Summary of the Book of Hebrews
Hebrews is one of the most theologically rich and literarily sophisticated documents in the New Testament. Its author is unknown — Paul, Apollos, Barnabas, and Priscilla have all been proposed over the centuries — and the question remains genuinely open. What is not in question is the letter's purpose or its theological weight. Written to a community of Jewish Christians who were under pressure to abandon their faith and return to the familiar structures of Judaism, Hebrews makes one sustained, relentless argument: Jesus Christ is better. Better than angels, better than Moses, better than Aaron, better than the entire Levitical system. To turn back is not a step sideways. It is a step into darkness. The Supremacy of the Son Hebrews opens without a greeting or an introduction, launching immediately into one of the most exalted Christological statements in all of Scripture. God, who spoke in former times through the prophets, has now spoken finally and fully in his Son — the he...