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Text -- Hebrews 11:8 (NET)

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Context
11:8 By faith Abraham obeyed when he was called to go out to a place he would later receive as an inheritance, and he went out without understanding where he was going.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Abraham a son of Terah; the father of Isaac; ancestor of the Jewish nation.,the son of Terah of Shem


Dictionary Themes and Topics: Quotations and Allusions | PROVIDENCE, 1 | Obedience | JUSTIFICATION | INHERITANCE | HEBREWS, EPISTLE TO THE | GENESIS, 4 | Faith | FINISHER | Decision | Call | Abraham | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Robertson , Vincent , Wesley , JFB , Clarke , Calvin , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , PBC , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
, Geneva Bible

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , Combined Bible , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Barclay , Constable , College

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Critics Ask

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Robertson: Heb 11:8 - -- Not knowing whither he went ( mē epistamenos pou erchetai ). Usual negative mē with a participle (present middle from epistamai , old and commo...

Not knowing whither he went ( mē epistamenos pou erchetai ).

Usual negative mē with a participle (present middle from epistamai , old and common verb to put the mind on). Present middle indicative (erchetai ) preserved in the indirect question after the secondary tense exēlthen (went out) from which epistamenos gets its time. Abraham is a sublime and graphic example of faith. He did not even know where the land was that he was going to receive "as an inheritance"(eis klēronomian ).

Vincent: Heb 11:8 - -- Paul exhibits faith as the element of personal righteousness in Abraham. In these verses (Heb 11:8-22) faith, according to the opening definition in ...

Paul exhibits faith as the element of personal righteousness in Abraham. In these verses (Heb 11:8-22) faith, according to the opening definition in this chapter, is that assurance and conviction of unseen things which caused Abraham and the patriarchs to rely confidently upon the future fulfillment of the divine promises.

When he was called to go out - obeyed ( καλούμενος ἐξελθεῖν ὑπήκουσεν )

A.V. is wrong. Ἐξελθεῖν to go out should be construed with ὑπήκουσεν obeyed , and καλούμενος being called is to be taken absolutely. Καλούμενος , the present participle, indicates Abraham's immediate obedience to the call: while he was yet being called . Rend. " when he was called obeyed to go out." The infinitive explains the more general obeyed , by specifying that in which his obedience was shown. For the construction, see Act 15:10; 1Th 1:9; Heb 5:5. For the narrative, see Gen 12:1-6, and comp. Act 7:2-5.

Vincent: Heb 11:8 - -- Whither he went ( ποῦ ἔρχεται ) Note the picturesque continued present tense, " whither he is going," as of Abraham on his journ...

Whither he went ( ποῦ ἔρχεται )

Note the picturesque continued present tense, " whither he is going," as of Abraham on his journey.

Wesley: Heb 11:8 - -- Gen 12:1, Gen 12:4-5

JFB: Heb 11:8 - -- From the antediluvian saints he passes to the patriarchs of Israel, to whom "the promises" belonged.

From the antediluvian saints he passes to the patriarchs of Israel, to whom "the promises" belonged.

JFB: Heb 11:8 - -- By God (Gen 12:1). The oldest manuscripts and Vulgate read, "He that was called Abraham," his name being changed from Abram to Abraham, on the occasio...

By God (Gen 12:1). The oldest manuscripts and Vulgate read, "He that was called Abraham," his name being changed from Abram to Abraham, on the occasion of God's making with him and his seed a covenant sealed by circumcision, many years after his call out of Ur. "By faith, he who was (afterwards) called Abraham (father of nations, Gen 17:5, in order to become which was the design of God's bringing him out of Ur) obeyed (the command of God: to be understood in this reading), so as to go out," &c.

JFB: Heb 11:8 - -- He had not fully received even this promise when he went out, for it was not explicitly given him till he had reached Canaan (Gen 12:1, Gen 12:6-7). W...

He had not fully received even this promise when he went out, for it was not explicitly given him till he had reached Canaan (Gen 12:1, Gen 12:6-7). When the promise of the land was given him the Canaanite was still in the land, and himself a stranger; it is in the new heaven and new earth that he shall receive his personal inheritance promised him; so believers sojourn on earth as strangers, while the ungodly and Satan lord it over the earth; but at Christ's coming that same earth which was the scene of the believer's conflict shall be the inheritance of Christ and His saints.

