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Messages from Hebrews: Preface

By H. C. G. Moule


      MESSAGES FROM THE EPISTLE
      TO THE HEBREWS

      By HANDLEY C.G. MOULE, D.D.
      BISHOP OF DURHAM
      1909

                  THE BIBLE IS THE SKY IN WHICH
                   GOD HAS SET CHRIST THE SUN.

                                          JOHN KER, D.D.

      PREFACE

      The following chapters are the work of intervals of leisure scattered over a long time. The exposition had advanced some way when an unexpected call to new and exacting duties compelled me to put it aside for several years. Accordingly a certain difference of treatment in the later chapters as compared with the earlier will probably be seen by the reader, particularly a rather fuller detail in the exposition. But purpose and plan are essentially the same throughout.

      No attempt whatever is made, here or in the course of the work, to deal with those literary and historical problems which so conspicuously attach themselves to this Epistle. Who the "Hebrews" were is nowhere discussed. Nor is any positive answer offered to a question to which assuredly no such answer can be given, the question, namely, of the authorship. In my opinion, in face of all that I have read to the contrary, it still seems at least possible that the ultimate human author was St. Paul. All, or very nearly all, the objections to his name which the phenomena of the Epistle prima facie present, and some of which lie unquestionably deep, seem to be capable of a provisional answer if we assume, what is so conceivable, that the Apostle committed his message and its argument, on purpose, to a colleague so gifted, mentally and by the Spirit, that he might be trusted to cast the work into his own style. The well-known remark of Origen that only God knows who "wrote" the Epistle appears to me to point (if we look at its context) this way. Origen surely means by the "writer" what is meant in Rom. xvi. 22. Only, on the hypothesis, the amanuensis of our Epistle was, for a special purpose presumably, a Christian prophet in his own right.

      In any case the author, if not an apostle, was a prophet. And he carries to us a prophet's "burthen" of unspeakable import, and in words to which all through the Christian ages the soul has responded as to the words of the Holy Spirit.

                        HANDLEY DUNELM.

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See Also:
   Preface
   Chapter 1 - Consider Him
   Chapter 2 - A Heart of Faith
   Chapter 3 - Unto Perfection
   Chapter 4 - Our Great Melchizedek
   Chapter 5 - The Better Covenant
   Chapter 6 - Sanctuary and Sacrifice
   Chapter 7 - Full, Perfect, and Sufficient
   Chapter 8 - Faith and its Power
   Chapter 9 - Faith and its Annals
   Chapter 10 - Followers of Them
   Chapter 11 - Sinai and Sion
   Chapter 12 - Appeals and Instructions
   Chapter 13 - Last Words

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