the last days and the last time, because not to be followed by any other dispensation; or the conclusion...
Clarke: Heb 1:2 - --  Last days -  The Gospel dispensation, called the last days and the last time, because not to be followed by any other dispensation; or the conclusion...
											Last days - The Gospel dispensation, called the last days and the last time, because not to be followed by any other dispensation; or the conclusion of the Jewish Church and state now at their termination

 Clarke: Heb 1:2 - --  By his Son -  It is very remarkable that the pronoun  αὑτου, his, is not found in the text; nor is it found in any MS. or version. We should n...
Clarke: Heb 1:2 - --  By his Son -  It is very remarkable that the pronoun  αὑτου, his, is not found in the text; nor is it found in any MS. or version. We should n...
											 By his Son -  It is very remarkable that the pronoun 
The apostle begins with the lowest state in which Christ has appeared
1. His being a Son, born of a woman, and made under the law. He then ascends
2. So his being an Heir, and an Heir of all things
3. He then describes him as the Creator of all worlds
4. As the Brightness of the Divine glory
5. As the express Image of his person, or character of the Divine substance
6. As sustaining the immense fabric of the universe; and this by the word of his power
7. As having made an atonement for the sin of the world, which was the most stupendous of all his works
"’ Twas great to speak a world from nought
’ Twas greater to redeem.
8. As being on the right hand of God, infinitely exalted above all created beings; and the object of adoration to all the angelic host
9. As having an eternal throne, neither his person nor his dignity ever changing or decaying
10. As continuing to exercise dominion, when the earth and the heavens are no more! It is only in God manifested in the flesh that all these excellences can possibly appear, therefore the apostle begins this astonishing climax with the simple Sonship of Christ, or his incarnation; for, on this, all that he is to man, and all that he has done for man, is built.
 Calvin: Heb 1:1 - -- ===God formerly, === etc.  This beginning is for the purpose of commending the doctrine taught by Christ; for it shows that we ought not only reverent...
Calvin: Heb 1:1 - -- ===God formerly, === etc.  This beginning is for the purpose of commending the doctrine taught by Christ; for it shows that we ought not only reverent...
											===God formerly, === etc. This beginning is for the purpose of commending the doctrine taught by Christ; for it shows that we ought not only reverently to receive it, but also to be satisfied with it alone. That we may understand this more clearly, we must observe the contrast between each of the clauses. First, the Son of God is set in opposition to the prophets; then we to the fathers; and, thirdly, the various and manifold modes of speaking which God had adopted as to the fathers, to the last revelation brought to us by Christ. But in this diversity he still sets before us but one God, that no one might think that the Law militates against the Gospel, or that the author of one is not the author of the other. That you may, therefore, understand the full import of this passage, the following arrangement shall be given, —

 Calvin: Heb 1:2 - --  2.=== Whom he has appointed, heir, === etc.  He honors Christ with high commendations, in order to lead us to show him reverence; for since the Fathe...
Calvin: Heb 1:2 - --  2.=== Whom he has appointed, heir, === etc.  He honors Christ with high commendations, in order to lead us to show him reverence; for since the Fathe...
											2.=== Whom he has appointed, heir, === etc. He honors Christ with high commendations, in order to lead us to show him reverence; for since the Father has subjected all things to him, we are all under his authority. He also intimates that no good can be found apart from him, as he is the heir of all things. It hence follows that we must be very miserable and destitute of all good things except he supplies us with his treasures. He further adds that this honor of possessing all things belongs by right to the Son, because by him have all things been created. At the same time, these two things 10 are ascribed to Christ for different reasons.
The world was created by him, as he is the eternal wisdom of God, which is said to have been the director of all his works from the beginning; and hence is proved the eternity of Christ, for he must have existed before the world was created by him. If, then, the duration of his time be inquired of, it will be found that it has no beginning. Nor is it any derogation to his power that he is said to have created the world, as though he did not by himself create it. According to the most usual mode of speaking in Scripture, the Father is called the Creator; and it is added in some places that the world was created by wisdom, by the word, by the Son, as though wisdom itself had been the creator, [or the word, or the Son.] But still we must observe that there is a difference of persons between the Father and the Son, not only with regard to men, but with regard to God himself. But the unity of essence requires that whatever is peculiar to Deity should belong to the Son as well as to the Father, and also that whatever is applied to God only should belong to both; and yet there is nothing in this to prevent each from his own peculiar properties.
But the word heir is ascribed to Christ as manifested in the flesh; for being made man, he put on our nature, and as such received this heirship, and that for this purpose, that he might restore to us what we had lost in Adam. For God had at the beginning constituted man, as his Son, the heir of all good things; but through sin the first man became alienated from God, and deprived himself and his posterity of all good things, as well as of the favor of God. We hence only then begin to enjoy by right the good things of God, when Christ, the universal heir, admits to a union with himself; for he is an heir that he may endow us with his riches. But the Apostle now adorns him with this title, that we may know that without him we are destitute of all good things.
If you take all in the masculine gender, the meaning is, that we ought all to be subject to Christ, because we have been given to him by the Father. But I prefer reading it in the neuter gender; then it means that we are driven from the legitimate possession of all things, both in heaven and on earth, except we be united to Christ.
 Defender: Heb 1:1 - -- The Old Testament Scriptures were all from God, but He used many different writers over the ages and different manners of inspiration to write them. W...
Defender: Heb 1:1 - -- The Old Testament Scriptures were all from God, but He used many different writers over the ages and different manners of inspiration to write them. W...
											The Old Testament Scriptures were all from God, but He used many different writers over the ages and different manners of inspiration to write them. Whatever method was used, however, whether direct dictation, special revelation or the individual knowledge and ability of the writer, all were so guided and illumined by the Holy Spirit that the words finally written down were as though spoken by God Himself.

 Defender: Heb 1:1 - -- The epistle to the Hebrews is neither addressed to a particular church or a particular person (as are all Paul's other letters), yet there are several...
Defender: Heb 1:1 - -- The epistle to the Hebrews is neither addressed to a particular church or a particular person (as are all Paul's other letters), yet there are several...
											The epistle to the Hebrews is neither addressed to a particular church or a particular person (as are all Paul's other letters), yet there are several reasons for believing Paul was the author, as follows: (1) its ending is a typical Pauline ending (Heb 13:25); (2) its author was associated closely with Timothy (Heb 13:23); (3) Peter implied that Paul had written an epistle to the Jews (2Pe 3:15, 2Pe 3:16); (4) it was written from Italy (Heb 13:24) possibly as one of Paul's prison epistles; (5) he had been prevented from giving his message to the Jews by his arrest in the temple and transport to Jerusalem, so he undoubtedly wanted to give a full exposition of the Christian faith to his beloved countrymen (note his testimony in Rom 9:1-3). Although he had written many epistles to the Gentiles, he had written nothing yet for his Jewish brethren and may well have proceeded to do so in prison, after the Jews in Rome had rejected his spoken message (Act 20:29-31)."

