Times were hard for the first readers of the letter to the Hebrews. Many had been exposed to fierce persecution. They had been assaulted, their homes had been plundered, and some had been cast into prison.
To such people this letter came as an encouragement. The writer of the letter turns their eyes to Christ, and shows how he fulfils the hope expressed in the Old Testament sacrifices. He calls his readers to a steadfast faith that will take them through the hard times they now face.
Such encouragement and challenge is never without relevance to Christians. Raymond Brown demonstrates this clearly in his passage-by-passage exposition.
A majestic exhortation(s) is found within these pages to persecuted Christians yesterday, today and tomorrow. These words of encouragement meant life or death to some newly ordained Christians and the same applies today to some countries where even the name Christian is meant as insulting. Let the reader grasp these words of love with a harmonious heart toward fellow Christians alike, today & tomorrow. There are some highly thought of Christian~Jews found in this letter, but we must remember too they were the frailest of kinds, persecuted for there behaviour & beliefs, uprooted, and despised.
Great commentary on Hebrews. Practical exegesis verse by verse. Touches on original languages, but didn't get bogged down in them. Excellent work making a very practical teaching clear and applicable to current times.
A useful guide to the book of Hebrews in the Bible. Before reading this it was a bit of an unknown study so Ramond Brown's notes, although a little detailed were a good guide.
I think my sentiment on this book is very similar to Knowing God by Packer. This book was an exposition on Hebrews, which sometimes turned into some rabbit trails that were dry, and tough to tie back to the original scripture. But as with Knowing God, I took a couple hours and went back through all my underlinings and markings, and came away with myriad profound, encouraging, edifying nuggets. This book is so much more than commentary on Hebrews, but like Knowing God is a pretty all-encompassing essay on the nature of God, Faith, our new covenant and status in Christ: our sacrifice, surety, mediator, intercessor, forerunner, guarantor, high priest. This book can stand alone also as a thorough description of the person of God, Christ, Faith, etc. It wasn't the fastest read, and there were some dry parts, but there was plenty of great material that I'm sure to reference again down the road.