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The Epistle of Paul the Apostle to the Hebrews, with Notes and Introduction is unavailable, but you can change that!

Farrar’s analysis of the Greek text of Hebrews illuminates the nuances and history of the language, and presents an in-depth reading of this intricate and important book of the Bible. Before Farrar examines the Greek text, he offers his observations on the questions that surround this book: who wrote it and when? Farrar also examines the theology of Hebrews and its canonicity.

in different senses. In its wider sense it included all who were of the seed of Abraham (2 Cor. 11:22), the whole Jewish race alike in Palestine and throughout the vast area of the Dispersion (Phil. 3:5). But in its narrower sense it meant those Jews only who still used the vernacular Aramaic, which went by the name of “Hebrew,” though the genuine Hebrew in which the Old Testament was written had for some time been a dead language. In a still narrower sense the designation “Hebrews” was confined
Pages xv–xvi