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486
Formerly Journal for the Study of the New Testament Supplement Series
Editor
Mark Goodacre
Editorial Board
John M. G. Barclay, Craig Blomberg,
R. Alan Culpepper, James D. G. Dunn, Craig A. Evans, Stephen Fowl,
Robert Fowler, Simon J. Gathercole, John S. Kloppenborg, Michael Labahn,
Love L. Sechrest, Robert Wall, Steve Walton, Robert L. Webb,
Catrin H. Williams
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ii
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Amy L. B. Peeler
www.bloomsbury.com
Bloomsbury is a registered trade mark of Bloomsbury Publishing plc
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any
form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or any
information storage or retrieval system, without prior permission in writing from the
publishers.
Amy L. B. Peeler has asserted her right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act,
1988, to be identi¿ed as Author of this work.
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CONTENTS
Acknowledgments ix
Abbreviations xi
Introduction 1
I. The Family of God 1
II. Outline of the Project 8
Chapter 1
‘MY SON’: THE APPOINTED HEIR OF ALL THINGS 10
I. The Description of God’s Son: Hebrews 1.1-4 11
A. God Spoke Through a Son 11
B. The Narrative of God’s Son 13
II. The Son as God’s Wisdom and Word: Hebrews 1.1-4 21
III. The Relationship Announced: Hebrews 1.5 29
A. The Introduction to the Citations (Heb. 1.5a):
Spoken By God 30
B. Quasi-Prosopopographic Exegesis 31
C. The Selection of These Citations 37
D. The Content of the Citations 40
E. Hebrews 1.5 as the Interpretive Lens for Hebrews 1.1-4 41
F. The Temporal Setting of the Citation 42
G. The Character of the Son and of the Father 46
IV. The Name and Its Inheritance: Hebrews 1.6-13 51
A. The Angels Worship the Firstborn: Deuteronomy 32.43 LXX 52
B. The Angels as Spirits and Flames: Psalm 103.4 LXX 55
C. The Worthy King: Psalm 44.7-8 55
D. The Unchanging Creator: Psalm 101.26-28 LXX 56
E. The Invitation: Psalm 109.1 LXX 58
F. The Inherited Name 59
V. Conclusion 61
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vi Contents
Chapter 2
‘A SON’: THE SUFFERING HEIR OF GOD’S CHILDREN 64
I. The Son of Man Inherits All Things 66
Through the Suffering of Death: Hebrews 2.6-9
A. The Inheritance of Jesus: Psalm 8.7 66
B. The Inheritance of the ĎĠË Å¿ÉļÈÇÍ 71
C. Because of the Suffering of Death 74
II. It Was Fitting: Hebrews 2.10 77
A. The Action of God 77
B. Perfected as the Heir 78
C. God Leads Many ĎÇĕ to Salvation 80
D. The Character of a Father 83
III. Behold the Children Whom God Has Given to Me!
Hebrews 2.11-13 84
A. Jesus is Brother to Humanity: Psalm 21.23 LXX 85
B. The Trust of Jesus: Isaiah 8.17 LXX 89
C. Jesus’ Possession of God’s Children: Isaiah 8.18 LXX 91
IV. Inheritance in the Scriptures 94
A. The House of David: 2 Samuel 7 94
B. The Enemies of God and the People of God 96
V. Rescue from Death Through Death: Hebrews 2.14-16 98
VI. Conclusion 102
Chapter 3
‘MY SON, YOU ARE PRIEST’:
THE FILIAL CONTEXT OF THE CULTIC MOTIF IN HEBREWS 105
I. A Son Over His House: Hebrews 3.1-6 109
A. The Son’s Humanity and Death 109
B. The Son Over the Children 113
C. The Character of the Father and the Son 114
II. The Call of the Father 115
A. Honor and Glory 115
B. The Royal Appointment: Psalm 109.4 LXX 116
C. The Reiteration of the Familial Relationship: Psalm 2.7 LXX 117
III. The Word of the Oath Appoints a Son: Hebrews 7.1-10, 28 118
A. The Oath 118
B. Melchizedek 120
C. The Oath Appoints a Son 123
IV. The Experience of the Son 124
A. Suffering 124
B. Exaltation 128
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Contents vii
Chapter 4
‘MY SON’: THE ASSEMBLY OF THE FIRSTBORN 140
I. The New Covenant 142
II. ‘My Son’: The Audience of Hebrews as ϊÀÇÀ of God 144
A. The Proverb 144
B. The Similarities Shared by the ĎÇĕ of God:
The ¸À»¼ĕ¸ of the Lord 151
III. Exhortations to the Children: Hebrews 12.12-17 163
A. Positive Instructions 163
B. Negative Examples 164
IV. The Assurance: The Inheritance of the Firstborn 168
A. Two Mountains 168
B. Do Not Resist the One Speaking 171
C. Benediction 174
V. Conclusion 176
Conclusion 179
I. Contributions to Scholarship on Hebrews 181
II. Conclusion 193
Bibliography 194
Index of References 205
Index of Authors 222
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viii
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
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LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS
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List of Abbreviatins xiii
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INTRODUCTION
The ¿rst words of the Epistle to the Hebrews declare: God, after speak-
ing, spoke ( o ¿¼ġË Â¸ÂûÊ¸Ë ëÂÚ¾ʼÅ, Heb. 1.1). The artfully crafted
beginning of the sermon1 ‘to the Hebrews’2 con¿rms that this epistle has
1 The genre classi¿cation is one of the Epistle to the Hebrews’ many unresolved
questions; see Harold W. Attridge, The Epistle to the Hebrews: A Commentary on
the Epistle to the Hebrews (Hermeneia; Philadelphia: Fortress, 1989), p.13; F. F.
Bruce, The Epistle to the Hebrews (rev. ed.; NICNT; Grand Rapids: Eerdmans,
1990), p.3; B. F. Westcott, The Epistle to the Hebrews (3rd ed.; London: Macmillan,
1928), pp.xxix–xxx; James W. Thompson, Hebrews (Paideia; Grand Rapids, MI:
Baker Academic, 2008), p.3; William Wrede, Das literarische Rätsel des Hebräer-
brief (FRLANT, 8; Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1906). Its lack of an
epistolary prescript, its inclusion of an epistolary postscript, and its focus upon the
importance of speech and hearing all result in a debate about its classi¿cation. The
text itself says that it is a ÌÇı ÂŦºÇÍ ÌýË È¸É¸ÁÂŢʼÑË, a word of exhortation (13.22).
The epistolary and oral features of the document lead me to af¿rm those who argue
that it was delivered to this congregation as a letter, but read as a sermon; see Paul
Ellingworth, The Epistle to the Hebrews (NIGTC; Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans,
1993), p.62; Luke Timothy Johnson, Hebrews: A Commentary (NTL; Louisville:
Westminster John Knox, 2006), p.10; Craig R. Koester, Hebrews (AB, 36; New
York: Doubleday, 2001), p.81; and William L. Lane, Hebrews (2 vols.; WBC, 47;
Dallas: Word, 1991), p.1:lxxiv.
2 The ethnic makeup of the audience also remains disputed. A group of com-
mentators assumes the references to Jewish scriptures and cult suggests a Jewish
audience (St. John Chrysostom, Hom. Hebr. Argument1 [NPNF 14:363]; Bruce,
Hebrews, pp.xxiii–xxx; George Wesley Buchanan, To the Hebrews: Translation,
Comment, and Conclusions [AB, 36; Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1972], pp.246–
67; Graham Hughes, Hebrews and Hermeneutics: The Epistle to the Hebrews as a
New Testament Example of Biblical Interpretation [SNTSMS, 36; Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1979], pp.26–51; Johnson, Hebrews, p.33; Simon J.
Kistemaker, Exposition of the Epistle to the Hebrews [NTC; Grand Rapids: Baker,
1984], p.17; William R. G. Loader, Sohn und Hoherpriester: Eine traditions-
geschichtliche Untersuchung zur Christologie des Hebräerbriefes [WMANT, 53;
Neukirchen–Vluyn: Neukirchener, 1981], pp.251–60; Peter T. O’Brien, The Letter
to the Hebrews [PNTC; Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2010], p.13). Others argue that the
text could just as easily reÀect a Gentile or mixed audience who has been introduced
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2 You Are My Son
much to say about God because God has much to say. God speaks
twenty-three citations in Hebrews.3 In addition to these, the author
discusses God’s speech over thirty times.4 With the pervasive theme of
the ‘speaking God’,5 the author conveys a theological truth to his
to Jewish customs (Herbert Braun, An die Hebräer (HNT, 14; Tübingen: Mohr
Siebeck, 1984], p.2; Ellingworth, Hebrews, p.22; Erich Grässer, An die Hebräer
[3 vols.; EKKNT, 17; Zurich: Benziger, 1990–97], p.1:148–9; James Moffatt,
A Critical and Exegetical Commentary on the Epistle to the Hebrews [ICC;
Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1924; repr. Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1963], pp.xvi–xvii;
Ceslas Spicq, L’épitre aux Hébreux [2 vols.; EBib; Paris: Lecoffre, 1952–53],
pp.1:222–23).
3 Heb. 1.5, 6, 7, 8-9, 10-12, 13; 3.9-11; 4.3, 5, 7; 5.5, 7; 6.14; 7.17, 21; 8.5,
8-12; 10.30, 37-38; 11.18; 12.5-6, 26; 13.5.
4 Heb. 1.1, 2; 2.4; 3.16; 4.2, 6, 12-13; 5.4, 10, 12; 6.5, 13, 15, 17; 7.6, 11, 28;
8.6, 13; 9.15; 11.2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 9, 11, 13, 17, 39; 12.19, 20, 25.
5 Two monographs analyze how the author’s emphasis on the speaking God
impacts the epistle. Tomasz Lewicki argues that a ‘Wort-Gottes-Theologie’ is the
foundation for the letter’s Christology and soteriology in ‘Weist nicht ab den
Sprechenden!’ Wort Gottes und Paraklese im Hebräerbrief (PadTS, 41; Paderborn:
Ferdinand Schöningh, 2004). In addition to Lewicki, David Wider also asserts that
Hebrews’ hermeneutical key is in the speech of God in Theozentrik und Bekenntnis:
Untersuchungen zur Theologie des Redens Gottes im Hebräerbrief (BZNW, 87;
Berlin: de Gruyter, 1997). God’s speech is the key theme in a dissertation by Gary
Smillie (‘Living and Active: The Word of God in the Book of Hebrews’ [Ph.D. diss.,
Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, 2000]). As a sampling of the importance of this
theme, consider these statements. William L. Vander Beek claims, ‘[t]he content
of the whole epistle can be summed up under the heading, “In Praise of the God
Who Speaks” ’ (‘Hebrews: A “Doxology” of the Word’, Mid-America Journal of
Theology 16 [2005]: pp.13–28 [13]). Graham Hughes argues, ‘[t]he question which
has preoccupied [the author of Hebrews] more deeply than any other…has been that
of saying how we may conceive the Word of God…as being subject to historical
processes and yet remaining, recognizably, God’s Word’ (Hebrews and Hermeneu-
tics, p.3). Susan Lehne states, ‘…most commentators would agree that a major
concern of Heb. is God’s speaking and his people’s hearing of his Word…’ (The
New Covenant in Hebrews [JSNTSup, 44; Shef¿eld: JSOT, 1990], p.12). William
Lane, in his two-volume commentary, concludes, ‘[t]he central theme of Hebrews is
the importance of listening to the voice of God in Scripture and in the act of
Christian preaching’ (Hebrews, p.1:cxxvii). In James W. Thompson’s recent com-
mentary, the theme of speech forms its structure: hearing God’s word with faithful
endurance (Heb. 1.1–4.13); discovering certainty and con¿dence in the word for the
mature (Heb. 4.14–10.31); on not refusing the one who is speaking (Heb. 10.32–
13.25). He asserts that, ‘[t]he centerpiece of the author’s persuasive effort is the
claim that “God has spoken in these days by a Son” ’ (Hebrews, p.20). Harold
Attridge asserts, ‘[i]n development of this conceit [that ‘readers and hearers of
scripture can listen to God speaking’] resides the most creative theological work of
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Introduction 3
this complex text’ (‘God in Hebrews: Urging Children to Heavenly Glory’, in The
Forgotten God: Perspectives in Biblical Theology: Essays in Honor of Paul J.
Achtemeier on the Occasion of His Seventy-¿fth Birthday [A. Andrew Das and Frank
J. Matera, eds; Louisville: Westminster John Knox, 2002], pp.197–210 [204]).
6 Lewicki argues that the author is trying to counter a view of God as distant
(‘Weist nicht ab den Sprechenden!’, p.14).
7 The only time the author includes a dative pronoun to specify that God is
speaking to the audience directly occurs in Heb. 12.5. See my argument in Chapter 4
that this proverb is best interpreted as the speech of God.
8 Pertaining to the relationship between ‘Son’ and ‘Father’, Pamela Eisenbaum
says similarly, ‘…since the author almost always portrays God as the speaker,
addressing himself to his Son, there can be no doubt that God’s relationship to Jesus
and by extension, Jesus’ followers, is as Father’ (‘Father and Son: The Christology
of Hebrews in Patrilineal Perspective’, in Feminist Companion to the Catholic
1
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4 You Are My Son
Epistles and Hebrews [A.-J. Levine and M. M. Robbins, eds; London: T&T Clark
International, 2004], pp.127–46 [136 n.44]). David DeSilva states, ‘[t]he title “Son”
carries a message that Jesus’ honor and worth derives from the honor of the father,
God himself… Dwelling on Jesus’ status as “Son” is a reminder that God stands
behind the honor of this person…’ (Perseverance in Gratitude: A Socio-Rhetorical
Commentary on the Epistle ‘to the Hebrews’ [Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2000],
pp.85–6).
9 Pamela Eisenbaum also argues for the close connection between Jesus’
sonship and his role as God’s heir (‘Patrilineal Perspective’, p.141). I build upon
Eisenbaum’s work by placing more emphasis upon the complexity of Jesus’ lineage
as both the Son of God and also the son of man.
10 In my discussion of the text, I maintain the author’s gender exclusive use of
‘sons’ in the places where he uses ÍĎÇĕ. In Chapter 4, I argue that this language is
intentional, meant to reÀect the connection between Jesus’ ¿lial status and that of
the audience.
11 Many interpreters refer to the familial theme in Hebrews. Most prevalent is
recognition of the importance of Jesus as Son in Hebrews. Early in the twentieth
century, Julius Kögel asserted the fundamental importance of Jesus’ ¿lial status:
‘[i]n der uĎĠË-Bezeichnung umschliesst sich ihm der ganze Reichtum der Person wie
des Werkes Christi’ (Der Sohn und die Söhne: Eine exegetische Studie zu Hebräer
2,5-18 [BFChTh Jahrgang, 8, Heft 5+6; Güttersloh (C. Bertelsmann), 1904], p.116).
