Hebrews
Robert P. Gordon
Sheffield Phoenix Press, 2008-02-29 - 215 pages
This
commentary on the Letter to the Hebrews envisages the recipients of the
letter as a community that has embraced the Christian message but is
beginning to question its adequacy to meet their spiritual needs. They
have given up the richness of Jewish ritual and cultic tradition for a
way of life that lacks the venerable symbols and institutions they had
previously valued. Gordon highlights the arguments and rhetorical
strategies the author uses to counter this feeling of 'cultic deficit'
as he draws attention to what they actually possess in consequence of
their Christian commitment. The Letter to the Hebrews has particular
contemporary relevance today because, in warning the community against
'going back', the author implies that Christianity has superseded their
ancestral Jewish faith. That may seem a slight on the religion
'superseded', but Gordon points out that Judaism itself, as well as
Christianity, represents a significant break with the religion of the
Hebrew Bible/Old Testament. Jewish-Christian dialogue would profit from
being conducted in that light. For this Second Edition, the author has
written an additional Introduction, and the pagination of this edition
differs from that of the first.
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