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August 25, 2007

Letter from God Knows Who

This Sunday I am starting a new sermon series on the Book of Hebrews, and have found myself looking at commentaries all week. One of the commentaries is a used copy of F.F. Bruce's volume in the New International Commentary on the New Testament series that I found in a second-hand bookstore somewhere years ago. The text of the commentary was helpful, but what was perhaps most helpful to me were the handwritten pen marks along the side of the text. Whoever the text had belonged to had marked notes in the margins, along with questions and notations of "main point" or "conclusion." The questions were not profound, just little question marks or underlines that caused me to think about the writing more.

As I read the commentary, I became grateful for the little question marks along the way, even though I have no idea who made them. Who owned this book? Was he a pastor preaching through his own series on Hebrews? Was he a churchmen seeking to understand better his own pastor's proclamation of the Book? Was he an atheist or a liberal scholar seeking to discredit Christian interpretations of an ancient text? I don't know. But his little question marks helped me focus on Bruce's argument.

The more I thought about this, the more I realized that my unknown co-reader was playing something of the same role as the author of Hebrews himself. Unlike the epistles of Paul or Peter or James, the church has not been told who the writer of this text is. Options abound, from Paul to Luke to Barnabas. Some feminist theologians prefer to think Priscilla penned Hebrews. I once served with a pastor who believed it was Matthias, though I was never sure exactly why. I, with Martin Luther, tend to believe the arguments for Apollos are strong and convincing. Nonetheless, at the end of the day (at least of this day), we just don't know who is addressing us in the Book of Hebrews or who exactly his first hearers were.

But, in a real sense, we do. It seems that the writer of Hebrews remains intentionally anonymous. In this sermonic letter, he exhorts the congregation (whoever they are) from the very first paragraph that God of their fathers has spoken to them in his Son. It seems that the writer of Hebrews wishes to identify himself less with the prominent names of the fathers in Hebrews 11 and more with the "others" mentioned but not named, for lack of time, in 11:36-38.

In his voice, the writer of Hebrews calls us to listen instead to another Voice, a voice of a Father echoed in that of the Son. The small "a" author is not the point; the capital "A" Author is, just as the small "t" tabernacle is not the point, but the capital "T" Tabernacle is; the small "p" priesthood is not the point; and so on.

The writer of Hebrews is much like the scribbled notes on my old commentary. The anonymous author of the one just wants to put some question marks around a biblical scholar's argument. The anonymous author of the other places some question marks around fear and slavery, with some exclamation marks around the Gospel of Jesus.

Posted by Russell D. Moore at 01:28 PM | Permalink

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I would love to hear your sermon series on Hebrews. You don't, perchance, make those available on the internet do you?

Posted by: GL | Aug 25, 2007 1:40:50 PM

GL, Yes, they will be up at this link, http://www.henryinstitute.org/bibleteaching.php, and this one,http://www.deansclass.com/?page_id=5 probably beginning early this week.

Posted by: Russell D. Moore | Aug 25, 2007 3:05:53 PM

The audio for the sermons will be available in two places: The website for Dr. Moore's Sunday school (www.deansclass.com), and the website for the Henry Institute (www.henryinstitute.org).

Posted by: Phillip | Aug 25, 2007 3:14:49 PM

Oh, everyone knows that the real writer of Hebrews was Priscilla, and the evil patriarchal Church fathers took that line out since she was a woman. It's pretty obvious, really - you just need to read between the lines...

Posted by: Wonders for Oyarsa | Aug 25, 2007 5:39:33 PM

Ahh-hoo! The best known commentary on the planet - make that the earth - is Phillip Edgecumb Hughes' commentary on the Epistle to the Hebrews.

This is published by the Dutchmen at Wm. B. Eerdmans Pub. Co. in the American City of Grand Rapids, Michigan.

Posted by: Gerhard von Stubenfield Jr. | Aug 25, 2007 9:12:01 PM

>>Ahh-hoo! The best known commentary on the planet - make that the earth - is Phillip Edgecumb Hughes' commentary on the Epistle to the Hebrews.<<

Really? I've never heard of it. What does he say that's made it so famous?

Posted by: Ethan C. | Aug 25, 2007 9:54:16 PM

Dear Ethan,

Dr. P. E. Hughes was a very erudite Low Church Anglican from S. Africa and author of many books, including commentaries on Hebrews, II Corinthians, and Revelation. He is a first-rate writer and anything from his pen is worth perusal. He taught for many years as an assoicate faculty member of Westminster Seminary here in Glenside, PA, and was a member of St. John's Epsicopal of Huntingdon Valley (now St. John's Anglican of Churchville, an AMiA parish). He was a good personal friend of my rector, Fr. David Ousley (who is as High Church as Dr. Hughes was Low Church).

I did not get to meet him myself as he died just before I came to Philadelphia. My wife became a member of St. John's at about that same time and became good friends with Dr. Hughes' daughter Marion, who is still a member of St. John's.

I have a stack of several of Dr. Hughes' books -- "Theology of the English Reformers", "No Cross, No Crown", "The True Image", etc. -- that I am presently working through. Of the commentaries I have only read the one of Revelation. Unlike the other two commentaries it does not have any supporting scholarly apparatus (footnotes and bibliogrpahy) -- I believe because it was his last book, written during his final illness, and he was racing to complete it before his death. Even so, it is still one of the most sane overviews of that difficult text one could hope to find.

The one point on which Dr. Hughes excited some controversy was the closng pages of "The True Image", in which he defended an annihilationist theory of the souls of the damned against the traditional position of eternal torment. I don't know if he changed his mind on that later or not, as I do not recall such a position in his commentary on Revelation (which I read many years ago).

Be warned in advance -- the commentaries on Hebrews and II Cor. are both several hundred page long doorstops!

Posted by: James A. Altena | Aug 26, 2007 8:11:37 AM

Archbishop Dmitri of the Orthodox Church in America wrote a fine little commentary on Hebrews a few years back, which I wrote a notice for in Touchstone. It is patristic in foundation and pastoral in approach. Published by St. Vladimir's Seminary.

Posted by: Rob Grano | Aug 27, 2007 9:39:51 AM

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