Later interpreters agreed. Lane states, ‘[t]he dominant motif is that of Jesus as the
Son of God’ (Hebrews, p.1:cxxxix). Similarly, Ben Witherington avers, ‘[w]ithout
question, the major christological category or terminology in Hebrews and the term
used to cover the scope of Christ’s work is Son’ (Letters and Homilies for Jewish
Christians: A Socio-rhetorical Commentary on Hebrews, James and Jude [Downers
Grove, IL: IVP Academic, 2007], p.59). James D. G. Dunn notes the importance of
‘Jesus’ divine sonship’ for the letter (Christology in the Making: A New Testament
Inquiry into the Origins of the Doctrine of the Incarnation [2nd ed.; Grand Rapids:
1
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Introduction 5
Eerdmans, 1989], pp.51–2), but Richard Bauckham states more forcefully, ‘[t]he
most fundamental category is that of the Son of God who shares eternally the unique
identity of his Father…’ (Jesus and the God of Israel: God Cruci¿ed and Other
Studies on the New Testament’s Christology of Divine Identity (Grand Rapids: Eerd-
mans, 2008], p.236). Victor C. P¿tzner argues, ‘[t]hus, although both titles [Son and
High Priest] are vital for the Christology of the letter, the primary title is “Son” ’
(Hebrews [ANTC; Nashville: Abingdon, 1997], p.38). Similarly Donald Hagner
asserts that the designation Son or Son of God is ‘the central Christological designa-
tion’ (‘The Son of God as Unique High Priest: The Christology of the Epistle to the
Hebrews’, in Contours of Christology in the New Testament [R. N. Longenecker,
ed.; McMaster New Testament Studies; Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2005], p.248).
Ellingworth emphasizes what Jesus’ role means for the theology of the letter: ‘[t]he
most distinctive developments in the letter’s teaching about God occur where the
writer speaks of God’s relationship with his son; for if christology is the centre of the
epistle’s teaching, that christology is rooted in teaching about God’ (Hebrews, p.66).
Pamela Eisenbaum, citing comparisons with the Pauline corpus, argues for the preva-
lence of the theme as a whole: ‘[a] comparative survey quickly reveals that Hebrews
places much greater emphasis on Jesus’ divine sonship than other NT writings, save
perhaps the Johannine literature’ (‘Patrilineal Perspective’, p.135). In addition to
recognizing the importance of this title, I call attention to the relational nature of this
term, namely, how its use also conveys truths about the Father of the Son.
Despite these widespread af¿rmations of the familial theme, only one other
monograph has examined familial themes in Hebrews: J. Scott Lidgett’s Sonship and
Salvation: A Study of the Epistle to the Hebrews (London: Epworth, 1921). He also
af¿rms the importance of this theme: ‘[t]he key is to be found, in my judgment, in
our Lord’s Sonship and in all that His Sonship reveals… Hence, as it has become
apparent to me, the subject of the Epistle is, above all else, Sonship and Salvation,
the latter being explicable only in terms of the former’ (Lidgett, Sonship and
Salvation, p.7). This largely forgotten work – among the major commentaries of
Hebrews, Lidgett is included in the bibliography of Bruce, Ellingworth, Lane, and
Spicq, yet he is never cited in any of these texts – provides a conversation partner
who, at times, provides support for my interpretations and, at others, provides ideas
to challenge. The major distinction between our projects is the weight given to
God’s Fatherhood. Lidgett argues that the author of Hebrews ‘assumes [the Father-
hood of God] throughout the Epistle, but [it] is only explicitly stated towards the
end’ (Lidgett, Sonship and Salvation, p.13). Similarly on p.93: ‘And while the writer
says nothing expressly about the Fatherhood of God, the whole of the Epistle turns
upon Sonship’. This project argues that the author explicitly presents the Fatherhood
of God at the very beginning of the sermon through God’s own speech and
continually throughout the letter. Therefore, I aim to explicate consistently, along
with the Christology and soteriology of the letter, its theology as well.
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6 You Are My Son
relationship with them, the author and his audience. First, by portraying
God as Father, the author is able to convey diverse aspects of God’s
character. God exercises his sovereignty and magnanimity as a Father,
sharing aspects of his divine identity with his children. God also exer-
cises his soteriological will as a Father, disciplining his children through
suffering so that they might become perfect.
Second, by portraying Jesus as the Son,12 the author highlights both his
sovereignty and his obedience. Because he is the Son of God, he has
been elevated over all: the prophets, the angels, Moses, and the priests.
As the Son of God who became a son of man,13 he shows himself to be
perfectly obedient to his Father even in the face of death. Consequently,
God instates this obedient son as the resurrected and exalted heir of all
things, through this process Jesus provides the ultimate example of a son
of God.
Third, God’s paternal relationship with Jesus grants to the audience
members their identity and hope as children of God. Because God
perfects his Son Jesus through the process of suffering, death, and
resurrection, he is able to rescue the audience members from slavery
to the fear of death (2.15), cleanse them from sin (1.3; 2.17; 3.13, 17;
5.1; 8.12; 9.26; 10.12, 17), and bestow upon them the status and bene¿ts
of God’s children. As such, they, like Jesus, experience God’s discipline
so that they can dwell in God’s presence and share in the qualities of
God’s nature.14 Moreover, the author of Hebrews bolsters his readers’
12 See the treatment of Jesus as ‘der Sohn’ by William G. Loader (Sohn und
Hoherpriester, pp.7–141). Loader analyzes the relevant texts in Hebrews pertaining
to Jesus’ sonship and that of the audience. His primary interest, however, lies in
discovering the traditions that lie behind the author’s various – and at times seem-
ingly oppositional – Christological statements. On the other hand, my project inves-
tigates not what lies behind the assertions of sonship, but rather how those assertions
function for the construction of the letter’s Christology and its exhortation.
13 I use the phrase ‘son of man’ to refer to humanity as it seems the author does
with his reference to Ps. 8.4 in Heb. 2.6.
14 Interpreters of Hebrews often note the connection between Jesus’ ¿lial status
and that of the audience. Ernst Käsemann stated, ‘[w]hen J. Kögel supplied his essay
about Heb. 2.5ff with the title “The Son and the Sons” he captured with it in an
accurate manner a motif that claims critical meaning’ (Das wandernde Gottesvolk:
Eine Untersuchung zum Hebräerbrief [Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1959],
p.58 [my translation]). David A. DeSilva states, ‘[f]rom the opening paragraph
through the concluding exhortations, he calls their attention to the Son… Remain-
ing connected to the community gives them “noble birth” as children of God’
(Perseverance, pp.58–9). So also Koester, ‘[c]entral to the confession was that Jesus
is the Son of God. Hebrews explicitly links the confession with Jesus’ divine sonship
in 4.14. The opening lines show that divine sonship was understood to include
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Introduction 7
ability to endure with the knowledge that they are part of the inheritance
God has promised and Jesus has already secured.15 The example of the
relationship between God and Jesus gives them direction and hope; the
act of God’s relationship with Jesus gives them assurance.
The familial relationship forms one of the foundation stones upon
which this author constructs his homily. In addition to highlighting the
fact of Jesus’ and the audience’s sonship, perfecting, and inheritance, I
seek to elucidate the author’s description of the process through which
these realities came to be. God expresses his Fatherhood by calling his
Christ’s appointment as heir of all things in a manner congruent with the Scriptures,
together with his creative power, divinity, and glory (1.1–5)… The royal connota-
tions of the title “Son of God” imply that believers have a “confession of hope” of
inheriting a share in his kingdom (10.32-34; 13.3, 13)’ (Hebrews, pp.126–7). Patrick
Gray states, ‘[The author] takes quite seriously the notion that God’s Son is the
brother of all the faithful and explores the implications of this idea for those fortu-
nate to have the same father’ (‘Brotherly Love and the Christology of Hebrews’, JBL
122.2 [2003], pp.335–51). In his commentary, Attridge states, ‘[i]n Hebrews,
Christ’s status as heir is manifested in his exaltation to the “right hand” (v. 3d), a
transcendent position that guarantees his brethren their inheritance’ (Hebrews, p.40).
In a later essay, he states more forcefully, ‘[t]he whole short story of God in Hebrews
revolves around that relationship between God and God’s children. Through the
windows on that story opened by Hebrews there emerges a picture of a God passion-
ately involved not only with a single Son but with many children destined ultimately
to share God’s sabbatical rest’ (‘God in Hebrews’, p.202). I seek to show how this
connection functions on two levels. Jesus is both example of the perfect Son and the
one who makes sonship possible for others. In other words, the audience learns from
him how to attain their inheritance and learns that they are his inheritance. Jesus
serves as both the model and means of their familial relationship with God.
15 Scott D. Mackie also stresses the hortatory importance of the author’s famil-
ial imagery in his monograph, Eschatology and Exhortation in the Epistle to the
Hebrews (WUNT, 2/223; Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 2007). Much of this discussion
also appears in ‘Confession of the Son of God in Hebrews’, NTS 53 (2007), pp.114–
29. For Mackie, the aim of the ‘Son of God Christology’, which begins with the
‘Father’s declaration of Jesus’ Sonship’, and includes ‘Jesus’ reciprocal confession
of the fatherhood of God’ is to ‘elicit a confession of Jesus as the Son of God’ and to
‘solidify [the audience’s] resolve to publicly confess and identify with the Son of
God and his family’ (Eschatology and Exhortation, pp.216–17). I also seek to show
how the familial reality came to be for the audience, and consequently, why the
readers can trust the surety of this status. See also the essay ‘Brotherly Love and the
High Priest Christology of Hebrews’, where Patrick Gray shows the correspondence
between the epistle’s depiction of Jesus as brother and other depictions of sibling
relationships, particularly in Plutarch’s essay, ‘On Brotherly Love’ (De fraterno
amore 478A–492D). He also draws attention to Jesus’ status as the elder brother in
which Jesus acts as the guardian of his siblings.
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8 You Are My Son
Son to suffer so that Jesus can be elevated to his own right hand where,
ultimately, he will inherit all things. By virtue of this process, the author
and his audience become members of God’s family; as such they have
faith that their present experiences con¿rm their ultimate eternal
participation in the household of God as part of Jesus’ own inheritance.
In other words, God’s paternal relationship with Jesus his Son shapes the
theology and Christology of the letter, and, in so doing, constructs the
identity of the audience, legitimizes their present experience, and sup-
ports them in their endurance. Because God is Father and Jesus is Son,
the author argues, the audience can be con¿dent in their status as God’s
children and in the promised future that status entails.
In order to present just how the author develops his argument about the
Fatherhood of God, the sonship of Jesus, and the identity of the commu-
nity, the structure of this book largely follows that of the sermon itself.
The ¿rst chapter treats Hebrews 1, analyzing the establishment of the
Father/Son relationship between God and Jesus in v. 5 and then tracing
the implications of that relationship in the ¿rst sentence (Heb. 1.1-4) and
in the catena of scriptural quotations that follow (Heb. 1.5-13). This
relationship de¿nes God as a Father for the entire sermon and provides
the foundation for Jesus’ glorious status as God’s Son and, hence, his
heir.
The second chapter of the book moves to the second chapter of
Hebrews to elucidate the interplay between God’s paternal perfecting of
Jesus and the establishment of humanity as children of God. God the
Father perfects the Son as heir by means of his suffering unto death.
In doing so, God establishes the means by which the Son secures his
inheritance, an inheritance that includes the audience of Hebrews as
children of God.
The third chapter unpacks the familial theme in the cultic sections of
the letter. Jesus’ priesthood is the vocation to which God his Father calls
him and through which God his Father perfects him. He is quali¿ed to
serve as high priest because he has been called, prepared, and exalted
by his Father. Serving as a high priest forever, he makes possible the
inheritance of salvation for his brothers and sisters and aids them on their
journey to attain it. This priestly provision and assistance leads to the
possession of his own all-encompassing inheritance.
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Introduction 9
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Chapter 1
In the ¿rst chapter of Hebrews Jesus remains unnamed, but his identity is
without question: he is the Son of God.1 Equally important, that means
that God is his Father. This chapter traces the construction of this
relationship throughout Hebrews 1. Arranged into three sections, the ¿rst
attends to the story of God’s Son in 1.2-4, the second analyzes God’s
proclamation of the relationship in 1.5, and the ¿nal portion examines
God’s articulation of his Son’s inherited name in vv. 6-13. In this analy-
sis, I argue that the two citations in 1.5 anchor the author’s depiction of
the Father and Son relationship between God and Jesus. The proclama-
tion made by God in 1.5 orients the author’s story about Christ in vv. 2-4.
Moreover, because the author continues to evoke this relationship
throughout the rest of the chapter in his introductions to the citations, it
provides the basis for that which is attributed to Christ in vv. 6, 8-13.
As the author sketches the contours of this familial relationship, he
constructs an exalted Christology and a paternal theology. Jesus’ rela-
tionship with God distinguishes him from the angels (1.4) and, even
grander, as God’s Son, he is heir of everything (1.2, 13; 2.8). Interlaced
with this Christology, the opening section of the letter also introduces a
fatherly portrayal of God. Sovereign in his ability to grant such an
inheritance to his Son, God is generously paternal in his willingness to
do so.
This chapter serves the overarching argument of my thesis in two
respects. First, it demonstrates that the author maintains focus upon the
familial relationship between God and Jesus throughout the ¿rst chapter
of his sermon. He clearly does so in v. 5, but his utilization of familial
language and themes throughout the chapter shows that this is not simply
a theme he replicates from a citation, but one that he integrates into the
fabric of his argument. Second, it analyzes how the author’s consistent
appeal to the Father/Son relationship shapes vital elements of the identity
1 Through the use of the word ÍĎĠË or other familial terms (Á¾ÉÇÅĠÄÇË, Á¾ÉÇ-
ÅÇÄñÑ, ÈÉÑÌĠÌÇÁÇË, Ò»¼ÂÎĠË) the author describes Jesus as God’s Son throughout the
letter (Heb. 1.2, 4, 5, 6, 8; 2.11; 3.2, 6; 4.14; 5.5; 6.6; 7.3, 28; 10.29).
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1. ‘My Son’: The Appointed Heir of All Things 11
of God and the identity of Christ.2 In the ¿rst chapter of Hebrews, the
author portrays God’s sovereign and sharing nature as well as Christ’s
exalted status through the paternal/¿lial relationship that exists between
them.
makes this clear. Being a prophet can become one’s identity; but in order
for this to happen, one must perform the actions of a prophet, namely,
hearing from God and then passing on God’s message (1 Sam. 3.1-21;
Amos 7.14-15; Jer. 1.1-19). Conversely, the status of sonship requires no
action on the son’s part to become a reality.4 A basic contrast exists
between the two media of God’s speech – the prophets are de¿ned by
what they do, and the Son is de¿ned solely by his relationship to God.
By focusing on his ¿lial identity, the author has signi¿ed that this one
who now serves as a vehicle for God’s communication to humanity
stands in a close relationship to God. This relationship differs signi¿-
cantly from the prophets.5 They held a close connection to God, but to be
a spokesman for God is not equal to the status of being God’s Son.6 It
follows that if the prophets were worthy of honor and respect, then God’s
Son is that much more worthy of honor and respect.7 Similarly, if the
4 In the following sections, I argue that the temporal language of vv. 4 and 5
does not indicate that Jesus had to make puri¿cation for sins ¿rst before he became
God’s Son. More broadly, I refer here to the meaning of the term within the biologi-
cal familial metaphor, where a son born to a father does nothing in order to become a
son. This is true even in Greece and Rome whose cultures included the exposure of
infants. Those who were not exposed, but allowed to live and of¿cially to join the
family, did nothing of their own action to gain this clemency. It was solely the
decision of the father (see John Boswell, The Kindness of Strangers: The Abandon-
ment of Children in Western Europe from Late Antiquity to the Renaissance [New
York: Pantheon, 1988], esp. pp.57–70). Even when the title ‘Son’ is used in a royal
context in Israel’s scriptures, as it is in the context of the citations that follow, the
situation remains the same. God designates David’s heir, Solomon, as his son before
he is born (2 Sam. 7.14; 12.24). David also, to whom Psalm 2 and Psalm 88 ( LXX)
refer, did nothing to earn God’s election of him to the Kingship (1 Sam. 16).
