New Commentary on Hebrews by Edward Fudge

hebI’ve just finished reading an advance copy of Hebrews: Ancient Encouragement for Believers Today, by Edward Fudge.

Most readers will be familiar with Br. Fudge, who occasionally comments here and authors the popular GracEmails. Edward has using the Internet to teach the grace of God since 1996.  (It’s unthinkable that Edward received no mention in the Theobloggers awards. I would gladly give up my nomination — plus two of Patrick Mead’s 😉 — for Edward to have spot.)

Anyway, Edward is an elder, lawyer, and theological author working at the highest levels. He wrote The Fire that Consumes, which remains the classic treatment of conditionalism, being cited by scholars from all denominations and traditions whenever the topic is broached.

In his GracEmails, Edward demonstrates his rare gift for stating profound truths in gems of remarkable simplicity and conciseness (I am painfully jealous). His commentary on Hebrews is written with the same elegance. In fact, it’s a bit deceptive, as he speaks so directly and simply that at first you don’t realize how much depth is being provided. Linger over every word.

The style is popular, with few references to Greek syntax and such. The book has no footnotes or endnotes, and minimizes references to the work of other non-biblical authors. However, it’s clear the book reflects serious research into the latest studies. Thus, Edward refers to the book as a “bridge commentary,” that is, a commentary of serious scholarship written in a style that’s transparent to the novice learner.

For example, regarding the mysterious authorship of Hebrews, Edward writes,

The first known writing identifying Paul as author of Hebrews is Papyrus 46 (or P46) written about a.d. 200 and found in Egypt. However, church leaders a century later still didn’t know who wrote Hebrews. Clement of Alexandria surmised that Paul wrote Hebrews in Hebrew and that Luke translated it into Greek. (Of course no one has ever found a Hebrew Hebrews, so Clement stands by himself with that idea.) Origen was less sure, confessing that “who really wrote the letter is known to God alone.” Elsewhere in Africa, at Carthage, Tertullian nominated Barnabas as the author of Hebrews. Most Christians in the Roman West said they didn’t know. Centuries later, in the Reformation, Luther leaned toward Apollos while Calvin favored Luke or a second-century believer named Clement of Rome.

The commentary on Hebrews by F. F. Bruce in the New International Commentary series expends nearly eight pages on the question, and yet says little more.

It’s pointless to try to summarize a commentary. Rather, let me offer one more example of Edward’s style from Hebrews 10:26 — a verse I frequently refer to —

Apostasy in Practice

To go to the place of no more sacrifice, one does not have to intellectually forsake every element of Christian understanding piece by piece until nothing remains. Nor is it necessary that someone stand before the public and specifically renounce Jesus Christ and all that he has done. A person can fall to the place of no more sacrifice while supposing that he or she is a genuine believer. This is a practical apostasy, not necessarily an intellectual one. As such, it allows the greatest room for self-deception. It can occur in more ways than one.

• It can happen when someone listens to God speak through the Son, professes to believe God’s promises, claims to rely on Jesus Christ and his sacrifice for sin, attends public meetings with other believers—but steadfastly continues to practice sin and immorality as a chosen and regular way of life.

• It can happen when someone listens, professes, claims and attends as just described, and even demonstrates a somewhat transformed life—but one day decides it isn’t worth the effort, packs away the Bible, stops meeting with believers, quits praying, puts Jesus out of mind and, from that point forward, lives as if Jesus did not exist and if this present life were the final stop.

I’ve just read the comments on the same passage in the Sweet, the New International, and the Tyndale commentaries. There is no comparison. Edward’s comments cut to the heart of the passage and tell us what we need to hear. The others either explain the passage away or treat it with such intellectualism that the passage is stripped of its real and present fearsomeness.

The commentary is scheduled to be published May 19, but may be preordered at a 10% discount from Leafwood.

[Full disclosure: I got the book for free by agreeing to review it. Fuller disclosure: All I got was a .pdf file. I can’t be bought that cheap.]

About Jay F Guin

My name is Jay Guin, and I’m a retired elder. I wrote The Holy Spirit and Revolutionary Grace about 18 years ago. I’ve spoken at the Pepperdine, Lipscomb, ACU, Harding, and Tulsa lectureships and at ElderLink. My wife’s name is Denise, and I have four sons, Chris, Jonathan, Tyler, and Philip. I have two grandchildren. And I practice law.
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6 Responses to New Commentary on Hebrews by Edward Fudge

  1. Robert Baty says:

    > "Edwards demonstrates"???
    > "Edwards writes"???

    :o)

    Sincerely,
    Robert Baty

  2. Jay Guin says:

    Thanks. Repairs have been made.

  3. wjcsydney says:

    Jay, someone should have nominated Edward for the Theobloggers Awards. Perhaps his GracEmails weren't perceived as being strictly "blogging' and so no-one thought to nominate him?

  4. Robert Baty says:

    As you suggest, he may have been nominated but disqualified on a technicality; what he does not being considered "blogging".

    Sincerely,
    Robert Baty

  5. It is an outstanding commentary!

  6. Burntribs says:

    I picked this up during the Tulsa Workshop because of this review. I just started going through it and I’m extremely impressed. Thanks for bringing the book to my attention.

    Josh

Comments are closed.