Clarke: Heb 11:8 - -- Abraham, when he was called - See on Gen 12:1-4 (note)

Abraham, when he was called - See on Gen 12:1-4 (note)

Clarke: Heb 11:8 - -- Not knowing whither he went - Therefore his obedience was the fullest proof of his faith in God, and his faith was an implicit faith; he obeyed, and...

Not knowing whither he went - Therefore his obedience was the fullest proof of his faith in God, and his faith was an implicit faith; he obeyed, and went out from his own country, having no prospect of any good or success but what his implicit faith led him to expect from God, as the rewarder of them that diligently seek him. In all the preceding cases, and in all that follow, the apostle keeps this maxim fully in view.

Calvin: Heb 11:8 - -- 8.By faith Abraham, === etc. He comes now to Abraham, who is the chief father of God’s church on earth, and in whose name the Jews gloried, as tho...

8.By faith Abraham, === etc. He comes now to Abraham, who is the chief father of God’s church on earth, and in whose name the Jews gloried, as though by the distinction of being the holy race of Abraham alone, they were removed from the common order of men. But he now reminds them of what they ought to possess as the main thing, that they might be counted among his children. He therefore calls their attention to faith, for Abraham himself had no excellency which did not proceed from faith.

He first teaches us that faith was the cause why he immediately obeyed God when he was commanded to remove from his own country; and then that through the same faith it was that he went on without wavering, according to what he was called to do even to the end. By these two things, — his promptness in obeying, and his perseverance, was Abraham’s faith most clearly proved.

===When he was called, === etc. The old Latin translator and Erasmus apply this to his name, which is extremely tame and frigid. On the contrary, I refer it to the oracle by which he was called from his own country. He indeed did in this way undergo a voluntary exile, while yet he did nothing but by God’s command; and no doubt it is one of the chief things which belong to faith, not to move a step except God’s word shows us the way, and as a lantern gives us light, according to what David says. (Psa 119:105.) Let us then learn that it is a thing to be observed through life, that we are to undertake nothing to which God does not call us.

===To go out into a place, 216 etc. To the command was added a promise, that God would give him a land for an inheritance. This promise he immediately embraced, and hastened as though he was sent to take possession of this land. It is a no ordinary trial of faith to give up what we have in hand, in order to seek what is afar off, and unknown to us. For when God commanded him to leave his own country, he did not point out the place where he intended him to live, but left him in suspense and perplexity of mind: “go”, he said, “into the place that I will show thee.” (Gen 12:1.) Why did he defer to point out the place, except that his faith might be more and more exercised? Besides, the love of his native land might not only have retarded the alacrity of Abraham, but also held him so bound to it, so as not to quit his home. His faith then was not of an ordinary kind, which thus broke through all hindrances and carried him where the Lord called him to go.

TSK: Heb 11:8 - -- Abraham : Gen 11:31, Gen 12:1-4; Jos 24:3; Neh 9:7, Neh 9:8; Isa 41:2, Isa 51:2; Act 7:2-4 which : Gen 12:7, Gen 13:15-17, Gen 15:7, Gen 15:8, Gen 17:...

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Heb 11:8 - -- By faith Abraham - There is no difficulty in determining that Abraham was influenced by faith in God. The case is even stronger than that of No...

By faith Abraham - There is no difficulty in determining that Abraham was influenced by faith in God. The case is even stronger than that of Noah, for it is expressly declared, Gen 15:6, "And he believed in the Lord; and he counted it to him for righteousness."Compare notes, Rom 4:1-5. In the illustrations of the power of faith in this chapter, the apostle appeals to two instances in which it was exhibited by Abraham, "the father of the faithful."Each of these required confidence in God of extraordinary strength, and each of them demanded a special and honorable mention. The first was that when he left his own country to go to a distant land of strangers (Gen 15:8-10); the other when he showed his readiness to sacrifice his own son in obedience to the will of God, Heb 11:17-19.

When he was called - Gen 12:1, "Now the Lord had said unto Abraham, Get thee out of thy country, and from thy kindred, and from thy father’ s house, unto a land that I will show thee."

Into a place which he should after receive for an inheritance, obeyed - To Palestine, or the land of Canaan, though that was not indicated at the time.

And he went out, not knowing whither he went - Gen 12:4. Abraham at that time took with him Sarai, and Lot the son of his brother, and "the souls that they had gotten in Haran."Terah, the father of Abraham, started on the journey with them, but died in Haran; Gen 11:31-32. The original call was made to Abraham, Gen 12:1; Act 7:2-3, but he appears to have induced his father and his nephew to accompany him. At this time he had no children Gen 11:30, though it seems probable that Lot had; Gen 12:5. Some, however, understand the expression in Gen 12:5, "and the souls they had gotten in Haran,"as referring to the servants or domestics that they had in various ways procured, and to the fact that Abraham and Lot gradually drew around them a train of dependents and followers who were disposed to unite with them, and accompany them wherever they went. The Chaldee Paraphrast; understands it of the proselytes which Abraham had made there - "All the souls which he had subdued unto the law."When it is said that Abraham "went out, not knowing whither he went,"it must be understood as meaning that he was ignorant to what country he would in fact be led. If it be supposed that he had some general intimation of the nature of that country, arid of the direction in which it was situated, yet it must be remembered that the knowledge of geography was then exceedingly imperfect; that this was a distant country; that it lay beyond a pathless desert, and that probably no traveler had ever come from that land to apprize him what it was. All this serves to show what was the strength of the faith of Abraham.

Poole: Heb 11:8 - -- Here begin instances of this Divine faith after the flood from Abraham to Moses’ s time, Heb 11:8-22 . The first is the father of believers, so...

Here begin instances of this Divine faith after the flood from Abraham to Moses’ s time, Heb 11:8-22 . The first is the father of believers, so entitled by God, eminent in the exercise of this grace, of whose ancestry, and their descent from him, these Hebrews did greatly glory. He had an express discovery of the will of God unto him, that he should leave the idolatrous place where he lived, Gen 11:31 12:1-3 ; compare Jos 24:2 Act 7:2,3 ; and with his family should travel to a land which God would show him, and which he would give him as an inheritance for him and his, which was the land of Canaan, as described, Gen 13:14-17 25:18,19,21 . This command of God, strengthened by a promise, he obeyed, Gen 12:4 Act 7:4 : through faith, really, freely, and fully resigning up himself and his to God’ s disposal.

And he went out not knowing whither he went he went forth with his father Terah from his country, kindred, and friends, in Ur of the Chaldees, to Charran, and there they dwelt till Terah died, Gen 11:31 Act 7:4 . After which, he pursued God’ s orders in his motion from place to place, though he knew neither the way, nor the place in which and whither he was to move, resting himself on God’ s word and guidance, and relying wholly on his provision for him, and protection of him in all his ways.

PBC: Heb 11:8 - -- " obeyed" Faith always identifies itself by obedience. Faith alone (faith without accompanying works that manifest faith) is empty. Real faith manife...

" obeyed"

Faith always identifies itself by obedience. Faith alone (faith without accompanying works that manifest faith) is empty. Real faith manifests itself by obedience -by actions.

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 What is faith? Faith is an obedient response to God’s revelation (i.e. God’s word) arising from a confident persuasion that He is faithful to His promises. Though the pressures were great on the Hebrew Christians, they must not give in to the temptation to retreat. Instead, as the writer urges them, they must " live by faith." In other words, they must respond to God’s revelation through His Son {Heb 1:1-2} in obedience and commitment. But how could they respond obediently to the light God had given them when the obstacles were so formidable? By remembering the trustworthy character of their God. Such a fresh perspective of God necessarily produces a confidence that enables the weary pilgrim to persevere when the way is hard.

To encourage the Hebrews to be faithful, the author reviews the most familiar episodes of Jewish history, cataloging the deeds of people the Hebrews considered heroes. These were people of faith -people who didn’t give up, give in, or give out. They were faithful.

The writer knows that there is no better place to begin in a review of history than the book of beginnings -the book of Genesis. In fact he begins at the first verse of the Bible. {Heb 11:3} Then he talks about Abel, {Ge 4:1-26} Enoch, {Ge 5:1-32} and Noah. {Ge 6:1-22} Then he devotes twelve verses to one of the dominant characters in Genesis- Abraham.

Perhaps the most notable example of faith in antiquity is Abraham, the first " Hebrew." Called by God to leave the idolatry of Chaldea, Abraham obeyed by faith. All who serve the true God according to His revelation like Abraham- that is, all who imitate His example, " walking in the steps of that same faith,"‘ are the children of Abraham. Hence, Abraham is called the " father of the faithful." {Ro 4:11-12} Abraham’s life was, all in all, a life of faith.

What lessons can be gleaned from Heb 11:8-19?

The Life of Faith Involves Testing

First, Abraham’s case reminds us that God tests an individual’s faith. The passage focuses on the three major trials of faith in Abraham’s life: (1) His departure from home; {Heb 11:8-10} (2) The delayed fulfillment of the promise of a son; {Heb 11:11-12} (3) The command to sacrifice that son to the Lord. {Heb 11:17-19} Abraham’s experience suggests that tests of faith increase in intensity as one grows to spiritual maturity. The offering of Isaac was not Abraham’s first test of faith. He couldn’t have handled it at the outset of his pilgrimage. It was difficult to leave his homeland. It was harder still to wait for God to fulfill the promise of a son. But the severest trial yet was God’s command to sacrifice that son to the Lord. As a wise and loving Heavenly Father, our God knows just how much pressure to exert upon his children at each stage of their spiritual development. {1Co 10:13} His tests are providentially adapted to our peculiar capacities at a given moment. But this much remains: God will test the faith of every believer, for " faith blossoms when the winds of trial blow the fiercest." {Heb 12:5-11}

What is the purpose of testing? To prove the genuineness, sincerity, and strength of our faith. {De 8:2} Trials have a way of exposing the spiritual condition of our lives. Trouble reveals the degree to which God is real to us and the level to which we have learned to lean upon Him.

What is the value of testing? It burns out the dross (the areas of hypocrisy) in our service to God and makes us more fit for His service. {1Pe 1:7} It also gives the believer the valuable gift of experiential knowledge concerning the faithfulness of God.

What is the nature of the tests that God sends into our lives? Usually, the test involves a sacrifice of some kind. Everyone who lives by faith will be called upon at some point to give up something dear to him in order to devote himself more specifically to God. In Abraham’s case, God called upon him to leave his family. He had to sacrifice personal freedom, human friendship, social position, and the familiar comforts of home. He traded it all for the uncertainties and rigors of a nomadic existence, living in tents and travelling in caravans. Faith always brings upheaval and sacrifice.

The Hebrews, no doubt, could identify with this kind of sacrifice, for they had loved Christ more than father, mother, and their own lives also. To be able to give up and let go of one’s security, he must believe that the God who told Abraham " I will bless you and you shall be a blessing" has something better in store.

The Life of Faith Involves Waiting {Heb 11:8}a

Abraham was called to go to a land which " he should after receive for an inheritance." Faith is a long-term perspective. In an instant society like ours, where people expect immediate results, the principle of delayed gratification is held in disdain. But living by faith enables the believer to endure the privations and difficulties of the moment because he knows that God has an " afterward" in store for him.

The Life of Faith Involves Obeying {Heb 11:8}b

How did Abraham respond to God’s call? He " obeyed and went out, not knowing whither he went." Even though he couldn’t see the finish line, he did what the Lord commanded. Faith is " going, not knowing." {Ac 20:22} Even when we cannot " see our way clear," faith continues on, a step at a time, a day at a time, looking to the God who said, " As thy day, so shall thy strength be." {De 33:27} By nature people grasp the security of the familiar. But God frequently puts His children into very unfamiliar circumstances with all the uncertainties that attend such situations in order to teach them to trust and obey Him implicitly. After all, what better security is there than trusting a faithful God?

How did Abraham know where to go? At each step of the journey, God gave him direction. He walked in the light he had at the moment, trusting that God would show him the next step when the time was right. God rarely gives his people a stock of grace days or months in advance. The Christian life is a daily matter of obeying God’s word and trusting Him to provide. That’s what it means to walk by faith.

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Haydock: Heb 11:8 - -- By faith he that is called Abraham, &c. He commends his faith, who believing God, left his own country, lived in Chanaan [Canaan] as in a strange co...

By faith he that is called Abraham, &c. He commends his faith, who believing God, left his own country, lived in Chanaan [Canaan] as in a strange country, waiting for the promise and for a city, whose builder and maker is God; i.e. for an habitation in the kingdom of heaven. (Witham)

Gill: Heb 11:8 - -- By faith, Abraham, when he was called,.... The Alexandrian copy and the Vulgate Latin version read, "by faith he who was called Abraham"; but this cal...

By faith, Abraham, when he was called,.... The Alexandrian copy and the Vulgate Latin version read, "by faith he who was called Abraham"; but this call is not to be understood of his name; for though his first name Abram might be given him, in the faith of his being a great man, and his second name Abraham, when he himself was a believer; yet this change was made some years after the call referred to; which is that in Gen 12:1 when he was called out of his own country, kindred, and father's house; which was an emblem of the call of God's people out from among the men of the world, and from their friends, relations, and acquaintance, and even out of themselves; and as Abraham was called from "Ur" of the Chaldees, so they from darkness, bondage, idolatry, and communion with wicked men; that, as he, they might not perish with idolaters, being chosen vessels, and for whom God has peculiar blessings in store: and so the grace of God is seen in calling them, without any respect to their deserts, as in calling Abraham: and the care and goodness of God may be observed, in raising up fit instruments to propagate his cause and interest. Now Abraham, being called

to go out into a place; from Ur of the Chaldees, to the land of Canna;

which he should afterwards receive for an inheritance; not in his own person, but in his seed and posterity, unless after the resurrection, in the New Jerusalem church state, and which inheritance was typical of heaven;

obeyed the divine call; and which was a fruit and evidence of his faith, and may he called the obedience of faith:

and he went out, not knowing whither he went: for though he went forth to go into the land of Canaan, and into the land of Canaan he came, Gen 12:5, yet, when God called him to go forth, and he prepared to obey his call, he knew not what land he was to go into; for it is only said, Gen 12:1,

unto a land that I will show thee: upon which words a Jewish commentator r has this note;

"he (God) did not immediately make known the land unto him, that so it might be lovely in his eyes;''

and it is, elsewhere, said by the Jews s, that Abraham

"came from Aspamia (i.e. Mesopotamia), and its companions, ולא היה יודע היכן, "and he knew not where" he was, as a man that is in the dark;''

all which agrees with our apostle: and, from hence, it may be observed, that God sometimes leads his people in ways they have not known, though they are known to him, and are always right; and that it is the property of faith to follow God, when it cannot see its way; and a great mercy it is to have God for a guide. This also shows, that Abraham's faith agrees with the apostle's definition of it, Heb 11:1.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

Geneva Bible: Heb 11:8 ( 7 ) By faith Abraham, when he was called to go out into a place which he should after receive for an inheritance, obeyed; and he went out, not knowi...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Heb 11:1-40 - --1 What faith is.6 Without faith we cannot please God.7 The worthy fruits thereof in the fathers of old time.

Combined Bible: Heb 11:8 - --Call of Abraham    (Hebrews 11:8)    "The scope of the apostle in this chapter is to prove that the doctrine of faith is an anc...

MHCC: Heb 11:8-19 - --We are often called to leave worldly connexions, interests, and comforts. If heirs of Abraham's faith, we shall obey and go forth, though not knowing ...

Matthew Henry: Heb 11:4-31 - -- The apostle, having given us a more general account of the grace of faith, now proceeds to set before us some illustrious examples of it in the Old ...

Barclay: Heb 11:8-10 - --The call of Abraham is told with dramatic simplicity in Gen 12:1. Jewish and eastern legends gathered largely round Abraham's name and some of them m...

Constable: Heb 11:1--12:14 - --IV. THE PROPER RESPONSE 11:1--12:13 "In chapter 10:22-25 there were three exhortations, respectively to Faith, H...

Constable: Heb 11:1-40 - --A. Perseverance in Faith ch. 11 The writer encouraged his readers in chapter 11 by reminding them of the...

Constable: Heb 11:8-22 - --2. Faith in the Patriarchal Era 11:8-22 11:8-10 Like Abraham we should look forward to our inheritance in the coming world and should live as stranger...

College: Heb 11:1-40 - --HEBREWS 11 VII. GOD EXPECTS US TO SHOW FAITH (11:1-40) A. THE NATURE OF FAITH (11:1-3) 1 Now faith is being sure of what we hope for and certain of...

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Commentary -- Other

Critics Ask: Heb 11:8 HEBREWS 11:8 —Did Abraham know where he was going when he left his homeland to follow God? PROBLEM: The writer of Hebrews informs us here that ...

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Introduction / 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...

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 11 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Heb 11:1, What faith is; Heb 11:6, Without faith we cannot please God; Heb 11:7, The worthy fruits thereof in the fathers of old time.

Poole: Hebrews 11 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 11

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 11 (Chapter Introduction) (Heb 11:1-3) The nature and power of faith described. (Heb 11:4-7) It is set forth by instances from Abel to Noah. (Heb 11:8-19) By Abraham and his ...

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 11 (Chapter Introduction) The apostle having, in the close of the foregoing chapter, recommended the grace of faith and a life of faith as the best preservative against apos...

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 11 (Chapter Introduction) The Christian Hope (Heb_11:1-3) The Faith Of The Acceptable Offering (Heb_11:4) Walking With God (Heb_11:5-6) The Man Who Believed In God's Messag...

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 11 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO HEBREWS 11 The apostle having, in the preceding chapter, spoken in commendation of the grace, and life of faith, and of its usefuln...

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. ...

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