Whether by birth or by election, the conferral of the status of son is not conditional
upon any action of the one named son.
5 Cf. Alan C. Mitchell, Hebrews (SP, 13; Collegeville, MN: Liturgical, 1989),
p.37); Thompson, Hebrews, p.37.
6 In Israel’s scriptures, a prophet is one to whom and through whom God speaks
(Num. 12.6; Deut. 18.18, 19; Judg. 6.8; 1 Sam. 3.21; 1 Kgs 13.20; 2 Kgs 17.13;
21.10; 2 Chr. 12.5; Ezra 9.11; Amos 3.7; Hab. 1.1; Hag. 1.3; Zech. 1.1; 7.7; Jer.
7.25; 25.4) and one to whom God gives his Spirit (Num. 11.25, 29; 1 Sam. 10.6. 10;
19.23; Joel 2.28). Moses is held up as a prophet who knew the Lord face to face and
is unparalleled by any other (Deut. 34.10). Yet, as the author of Hebrews will make
clear (Heb. 3.1-6), no prophet – not even Moses – is known also as God’s Son.
7. With support from citations of Ben Sira, Dio Chrysostom, and Rhetorica ad
Herrenium, David DeSilva observes, ‘[i]n the Greco-Roman world, one’s honor or
standing depended largely on one’s parentage – whether one was born into low or
high status’. For Desilva, then, that means that, ‘[t]he title “Son” carries a message
that Jesus’ honor and worth derives from the honor of the father, God himself’
(Perseverance, p.85).
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1. ‘My Son’: The Appointed Heir of All Things 13
prophets could be trusted to bring God’s message, one from the very
family of God serves as an even more a trustworthy witness.8
Second, the different persons through whom God speaks also set up a
comparison between the images of God revealed in that speech. As one
who speaks ëÅ ÌÇėË ÈÉÇÎŢ̸ÀË, God acts as the divine Lord who inspires
prophetic speech.9 Speaking through the prophets, God de¿nes himself
as a God who communicates with his people. God continues to be a God
who addresses humanity when God speaks through his Son. At the same
time, in addition to revealing an action of God – the fact that God
communicates with humanity – God’s speech in a Son reveals another
aspect of the character of the God who speaks. To speak ëÅ ÍÀŊ – through
a Son – opens the possibility that God is speaking as a Father.10 God is
speaking through one who is a Son. This Son God has appointed as heir,
and he participated with God in creation. He reÀects God’s glory and
mirrors God’s being and sits at God’s right hand. In other words, his
participation in God’s activity, his proximity to God, his reÀection of
God’s image, and, most persuasively, his standing as God’s heir suggests
that he is, in fact, God’s Son. The ¿rst citation makes this association
explicit, but the narrative of the ¿rst four verses lays the groundwork.
Hence, if this Son is God’s Son, then by speaking through him, God
reveals his paternal identity to his addressees. Hence, in addition to
directing the attention of his hearers to the identity of the one through
whom God now speaks and his derivative superiority, the author also
provides his audience with a conception of God as a Father.
things by the word of his power. The Son made puri¿cation for sins. The
Son sat down on the right hand of the Majesty on High. The Son is much
better than the angels to the degree that he has inherited a better name.
The narrative that runs through Heb. 1.2-4 is the story of God’s Son:11
as Son, Jesus reigns supreme. As such, it also proclaims that God, the
Father of the Son, includes Jesus in his qualities that are his as God.
The story begins with a close corollary to Jesus’ ¿lial status.12 As
God’s Son, God has appointed him as his heir.13 As be¿ts such a Father,
11 I am using the term ‘narrative’ here to describe the way in which the state-
ments about the Son in vv. 1-4 ¿t together. Although I am not arguing for a strict
sequential progression from one element to the next, the elements do convey a story
about the Son before, during, and after his priestly act. This use of the term follows
that of Richard Hays in his book The Faith of Jesus Christ: The Narrative Sub-
structure of Galatians 3:1–4:11 (2nd ed.; BRS; Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2002),
p.6. Kenneth L. Schenck maintains that although the surface structure of Hebrews is
an argument, the sermon evokes a particular narrative (Understanding the Book of
Hebrews: The Story Behind the Sermon [Louisville: Westminster John Knox, 2003],
p.5 and Cosmology and Eschatology in Hebrews: The Settings of the Sacri¿ce
[SNTSMS, 143; Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007], p.13). Richard
Bauckham refers to Heb. 1.2b-4 as ‘a sketch of the Son’s narrative identity’ (Jesus
and the God of Israel, p.237). Moreover, if diegesis or narratio is, as George
Kennedy translates it, a ‘ “leading through” of the facts’ (Aristotle: On Rhetoric: A
Theory of Civic Discourse [New York: Oxford University Press, 1991], p.268), then
these verses qualify as a narratio of important elements. Who Jesus is, what he has
done, and what he has inherited are key facts for the entire sermon.
12 Contra Paul Ellingworth who argues, ‘[h]ere, as generally in biblical greek,
Á¾ÉÇÅĠÄÇË does not, unless (as in Heb 9:16f) the context so speci¿es, imply the
transmission of property by a testator, but more generally the idea of taking perma-
nent possession (cf. Á¸ÌÚÊϼÊÀË in parallel to Á¾ÉÇÅÇÄĕ¸ in Ps 2:8), especially of
something given by God… [T]he link between Christ’s status as Son and as heir is
implied but not emphasized’ (Hebrews, pp.94–5). It does not follow that taking a
permanent possession given by God eliminates the option that God is also portrayed
as a Father entrusting his possessions to his Son as an inheritance. Moreover, if
one’s data includes Greek that appears outside of the Bible, evidence shows authors
who do employ Á¾ÉÇÅĠÄÇË to discuss the transmission of goods (Isocrates, Ep.1.44;
Plato, Leg. 923c; Epicurus, Frag. 217). Contrary to Ellingworth, Werner Foerster
states, ‘[i]n Greek the word group Á¾ÉÇÅĠÄÇË circles around the concept of inheri-
tance and never moves very far away from it (‘Á¾ÉÇÅĠÄÇË, ÊͺÁ¾ÉÇÅĠÄÇË, ÁÌÂ’,
TDNT 3:768). In this instance in Hebrews, the context does so specify the bestowal
of possessions from a Father to a Son. The proximity of inheritance and sonship in
both v. 2 and vv. 4-5 as also in Psalm 2 (see discussion below), in my view, empha-
sizes the link between Christ’s status as Son and as heir. Paul makes the same link
between sonship and inheritance in Gal. 4.7.
13 Attridge draws attention to the use of Ìĕ¿¾ÄÀ in this phrase that is also found
in Ps. 88.28 (LXX), where God appoints the King as his ¿rstborn, a verse to which
the author alludes with his use of ÈÉÑÌĠÌÇÁÇË in v. 6 (Hebrews, p.39 n. 62).
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1. ‘My Son’: The Appointed Heir of All Things 15
God appoints his Son as heir of all things, thereby giving Jesus an
unparalleled authority – nothing is outside of his ownership. In addition,
the assertion that Jesus inherits all things suggests either that there are no
other children with whom God’s property is divided or that Jesus is the
preeminent heir to whom God has elected to give everything that is his.14
In either case, the honor bestowed upon Jesus as God’s Son is shared
with no other. Depicting Jesus as the heir of all things is one striking
brushstroke in Hebrews’ portrait of Jesus’ unmatched superiority. As
God’s Son and heir, Jesus is in a position of honor and authority
unequaled by anyone save God.15
With the statement that God appointed Jesus as heir of all things, the
author also begins to construct the nature of God’s character as a Father.
The giving of this unmatched inheritance is also a way of af¿rming
14 The standard in Greek law was that property passed from father to son and
was evenly divided among sons (Isaeus, On the Estate of Philoctemon 25 [Forster,
LCL]). In Athens, the father was not allowed to leave his property to others if he had
legitimate sons (Isaeus, On the Estate of Philoctemon 28, 59; John A. Crook, ‘Patria
Potestas’, CQ 17 [1967], pp.113–22). Roman law dictated the same except that
daughters were also eligible to inherit (preserved in Justinian’s Institutes 2.13.5).
Philo gives evidence of this standard of inheritance, namely, that fathers pass their
property on to their children (Congr. 23; Mos. 2.243; Spec. 2.124). In Israel’s
scriptures, a father’s property passed to his children (Gen. 25.5; Deut. 21.15-17;
Prov. 13.22; Ezek. 46.18), most often his sons, but not always, as depicted in Job
42.15 where Job includes his daughters in his testament (see also the exceptions in
the story of the daughters of Zelophehad in Num. 36.1-12 and in Josh. 17.3-6 that
prove the rule). Some texts speak of special rights for the ¿rstborn (Gen. 25.31-34;
Deut. 21.17). Normally, if there is more than one child, each child receives some
portion of the inheritance (Gen. 21.10; Deut. 21.17; Num. 26.55). In the case of
Abraham and Isaac, even though Abraham had other legitimate children through
Chettoura, he chooses to give ‘all that is his’ to Isaac (Gen. 25.5), and the other
children get gifts (Gen. 25.6). Even compared with this instance, the inheritance of
Jesus is still more comprehensive. Because he inherits all things, there is nothing
left – even gifts – to give to any other child. As the second chapter of Hebrews
makes clear, there are other children of God (2.10). Nevertheless, I argue that their
relationship to God is predicated upon God’s relationship with Jesus in ch. 2.
Consequently, Jesus is God’s preeminent Son, the only one to whom God would
give all things. All others take their status as God’s children and the inheritance that
comes with it only through him.
15 DeSilva highlights the honor associated with descent in Greek speeches,
rhetorical handbooks, and Hellenistic Jewish texts. He asserts, ‘[t]he author of
Hebrews, in presenting Jesus ¿rst of all as “Son”, is explicitly concerned with estab-
lishing Jesus’ honor’ (Despising Shame: Honor Discourse and Community Mainte-
nance in the Epistle to the Hebrews [SBLDS, 152; Atlanta: Scholars Press, 1995],
p.212). In John’s Gospel, being God’s Son is of such a high honor that the Jews
charge Jesus with making himself equal with God (Jn 5.18).
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16 You Are My Son
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1. ‘My Son’: The Appointed Heir of All Things 17
The next element of the narrative states that the Son radiates God’s
glory and that he is a picture of his Father’s identity in relief.19 The
familial theme serves this imagery well. Just as a son often looks like his
father, so too does Jesus show forth the image of God.20 To see the Son is
to get a glimpse of his Father. Here, the author continues to add to the
greatness of the Son; as God’s Son, Jesus is the reÀection of God him-
self. This statement also increases his trustworthiness as a messenger of
God. The Son allows the audience to hear what God says, and he is also
the medium who allows them to see what God looks like.21 He is the one
through whom God has chosen to show forth his glory and his nature.22
The Son of God also upholds all things. This element of the story
suggests that, as God’s heir apparent, Jesus is, in some way, sustaining
all things. He does so through ÌŊ ģûĸÌÀ ÌýË »ÍÅÚļÑË ¸ĤÌÇı. The words
of Jesus are always words of response to his Father. As the remainder of
the letter will show, God’s powerful word, which appoints Jesus his Son
as heir and priest forever in the line of Melchizedek (Heb. 5.5-6; 7.16-17,
21), is brought to its ful¿llment by the words of Jesus that embrace
God’s appointment (2.12-13; 10.5-8). Therefore, following upon his
powerful word of response, he secures eternal forgiveness for humankind
(10.14, 18) and takes his position at God’s right hand where everything
is subjected to him (1.13; 2.8; 8.1; 10.12). Thus the Son is the sustainer
of all things by his word that is a response to the word of his Father. In
other words, he is the sustainer of all things by virtue of their conversa-
tion.
19 X¸É¸ÁÌûÉ is the term for the image engraved on stamps and seals (Euripides,
El. 559; Plato, Pol. 289b; Diodorus Siculus 17.66.2) and also takes on the meta-
phorical meaning of what is characteristic of a person (Herodotus, Hist. 1.116; Plato,
Phaedr. 263b; Josephus, Ant. 13.12.1).
20 Writers also use ϸɸÁÌûÉ to describe the likeness that parents – especially
mothers – impress on their children, for example, in 4 Macc. 15.4. DeSilva high-
lights the connotation of family resemblance as well (Perseverance, p.89).
21 Daniel J. Treier notes the appeal to multiple senses in Heb. 12.18-29 (‘Speech
Acts, Hearing Hearts, and Other Senses: The Doctrine of Scripture Practiced in
Hebrews’, in The Epistle to the Hebrews and Christian Theology [R. Bauckham,
D. Driver, and T. Hart, eds; Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2009], pp.337–52 [346]).
Although the appeal to hearing is most prominent, allusions to other senses occur
throughout the letter (1.8-9; 6.5; 8.5; 12.2).
22 Basil asserts that the point of Heb. 1.3 is to ‘establish the true sonship, the
indivisibility, and the intimacy of the relationship of the Son to the Father’ (Letter 38
[Deferrari, LCL]).
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18 You Are My Son
23 Bernhard Weiss, who argues for the same referent of the pronouns in 1.3a
and 1.3b, also interprets this as God’s power (Der Brief an die Hebräer [KEK;
Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1897], pp.45–6). Attridge dismisses this
interpretation (Hebrews, p.45), and this dismissal is appropriate if the alignment of
the pronouns in vv. 3 and 4 provides the only support. The other four reasons put
forth here increase the persuasiveness of this interpretation.
The author’s tendency to mix Father and Son as antecedents for the pronouns ‘his’
or ‘him’ suggests that he views the pre-existent Son as a personal being just as he
does the Father. This observation adds support for the argument that appears below.
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1. ‘My Son’: The Appointed Heir of All Things 19
sin. The author associates his honori¿c status with an experience that is,
as later portions of the sermon reveal, quite shameful (Heb. 12.2). This is
a foreshadowing of the argument developed in Hebrews 2 that Jesus’
status as God’s Son brings with it, along with God’s inheritance, God’s
pedagogical plan for Jesus’ act of puri¿cation.
After he performed the deed of puri¿cation, the Son sat down at God’s
side. He is not in the position of a servant standing around a throne, but
in the position of a sovereign, seated on the right hand of the majesty on
high.24 This is the ¿rst allusion to Ps. 110.1, quoted at the conclusion of
the catena (1.13), and invoked again several times throughout the letter.25
By proclaiming that Christ sits here, the author has proclaimed that
Christ’s place of honor and authority is superseded only by God himself.
No one could take this seat, unless, of course, the majestic one himself
allowed it. God, as might be expected of a father, allows his Son a place
of honor right next to him. They are enthroned together as Father and
Son.
The ¿nal phrase of this period reiterates the theme of the preceding
narrative, namely that the identity of the one through whom God is now
speaking is the basis for his superiority: ‘Having become as much better
than the angels as he has inherited a more excellent name than they’
(1.3d). In this phrase, the author indicates that his high position corre-
sponds directly to the name he has inherited. The author has already
established that Jesus is God’s heir because he is God’s Son (1.2). To be
a son means that one inherits the name of one’s father, and that father’s
name is passed to the son.26 Because Jesus has inherited the name of his
24 To sit upon a throne is the right of the king (Deut. 17.18; 1 Sam. 2.8; 3
Kgdms 1.13; 2.12; Ps. 121.5 [LXX]). The same royal imagery is also applied to God
(Joel 3.2; Rev. 3.21). The right hand is a position of honor (Gen. 48.14; Ps. 110.1)
and an expression of God’s power (Exod. 15.6, 12; Deut. 33.12; Ps. 18.35). The
author draws a comparison between the seated position of Christ and the standing
position of the other priests in Heb. 10.11-12.
25 The author quotes from this psalm in Heb. 1.13; 5.6; 7.17, 21. There are
allusions to it in Heb. 1.3; 5.10; 6.20; 7.3, 11, 15; 8.1; 10.12; 12.2. George Wesley
Buchanan argues that Hebrews is a midrash on this text (Hebrews, p.xix). While it is
certainly important, this argument gives this psalm more weight than is warranted by
the vastly varied scripture references throughout the letter.
26 In Israel’s scriptures, ‘son of ____’ often designates an individual. This
phrase becomes part of his name (Gen. 11.31; Exod. 6.25; 33.11; Deut. 32.44;
1 Sam. 20.31; 2 Sam. 21.7, etc). In Aramaic, a son could be known by the same
name as his father by the addition of the particle bar (i.e., Bartimaeus in Mk 10.46).
In Hellenistic culture, the father’s name in the form of a genitive followed the ¿rst
name for use in public life. The use of the patronymic continued into the Roman and
imperial period in a variety of ways (Elaine Matthews, ‘Names, Personal, Greek’,
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20 You Are My Son
Father, he is superior to the same degree that the name of his Father is
superior to all other names.27 At this point the author also introduces a
new element to the discourse: the Son’s superiority speci¿cally in rela-
tion to the angels.28 He is exalted above them because as God’s Son and
heir he has inherited God’s name – a claim no angel can make (1.6-13).
Because he is God’s Son, God his Father has appointed Jesus heir of
all things, implanted in him the reÀection of his own glory and character,
involved him in the creation of all things, and empowered the word of
OCD 1022–4). In the Roman system the of¿cial name included the name of one’s
father followed by ¿lius. Unof¿cially, a Roman used three names, the second of
which, the nomen, was the designation of one’s gens or family group. Most of these
originated as patronymics (Heikki Solin, ‘Names, Personal, Roman’, OCD 1024–6).
27 See the ¿nal section of the chapter for my argument for the precise name he
inherits.
28 Several scholars of Hebrews have seen in this comparison a possible polemic
against some kind of veneration of angels (Bruce, Hebrews, p.9; Darrell D. Hannah,
Michael and Christ; Michael Traditions and Angel Christology in Early Christianity
[WUNT, 2/109; Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 1999], pp.137–9; Randall C. Gleason,
‘Angels and Eschatology of Heb 1–2’, NTS 49 (2003), pp.90–107; Moffatt, Hebrews,
p.7; Hugh Monte¿ore, A Commentary on the Epistle to the Hebrews [BNTC;
London: Adam & Charles Black, 1964], p.35; Hans Windisch, Der Hebräerbrief
[HNT, 14; Tübingen: J. C. B. Mohr (Paul Siebeck), 1931], pp.14–15). Loren T.
Stuckenbruck articulates the position carefully. For him, underlying Hebrews 1–2
may be ‘a polemic against a Zeitgeist in which the Àuid ideas about angels and
preeminent heavenly ¿gures, however metaphorically conceived, were perceived as
a threat to a belief in a surpassing exaltation of Christ. The author of Hebrews takes
over this polemic to sharpen his readers’ perception of the message given through
Christ, through whom God has spoken “in these last days” (1:2)’ (Angel Veneration
and Christology: A Study in Early Judaism and in the Christology of the Apocalypse
of John [WUNT, 2/70; Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 1995], p.139). Others see it as that
which lays the groundwork for the comparison between the covenant mediated by
angels and that mediated by Christ (Ellingworth, Hebrews, p.104; Kenneth L.
Schenck, ‘A Celebration of the Enthroned Son: The Catena of Hebrews 1’, JBL 120
[2001], pp.469–85; Spicq, Hébreux, p.2:52). Bauckham argues that the angels
‘…mark out the cosmic territory. They function, so to speak, as measures of onto-
logical status. To be above the angels is to be God, to be below the angels is to be
human’ (Jesus and the God of Israel, p.241; for a similar argument, see also Johnson,
Hebrews, p.84). Ernst Käsemann had much the same opinion in his reaction against
the ‘Tübingen tendency’ that pointed toward an underlying heresy with angels (Das
wandernde Gottesvolk, p.60). David Mof¿tt suggests that the stark difference
between Jesus and the angels is their nature: Jesus is human while angels are spirit
(Atonement and the Logic of the Resurrection [NovTSup, 141; Leiden: Brill, 2011],
pp.47–53). In the rest of the letter, there seems to be no concern with angel worship;
therefore, the angels’ status as mediators of the covenant, ontological standing, and
spirituality make good sense for the reason of their appearance in chs. 1 and 2.
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1. ‘My Son’: The Appointed Heir of All Things 21
the Son so that it sustains all things and grants him access to the seat of
honor at his right hand. Because he is God’s Son – because God has
treated him as a magnanimous Father would treat a Son – he is superior.29
At the same time, the author tells his audience that the glorious and
powerful God created all times and places, and reigns majestically over
the universe. It is the God supreme who has chosen to speak with his
people in the past and in the present. In these last days, God’s speech has
come through one whom God determined to be heir of all things, through
whom God created, and to whom God imparted his glorious character.
Because he is Father, God shares his identity and actions with another.
Up to this point familial imagery has provided the lens through which
this narrative has been interpreted. Each element has contributed to the
knowledge of the excellence of the Son and the generosity of his Father,
both of which are expressed in the context of the relationship between
them. There is, however, another lens through which this section of the
letter has often been read, namely the close correspondence between the
opening sentence and the exaltation of Wisdom and the Word in Israel’s
scriptures and in the Hellenistic Jewish literature of the Second Temple
period.30
31 Similar statements include: ‘[a]nd when he [God] was fashioning the world,
he used this as his instrument’ (Migr. Abr. 6, Colson, LCL) and ‘its instrument is the
word of God, through which it [the universe] was framed’ (Cher. 127, Colson and
Whitaker, LCL).
32 Yet the correspondence here is not precise. To be the representation of God’s
seal – a device employed in the act of communication – is not equal to being the
representation of the essence (ĨÈĠÊ̸ÊÀË) of God.
33 See also Somn. 1.215 and Conf. 146.
34 By way of comparison, in Sirach, the inheritance of personi¿ed Wisdom is
limited to Israel and does not include all things (Sir. 24.8, 12). Contra Dey who sees
in Plant. 62–64, 69, Fug. 102, and Somn. 1.159 a reference to Word as the ‘heir not
only of the whole world but of God himself’ (Intermediary World, p.137). In this
section of De Plantatione, the inheritance of the whole world, and even of the Lord
of all, is the portion that comes along with Wisdom to the Levites, those who
represent the pure mind (Plant. 64). In Fug. 102, Philo is comparing the one who is
‘free from even unintentional offense’ with those who ‘have fallen’ (Colson and
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1. ‘My Son’: The Appointed Heir of All Things 23
Wisdom inherit all things, including God himself (Somn. 1.175; Mos.
1.155; Plant. 69).35 The close and pervasive correspondence demands the
conclusion that in his portrayal of Christ the author of Hebrews used
imagery that other Jewish authors of his time employed for God’s
Wisdom and God’s Word.36
The terminology used for God’s Wisdom and Word ¿nds parallels in
statements about the other regional gods and the deities of the philoso-
phical schools.37 Nevertheless, scholars generally agree that when these
Jewish authors utilized this imagery, they did not allow it to compromise
their commitment to monotheism. In these conceptions, God’s Wisdom
and God’s Word are not separate beings alongside God, but are aspects
of the one God.38
Whitaker, LCL). Again, a certain person is in view as the inerrant one who inherits
God himself. Finally, in Somn. 1.159 it is the person who is a ‘lover of virtue’
(Colson and Whitaker, LCL) who has the Lord as his inheritance. The Logos is not
in view.
35 This includes Moses (Mos. 1.155) and the Levites (Plant. 69).
36 See Attridge, Hebrews, p.40; Bruce, Hebrews, pp.47–8; Franz Delitzsch,
Commentary on the Epistle to the Hebrews (T. L. Kingsbury, trans.; 2 vols.; Clark’s
Foreign Theological Library, 4/20; Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1872–78], pp.48–9;
Ellingworth, Hebrews, p.99; DeSilva, Perseverance, pp.87–8; Grässer, An die
Hebräer, p.1:60; Johnson, Hebrews, pp.69–70; Sidney G. Sowers, The Hermeneutics
of Philo and Hebrews: A Comparison of the Interpretation of the Old Testament in
Philo Judeaus and the Epistle to the Hebrews (Basel Studies of Theology, 1; Zurich:
EVZ, 1965), pp.66–7; Spicq, Hébreux, pp.2:6–7; Ronald Williamson, Philo and the
Epistle to the Hebrews (Leiden: Brill, 1970), p.493; Witherington, Letters and
Homilies, p.102.
37 James D. G. Dunn refers to inÀuence from the cult of the Mesopotamian
goddess of love, Ishtar-Astarte, the Isis cult, and Stoic and Platonic thought
(Christology in the Making, p.169). Dunn mentions particularly Plutarch, Is. Os. 53
and Apuleius, Metamorphoses 11.5.
38 Dunn states: ‘it is very unlikely that pre-Christian Judaism ever understood
Wisdom as a divine being in any sense independent of Yahweh… Wisdom never
really becomes more than a personi¿cation…of a function of Yahweh, a way of
speaking about God himself, of expressing God’s active involvement with his world
and his people without compromising his transcendence’ and ‘the Logos of God
is God in his self revelation’ (Christology in the Making, pp.176, 230). Kenneth
Schenck says in agreement with Dunn, ‘…these two words [Wisdom and Word]
were commonplaces of the Jewish wisdom tradition which were never meant to
imply real, personal beings but rather personi¿ed aspects of God’s action in refer-
ence to the world’, and ‘the logos for Philo is a vehicle for sometimes complex
personi¿cations of God and the creation in relation to one another, rather than an
actual entity’ (‘Keeping His Appointment: Creation and Enthronement in Hebrews’,
JSNT 66 [1997], pp.91–117 [108 and 110]). Similarly, about Wisdom and Word,
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24 You Are My Son
The author’s use of this language for the Son suggests that he is doing
the same, namely, ascribing divinity to the Son. On this point too there is
a general consensus. Commentators extol the ¿rst chapter of Hebrews as
an example of one of the ‘highest Christologies’ in the New Testament.39
This section of the letter asserts the close likeness between the Son and
God while also asserting the Son’s pre-existence; he was with God prior
to the moment of creation.40
Bauckham states, ‘[t]hey are not created beings, but nor are they semi-divine entities
occupying some ambiguous status between the one God and the rest of reality. They
belong to the unique divine identity’ (Jesus and the God of Israel, p.17). Yet
Bauckham disagrees with Dunn on whether these ¿gures are ‘envisaged as having
some form of distinct existence in reality’ (Jesus and the God of Israel, p.17).
Asserting that Wisdom is not a divine hypostasis, Dunn argues, ‘[i]t has not been
demonstrated that Hebrew thought was already contemplating such distinctions
within its talk of God’ (Christology in the Making, p.174). To the contrary, Bauck-
ham argues, ‘…these Jewish writers envisage some form of real distinctions within
the unique identity of the one God. If so, they are not abandoning or in any way
compromising their Jewish monotheism. The Second Temple Jewish understanding
of the divine uniqueness does not de¿ne it as unitariness and does not make
distinctions within the divine identity inconceivable’ (Jesus and the God of Israel,
p.17). It is not the task of this investigation to take a position on whether or not these
Jewish authors thought of distinctions within God, but to take up the question
whether or not this is the direction in which the author of Hebrews is moving. Others
argue that Wisdom and Word represent a departure from monotheism in Judaism;
see, Peter Hayman, ‘Monotheism – a Misused Word in Jewish Studies?’, JJS 42
(1991), pp.1–15 and Margaret Barker, The Great Angel: A Study of Israel’s Second
God (London: SPCK, 1992).
39 William L. Lane says it most forthrightly: ‘[t]he writer of Hebrews held a
high Christology. A high Christology is one that acknowledges that God’s self-
disclosure found its ultimate expression in Jesus of Nazareth, who was the Son of
God incarnate’ (Hebrews, p.1:cxxvii). Bauckham avers, ‘Hebrews begins with an
overwhelming emphasis on the full and eternal deity of the Son’ (Jesus and the God
of Israel, p.237). Dunn asserts, ‘[t]he special contribution of Hebrews is that it seems
to be the ¿rst of the NT writings to have embraced the speci¿c thought of a pre-
existent divine sonship’ (Christology in the Making, p.55). So also Witherington,
‘…perhaps Hebrews most clearly and emphatically af¿rms a high or divine
Christology among all the New Testament witnesses’ (Letters and Homilies, p.106).
See also Attridge, Hebrews, p.25; Ellingworth, Hebrews, p.71; and Hagner, ‘Son
of God’, p.252. I use the phrase ‘highest Christologies’ with caution, aware of
Johnson’s dissatisfaction with the terminology: ‘[t]he range of titles applied to Jesus
reveals how Hebrews eludes easy categorization of its Christology in terms of
“high” and “low”’ (Hebrews, p.50).
40 Schenck states: ‘[i]t is clear that the author [of Hebrews] af¿rmed the pre-
existence of Christ’ (‘Keeping His Appointment’, p.115), and Johnson: ‘[t]his Son is
the heir of all things, is the one through whom God created the world, and upholds
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1. ‘My Son’: The Appointed Heir of All Things 25
the universe by his word of power (1:1–3). These three expressions place the Son at
the origin of all things with God…’ (Hebrews, p.50). Some earlier scholars arrived
at a similar opinion. Fred B. Craddock states, ‘[i]n these opening lines the entire
theme of his Christology is given by the author: the Son pre-existed with the
Father…’ (The Pre-existence of Christ in the New Testament [Nashville: Abingdon,
1968], p.129). Robert G. Hamerton-Kelly arrives at a similar assessment: ‘[i]t is well
known that the opening verses proclaim the pre-existence of Christ in terms of the
Wisdom myth (Wisd. 7:27)’ (Pre-Existence, Wisdom, and The Son of Man: A Study
in the Idea of Pre-existence in the New Testament [SNTSMS, 21; Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1973], p.243).
41 Dunn, Christology in the Making, pp.55–6. G. B. Caird espouses a similar
idea. Maurice Wiles quotes him to say, ‘neither the Fourth Gospel nor Hebrews ever
speaks of the eternal Word or Wisdom of God in terms which compel us to regard it
as a person’ (‘Person or Personi¿cation? A Patristic Debate About Logos’, in The
Glory of Christ in the New Testament: Studies in Christology in Memory of George
Bradford Caird [L. D. Hurst and N. T. Wright, eds; Oxford: Clarendon, 1987],
pp.281–89 [281]).
42 Dunn, Christology in the Making, p.54.
43 In several instances, Schenck urges ‘extreme caution’ in the interpretation of
the verses in Hebrews 1 (‘Keeping His Appointment’, pp.92, 113, 115).
44 ‘Keeping His Appointment’, p.119. In a later article, Schenck says similarly,
‘…the author only considered Christ to be the creator of the world in a ¿gurative
way – as the embodiment of God’s creative wisdom’ (‘Celebration of the Enthroned
Son’, p.476).
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26 You Are My Son
Heb. 1.3 in particular alerts us to the possibility that wisdom and logos
motifs may be in the author’s mind when he speaks of Christ protologi-
cally. Immediately following the statement in 1.2 concerning Christ as
the agent of creation, ‘hymnic’ language appears that applies to Christ
images appropriate to both wisdom and logos. If this is in fact the origin
or nature of this language, then the possibility presents itself that these
verses have nuances or subtleties that should be taken into account in the
interpretation of Christ’s role in creation.45
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1. ‘My Son’: The Appointed Heir of All Things 27
particular. If the author’s quotation from Ps. 102 was not meant to present Christ as
the personal agent of creation, he chose his text very badly, and modi¿ed its opening
words incomprehensibly’ (Jesus and the God of Israel, p.240).
54 Dunn, Christology in the Making, p.55. Conversely, Angela Rascher notes
the importance of the relationship between God and Jesus, ‘[d]iese Ansprache Gottes
als Vater durch Jesus ist im Hebr allerdings nicht zu ¿nden, nur der Sohn wird als
Sohn von Gott angesprochen. Die Bezeichnung, “Vater” für Gott spielt im Hebr
keine Rolle, jedoch die enge Beziehung von Gott und Sohn’ (Schriftauslegung und
Christologie im Hebräerbrief [BZNW, 153; Berlin: de Gruyter, 2007], p.46). Even
so, she goes on to cite, in a footnote, the three instances that the author of Hebrews
designates God as Father.
55 Dunn, Christology in the Making, p.54.
56 Dunn, Christology in the Making, p.55.
57 Witherington comes to a similar conclusion: ‘[t]he author uses the language
of wisdom to describe Christ’s work, but he is not dealing merely with a preexisting
idea or a personi¿cation of wisdom; he is talking about a preincarnate person, indeed
an eternal one’ (Letters and Homilies, p.61). So also, Rascher, ‘[d]ie Beziehung von
Gott und Sohn kann im Hebr als die der zwei gleichberechtigten göttlichen Personen
beschrieben werden’ (Schriftauslegung, p.85). Dunn, incidentally, adopts this inter-
pretation in his treatment of John’s prologue. By joining the Logos language with a
Son of God Christology, ‘it becomes clear that for John the pre-existent Logos was
indeed a divine personal being’ (Christology in the Making, pp.243–4).
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1. ‘My Son’: The Appointed Heir of All Things 29
The pair of citations (Ps. 2.7 and 2 Sam. 7.14/1 Chr. 17.13)60 appearing
in Heb. 1.5 serves to emphasize the Father and the Son in relation to one
his mercy. The version in 1 Chronicles lacks any note about possible unrighteous
acts of the king. Ellingworth suggests that 1 Chr. 17.13 ¿ts the context of Hebrews
best because it lacks reference to ‘the son’s sin’ (Hebrews, p.114). The bene¿t of
this text as the referent is that the author of Hebrews could think of the entire speech
concerning David’s heir (1 Chr. 17.11-15) as that which could apply to Jesus. On
the other hand, if the Chronicler could drop the reference to sin when taking over
1 Samuel, so could the author of Hebrews. Hence, it is dif¿cult to make a ¿rm
decision on the source text for this citation. See Gert J. Steyn, A Quest for the
Assumed LXX Vorlage of the Explicit Quotations in Hebrews (FRLANT, 235;
Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2011), pp.49–52.
61 Those who highlight this relationship include Delitzsch, ‘The promise of
2 Sam vii speaks of a reciprocal relation between Jehovah and the seed of David’
(Hebrews, p.1:62); Thomas G. Long, ‘Second Sam 7:14 was employed to point to
the unique bond between God and Jesus’ (Hebrews [IBC; Louisville: John Knox,
1997], p.17; and Mitchell, ‘The author has selected LXX texts that highlight the
father/son relationship’ (Hebrews, p.51). Spicq indicates what this text says about
the relationship and God. ‘La seconde citation…est, comme la précédente, une
af¿rmation de la ¿liation divine du Christ, mais elle souligne surtout la continuité de
ses relations affectueuses aves son Père… Dans notre texte [Heb 1:5], il faut donc
comprendre au moins que Dieu a promis le secours de sa providence paternelle à son
Fils devenu homme (cf. Jo. VIII, 29; XVI, 32), mais l’auteur semble bien y voir une
af¿rmation de paternité proprement dite, de meme nature que la précédente’
(Hébreux, pp.2:16–17). Grässer calls attention to God through God’s speech and
through the relationship he shares with Christ: ‘Die Namensverleihung als Ausdruck
göttlicher Sohnschaft ist von Gott selbst verfügt’, and again, ‘Gott spricht in der
Schrift (italics original)’ (An die Hebräer, pp.1:72, 73). About the relationship, he
notes its eternal endurance: ‘Für den Heb heisst das: Es geht darum, dass das Vater-
Sohn-Verhältnis irreversibel ist’ (An die Hebräer, pp.1:75, 76).
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1. ‘My Son’: The Appointed Heir of All Things 31
God’s speech to someone else – he alerts his readers that through these
citations they are also going to learn something about the one speaking.
Hence, even if the content said nothing about God, the citations would
still disclose something about the character, or ethos, of God simply
because God is speaking them. In the ancient world, there was a wide-
spread understanding that speech disclosed character.62 By introducing
these verses as God’s speech, the author sets up the citations as a
conversation between two persons. As such, the dual emphasis upon both
the addressee and the addressor provides evidence of the relationship
between God and the one to whom God is speaking.
B. Quasi-Prosopopographic Exegesis
In order to highlight the way in which the author of Hebrews places
emphasis upon both God and the Son in Heb. 1.5, it is helpful to attend
to the rhetorical function of Heb. 1.5 as God’s speech. Hebrews 1.5
serves as evidence for the opening sentence of Hebrews: that God is a
God who speaks. By quoting scripture in this way, as that which is
spoken by God, the author is doing something that is distinct from his
own repetition of a written text. The author does not use scripture to
62 The rhetorical handbooks discuss the ways in which those who wrote and
delivered speeches might best construct a trustworthy and appealing character.
Aristotle was a very early proponent that a speech itself could convey character.
Previous to Aristotle, rhetoricians like Anaximenes of Lampsacus and Isocrates saw
character as part of the speaker’s reputation, a quality extrinsic to the speech itself
(Manfred Kraus, ‘Ethos as a Technical Means of Persuasion in Ancient Rhetorical
Theory’, in Rhetoric, Ethic, and Moral Persuasion: Essays from the 2002 Heidel-
berg Conference [Thomas H. Olbricht and Anders Eriksson, eds; New York: T&T
Clark International, 2005], pp.73–87, esp. pp.76–7; and George Kennedy, A New
History of Classical Rhetoric [Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1994], p.48).
About ethos Aristotle states, ‘[t]here is persuasion through character whenever the
speech is spoken in such a way as to make the speaker worthy of credence… And
this should result from the speech, not from a previous opinion that the speaker is a
certain kind of person… [C]haracter is almost, so to speak, the controlling factor in
persuasion’ (Rhet. 1.2.4 [Kennedy]). Similarly, Cicero, in his De Oratore (ca. 55
BCE), declares, ‘…so much is done by good taste and style in speaking, that the
speech seems to depict the speaker’s character. For by means of particular types of
thought and diction, and the employment besides of a delivery that is unrufÀed and
eloquent of good nature, the speakers are made to appear upright, well-bred and
virtuous men’ (De or. 2.184 [Sutton]). Finally, Quintilian, a teacher of rhetoric from
the ¿rst century CE, asserts, ‘the speaker’s character shines through his speech’ (Inst.
6.2.13 [Russell]). In the ancient world, rhetoricians recognized the power of the
spoken word to convey character and assumed that a speaker could elicit a certain
impression of his character based on the words of his oration.
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32 You Are My Son
support his own speech by loosely reformulating its basic ideas in his
own words or appealing to its written statements, but rather introduces
God himself to speak.63 As Koester notes, ‘[p]resenting God as speaker
was unconventional rhetorically and signi¿cant theologically. Some
speeches opened with an appeal that God or the gods might help the
speaker, but Heb. 1.1-4 identi¿es God as the speaker…so that listeners
are confronted not with the author’s reÀections about God but with
God’s words from the scriptures.’64 Hebrews’ penchant for presenting
divinely articulated scripture retains the focus on the community’s ability
to hear God’s address that the author established in the ¿rst sentence.
In Heb. 1.5, the author ¿nds warrant to make this claim – that God
speaks these scriptures – from the citations themselves. In their original
contexts these are all words spoken by God.65 The king reports God’s
speech to him in the Psalm (Ps. 2.7a), and Nathan relays to David the
Lord’s speech to him (2 Sam. 7.5). Therefore, like the king or Nathan,
the author of Hebrews is reporting God’s speech. Yet, the author of
Hebrews’ situation is slightly different. Because these are citations –
because he is repeating the king’s and Nathan’s reports of God’s
speech – it is important to note that he does the same thing as the king or
Nathan, namely, he reports God’s speech directly. For him to do so, he
had to ‘decrease the quotation level’66 by not repeating their introductions
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1. ‘My Son’: The Appointed Heir of All Things 33
to God’s speech (ÁįÉÀÇË ¼čȼŠÈÉĠË Ä¼, Ps. 2.7; ÌÚ»¼ Âñº¼À ÁįÉÀÇË, 2 Sam.
7.5). Hebrews silences the human medium in these texts and allows the
audience to hear God speaking directly.
With this move, the author’s mode of scriptural presentation resembles
a feature of rhetoric termed ethopoeia or prosopopoeia,67 an invented
¿rst-person speech in a voice other than the speaker’s own. With this
tool, the orator can relay the words of another person – living or dead,
general or speci¿c – or the speech of a thing – a country, the sea, a
quality, or, as Quintilian notes, the gods from heaven.68 The ancients
agree that it is highly effective, adding variety and drama to one’s
speech.69 Presenting the scriptures as the spoken word of God rather than
as written documents contributes to the oral makeup of the sermon and
adds to its effectiveness.70
Nevertheless, Hebrews avoids precisely replicating this tool. The way
in which Hebrews presents God’s speech differs from true prosopopoeia
in two key respects. First, the content of God’s speech does not originate
with Hebrews. One of the most important aspects of properly utilizing
prosopopoeia was the creation of ¿tting words, convincingly aligning
them with the character of the speaker and the nature of the situation.71
Quintilian, for example, teaches that
[the inner thoughts] are credible only if we imagine them saying what it is
not absurd for them to have thought!… But great powers of eloquence are
needed for this, since things which are false or in their nature unbeliev-
able must either strike the hearer with special force, because they surpass
the truth, or else be taken as empty nothings because they are not true.
(Inst. 9.2.30, 33 [Russell])
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1. ‘My Son’: The Appointed Heir of All Things 35
hearers would have shared some degree of the author’s own competence as a reader’
(Hebrews, p.21). Eisenbaum states, ‘[g]iven the hermeneutical presuppositions of the
time, we can safely assume that, for the author of Hebrews, [the citations] are all
instances of divine utterance’ (Jewish Heroes, p.92). A Jewish ‘canon’ was not a
settled body of literature at this time; but by quoting from the Law (e.g., 8.20/Exod.
24.8), prophets (e.g., 8.8-12/Jer. 31.31-34), historical books (1.5/2 Sam. 7.14, and
writings (e.g., the various psalms in 1.5-13; and 12.5-6/Prov. 3.11), the author of
Hebrews is appealing to what a wide range of ¿rst-century Jews would consider
authoritative and what would later become canon. For a discussion of the complexity
of the issue of what was authoritative and to whom, see George W. E. Nickelsburg,
Ancient Judaism and Christian Origins: Diversity, Continuity, and Transformation
(Minneapolis: Fortress, 2003), pp.9–21.
74 Notice Demetrius’s example of prosopopoeia: ‘[i]magine that your ancestors
are rebuking you and speak such words, or imagine, Greece…’ (Eloc. 265 [Innes]).
The same hypothetical situation is described by the Rhetorica ad Herennium, ‘[b]ut
if this invincible city should now give utterance to her voice, would she not speak as
follows?… But if that great Lucius Brutus should now come to life again and appear
here before you, would he not use this language?’ (4.66 [Caplan, LCL]). See also
Cicero, Inv. 1.99–100 (Hubbell, LCL]), Dio Chrysostom, Or. 55; 85 (Cohoon, LCL).
Aphthonius titles his exercise in ethopoeia, ‘An Exercise in Characterization: What
Words Niobe Might Say When Her Children Lie Dead’ (Preliminary Exercises 11
[Kennedy]).
75 According to Harold W. Attridge, ‘Hebrews…operates with the conceit that
readers and hearers of scripture can listen to God speaking’ (‘God in Hebrews’,
p.203). The word ‘conceit’ could imply that this conviction is fanciful or self-
aggrandizing. The author’s assurance, however, that he and his readers do hear God
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36 You Are My Son
and then proceeds – through the vehicle of the numerous citations in the
sermon – to introduce God’s (scriptural) speech to this community.
Because he is not creating a dramatic moment, but rather functioning as
the vehicle through which God is speaking, his technique does something
quantitatively and qualitatively different from other orators who use
prosopopoeia.76
The author of Hebrews cites scripture as that which God speaks. In so
doing, he mimics prosopopoeia by presenting a portion of scripture in
another’s voice to achieve the same striking dramatic effect as would any
other orator. Moreover, because he selects from the vast scriptures of
Israel words for God to speak, his citations, like prosopopoeia, construct
a particular perception of God for his audience, a particular ethos of God.
However, because he does not construct these words and because he
presents them as God’s actual (not imagined) speech for this community
to hear, it might be ¿tting to describe his method of citation as quasi-
prosopographical exegesis.77 He achieves a similar effect, but employs
different suppositions.
The point for the present argument is that Hebrews presents these
scriptures in such a way that God is evoked as a speaker before the
auditors. By using rhetorically informed exegesis to convey what God
has said, the author directs the attention of the audience to the two parti-
cipants of this conversation: the addressee of these words and the One
speaking is often expressed in the scriptures themselves (Gen. 21.12; Exod. 25.1;
Deut. 32.20; Josh. 1.1; 2 Sam. 7.4/1 Chr. 17.3; Pss. 2.7; 94.7 LXX; 109.1 LXX; Jer.
38.31 LXX; Hag. 1.1).
76 Paul does something similar in Romans 9–11 and 15 when he presents the
speech of God and Jesus in the ¿rst person. Paul, like the author of Hebrews, intro-
duces these texts as the speech of God (Rom. 9.9, 15, 25; 10.21; 11.4), but more
often introduces them as written documents (Rom. 9.13, 17, 33; 11.26; 15.9) or
names the human medium (Rom. 9.25; 10.19, 20). This comparison serves to
emphasize the oral nature of the Epistle to the Hebrews. For an analysis of Paul’s
use of ¿rst person speech for God, see Hans Hübner, Gottes Ich und Israel: Zum
Schriftgebrauch des Paulus in Römer 9–11 (FRLANT, 136; Göttingen: Vanden-
hoeck & Ruprecht, 1984). Similarly Mark begins his Gospel with the speech of God,
but does so by introducing it as that which is written by Isaiah the prophet (Mk 1.1–
3). These comparisons show how the author of Hebrews is distinguished by his
emphasis upon the scriptures as God’s spoken word.
77 I derive this term from Martin Meiser’s term ‘prosopographic exegesis’ that
appears in his essay ‘Ancient Christian Exegesis of Psalms and Ancient Philology on
Homer’ where he uses it to describe how pagan, Christian, and Jewish exegetes
account for dif¿cult texts spoken by esteemed ¿gures (paper presented at the annual
meeting of the Society of Biblical Literature; New Orleans, November 22, 2009).
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1. ‘My Son’: The Appointed Heir of All Things 37
who speaks them. By so doing, the author appeals to the authority of God
and displays his character. As the following section will explore, the
character God displays is that of a Father.
78 This citation might have also been attractive to the author because of other
resonances it provides with the rest of the letter. As many commentators note, the
next verse says that God will give the king the nations as an inheritance (Á¾ÉÇ-
ÅÇÄĕ¸), echoing the author’s assertions about inheritance in vv. 2 and 4. Note also the
mention of Zion (v. 6; Heb. 12.22), the staff of the king (ģÚ¹»ÇË, v. 9; Heb. 1.8), the
instruction (ȸÀ»¼ĕ¸) of the Lord (v. 12; Heb. 12.5-11), and the proclamation of
blessing to those who trust in the Lord (v. 12; Heb. 11.6).
79 Pss. 2.7; 88.28 LXX; 109.3 LXX; 2 Sam. 7.14; 1 Chr. 17.13; 22.10; 28.6. Meye
Thompson, The Promise of the Father: Jesus and God in the New Testament (Louis-
ville: Westminster John Knox, 2000), p.47.
80 The ‘Western Text’ of Luke (D) contains the full citation, ‘You are my Son;
today I have begotten You’. References to other portions of Psalm 2 appear in Acts
4.25-26; Rev. 2.26; 12.5; and 19.15.
81 These authors utilize this text, however, as a reference to the people of God,
not the King of Israel.
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38 You Are My Son
82 Attridge, Hebrews, p.53. He says much the same in his essay ‘The Psalms in
Hebrews’: ‘[t]he two verses appear in tandem in the Dead Sea Scrolls (4QFlor 3:10-
19) and their association was probably a traditional bit of Messianic proof-texting’
(‘The Psalms in Hebrews’, in The Psalms in the New Testament [S. Moyise and
M. J. J. Menken, eds; New York: T&T Clark, 2004], pp.197–212 [199]); see also
Steyn, Assumed LXX Vorlage, pp.29–31. Whereas Monte¿ore goes so far as to
suggest that these verses existed together in an earlier written form (Hebrews, p.43),
George Brooke offers, more reservedly, that the authors of both Hebrews and 4QFlor
‘were acquainted with a tradition whereby 2 Samuel 7 and Psalm 2 belong together’
(Dead Sea Scrolls and the New Testament (Minneapolis: Fortress, 2005), p.77.
83 Attridge, Hebrews, p.43.
84 Brooke, Dead Sea Scrolls.
85 Brooke, Dead Sea Scrolls, p.76.
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86 Brooke, Dead Sea Scrolls, p.77.
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1. ‘My Son’: The Appointed Heir of All Things 39
are a widespread pair of proof texts, his selection of these two texts
reveals his own interests and goals for the letter. He did, it seems, do his
own research into the Old Testament.
By citing these two texts, the author is able to discuss (or, more appro-
priately, to have God declare) Jesus as the Son of God in such a way that
God’s role as the Father of the Son is proclaimed as well. He draws from
a small group of texts in which God designates himself as the Father of
the king (Pss. 2.7; 88.28 LXX; 109.3 LXX; 2 Sam. 7.14; 1 Chr. 17.13;
22.10; 28.6). He cites two of these and alludes to a third (Ps. 88.28 LXX)
in the introduction to the quotation in Heb. 1.6 (Ğ̸Š»ò ÈÚÂÀÅ ¼ĊʸºÚºþ
ÌġÅ ÈÉÑÌĠÌÇÁÇÅ ¼ĊË ÌüÅ ÇĊÁÇÍÄñžÅ).87 This verse is similar to the other
quotations in that God designates the king as his child. Finally, there is a
possible echo to Ps. 109.3 (ëÁ º¸ÊÌÉġË ÈÉġ îÑÊĠÉÇÍ ëƼºñÅžÊÚ Ê¼) in v. 3
where Ps. 109.1 is invoked. Consequently, the author has selected what
is a minority theme from Israel’s scriptures88 as the departure point of his
sermon. In this way he is like the other ¿rst-century authors who found
messianic material in these rare texts. The author highlights the gravity
of this theme for his sermon by appealing to a wide swath of texts where
God portrays his relationship with Israel’s king as that of a Father and
son and by doing so in the space of only three verses at the beginning of
his address.
The distinction between the author’s quotation of Ps. 2.7 and 2 Sam.
7.14 and his allusions to Ps. 88.28 LXX and Ps. 109.3 LXX reveals more
about his intent in selecting these texts. He cites the texts that include an
equal balance between the Father and the Son. The allusions to Ps. 88.28
and Ps. 109.3 LXX buttress the familial theme of the ¿rst chapter, but
Ps. 2.7 and 2 Sam. 7.14 explicitly highlight God’s role as a Father as
87 Psalm 88.28 LXX is the only time in Israel’s scriptures in which God desig-
nates one person as his ÈÉÑÌĠÌÇÁÇË.
88 The scriptures of Israel give evidence of a relatively infrequent yet rich
understanding of God as their Father. Gen. 15.7-8; 48.15; Exod. 4.22-23; 15.17;
Num. 18.20, 21, 24, 26; Deut. 1.31-32; 8.5; 10.9; 12.12; 14.1; 18.2; 32.5-6, 10, 11,
18-20; 2 Sam. 7.14; 1 Chr. 17.13; 22.10; 28.6; 29.10 [LXX only]; Pss. 2.7; 36.9, 22,
29 LXX; 67.6 LXX; 68.36 LXX; 72.15 LXX; 88.27-28 LXX; 102.13 LXX; 104.44 LXX;
118.111 LXX; Prov. 3.12; Hos. 1.10; 11.1; Mal. 1.6; 2.10; 3.17; Isa. 1.2, 4; 30.1, 9;
34.17; 43.6; 45.10-11; 46.3; 49.8; 50.1; 53.12; 57.13; 60.21; 61.7; 63.8, 16; 64.8
LXX; Jer. 3.4, 14, 19, 22; 4.22; 38.9, 20 LXX; Lam. 5.2-3; Ezek. 36.12; 44.28.
Marianne Meye Thompson states, ‘[i]t is unwise to exaggerate the number of
passages that present God as Father [in the Old Testament]. The relative infrequency
of the term “Father” for God does contrast sharply with the regular use of the term in
the New Testament’ (Promise of the Father, p.47).
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40 You Are My Son
much as they do Jesus’ designation as the Son. Psalm 103.9 lacks the
word ÍĎŦË, a term included in the two other citations, suggesting that the
author intended to have God articulate the identity of the one through
whom he is now speaking with the term ÍĎŦË. This verse, where God says
‘ëƼºñÅžÊÚ Ê¼’, highlights God’s parental role, but lacks the explicit
parallel of Jesus’ sonship. On the other hand, Ps. 88.28 LXX lacks a clear
and equal reference to God as a Father. Obviously, unlike 2 Sam. 7.14 it
lacks the word ȸÌûÉ, but even in comparison with Ps 2.7, Ìĕ¿¾ÄÀ in
Psalm 88 does not highlight the metaphor of parenthood the same way
º¼ÅÅÚÑ does. It includes the idea of sonship, but lacks the parallel of
fatherhood. The citations depict God not only presenting Jesus as Son,
but himself as Father as well. They emphasize the relationship in which
Jesus stands with God, and hence, the identity imparted to each in the
context of that relationship.
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1. ‘My Son’: The Appointed Heir of All Things 41
line, it is the speaker – God – who begets him. In the third, God declares
himself to be a Father to this one, and, ¿nally, in the last, the Son takes
this ¿lial position in relation to the speaker. The chart below shows this
balance in each line and in the chiastic pattern of the two citations
together.92
A ÍĎĠË ÄÇÍ ¼č Êį
B ëºĽ ÊûļÉÇÅ º¼ºñÅžÁÚ Ê¼
B1 ëºļ ìÊÇĸÀ ¸ĤÌŊ ¼ĊË È¸Ìñɸ
A1 Á¸ĕ ¸ĤÌġË ìÊ̸À ÄÇÀ ¼ĊË ÍĎĠÅ
With these citations, the author reiterates that the titles ‘Son’ and ‘Father’
mean nothing in isolation. To be Son or Father necessarily implies that
one is related to the other in a familial way.93
92 The lines that focus upon the Son are shaded. The words that refer to the Son
are underlined, while the words that refer to the Father are in italics.
93 Similarly Origen states, ‘no one can be a father without having a son’, Princ.
I.2.10. Peter Widdicombe elucidates this statement by saying, ‘God as Father must
have a Son in order to be what he is, and the Son as Son must have a Father in order
to be what he is’ (The Fatherhood of God from Origen to Athanasius [OTM;
Oxford: Clarendon, 1994], p.69).
1
94 Dunn, Christology in the Making, p.55.
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42 You Are My Son
way in which the author uses ÍĎĠË as the Son with whom God the Father
is involved in a relationship tips the balance created by his use of royal
and wisdom traditions in Heb. 1.1-4. Hebrews uses the language of Word
and Wisdom, but he does so to describe God’s Son and heir. The texts
that portray God’s Wisdom or God’s Word as God’s Son can imply a
fatherly nature for God, but Hebrews does not leave this role as an impli-
cation only. His emphasis on God’s Fatherhood in Heb. 1.5 suggests that
the ÍĎĠË of Hebrews 1 is not an aspect or a function, but a person. God
could not have a dialogic and truly paternal relationship with an aspect of
himself. In some other texts, Sophia and Logos may be designated as the
¿rstborn of God, but God never speaks to them directly to declare his
paternal relationship with them. Hence, the Son is a person who reÀects
God’s being, who participated with God in creation, and who reigns
alongside God bearing all things.95 Even in the midst of the congruence
between the language of Hebrews and that depicting God’s Wisdom and
Word, the familial relationship articulated so carefully in Heb. 1.5 pro-
vides the interpretive context for the author’s portrayal of God and Jesus
in the opening verses of Hebrews.
95 Origen arrives at this conclusion about the use of Wisdom language for
Christ: ‘[l]et no one, however, imagine that we mean anything impersonal when we
call Him the wisdom of God; or suppose, for example, that we understand Him to
be, not a living being endowed with wisdom, but something which makes men wise,
giving itself to, and implanting itself in, the minds of those who are made capable of
receiving His virtues and intelligence’ (Princ. I.2.2 [Widdicombe]). Directly previ-
ous to this statement, he states that the scriptures name Christ as both wisdom and
¿rst-born. Peter Widdicombe concludes, ‘[t]he Son’s real individual existence is one
of the main themes of Origen’s theology’ (Fatherhood, p.67 n.10). See also Com. Jn.
I.34.151, 243.
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1. ‘My Son’: The Appointed Heir of All Things 43
became the Son upon his exaltation, but was only proleptically so before
this point.96
This interpretation seems to be the motivating factor in G. B. Caird’s
short essay on the Christology of Hebrews where he concludes: ‘[t]he
author of Hebrews has no place in his thinking for pre-existence as an
ontological concept. His essentially human Jesus attains to perfection, to
preeminence, and even to eternity… [T]he right [to the highest place that
heaven affords] was guaranteed by the place he held in the eternal
purpose of God.’97 Caird appeals to Heb. 1.4 to say
[Jesus] had to become superior to the angels and to inherit the loftier name
(1.4). It was because of his death that he entered upon his heavenly glory,
through suffering that he attained perfection as the pioneer of man’s salva-
tion (2.9-10)… [The author of Hebrews] explored to the uttermost what it
means in the circumstances of this world for a man to be God’s son.98
Caird’s logic is that God had an eternal purpose for bringing humanity
to glory.99 Jesus ful¿lled that purpose by obeying God’s will,100 then
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1. ‘My Son’: The Appointed Heir of All Things 45
104 James T. Chulp, ‘Identity and the Representation of War in Ancient Rome’,
in Fighting Words and Images: Representing War Across the Disciplines (Elena V.
Baraban, Stephen Jaeger, and Adam Muller, eds; Toronto: University of Toronto
Press, 2012), pp.209–32 [222]).
105 See, similarly, Schenck, ‘Keeping His Appointment’, p.91; keep in mind
that Schenck is hesitant to attribute a personally pre-existent sonship of Christ to
Hebrews.
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46 You Are My Son
that he is inheriting the name ‘Son’ at this moment. Parallels from Roman
and Israelite history support reading the citation as God’s restatement of
that fact. No time exists when the Son was not appointed as heir. Yet, it
is after he makes puri¿cation for sins that he comes into possession of
his inheritance.106
106 This is articulated well by Bruce McCormack: ‘[t]he One who was appointed
heir of all things in protology is the One who became superior to the angels and who
received His inheritance when He sat down at the right hand of God’ (‘The Identity
of the Son: Karl Barth’s Exegesis of Hebrews 1.1-4 [and Similar Passages]’, in
Christology, Hermeneutics, and Hebrews: Pro¿les from the History of Interpretation
[Jon C. Laansma and Daniel J. Treier, eds; LNTS, 423; London: T&T Clark, 2012),
p.161. But precisely here, a problem announces itself. How can the Son already be
the Son in protology if he only enters into the fullness of his sonship (i.e., receives
his inheritance and his name) in his eschatological enthronement? The author’s
citation of Psalm 8 supports this interpretation. Jesus is crowned with glory and
honor, and all things are subjected to him after he is lowered below the angels
through the suffering of death (Heb. 2.8-9). See the discussion in the following
chapter.
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1. ‘My Son’: The Appointed Heir of All Things 47
ÍĎÇĖ ¿¼Çı.107 The angels may be known as the sons of God, but God never
107 Gen. 6.2, 4; Deut. 32.43 (a possible source of the third citation of the catena
in Heb. 1.6); Pss. 28.1; 88.7. When thinking of sons, particularly sons of God, could
a ¿rst-century audience have thought of angels? And when thinking of angels could
they have thought of them as sons of God? Numerous translators of the Hebrew
Bible certainly did so. Deuteronomy 32 provides two salient examples. In Deut.
32.8, 4QDeutj provides evidence of the reading -'!+ '1 in the last phrase. It is this
version that best explains most Greek manuscripts’ translation of ¸ºº¼ÂÑÅ ¿¼ÇÍ.
Hence, these Greek translators saw the sons of God as the angels in charge over
nations, an idea represented also in Jub. 15.31-32, Philo (Post. 89, 91-92), and
Origen (Hom. Num. 11.5 [GCS 30, p.86). Deut. 32.43 and Odes 2.43 present the
possibility that those who read these texts could have seen the sons of God as
parallel to the angels of God because of the format of Hebrew poetry. The trend
continues outside Deuteronomy. Three times in the book of Job the translators from
Hebrew to Greek opted to use ¸ºº¼ÂÇÀ ¿¼ÇÍ for -'!+ '1. In the ¿rst two references
the beings come to present themselves before the Lord. In the last, they shout and
sing at the time of creation, a moment the author of Jubilees also thought included
the participation of angels (Jub. 2.1-4). In Daniel’s story of the ¿ery furnace, the
fourth being who appears has the appearance of a son of God, which the Old Greek
translates as an ¸ºº¼ÂÇË ¿¼ÇÍ. In Dan. 3.28 Nebuchadnezzar attributes the deliverance
of the young men to an angel. So both the original story of Daniel and the translators
of 3.25 interpreted this son of God as an angel. Finally, three Psalms translate sons
as angels. The Aramaic translation of Ps. 29.1 has the psalmist call upon the bands
of angels as -'!+ '1, who bring to the Lord glory and might. In Ps. 82.6, the
syrohexapla reads the sons of the most high who judge Israel as angels. Psalm 89
asks who among the divine sons can be like the Lord (89.7). For they, the holy ones
(89.6, 8) praise the wonders and the faithfulness of God. The Syriac and targums
took these divine sons to be angels.
In other instances, interpreters see a correspondence between ÍÀÇÀ ¿¼ÇÍ and angels.
In the fantastic passage in Genesis 6 the narrator describes a time when the sons of
God (-'!+ '1) noticed the daughters of men, took them as wives, and bore children
with them. The Septuagint translates the phrase woodenly, the ÍÀÇÀ ÌÇÍ ¿¼ÇÍ perform
these actions, but for many early interpreters, this was an account of malicious
angels. First Enoch, the earliest reÀection on this passage, uses the term angels to
describe the ‘sons of heaven’ who mate with and de¿le the daughters of men (1 En.
6.2; 10.7, 8). When reÀecting upon the Genesis passage, it places both terms next to
each other: ‘the angels, the sons of heaven’ (6.2). In other places, Enoch puts sons of
heaven into parallel with watchers, another term it uses mostly for fallen angels
(1 En. 13.8; 14.3). Much literature of the second temple period opted for the same
translation (Jub. 4.15; 5.1; 1 En. 6–7; 39.1; T. Reub. 5.6; 2 Bar. 51.3; 56.12-16;
2 En. 18.4; Gen. Apoc. (1Qap Genar) 2.1. In Questiones et solutions in Genesin,
when he discusses the giants of Genesis 6, Philo states that Moses in describing the
angels refers to them as the sons of God (1.92). Josephus states that ‘many angels of
God accompanied with women and begat sons that proved unjust’ (Ant. 1.3.1.73).
Simeon, a Rabbi, encouraged people not to think of the angels of Genesis 6 as angels
(an indication that some did) because he was troubled by their ability to sin (Brendan
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48 You Are My Son
Byrne, Sons of God, Seed of Abraham: A Study of the Idea of the Sonship of God of
All Christians in Paul Against the Jewish Background [Analecta biblica 83; Rome:
Biblical Institute, 1979], p.76). While other interpretive options appeared later,
D. W. Baker concludes, ‘…the “angels” view [was] the only contender into the
second century’ (‘Sons of God, Daughters of Man’, DOTP 794–5).
Outside the Genesis 6 reference, Philo refers to the ¸ºº¼ÂÇË of Exodus 23 as
God’s ¿rstborn son (Agr. 51). For those who want to be sons of God, they should
model the angel, even the archangel who is also God’s ¿rstborn (Conf. 146). The
Prayer of Joseph, a possibly Alexandrian ¿rst-century apocryphal work quoted by
Origen who says it is in use among the Hebrews, describes Jacob as an angel who is
the ¿rstborn and the chief among the sons of God. In The History of the Rechabites,
the Greek text of the narrative of Zosimus describes a person seeing a being who
looks like an angel and he thinks he is the son of God (5.4) (W. A. Craigie, ANF 10,
pp.220–4). The connection continues on in the writings of the rabbis, where there is
some evidence of sons and angels. In addition to referring to the angelic court as the
family of God, some rabbis argued that the son of God name given to both angels
and Israel, but the angels lost it through sin (Byrne, Sons of God, Seed of Abraham,
p.76). This brief account is but a sample of other extensive surveys of this literature,
like that of Brendan Byrne, who concluded that the terminology sons of god for
angels would have been fully acceptable (Sons of God, Seed of Abraham, p.2; Gert J.
Steyn, ‘Addressing an Angelomorphic Christological Myth in Hebrews?’, HvTSt
59.4 [2003], pp.1107–26). At the very least, this survey suggests enough of a con-
nection that if the author of Hebrews wanted to distinguish the name of Jesus from
the angels, the term Son on its own would not be a clear way to do so.
108 Many commentaries focus upon the Son of these citations but fail to observe
what they might indicate for the author’s view of God. B. F. Westcott’s comment is
a good example of a focus on the Son to the exclusion of the Father. He categorizes
both citations by their meaning for the Son, saying, ‘[t]he dignity of the Son as Son
is asserted in three connexions, in its foundation (ÊûļÉÇÅ º¼ºñÅžÁÚ Ê¼); in its
continuance (ìÊÇĸÀ ¸ĤÌĿ ¼ĊË È¸Ìñɸ); and in its ¿nal manifestation (Ğ̸ŠÈÚÂÀÅ
¼ĊʸºÚºþ)’ (Hebrews, p.19).
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1. ‘My Son’: The Appointed Heir of All Things 49
that the God who speaks does not engage in divine monologues,109 but
instead speaks to others – to the ancestors and to us (Heb. 1.1-2). God’s
¿rst words bear this out. They are a dialogue, a direct address to another.
Hence, the dialogue captured in the citations and then highlighted by the
author’s introduction to them as God’s speech call into question Dunn’s
charges of the ‘impersonal tone’110 of this passage, and decrease the
likelihood that God is conversing with an aspect of himself.
Second, and more importantly, the very words that God speaks are
about the establishment of a relationship. He engages in a conversation
with Jesus, demonstrating that a familial relationship has been estab-
lished. As was made clear by others in antiquity who used paternal
themes to portray the divine, to say that God is a Father invokes ideas
of intimacy and care.111 The ¿rst thing God says establishes God as a
109 This challenges any ideas associated with a distant and non-involved God.
Tomasz Lewicki sees an aloof and alien God as one of the main problems among the
recipients of Hebrews (‘Weist nicht ab den Sprechenden!’, p.14).
110 Dunn, Christology in the Making, p.55.
111 See the references to God’s fatherhood in Israel’s scriptures in n. 88. Jewish
literature of the Second Temple period carries on many of the same emphases. God
is proclaimed as Father in relationship to members of Israel (Tob. 13.4; Apoc. Mos.
36.1; 43.4; 3. Macc. 7.6; T. Jud. 24.2, 3; T. Ab. 6.6; 20.12, 13; Jub. 1.25; 19.29).
Jews and others recognize that the Israelites were the children of God (Esth. 16.16
LXX; Sir. 36.17; Wis. 5.5; 12.19, 21; 16.10, 21; 18.4, 13; 19.6; 1 En. 62.11; 3 Macc.
6.28; Pss. Sol. 17.27; Sib. Or. 3.702; 5.202; T. Mos. 10.3). The familial relationship
is utilized in the themes of Israel’s sins (Bar. 4.8) and Israel’s restoration (Apoc.
Ezek. 2.1).
This trajectory of describing God as Father continues into rabbinic literature. A
prayer of Rabbi Akiba dated to the second century proclaims, ‘[o]ur Father our King
we have no king but you; Our Father our King for your sake have mercy on us’
(b. Ta’anit 25b; cited in Jakob J. Petuchowski, ‘Jewish Prayer Texts of the Rabbinic
Period’, in The Lord’s Prayer and Jewish Liturgy [J. J. Petuchowski and M. Brocke,
eds; New York: Seabury, 1978], pp.21–44 [39]).
Among the Greeks and Romans this was a frequent way to refer to the divine. It
showed the god’s close connection with creation, including the human element of
that creation. In his twelfth oration concerning the origin of humanity’s knowledge
of the gods, Dio Chrysostom praises Zeus as ‘the king ruler and lord and father’
(Or. 12.22 [Cohoon, LCL]) and by speaking in the voice of Pheidias, the artist who
constructed the statue of Zeus at Olympia, has him do the same: ‘I…have set up…a
mild and majestic god in pleasing guise, the Giver of our material and our physical
life and of all our blessings, the common Father and Saviour and Guardian of
mankind’ (Or. 12.74 [Cohoon, LCL]). Dio argues that the knowledge of Zeus’s
kinship with humanity is evident to everyone (Or. 12.27). Through the words of
Pheidias, Dio portrays humans’ desire to sacri¿ce to images of the gods as similar to
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50 You Are My Son
the desire of infants that long to be close to their parents (Or. 12.61). According
to him, the fatherhood imagery of the god conveys Zeus’ gentleness and solicitude
(Or. 12.75).
Several authors comment on the bene¿ts of thinking of the gods in a parental way.
Augustine quotes Varro who says that fear of the gods is the stance of the super-
stitious man, whereas the one who reverences them like parents is the religious man
(Augustine, City of God 6.9 [NPNF1 2:117]). Epictetus reÀects on the bene¿t of
thinking of oneself as a child of the god in several of his discourses (Diatr.1.3, 1.9).
Those who do so are able to live better because they know that they come from
something more than brute Àesh. He says, ‘[i]f a man could only subscribe heart and
soul, as he ought, to this doctrine, that we are all primarily begotten of God, and that
God is the father of man as well as of gods, I think that he will entertain no ignoble
or mean thought about himself. Yet, if Caesar adopts you no one will be able to
endure your conceit, but if you know that you are a son of Zeus, will you not be
elated?… [T]o have God as our maker, and father, and guardian, – shall this not
suf¿ce to deliver us from griefs and fears?’ (Diatr. 1.3.1–2; 1.9.7–8 [Oldfather]).
For writers like Dio Chrysostom and Epictetus, this language conveyed the gentle-
ness and compassion of the god. If Zeus is father, his children should live with the
conviction that the god knows them, cares for them, and expects them to live a life
worthy of a child of god. Philo’s statement serves as an excellent summation: ‘[f]or
what relation can be closer than that of a father to a son, or a son to a father?’
(Congr. 177 [Colson and Whitaker, LCL]).
On the other hand, the paternal nature of God can also entail a severe dimension.
This is certainly true of Zeus who, although he is still called father, elicits great fear
(Homer, Il. 1.533-35; 14.414-18). Seneca views the deity as a severe father, whose
discipline shapes his children into virtuous people (Ep.1.5). Severity, particularly in
the use of discipline, applies as well to the fatherly God of Israel. I discuss this
aspect of God’s paternal character in the third chapter.
112 Aristotle referred to the opening section as the one in which the speaker
establishes the theme of the speech and his own credibility (Rhet. 3.14).
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1. ‘My Son’: The Appointed Heir of All Things 51
Finally, with these citations, the author has also revealed why God is
relational. These citations depict God as one who enters into a relation-
ship because God has chosen to do so. In Hebrews, God can be known
as Father ¿rst and foremost not because someone has named him as
such – not even Jesus – but because God has made and declared himself
to be Father. This relationship exists by God’s initiative. God’s words
and God’s actions establish Jesus as his Son and himself as Jesus’ Father.
By selecting citations that emphasize the relationship between Father
and the Son, by setting them so that they create a balanced pattern
alternating between each member, and by introducing them as God’s
speech, the author begins to shape his picture of God by declaring the
unparalleled superiority of the Son.
As Heb. 1.5 provides the lens for reading Heb. 1.1-4, it also provides the
groundwork for the remaining citations of the chapter. Regarding the
Son’s inheritance and exaltation in those verses, many interpreters assert
that the name he inherits is ‘Son’113 – implying that Jesus became ‘Son’
at the moment of his exaltation. Such an assertion, however, is logically
troublesome. One can be in the relationship denoted by the word ‘Son’,
but one does not normally think of ‘Son’ as a name that one inherits.
Instead, a person who is a son inherits the name of his father. Bauck-
ham cogently argues that ‘the Son is the one who inherits the name from
his Father, not what he inherits. What he inherits must be something that
belongs to his Father, whereas “Son” is uniquely the Son’s title’.114 If
Heb. 1.5 is not the articulation of the name Jesus inherits, then it cannot
be support for the interpretation that Jesus becomes God’s Son only upon
his exaltation. Instead, it is God’s explicit announcement of Jesus’ iden-
tity based on his relationship with God. God’s articulation of ÍĎĠË is the
pronouncement of the relational reality on which the Name that Jesus
does inherit is based. In the remaining citations, God pronounces that
inherited name and the inheritance of all things (1.2) that will come
along with it.115
116 James Thompson notes, ‘[b]ecause in the catena the author is quoting and
using very little of his own language, the task of ascertaining his intention is espe-
cially dif¿cult’ (The Beginnings of Christian Philosophy: The Epistle to the Hebrews
[CBQMS, 13; Washington, DC: Catholic Biblical Association of America, 1982],
p.128). So also Susan Docherty states, ‘[a]lthough very brief, the importance of the
author’s introductions to his citations in providing new context to specify their
meaning in the way he wanted cannot be overstated’ (The Use of the Old Testament
in Hebrews [WUNT, 2/260; Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 2009], p.154). It is important
to pay close attention to the author’s own words, for this is how he integrates the
quotations into his portrayal of God and Christ and the relationship between them.
117 Num. 3.12-13, 41, 45; 8.16-18.
118 Other early Christian writers use ÈÉÑÌĠÌÇÁÇË to refer to Jesus and his place
as the ¿rstborn who will be followed by others (Rom. 8.29; Col. 1.15, 18; Rev. 1.5).
Similarly, in Hebrews 12, the audience comes to the mountain of God where there
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1. ‘My Son’: The Appointed Heir of All Things 53
is an assembly of the ¿rstborn ones (12.23). Hence, this introduction provides the
¿rst hint of the link between the sonship of Jesus and the ¿lial status of those who
trust in him.
119 For example, Attridge (Hebrews, p.56), Monte¿ore (Hebrews, p.45), and
Spicq (Hebréux, p.2:17) see this as a reference to the incarnation. DeSilva (Hebrews,
p.97), Loader (Sohn und Hoherpriester, pp.23–5), David Peterson (Hebrews and
Perfection: An Examination of the Concept of Perfection in the ‘Epistle to the
Hebrews’ [SNTSMS, 47; Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1982], p.214
n.19), and Vanhoye (Situation, pp.152–7) are among those who place it at the exal-
tation. Finally, Käsemann (Das wandernde Gottesvolk, pp.98–101), Otto Michel
(Der Brief an die Hebräer [8th ed.; KEK, 13; Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht,
1949], p.113), and Westcott (Hebrews, p.37) interpret it as taking place at the
parousia. See David Mof¿tt’s thorough treatment of the term, where he concludes
that this is Jesus’ ‘entry into the true eternal inheritance God promised to his people’
(Atonement and Resurrection, pp.53–118).
120 For support of the Christological reading of the Psalm in Hebrews, see the
argument in Chapter 2.
121 No extant Vorlage preserves the precise citation found in Hebrews. The
psalter appended to Alexandrinus (the ‘Odes’) preserves the closest reading to
Hebrews’ version of Moses’ song. The only difference is that the psalter includes a
de¿nite article before Óºº¼ÂÇÀ (Á¸Ė ÈÇÉÊÁÍžÊÚÌÑʸŠ¸ĤÌŊ ÈÚÅÌ¼Ë ÇĎ Óºº¼ÂÇÀ ¿¼Çı). If
this is a quotation from Deut. 32.43 as preserved in Vaticanus (Á¸Ė ÈÉÇÊÁÍžÊÚÌÑʸÅ
¸ĤÌŊ ÈÚÅÌ¼Ë ÍĎÇÀ ¿¼Çı), then the author makes only one change, from ÍĎÇĕ to Óºº¼ÂÇÀ;
but if this is from Ps. 96.7 (ÈÉÇÊÁÍÅûʸ̼ ¸ĤÌŊ, ÈÚÅÌ¼Ë ÇĎ Óºº¼ÂÇÀ ¸ĤÌÇÍ), he makes
four changes: the addition of Á¸ĕ, the form of the verb from second to third
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54 You Are My Son
¿rstborn, the author has attributed yet another solely divine prerogative
to the Son. In Jewish thought and practice of the ¿rst century, worship
belonged only to God.122 This attribution of divine characteristics is
con¿rmed by the context of Deuteronomy 32,123 which has portrayed
God as the object of the worship of the people of Israel.124 Moreover, the
author contributes to his theme of the Son’s superiority over the angels
through the format of God’s speech. God does not speak to the angels
but about them. He refers to them in the third person, rather than address-
ing them in the second person. God has no conversation with the angels
as he does with the Son.
person, the elimination of the article, and substituting ¿¼Çı for ¸ĤÌÇı. Moreover,
there are no other quotations from Psalm 96 in Hebrews, whereas the author quotes
from Deuteronomy 32 – the Song of Moses – in 10.30. See David Allen, Deutero-
nomy and Exhortation in Hebrews (WUNT, 2/238; Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 2007),
pp.44–57.
122 Bauckham does make reference to a few instances of apparent angel
worship, but concludes ‘it is very doubtful whether any substantial number of Jews
treated angels in a way that they would themselves have regarded as comparable,
even in degree, with the worship of God. Occasional prayer to angels should not be
confused with worship’ (Jesus and the God of Israel, pp.11–13). Larry W. Hurtado
focuses upon Jewish practice: ‘how and to whom Jews prayed, offered sacri¿ce, and
otherwise gave what they intended as worship of a divine ¿gure. For this, we have in
fact a good deal of evidence that devout Jews were quite scrupulous in restricting
full worship to the God of Israel alone’ (Lord Jesus Christ: Devotion to Jesus in
Earliest Christianity [Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2003], p.34).
123 Moses’ Song, preserved in Deuteronomy 32, is a particularly fruitful chapter
for the author. In addition to his quotation from v. 43, he also quotes from vv. 35-36
(Heb. 10.30). Moreover, this chapter contains numerous themes echoed in Hebrews
(God is not Ò»ÀÁ¸ĕÇË [Deut. 32.4//Heb. 6.10]; God leading his people [Deut. 32.12//
Heb. 2.10]; the sin of unfaithfulness [Deut. 32.20//Heb. 3.19]; God as a consuming
¿re [Deut. 32.22//Heb. 12.29]; God’s right hand [Deut 32.40//Heb. 1.13]; God’s
eternal existence [Deut. 32.40//Heb. 4.9–10]; Moses viewing the land of promise
from a distance [Deut. 32.52//Heb. 11.13]). It also includes several instances of a
portrayal of God’s relationship with people as that of a father with his children
(Deut. 32.5, 6, 10-11, 18, 19, 20). See also Allen, Deuteronomy and Exhortation,
pp.57–8.
124 Based upon the version of Deuteronomy 32 found at Qumran, Hurst presents
the possibility that the author of Hebrews thought of the ¿rstborn as representative
of the people of Israel so that the ‘him’ of Heb. 1.6 refers to the people of Israel.
He does not ¿nally embrace the anthropological interpretation of Deuteronomy,
however, stating in a footnote: ‘[t]his is the way I read the text until George Caird
pointed out the dif¿culty of such an interpretation in light of the larger context of
Deut. 32’ (‘Christology’, p.159 n.28).
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1. ‘My Son’: The Appointed Heir of All Things 55
125 Like Psalm 109 quoted in Heb. 1.10-12, Ps. 103.2 and 6 portray creation as a
garment (ĸË ĎÄÚÌÀÇÅ).
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126 Mof¿tt, Atonement and Resurrection, pp.141–2.
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56 You Are My Son
God’s proclamation about the Son’s eternal throne and righteous scepter.
Several elements that had been under the surface of the discourse in
Hebrews now become explicit. The author has hinted at a royal Christol-
ogy by identifying Jesus as God’s Son, and implied as much with the
citations in v. 5 and the allusion to Ps. 89.28 in v. 6, all of which are
spoken to the King of Israel. Now the Son’s royalty is made explicit by
his anointing and subsequent possession of a throne, scepter, and king-
dom.127 Moreover, this citation casts Jesus as a worthy king who loves
righteousness and hates lawlessness and has a right to this eternal throne
because he is God’s Son.128 Finally, with this citation, the author adds yet
another divine quali¿cation to the Son: an eternal reign.129 God declares
that his throne lasts forever.130 There will be no end to his throne and,
consequently, no end to his reign.
127 Anointing with oil in Israel’s scriptures is primarily ascribed to kings and
priests. Exceptions include Elijah’s anointing of Elisha (1 Sam. 19.16) and the
prophet anointed by the Lord in Isaiah 61.
128 The last line of the citation could also be further support that Jesus is better
than the angels if they are the companions (ļÌĠÏÇÀ) that his anointing places him
above (Lane, Hebrews, p.1:30; Attridge sees this as the primary referent, although he
does not exclude others [Hebrews, p.60]). However, every other time the author
employs this word, it speaks of the human followers of Christ (3.1, 14; 6.4; 12.8
[see Athanasius, C. Ar. 1.46; Koester, Hebrews, p.195; Johnson, Hebrews, p.80]).
If humans are the referent, then it is possible to see Christ as anointed with the oil
of gladness in the midst of his human companions. ¸ÉÚ with the accusative could
also be translated as ‘by’ or ‘near’ (ȸÉÚ, BDAG, 757). In Heb. 11.12, the author
cites Gen. 22.17 where ȸÉÚ is used with the accusative in this way. More often
ȸÉÚ is used with the accusative to convey that one thing is superior to another. In
all these instances (Heb. 1.4; 2.7, 9; 3.3; 9.23; 11.4; 12.24) save one (11.11), how-
ever, there is a comparative word to show that ȸÉÚ should be translated as indicat-
ing a comparison. If this is an anointing in the midst of his companions, this text
foreshadows his priestly anointing that takes place among humanity (12.3) and,
though excruciating, includes an element of joy (Heb. 12.2). See Amy L. B. Peeler,
‘With Tears and Joy: The Emotions of Christ in Hebrews’, Koinonia 20 (2008),
pp.12–26.
129 These texts describe God as eternal: Exod. 15.18; Deut. 32.40; Pss. 9.7;
10.16; 29.10; 92.8; 102.12; Wis. 3.8; Sir. 39.20; Isa. 48.12; Lam. 5.19; 2 Macc. 1.25;
Sib. Or. frg. 1.16; T. Mos. 10.7.
130 God’s promise of Jesus’ eternal endurance is also an important theme of
Jesus’ priesthood (5.6; 7.24).
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1. ‘My Son’: The Appointed Heir of All Things 57
131 Some mss of the Greek Old Testament also have Êį at the beginning of the
line (A, Graeco-Latinum Veronense, Purpureum Turicense). Bauckham notes that the
author of Hebrews’ presentation of this text in this way places ‘the person addressed
(Jesus Christ) at the same beginning with which Genesis begins, the primordial
eternity before the creation of the heavens and the earth, for which the pre-existent
Christ is also here made responsible’ (Jesus and the God of Israel, p.243).
132 Several interpreters (B. W. Bacon, ‘Heb. 1.10-12 and the Septuagint
Rendering of Ps. 102.23’, ZNW 3 [1902], pp.280–5; C. D. F. Moule, The Birth of the
New Testament [BNTC, 1; London: Adam & Charles Black, 1962], pp.77–8; Bruce,
Hebrews, pp.61–2; Simon J. Kistemaker, The Psalms Citations in the Epistle to the
Hebrews [Amsterdam: Wed. G. Van Soest N.V., 1961], pp.79–80) see a messianic
address by God in the text of the Greek Psalm itself, due to the addition of the Êį
and the vocative ÁįÉÀ¼. This conjecture is possible, but not certain (see Attridge,
Hebrews, p.60 n.122). Whether this ascription is warranted by the Greek version
or not, the author still ascribes a name associated with God to Christ and God-like
qualities of creation and eternality.
133 In support of his argument that God’s role as sole creator of all things is one
thing which sets God apart from all other reality, Bauckham lists Isa. 40.26, 28;
42.5; 45.12, 18; 48.13; 51.16; Neh. 9.6; Hos. 13.4 LXX; 2 Macc. 1.24; Sir. 43.33;
Bel. 5; Jub. 12.3-5; Sib. Or. 3.20-35; 8.375-76; Sib. Or. frg. 1.5-6; frg. 3; frg. 5;
2 En. 47.3-4; 66.4; Apoc. Ab. 7.10; Pseudo-Sophocles; Jos. Asen. 12.1-2; T. Job 2.4
(Jesus and the God of Israel, p.9 n.8).
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58 You Are My Son
134 This title is part of the introduction to God’s speech and not a direct address
of God himself. Hence, in maintaining these citations as the direct speech of God to
the Son, the author leaves the name ÁįÉÀÇË unexpressed here.
135 John Collins argues that the Greek presupposes a Hebrew reading wherein
the psalm speaks of the divine birth of the King; see Adela Yarbro and John J.
Collins, King and Messiah as Son of God: Divine, Human, and Angelic Messianic
Figures in Biblical and Related Literature (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2008), pp.17–
19. For further discussion of this verse, see below, p.117 n.30.
136 In addition to this resonance in v. 3, this psalm, like Psalm 2 and Psalm 44,
refers to the rod of the king (v. 2) and portrays God saying that this lord rules among
the holy ones (Heb. 2.11) in brightness (Heb. 1.3).
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1. ‘My Son’: The Appointed Heir of All Things 59
137 The psalm itself presents this ambiguity. It is a psalm addressed to a king,
and the Àow of the psalm seems to indicate that the human author is addressing the
king as ¿¼ĠË in v. 7 (Attridge appeals to grammatical precedent and Jewish interpre-
tations to show that the author of Hebrews stands in a line of tradition which reads
¿¼ĠË as a vocative [Hebrews, p.58; see also Collins and Collins, King and Messiah,
pp.56–7]).
In the last stanza (Heb. 1.9), the vocative use of ¿¼ĠË is not as clear. Both instances
of ¿¼ĠË could refer to God and not the one being addressed, the meaning being, ‘God,
yes, your God has anointed you’ (Bruce, Hebrews, p.10; Westcott, Hebrews, p.27).
It could also be possible that the son is called ¿¼ĠË here again, either reading the ¿rst
¿¼ĠË as a vocative, ‘God, your God has anointed you’ (Attridge, Hebrews, pp.59–60;
Braun, An die Hebräer, p.40; DeSilva, Perseverance, p.99; Ellingworth, Hebrews,
p.124; Michel, Hebräer, p.118; Spicq, Hébreux, p.2:20); or reading the ¿rst ¿¼ĠË as a
title, ‘Your God has anointed you (as) God’.
Hurst agrees that the Son is addressed as ¿¼ĠË here, but sees this address connected
to Jesus’ status as King: ‘[n]o threat to monotheism was implied, nor was there any
divinization of the king as has been claimed for surrounding cultures. The author
could rightfully see Christ as the inheritor of the royal title “God” precisely because,
as ideal king, he represents God to the people’ (‘Christology’, p.160). Hurst may be
correct about the function of this verse in the LXX, but because the author of Hebrews
presents this citation as the speech of God, the divine address becomes quite inter-
esting. It is God, not another human, that is calling another person ¿¼ĠË.
138 Bauckham reaches a similar conclusion, ‘[t]he name that is so much more
excellent than those of angels must be the Hebrew divine name, the Tetragrammaton’
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60 You Are My Son
The Son’s supremacy over the angels springs without hesitation from
this name that is different from (»ÀÚÎÇÉÇË) the names they possess. The
angels, while sometimes ÍĎÇĕ, are never gods or lords. Jesus is superior to
the angels because he has inherited a superior name, not ÍĎĠË but ¿¼ĠË and
ÁįÉÀÇË.
Along with the assertion of the Son’s divine superiority, the author
continues to construct a particular image of God his Father.139 God’s
speeches reiterate his supreme power. God has the power to command
his angels. God chooses whom to anoint as king.140 God will subdue all
enemies under the feet of his Son in the end. God permits his Son to
partake in the attributes of that very same divine supremacy. The author’s
crafting of the citation from Deuteronomy 32 portrays God commanding
not the worship of himself, but directing the angels to give their worship
to the ¿rstborn. In so doing, God presents himself as sovereign over the
angels and yet including his Son as co-object of their worship. The same
is true of v. 8. It is God who proclaims to his Son that he is to reign
forever. Only God could guarantee an eternal reign, and it is as a Father
that he does so for his Son. In vv. 10-12, the author shows that God
shares his divine role with the Son, this time the role of creator. Finally,
in v. 13, God has again shared his authority by raising the Son to the
favored position at his right hand and will use his power to make his Son
(Jesus and the God of Israel, p.239). Similarly, John Webster concludes: ‘At the end
of this movement, and in an emphatic position as the ¿nal word of the exordium,
stands a name; but it is a name which we do not know. Son? This seems natural in
view of the next verse where God addresses the Son (though ÍĎĠË there is as much
title as name). Is it, then, the tetragrammaton. This would accord with what has
already been said in the exordium about the Son’s deity. Perhaps there is a deliberate
withholding of the name… For, as one whose name is unknown, the Son is transcen-
dentally excellent, not speci¿able, in¿nitely regressive, bearer of the name beyond
names. And all this is because he is the Son of God’ (‘One Who Is Son: Theological
ReÀections on the Exordium to the Epistle to the Hebrews’, in Bauckham, Driver,
and Hart [eds], Epistle to the Hebrews, pp.69–94 [93]). For a similar argument, see
Long, Hebrews, p.44–5.
139 Minor themes about God’s character arise from these citations as well. In
describing the Son as one who reigns with uprightness and justice, God is thereby
shown to be a just and wise Father who exalts his worthy Son to the eternal throne.
In addition, the author depicts God in the joyful context of anointing with the oil of
gladness. God instigates a celebration at the installment of his Son to his throne,
thereby showing himself to be a God who initiates joyous occasions.
140 This is clear from v. 9 (ìÏÉÀÊñŠʼ ĝ ¿¼ĠË ĝ ¿¼ĠË ÊÇÍ), but is put into even
sharper relief by the author’s construction of this text as the direct speech of God to
the Son.
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1. ‘My Son’: The Appointed Heir of All Things 61
dominant over all. God’s paternal relationship with Jesus means that God
has opened himself up to share both the rights and responsibilities of his
status as God. Hence, the author highlights both the sovereign power and
graciousness of God as a Father to his Son.
God shares everything that is his with the Son because he shares his
identity with his Son. God has bequeathed to his Son his own name
ÁįÉÀÇË ¿¼ĠË and, in so doing, has granted to him all that comes with being
the Lord God.
V. Conclusion
The familial relationship between God the Father and Jesus the Son
¿gures prominently throughout the ¿rst chapter of Hebrews. The author
highlights this relationship most clearly in the ¿rst citations (Heb. 1.5).
By selecting, arranging, and introducing Psalm 2 and 2 Sam. 7.14 in the
way that he does, the author af¿rms that God is related to Jesus as a
Father to a Son. Once the familial emphasis of Heb. 1.5 becomes clear, it
is also evident that this relationship forms the backdrop for the descrip-
tion of the Son in vv. 1-4 as well. There, the author combines the two
motifs of sapiential and Davidic Christology into the framework of a
familial relationship. Finally, by maintaining that God’s pronouncements
are the Father’s speech to his Son, the author keeps focus on their
relationship through the catena in vv. 6-13 and shows that as the Father
grants his name to his Son, God also grants to him all the rights and
responsibilities that come with that inherited name.
Because God is in relationship with one whom he has designated as
his Son and in that relationship has invited him to share in the creation,
sustenance, and governance of all things, the author has constructed a
Christology asserting that the one who has the name and attributes of his
Father is God. God speaks to the Son in psalms that were originally
addressed to God. He directs the worship of his angels to the Son. He
promises his Son that he will remain the same forever. He addresses him
by the name ÁįÉÀÇË ¿¼ĠË. This exalted Christology is a relational Christol-
ogy, attaining its height because of its integral and inseparable relation-
ship to Hebrews’ theology. