Verse by verse sermons through the book of Hebrews with questions for review at the end of each sermon. Every sermon is full of Bible cross-references for further study.
high priest to Jesus involves not metaphor but analogy.77 Specifically, in Janet Soskice's terms, Hebrews' rendering of Jesus as high priest is not a “paramorphic” model but a “homeomorphic” one, “whose subject is also its source.
In this work, Kenneth Schenck re-presents the complex argument of Hebrews in terms of the salvation story it tells.
Scripture reveals that the great business of life is to glorify God by enjoying Him forever. In this paradigm-shattering work, John Piper reveals that the debate between duty and delight doesn't truly exist: Delightisour duty.
At other points it has remained a difficult argument, even, so it is said, a riddle. This is a commentary for those who want to follow what this book says--follow it both in terms of understanding it and living it.
Johnson sets out the creative development of this symbolic world, “The Bible imagines a world created by God and by imagining that world, reveals it, and by revealing it, invites us to enter it, and by inviting us to enter it, ...
In this volume, Thompson offers a guide for preachers, using the results of current scholarship on Hebrews and 1 Peter to enrich the preaching task.
Hebrews is a powerful meditation on the gospel.
The book of Hebrews was written to magnify the greatness of our Savior and the importance of the gospel of Jesus Christ.
The Model Sermon: Principles of Preaching from the Book of Hebrews
Focused on the book of Hebrews, this updated commentary explores Jesus's supremacy as the Son of God, providing preachers and Bible teachers with valuable insights into the biblical text. Part of the Preaching the Word commentary series.