 Defender: Heb 1:2 - -- God spoke intermittently and partially by the Old Testament prophets, but finally and fully by His Son, through the apostles (Heb 2:3).
Defender: Heb 1:2 - -- God spoke intermittently and partially by the Old Testament prophets, but finally and fully by His Son, through the apostles (Heb 2:3).
											God spoke intermittently and partially by the Old Testament prophets, but finally and fully by His Son, through the apostles (Heb 2:3).

 Defender: Heb 1:2 - -- The Son is the Creator of all things (Joh 1:1-3; Eph 3:9; Col 1:16). Here the Scripture notes that Christ created space/time. He is Creator of time as...
Defender: Heb 1:2 - -- The Son is the Creator of all things (Joh 1:1-3; Eph 3:9; Col 1:16). Here the Scripture notes that Christ created space/time. He is Creator of time as...
											The Son is the Creator of all things (Joh 1:1-3; Eph 3:9; Col 1:16). Here the Scripture notes that Christ created space/time. He is Creator of time as well as space and all things. The Greek word 
 TSK: Heb 1:1 - -- at : Gen 3:15, Gen 6:3, Gen 6:13-22, Gen 8:15-19, 9:1-17, Gen 12:1-3, Gen 26:2-5, Gen 28:12-15; Gen 32:24-30, Gen 46:2-4; Exod. 3:1-22; Luk 24:27, Luk...
TSK: Heb 1:1 - -- at : Gen 3:15, Gen 6:3, Gen 6:13-22, Gen 8:15-19, 9:1-17, Gen 12:1-3, Gen 26:2-5, Gen 28:12-15; Gen 32:24-30, Gen 46:2-4; Exod. 3:1-22; Luk 24:27, Luk...
											at : Gen 3:15, Gen 6:3, Gen 6:13-22, Gen 8:15-19, 9:1-17, Gen 12:1-3, Gen 26:2-5, Gen 28:12-15; Gen 32:24-30, Gen 46:2-4; Exod. 3:1-22; Luk 24:27, Luk 24:44; Act 28:23; 1Pe 1:10-12; 2Pe 1:20,2Pe 1:21
in : Num 12:6-8; Joe 2:28

 TSK: Heb 1:2 - -- these : Gen 49:1; Num 24:14; Deu 4:30, Deu 18:15, Deu 31:29; Isa 2:2; Jer 30:24, Jer 48:47; Eze 38:16; Dan 2:28, Dan 10:14; Hos 3:5; Mic 4:1; Act 2:17...
TSK: Heb 1:2 - -- these : Gen 49:1; Num 24:14; Deu 4:30, Deu 18:15, Deu 31:29; Isa 2:2; Jer 30:24, Jer 48:47; Eze 38:16; Dan 2:28, Dan 10:14; Hos 3:5; Mic 4:1; Act 2:17...
											these : Gen 49:1; Num 24:14; Deu 4:30, Deu 18:15, Deu 31:29; Isa 2:2; Jer 30:24, Jer 48:47; Eze 38:16; Dan 2:28, Dan 10:14; Hos 3:5; Mic 4:1; Act 2:17; Gal 4:4; Eph 1:10; 2Pe 3:3; Jud 1:18
spoken : Heb 1:5, Heb 1:8, Heb 2:3, Heb 5:8, Heb 7:3; Mat 3:17, Mat 17:5, Mat 26:63; Mar 1:1, Mar 12:6; Joh 1:14, Joh 1:17, Joh 1:18; Joh 3:16, Joh 15:15; Rom 1:4
appointed : Heb 2:8, Heb 2:9; Psa 2:6-9; Isa 9:6, Isa 9:7, Isa 53:10-12; Mat 21:38, Mat 28:18; Joh 3:25, Joh 13:3; Joh 16:15, Joh 17:2; Act 10:36; Rom 8:17; 1Co 8:6, 1Co 15:25-27; Eph 1:20-23; Phi 2:9-11; Col 1:17, Col 1:18
by whom : Pro 8:22-31; Isa 44:24, Isa 45:12, Isa 45:18; Joh 1:3; 1Co 8:6; Eph 3:9; Col 1:16, Col 1:17

 collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
								 Barnes: Heb 1:1 - --       God who at sundry times -  The commencement of this Epistle varies from all the others which Paul wrote. In every other instance he at first ann...
Barnes: Heb 1:1 - --       God who at sundry times -  The commencement of this Epistle varies from all the others which Paul wrote. In every other instance he at first ann...
											God who at sundry times - The commencement of this Epistle varies from all the others which Paul wrote. In every other instance he at first announces his name, and the name of the church or of the individual to whom he wrote. In regard to the reason why he here varies from that custom, see the introduction, section 3. This commences with the full acknowledgment of his belief that God had made important revelations in past times, but that now he had communicated his will in a manner that more especially claimed their attention. This announcement was of particular importance here. He was writing to those who had been trained up in the full belief of the truths taught by the prophets. As the object of the apostle was to show the superior claims of the gospel, and to lead them from putting confidence in the rites instituted in accordance with the directions of the Old Testament, it was of essential importance that he should admit that their belief of the inspiration of the prophets was well founded.
 He was not an infidel. He was not disposed to call in question the divine origin of the books which were regarded as given by inspiration. He fully admitted all that had been held by the Hebrews on that heart, and yet showed that the new revelation had more important claims to their attention. The word rendered "at sundry times"- 
      And in divers manners -   - 
In times past - Formerly; in ancient times. The series of revelations began, as recorded by Moses, with Adam Gen. 3, and terminated with Malachi - a period of more than three thousand five hundred years. From Malachi to the time of the Saviour there were no recorded divine communications, and the whole period of written revelation, or when the divine communications were recorded from Moses to Malachi, was about a thousand years.
Unto the fathers - To our ancestors; to the people of ancient times.
By the prophets - The word "prophet"in the Scriptures is used in a wide signification. It means not only those who predict future events, but these who communicate the divine will on any subject. See Rom 12:6 note; 1Co 14:1 note. It is used here in that large sense - as denoting all those by whom God had made communications to the Jews in former times.

 Barnes: Heb 1:2 - --       Hath in these last days -  In this the final dispensation; or in this dispensation under which the affairs of the world will be wound up. Phrase...
Barnes: Heb 1:2 - --       Hath in these last days -  In this the final dispensation; or in this dispensation under which the affairs of the world will be wound up. Phrase...
											Hath in these last days - In this the final dispensation; or in this dispensation under which the affairs of the world will be wound up. Phrases similar to this occur frequently in the Scriptures. They do not imply that the world was soon coming to an end, but that that was the "last"dispensation, the "last"period of the world. There had been the patriarchal period, the period under the Law, the prophets, etc., and This was the period during which God’ s "last"method of communication would be enjoyed, and under which the world would close. It might be a very long period, but it would be the "last"one; and so far as the meaning of the phrase is concerned, it might be the longest period, or longer than all the others put together, but still it would be the "last"one. See Act 2:17 note; Isa 2:2 note.
Spoken unto us - The word "us"here does not of necessity imply that the writer of the Epistle had actually heard him, or that they had heard him to whom the Epistle was written. It means that God had now communicated his will to man by his Son. It may be said with entire propriety that God has spoken to us by his Son, though we have not personally heard or seen him. We have what he spoke and caused to be recorded for our direction.
By his Son - The title commonly given to the Lord Jesus, as denoting his unique relation to God. It was understood by the Jews to denote equality with God (notes, Joh 5:18; compare Joh 10:33, Joh 10:36), and is used with such a reference here. See notes on Rom 1:4, where the meaning of the phrase "Son of God"is fully considered. It is implied here that the fact that the Son of God has spoken to us imposes the highest obligations to attend to what he has said; that he has an authority superior to all those who have spoken in past times; and that there will be special guilt in refusing to attend to what he has spoken. See Heb 2:1-4; compare Heb 12:25. The reasons for the superior respect which should be shown to the revelations of the Son of God may be such as these:
(1) His rank and dignity. He is the equal with God Joh 1:1, and is himself called God in this chapter; Heb 1:8. He has a right, therefore, to command, and when he speaks, people should obey.
(2) The clearness of the truths which he communicated to man on a great variety of subjects that are of the highest moment to the world. Revelation has been gradual - like the breaking of the day in the east. At first there is a little light; it increases and expands until objects become more and more visible, and then the sun rises in full-orbed glory. At first we discern only the existence of some object - obscure and undefined; then we can trace its outline; then its color, its size, its proportions, its drapery - until it stands before us fully revealed. So it has been with revelation. There is a great variety of subjects which we now see clearly, which were very imperfectly understood by the teaching of the prophets, and would be now if we had only the Old Testament. Among them are the following:
(a) The character of God. Christ came to make him known as a merciful being, and to show how he could be merciful as well as just. The views given of God by the Lord Jesus are far more clear than any given by the ancient prophets; compared with those entertained by the ancient philosophers, they are like the sun compared with the darkest midnight,
(b) The way in which man may be reconcile to God. The New Testament - which may be considered as what God "has spoken to us by his Son"- has told us how the great work of being reconciled to God can be effected. The Lord Jesus told us that he came to "give his life a ransom for many;"that he laid down his life for his friends; that he was about to die for man; that he would draw all people to him. The prophets indeed - particularly Isaiah - threw much light on these points. But the mass of the people did not understand their revelations. They pertained to future events always difficult to be understood. But Christ has told us the way of salvation, and he has made it so plain that he who runs may read.
© The moral precepts of the Redeemer are superior to those of any and all that had gone before him. They are elevated, pure, expansive, benevolent - such as became the Son of God to proclaim. Indeed this is admitted on all hands. Infidels are constrained to acknowledge that all the moral precepts of the Saviour are eminently pure and benignant. If they were obeyed, the world would be filled with justice, truth, purity, and benevolence. Error, fraud, hypocrisy, ambition, wars, licentiousness, and intemperance, would cease; and the opposite virtues would diffuse happiness over the face of the world. Prophets had indeed delivered many moral precepts of great importance, but the purest and most extensive body of just principles of good morals on earth are to be found in the teachings of the Saviour.
(d) He has given to us the clearest view which man has had of the future state; and he has disclosed in regard to that future state a class of truths of the deepest interest to mankind, which were before wholly unknown or only partially revealed.
1. He has revealed the certainty of a state of future existence - in opposition to the Sadducees of all ages. This was denied before he came by multitudes, and where it was not, the arguments by which it was supported were often of the feeblest kind. The "truth"was held by some - like Plato and his followers - but the "arguments"on which they relied were feeble, and such as were untitled to give rest to the soul. The "truth"they had obtained by tradition; the "arguments"were their own.
2. He revealed the doctrine of the resurrection of the body. This before was doubted or denied by nearly all the world. It was held to be absurd and impossible. The Saviour taught its certainty; he raised up more than one to show that it was possible; he was himself raised, to put the whole matter beyond debate.
3. He revealed the certainty of future judgment - the judgment of all mankind.
4. It disclosed great and momentous truths respecting the future state. Before he came, all was dark. The Greeks spoke of Elysian fields, but they were dreams of the imagination; the Hebrews had some faint notion of a future state where all was dark and gloomy, with perhaps an occasional glimpse of the truth that there is a holy and blessed heaven; but to the mass of mind all was obscure. Christ revealed a heaven, and told us of a hell. He showed us that the one might be gained and the other avoided. He presented important motives for doing it; and had he done nothing more, his communications were worthy the profound attention of mankind. I may add:
(3) That the Son of God has claims on our attention from the manner in which he spoke. He spoke as one having "authority;"Mat 7:29. He spoke as a "witness"of what he saw and knew; Joh 3:11. He spoke without doubt or ambiguity of God, and heaven, and hell. His is the language of one who is familiar with all that he describes; who saw all, who knew all. There is no hesitancy or doubt in his mind of the truth of what he speaks; and he speaks as if his whole soul were impressed with its unspeakable importance. Never were so momentous communications made to people of hell as fell from the lips of the Lord Jesus (see notes on Mat 23:33); never were announcements made so suited to awe and appall a sinful world.
      Whom he hath appointed heir of all things -  see Psa 2:8; compare notes, Rom 8:17. This is language taken from the fact that he is "the Son of God."If a son, then he is an heir - for so it is usually among people. This is not to be taken literally, as if he inherits anything as a man does. An heir is one who inherits anything after the death of its possessor - usually his father. But this cannot be applied in this sense to the Lord Jesus. The language is used to denote his rank and dignity as the Son of God. As such all things are his, as the property of a father descends to his son at his death. The word rendered "heir"- 
\caps1 (1) o\caps0 ne who acquires anything by lot; and,
\caps1 (2) a\caps0 n "heir"in the sense in which we usually understand the word. It may also denote a "possessor"of anything received as a portion, or of property of any kind; see Rom 4:13-14. It is in every instance rendered "heir"in the New Testament. Applied to Christ, it means that as the Son of God he is possessor or lord of all things, or that all things are his; compare Act 2:36; Act 10:36; Joh 17:10; Joh 16:15. "All things that the Father hath are mine."The sense is, that all things belong to the Son of God. Who is so "rich"then as Christ? Who so able to endow his friends with enduring and abundant wealth?
      By whom -  By whose agency; or who was the actual agent in the creation. Grotins supposes that this means, "on account of whom;"and that the meaning is, that the universe was formed with reference to the Messiah, in accordance with an ancient Jewish maxim. But the more common and Classical usage of the word rendered "by"(
      The worlds -  The universe, or creation. So the word here - 
 Poole -> Heb 1:2
Poole -> Heb 1:2
							
															 Poole: Heb 1:2 - -- Hath in these last days  the gospel day,  last,   as after the days of the old world, and after the law given to Israel by Moses: the days of the four...
Poole: Heb 1:2 - -- Hath in these last days  the gospel day,  last,   as after the days of the old world, and after the law given to Israel by Moses: the days of the four...
											Hath in these last days the gospel day, last, as after the days of the old world, and after the law given to Israel by Moses: the days of the fourth kingdom of the Roman empire, in the height of which Christ came into the world, and at the end of it shall accomplish his kingdom, Dan 2:40,44 . The last, because the perfection of those types which went before, when Christ settled in the church that religion which must remain unalterable, to the end of the world, Heb 12:25-28 : the best days for clearest light and greatest mercies.
Spoken revealed his will to us once and entirely, Joh 1:17,18 Jude 1:3,4 ; discovering the excellent things of God more clearly than they were before, Eph 3:3-11 1Pe 1:10-12 .
To us: the believing Hebrews were so favoured beyond their fathers, to have the best revelation of God in Christ made to them, Mat 13:16,17 Lu 10:23,24 .
By his Son our Lord Jesus Christ, who cometh out of the Father as a Son, Joh 1:14 16:28 . He is his bosom Son, nearest his heart, Joh 1:18 ; the complete Word of him, creating the new world as well as the old, Joh 1:1 ; his wisdom, who teacheth without any mistake, declaring all of God, being truth itself, and exhibiting of it, what he hath seen as well as heard, Joh 3:11 .
Whom this Son, who naturally issueth from his Father by a Divine and anutterable generation, Pro 8:22-31 30:4 . On him all the Father’ s love doth terminate, Col 1:13 . He is to be the Founder and Builder of God’ s family, propagating being to a holy seed for him, Heb 3:3-6 .
He hath appointed the Father hath chosen and ordained him as God-man to heirship by an inviolable ordinance of his decree, as 1Pe 1:20 ; compare Eph 1:10 ; giving him thereby right and title to all things; appointing to him his nature, Heb 2:16 , compare Heb 10:5 ; his offices in this nature, his kingly, Psa 2:6,7 , his priestly, Heb 3:1,2 , his prophetical, Act 3:22 ; being heir by nature, as God the Son, and heir by an irresistible ordinance, as God-man Mediator: so as he had a super-added right from the Father, which right he was able to make over to us, but his natural right he could not, Rom 8:17 . And he was by solemn investiture put in possession of it at his ascension, when he sat down on the Father’ s right hand, Heb 12:2 Mat 28:18 Eph 1:20-22 Phi 2:9-11 .
Heir Lord Proprietor, who hath sovereign and universal power over all, being the firstborn, and receiving the right of it in the whole inheritance, Psa 89:27 Rom 8:29 Col 1:15,18 . The lot and portion is fallen to him by God’ s law, the heir being Lord of all, Gal 4:1 ; being heir of his brethren, Psa 2:8 , and the builder and purchaser of his inheritance, Rev 5:9-14 ; compare 1Pe 1:3,4,18,19 ; possessing the inheritance during his Father’ s life, and making all his brethren heirs of it with him.
Of all things of all things within the compass of God, all that God is, all that God hath, all that God can or will do. All dominions of God, heaven, earth, and hell, are his. He is Lord of angels, Eph 1:21 Col 1:18 , and hath made them fellow servants with us, to himself, and ministering guards to us, Heb 1:14 Rev 5:11 19:10 : of devils, to overrule them, who cannot go or come but as he permits them, Mat 8:31 Col 2:15 : of saints, Joh 17:13 Rom 8:29 : of wicked men, his enemies, 2Th 1:8,9 : of all creatures, Col 1:15-17 : of all God’ s works, spiritual, temporal, past, present, or to come; pardon, peace, righteousness, life, glory; all blessings of all sorts, for time and for eternity. This Son-prophet hath right to, actual possession of, and free and full disposal of them. All, both in law and gospel, his, Moses himself, and all his work, to order, change, and do his pleasure with.
By whom his Son God-man, a joint cause, a primary and principal agent with the Father, and not a mere instrument, second in working as in relation; by this Word and Wisdom of God, who was the rule and idea of all things, all things were modelled, received their shapes, forms, and distinct beings, Joh 1:1-3 5:19,20 Col 1:16 . In the works of the Trinity, what one relation is said to do the other do, but in their order, answerable to the three principles in every action, wisdom, will, and power.
He made created and framed, giving being where there was none, causing to subsist; suggesting herein his ability for redemption work. He who made the world can remove it, Heb 11:3 .
The worlds
 PBC: Heb 1:1 - -- Introduction to Hebrews
At the beginning of every concentrated study, it is important to ask certain questions: Who wrote this specific book or lette...
PBC: Heb 1:1 - -- Introduction to Hebrews
At the beginning of every concentrated study, it is important to ask certain questions: Who wrote this specific book or lette...
											Introduction to Hebrews
At the beginning of every concentrated study, it is important to ask certain questions: Who wrote this specific book or letter? To whom was it written? What historical occasion provoked its writing? What is the general theme? With this general overview, the content of the book will be easier to understand.
367
The God of the Bible is a God who communicates to man; he has put his thoughts into words; he is not silent. Theologically, God’s self-disclosure is called " revelation," a word that means ‘unveiling.’ The doctrine of revelation means that God has made himself known to us in the same way that we make ourselves known to one another: by talking. It is a very humbling doctrine, for it assumes that because God in his greatness is beyond the reach of finite minds, people would have never known him unless he had taken the initiative to make himself known to them. Man can only know Him, consequently, through what he has disclosed of himself. " Without revelation," John R. W. Stott has said, " we would not be Christians at all but Athenians, and all the world’s altars would be inscribed ‘to an unknown God’." Ac 17:23
76
What is the writer’s purpose in Hebrews? He is concerned to demonstrate the superior value of the Christian faith to the Jew’s religion. Under the relentless pressure of persecution, the Hebrew Christians to whom he writes are considering a return to Judaism. Such a return, the writer argues, would constitute the abandoning of the superior for the inferior, the substitution of the shadow for the substance.
71
The Author
Who wrote Hebrews? In fact, we don’t know for sure. Unlike most of the other New Testament epistles, the author does not state his name. Historically, the letter has been attributed to Paul, but the style of Hebrews is different from Paul’s thirteen other letters in the New Testament. Others have suggested Clement of Rome, Barnabas, Luke, Apollos, and Priscilla. Besides Paul, Barnabas and Apollos seem to be the most credible choices.
In my estimation (and this is only personal conjecture), Paul is the most likely author. Though the style of Hebrews is different from Paul’s other letters, the theological content and the logical argument is strikingly similar. Furthermore, in 2Th 3:17-18, Paul identifies his special signature- " the token in every epistle" -in terms of the benediction " The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you all. Amen." Interestingly, Heb 13:25 closes with this benediction. Also, the book closes with the salutation " They of Italy salute you." {Heb 13:24} If the book was written in the early A.D. 60’s, as most scholars believe, this would coincide with Paul’s second imprisonment in Rome (Italy).
Potential hurdles to a Pauline authorship include the following arguments: (1) Why did the author begin with " God," {Heb 1:1} when Paul always started his letters with " Paul, a servant of God...?" ( 2) This is an epistle to Jews (i.e. Hebrews), but Paul was the apostle to the Gentiles. (3) The epistle was written in Hellenistic Greek; if Paul was the author, why did he not address his Jewish brethren in their natural language of Hebrew?
In the light of Paul’s passionate love and desire for his own Jewish brethren, however, these questions may be answered. This is the man who said, " I could wish myself accursed from Christ, for my brethren’s sake, my kinsmen according to the flesh," {Ro 9:3} and " My heart’s desire and prayer to God for Israel is, that they might be saved..."{Ro 10:1} He desperately wanted to preach the gospel to his fellow Israelites, but God had chosen him to bear the name of Christ to the Gentiles. Submissive to God’s will, Paul journeyed extensively throughout the Mediterranean world, preaching to " the Greek and the Barbarian." {Ro 1:14} He never lost his passion, though, for the Jews. When he received word of the poverty of the Jerusalem saints, he organized a relief effort among the Gentile churches for the Jewish Christians. {Ac 11:29; 24:17; Ro 15:26; 1Co 16:12; 2Co 9:1; Ga 2:9-10} It is not inconsistent with his passion for the welfare of his fellow Hebrews, then, that he would address through his pen those whom God did not allow him to address with his lips.
It is possible, therefore, that Hebrews starts with " God" instead of " Paul," because Paul had no recognized authority among the Jewish Christians, certainly not like Peter and John. He was, after all, sent to the Gentiles. The writer starts with " God," moreover, because the letter is written in the style of a sermon. Paul’s other letters were didactic, but Hebrews is a " Jewish homily [i.e. sermon]." The tone of this sermon is pastoral and serious. This is no mere literary essay or theoretical treatise. A spirit of zeal and urgency, like a pastor preaching to his flock, pervades the entire letter. This is certainly in keeping with Paul’s passion for his countrymen. If he wrote it from Rome, furthermore, then Luke, his resident physician, could have easily been his penman, as he was in other epistles. This may account for the fact that the epistle was written in Greek.
Granted, this is all speculative and vague. But the writer clearly had a pastoral love for the spiritual welfare of these Jewish Christians and a thorough knowledge of the Old Testament and the implications of the ceremonial law. Paul certainly fits this description. Because of the mystery that enshrouds it, however, it is important to avoid dogmatism.
The Readers
To whom was the book written? Obviously, as the name implies, it was written to Jews. More specifically, the letter is addressed to Jewish Christians, i.e. Jews who have been converted to Christianity. The gospel, you may remember, began in Jerusalem. From there, it spread to Judea, then Samaria, then to the farthest reaches of the Mediterranean world. {Ac 1:8} The earliest converts, consequently, were Jewish. After the stoning of Stephen, the Jewish Christians were dispersed from their central location in Jerusalem throughout the entire land of Palestine. {Ac 8:1-6} It was to these Jewish Christians of the Dispersion, therefore, still living in a predominately Jewish environment, that Hebrews is addressed.
The letter was no doubt written prior to A.D. 70, when Jerusalem was destroyed and the temple sacrifices ceased, for the writer speaks of the levitical sacrifices in the present tense, indicating that temple worship had not yet ceased. Other features, coupled with this fact, place the time of writing in the 60’s.
The Historical Occasion
Why, then, was the letter written? The answer to this question provides the key to unlocking the general theme and message of Hebrews. It is apparent that a very serious crisis threatens the purity of the early church. A situation has arisen in which these Jewish Christians were considering a compromise of their faith and the abandonment of the gospel. Living in Palestine, a Jewish environment, they were subjected to daily indignities, public abuse, the plundering of their property, imprisonment, and the prospect of martyrdom from their countrymen. Why were they persecuted with such hostility? Because these Jewish Christians were regarded as traitors to their ancestral religion. Many of them lost their jobs, their families, their reputation, and their material possessions. Perhaps this cultural antagonism toward those who had broken from the traces of Judaism by confessing faith in Jesus Christ as Lord was largely responsible for the terrible poverty of the mother-church in Jerusalem. The Hebrews, in other words, were socially ostracized. {Heb 10:32-34; 12:4; 13:13-14}
Under the relentless pressure of persecution, they were tempted to recant and withdraw from their new profession of faith. They were ready to surrender on the battlefield. The pressures were just too great.
Some had already gone back. They were called the lapseis, because they had lapsed into their former religion in order to purchase ease and comfort. It is likely that this ultimate compromise and renunciation of their profession of faith is the basis of the severe warnings in Heb 6:1-20 and Heb 10:1-39. Others had slipped into a state of complacency, at a spiritual standstill and in danger of backsliding. {Heb 5:12-14} Some had forsaken the public assembly of the house of God. {Heb 10:25} Most were discouraged and fearful, and were beginning to weaken beneath the assault. {Heb 12:12-13}
Hebrews is written, consequently, to persuade them to resist the strong temptation to surrender and to persevere in faith. Perseverance is one of the key words of the book. In fact, the writer terms the letter, in Heb 13:22, a " word of exhortation." Interestingly, the word " exhortation" implies a double concept of both " warning" and " encouragement." This letter includes at least five strong warnings about the danger of apostasy. " You can’t leave the superior and return to the inferior," the author says, " without incurring the judgment of God." As a faithful pastor, however, the writer balances his stern warnings with gentle encouragements. " Your High Priest can be touched with the feeling of your infirmities," he reminds them. Warning, to arouse them from the lethargy of fear, and encouragement, to incite them to persevere in the race of faith, are beautifully blended in Hebrews.
Theme
Key words in the book include the words " better" (as he reminds them of the superior blessings of the New Covenant to the Old) and " once" (as he reminds them of the fulfillment of the Jewish religion in the once for all sacrifice of Jesus Christ). The theme of the book is The Supremacy of Jesus Christ. The entire Old Testament, says the writer, pointed forward to One who is Prophet, Priest, and King, {Heb 1:1-3} Jesus Christ. Jesus is superior to the angels, the prophets, the sacrifices, and the entire old order. By encouraging them to re-evaluate their blessings and to consider the Lord Jesus Christ who was set down at the right hand of God, and by warning them of the danger of sinning against the light of knowledge, the writer urges them to endure to the finish line. What a relevant message for us today!
366
God Has Spoken Heb 1:1-3
The God of the Bible is a God who communicates to man; he has put his thoughts into words; he is not silent. Theologically, God’s self-disclosure is called " revelation," a word that means ‘unveiling.’ The doctrine of revelation means that God has made himself known to us in the same way that we make ourselves known to one another: by talking. It is a very humbling doctrine, for it assumes that because God in his greatness is beyond the reach of finite minds, people would have never known him unless he had taken the initiative to make himself known to them. Man can only know Him, consequently, through what he has disclosed of himself. " Without revelation," John R. W. Stott has said, " we would not be Christians at all but Athenians, and all the world’s altars would be inscribed ‘to an unknown God’."{Ac 17:23}
Where has God revealed himself? First, he has revealed himself in nature. {Ps 19:1-6; Ro 1:18-25} This is called Natural or General Revelation. Every human being, says Paul, instinctively and inherently knows that God exists and that he/she is ultimately accountable to that God for violations of his moral law, so that they are without excuse. The problem of the atheist, according to Ro 1:1-32, is not an intellectual problem but a moral problem -not a lack of knowledge but the refusal to acknowledge God as God, {Ro 1:21} for God has unveiled himself to all men in creation.
Secondly, he has revealed himself in Scripture. {Ps 19:7-14; Ro 1:16-17} This is called Special Revelation. It is more specific, rational, and comprehensive than natural revelation. He has revealed himself in words to minds. It is a rational revelation to rational creatures. In the New Testament, special revelation was given directly to the apostles, who then communicated God’s truth to us through their words. {Mt 16:17; Eph 3:3-4} Revelation, in other words, was communicated to man via the vehicle of inspiration. As we read and study God’s revealed word, therefore, we need illumination from God the Holy Spirit. {Eph 1:18} An outline of the doctrine of revelation looks like this:
I Natural Revelation (Visible and Empirical)
A. In Nature or Creation
B. Through Historical Deeds
II Special Revelation (Verbal and Rational)
A. In O. T. direct revelation to the prophets
B. In N.T., direct revelation to the apostles
1. Communicated via Inspiration (Objective)
2. Comprehended by Illumination (Subjective)
General revelation differs from special revelation in terms of its audience (everyone everywhere vs particular people in particular places), its nature (visual vs verbal; continuous vs final and complete), and its message (creation vs salvation).
" Hebrews" begins with an assertion of the fact that the God of Judaism and the God of Christianity is a God who speaks, a God who reveals himself verbally. The prologue {Heb 1:1-3} suggests that special revelation has been progressive revelation. The very core of the Bible is the story of God speaking to men and revealing himself at various times and in different ways (i.e. audible voice, theophanies, dreams, visions) to " the fathers by the prophets," a little here and a little more there. This progressive or gradual revelation has culminated, however, in God’s final and complete " Word," His own Son. {Heb 1:2} Jesus Christ is the Revealer of God, the grand finale of God’s self-disclosure, the One in whom and through whom God has spoken his last word. Through " the record that God has given of His Son," {1Jo 5:10} that is, through the Bible, God still speaks today. A close adherence to Scripture will protect us from two equally dangerous extremes: ( 1) The extreme that God is silent today; (2) The extreme that God is still giving revelation outside of Scripture.
Hebrews teaches that God has spoken, once and for all. Through that revelation, he still speaks. That’s the message of Hebrews: " God has spoken; how will you respond to him?" Are you listening to his voice?
367

 PBC: Heb 1:2 - -- To be proclaimed as God’s eternal son is to proclaim Jesus as co-eternal and co-equal, having the same nature and standing as God. He is God. That...
PBC: Heb 1:2 - -- To be proclaimed as God’s eternal son is to proclaim Jesus as co-eternal and co-equal, having the same nature and standing as God. He is God. That...
											To be proclaimed as God’s eternal son is to proclaim Jesus as co-eternal and co-equal, having the same nature and standing as God. He is God. That’s the point made here.
368
The very core of the Bible is the story of God speaking to men and revealing himself at various times and in different ways (i.e. audible voice, theophanies, dreams, visions) to " the fathers by the prophets," a little here and a little more there. This progressive or gradual revelation has culminated, however, in God’s final and complete " Word," His own Son. {Heb 1:2} Jesus Christ is the Revealer of God, the grand finale of God’s self-disclosure, the One in whom and through whom God has spoken his last word. Through " the record that God has given of His Son," {1Jo 5:10} that is, through the Bible, God still speaks today. A close adherence to Scripture will protect us from two equally dangerous extremes: (1) The extreme that God is silent today; (2) The extreme that God is still giving revelation outside of Scripture.
Hebrews teaches that God has spoken, once and for all. Through that revelation, he still speaks. That’s the message of Hebrews: " God has spoken; how will you respond to him?" Are you listening to his voice?
76
 Haydock: Heb 1:1 - -- At different times, [1]  and in many ways.   The first word signifies that God revealed the incarnation of his Son, as it were, by parcels, and by deg...
Haydock: Heb 1:1 - -- At different times, [1]  and in many ways.   The first word signifies that God revealed the incarnation of his Son, as it were, by parcels, and by deg...
											At different times, [1] and in many ways. The first word signifies that God revealed the incarnation of his Son, as it were, by parcels, and by degrees, at different times, and to different persons, to Adam, to Abraham, to Moses, to David, &c. The latter word expresseth the different ways and manners, as by angels, by immediate inspirations, and revelations, by types, figures, and ceremonies.[2] ---
Last of all, by his Son, this true, natural, eternal Son, of whom we must always take notice, that being both true God, and true man, by the union of the divine and human nature to one and the same divine person, St. Paul speaks of him sometimes as God, sometimes mentions what applies to him as man, sometimes as our Redeemer, both God and man. This must necessarily happen in speaking of Christ; but when we find things that cannot be understood of one that is a pure or mere man only, or that cannot be true but of him, who is truly God, these are undeniable proofs against the errors of the Arians and Socinians. (Witham)
===============================
[BIBLIOGRAPHY]
Multifariam, Greek: polumeros; which signifies, that God revealed the coming of his Son as it were by parts and parcels, or by degrees, first revealing some things and then others.
===============================
[BIBLIOGRAPHY]
Novissime, Greek: ep echatou, which reading Dr. Wells prefers before that in the ordinary Greek copies, which have Greek: ep echaton ton emeron, followed by the Protestant translation and Mr. N.

 Haydock: Heb 1:2 - -- Whom he hath appointed heir of all things.   Heir is here not taken for one that succeeds another at his death, but for the same as Master or Lord.  A...
Haydock: Heb 1:2 - -- Whom he hath appointed heir of all things.   Heir is here not taken for one that succeeds another at his death, but for the same as Master or Lord.  A...
											Whom he hath appointed heir of all things. Heir is here not taken for one that succeeds another at his death, but for the same as Master or Lord. And though Christ be inseparably God and man, yet this applies to him, as man, because, as God, he was not constituted in time, but was always from eternity, Lord of all things, with the Father and the Holy Ghost: by whom also he made the world. That is, all created beings, and in such a manner, that all creatures were equally produced by the three divine persons. See John i. 3. and the annotations on that place. (Witham)
 Gill: Heb 1:1 - -- God, who at sundry times and in divers manners,.... The apostle begins the epistle with an account of the revelation God has made of his mind and will...
Gill: Heb 1:1 - -- God, who at sundry times and in divers manners,.... The apostle begins the epistle with an account of the revelation God has made of his mind and will...
											God, who at sundry times and in divers manners,.... The apostle begins the epistle with an account of the revelation God has made of his mind and will in former times: the author of this revelation is God, not essentially, but personally considered, even God the Father, as distinguished from his Son in the next verse; for the revelation under the Old Testament is divine, as well as that under the New; in this they both agree, in whatsoever else they differ: and this revelation was made at several times, at different seasons, and to different persons; and consisted of a variety of things relating to doctrine and worship, and concerning the Messiah, his person and office; of whom, at different times, there were gradual discoveries made, both before and after the giving of the law, from the beginning of the world, or the giving forth of the first promise, and in the times of the patriarchs, of: Moses, David, Isaiah, and other prophets: and this was delivered in various manners; sometimes by angels; sometimes in a dream; at other times by a vision; and sometimes by Urim and Thummim: and this he
spake in time past unto the fathers by the prophets; by Moses, and other succeeding prophets, as David, Isaiah, Jeremiah, Micah, Zechariah, Malachi, and others; who were sent to the Jewish fathers, the ancestors of the people of the Jews, to whom they prophesied and declared the will of God, as they were moved and inspired by the Holy Ghost: and the apostle suggests, by this way of speaking, that it was a long time since God spake to this people; for prophecy had ceased ever since the times of Malachi, for the space of three hundred years; and this time past includes the whole Old Testament dispensation, from the beginning to the end of it, or of prophecy in it.

 Gill: Heb 1:2 - -- Hath in these last days spoken unto us by his Son,.... This is the Gospel revelation, or the revelation in the Gospel dispensation; which though it co...
Gill: Heb 1:2 - -- Hath in these last days spoken unto us by his Son,.... This is the Gospel revelation, or the revelation in the Gospel dispensation; which though it co...
											Hath in these last days spoken unto us by his Son,.... This is the Gospel revelation, or the revelation in the Gospel dispensation; which though it comes from the same author the other does, yet in many things differs from it, and is preferable to it; and indeed the general design of this epistle is to show the superior excellency of the one to the other; the former was delivered out in time past, but this "in these last days"; the Alexandrian copy, the Complutensian edition, and several other copies, read, "in the last of these days": perfectly agreeable to the phrase 
By whom also he made the worlds; this is said in agreement with the notions of the Jews, and their way of speaking, who make mention of three worlds, which they call, the upper world (the habitation of God), the middle world (the air), and the lower world o (the earth); and sometimes they call them the world of angels (where they dwell), the world of orbs (where the sun, moon, and stars are), and the world below p (on which we live); and it is frequent in their writings, and prayer books q, to call God 

 expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
								
 NET Notes: Heb 1:2 Grk “the ages.” The temporal (ages) came to be used of the spatial (what exists in those time periods). See Heb 11:3 for the same usage.
NET Notes: Heb 1:2 Grk “the ages.” The temporal (ages) came to be used of the spatial (what exists in those time periods). See Heb 11:3 for the same usage.
											
										 Geneva Bible: Heb 1:1 God, who at ( 1 ) sundry times and in divers manners spake in time past unto the fathers by the prophets, 
The purpose of this epistle, is to show tha...
Geneva Bible: Heb 1:1 God, who at ( 1 ) sundry times and in divers manners spake in time past unto the fathers by the prophets, 
The purpose of this epistle, is to show tha...
											
										
 Geneva Bible: Heb 1:2 Hath in these ( a ) last days spoken unto us by [his] ( b ) Son, ( 2 ) whom he hath appointed ( c ) heir of all things, by whom also he made the ( d )...
Geneva Bible: Heb 1:2 Hath in these ( a ) last days spoken unto us by [his] ( b ) Son, ( 2 ) whom he hath appointed ( c ) heir of all things, by whom also he made the ( d )...
											
										
 expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
								 TSK Synopsis -> Heb 1:1-14
TSK Synopsis -> Heb 1:1-14
							
															 TSK Synopsis: Heb 1:1-14  - --1 Christ in these last times coming to us from the Father,4 is preferred above the angels, both in person and office.
TSK Synopsis: Heb 1:1-14  - --1 Christ in these last times coming to us from the Father,4 is preferred above the angels, both in person and office.
											
										 Combined Bible -> Heb 1:1-3
Combined Bible -> Heb 1:1-3
							
															 Combined Bible: Heb 1:1-3  - --Superiority of Christ over the Prophets.   
  (Hebrews 1:1-3)   
 Before taking up the study of the opening verses of our Epistle,...
Combined Bible: Heb 1:1-3  - --Superiority of Christ over the Prophets.   
  (Hebrews 1:1-3)   
 Before taking up the study of the opening verses of our Epistle,...
											 MHCC -> Heb 1:1-3
MHCC -> Heb 1:1-3
							
															 MHCC: Heb 1:1-3  - --God spake to his ancient people at sundry times, through successive generations, and in divers manners, as he thought proper; sometimes by personal di...
MHCC: Heb 1:1-3  - --God spake to his ancient people at sundry times, through successive generations, and in divers manners, as he thought proper; sometimes by personal di...
											
										 Matthew Henry -> Heb 1:1-3
Matthew Henry -> Heb 1:1-3
							
															 Matthew Henry: Heb 1:1-3  - --  Here the apostle begins with a general declaration of the excellency of the gospel dispensation above that of the law, which he demonstrates from th...
Matthew Henry: Heb 1:1-3  - --  Here the apostle begins with a general declaration of the excellency of the gospel dispensation above that of the law, which he demonstrates from th...
											
										 Barclay -> Heb 1:1-3
Barclay -> Heb 1:1-3
							
															 Barclay: Heb 1:1-3  - --This is the most sonorous piece of Greek in the whole New Testament.  It is a passage that any classical Greek orator would have been proud to write. ...
Barclay: Heb 1:1-3  - --This is the most sonorous piece of Greek in the whole New Testament.  It is a passage that any classical Greek orator would have been proud to write. ...
											
										 Constable: Phm 1:8--Heb 1:10  - --A. Paul's appeal 8-11
v. 8 Paul's confidence (Gr. parresia) was his assurance that if he commanded Philemon to do as he requested because Paul was an ...
Constable: Phm 1:8--Heb 1:10  - --A. Paul's appeal 8-11
v. 8 Paul's confidence (Gr. parresia) was his assurance that if he commanded Philemon to do as he requested because Paul was an ...
											
										
 Constable: Phm 1:12--Heb 2:1  - --B. Paul's motives 12-16
vv. 12-14 Onesimus had so endeared himself to Paul that his departure was an extremely painful prospect for the apostle. Paul ...
Constable: Phm 1:12--Heb 2:1  - --B. Paul's motives 12-16
vv. 12-14 Onesimus had so endeared himself to Paul that his departure was an extremely painful prospect for the apostle. Paul ...
											
										
 Constable: Phm 1:18--Heb 2:5  - --D. Paul's offer 18-20
v. 18 Paul then hastened to remove a possible obstacle. Pilfering was common among slaves (cf. Titus 2:10). Paul seemed to be un...
Constable: Phm 1:18--Heb 2:5  - --D. Paul's offer 18-20
v. 18 Paul then hastened to remove a possible obstacle. Pilfering was common among slaves (cf. Titus 2:10). Paul seemed to be un...
											
										
 Constable: Heb 1:1--3:1  - --I. The culminating revelation of God 1:1--2:18
                
                    Hebrews is a sermon reduced to writing (cf. 13:22; James). Indica...
Constable: Heb 1:1--3:1  - --I. The culminating revelation of God 1:1--2:18
                
                    Hebrews is a sermon reduced to writing (cf. 13:22; James). Indica...
											
										 College -> Heb 1:1-14
College -> Heb 1:1-14
							
															 College: Heb 1:1-14  - --HEBREWS 1
I. JESUS IS SUPERIOR TO THE ANGELS (1:1-14)
A. THE PREEMINENCE OF THE SON (1:1-4)
1 In the past God spoke to our forefathers through the ...
College: Heb 1:1-14  - --HEBREWS 1
I. JESUS IS SUPERIOR TO THE ANGELS (1:1-14)
A. THE PREEMINENCE OF THE SON (1:1-4)
1 In the past God spoke to our forefathers through the ...
											
										
 expand allCommentary -- Other
expand allCommentary -- Other
								 Evidence: Heb 1:1  The Bible’s inspiration . The Bible doesn’t attempt to defend its inspiration. But here is an interesting thing: Genesis opens with the words " Go...
Evidence: Heb 1:1  The Bible’s inspiration . The Bible doesn’t attempt to defend its inspiration. But here is an interesting thing: Genesis opens with the words " Go...
											
										
 Evidence: Heb 1:2  " There is a Being who made all things, who holds all things in His power, and is therefore to be feared."   Sir Isaac Newton
Evidence: Heb 1:2  " There is a Being who made all things, who holds all things in His power, and is therefore to be feared."   Sir Isaac Newton 
											
										 expand allIntroduction / Outline
expand allIntroduction / Outline
						Robertson: Hebrews  (Book Introduction)  The Epistle to the Hebrews
  By Way of Introduction
 Unsettled Problems
Probably no book in the New Testament presents more unsettled problems tha...
										
									Vincent: Hebrews  (Book Introduction)  The Epistle to the Hebrews
   Introduction  " Who wrote the Epistle God only knows."  Such was the verdict of Origen, and modern criticism has gotte...
										
									JFB: Hebrews  (Book Introduction) CANONICITY AND AUTHORSHIP.--CLEMENT OF ROME, at the end of the first century (A.D), copiously uses it, adopting its words just as he does those of the...
										
									JFB: Hebrews  (Outline) 
THE HIGHEST OF ALL REVELATIONS IS GIVEN US NOW IN THE SON OF GOD, WHO IS GREATER THAN THE ANGELS, AND WHO, HAVING COMPLETED REDEMPTION, SITS ENTHRONE...
										
									TSK: Hebrews 1 (Chapter Introduction)    Overview
Heb 1:1, Christ in these last times coming to us from the Father, Heb 1:4, is preferred above the angels, both in person and office.
										
									Poole: Hebrews 1 (Chapter Introduction) ARGUMENT  
 Some few Greek copies not having the name of the apostle Paul prefixed to this Epistle, though most of them have, hath made many doubt con...
										
									MHCC: Hebrews  (Book Introduction) This epistle shows Christ as the end, foundation, body, and truth of the figures of the law, which of themselves were no virtue for the soul. The grea...
										
									MHCC: Hebrews 1 (Chapter Introduction) (Heb 1:1-3) The surpassing dignity of the Son of God in his Divine person, and in his creating and mediatorial work.
(Heb 1:4-14) And in his superior...
										
									Matthew Henry: Hebrews  (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Epistle to the Hebrews
Concerning this epistle we must enquire,  I. Into the divine authority of it...
										
									Matthew Henry: Hebrews 1 (Chapter Introduction)    In this chapter we have a twofold comparison stated:  I. Between the evangelical and legal dispensation; and the excellency of the gospel above tha...
										
									Barclay: Hebrews  (Book Introduction)  INTRODUCTION TO THE LETTER TO THE HEBREWS God Fulfils Himself In Many Ways Religion has never been the same thing to all men.  "God," as Tennyson sai...
										
									Barclay: Hebrews 1 (Chapter Introduction)  The End Of Fragments  (Heb_1:1-3) Above The Angels  (Heb_1:4-14)
										
									Constable: Hebrews  (Book Introduction) Introduction
            
            Historical background
                
                    The writer said that he and those to whom he wrote ...
										
									Constable: Hebrews  (Outline)
										
									Constable: Hebrews   Hebrews
        Bibliography
            
                Andersen, Ward. "The Believer's Rest (Hebrews 4)." Biblical Viewpoint 24:1 (April 1990):31...
										
									Haydock: Hebrews  (Book Introduction) THE
EPISTLE OF ST. PAUL, THE APOSTLE,
TO THE HEBREWS.
INTRODUCTION.
The Catholic Church hath received and declared this Epistle to be part of ...
										
									Gill: Hebrews  (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO HEBREWS
That this epistle was written very early appears from hence, that it was imitated by Clement of Rome, in his epistle to the...
										
									Gill: Hebrews 1 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO HEBREWS 1
The intention of this epistle being to demonstrate the superior excellency of the Gospel revelation to the legal one, the...
										
									College: Hebrews  (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION
It is difficult to overestimate the significance of Hebrews for understanding the nature of the new covenant. No other document in the N...
										
									College: Hebrews  (Outline) OUTLINE
I.   JESUS IS SUPERIOR TO THE ANGELS - 1:1-14
 A.   The Preeminence of the Son - 1:1-4
B.   The Son Superior to the Angels - 1:5-14
II.   ...
										
									 
     
 
 
 



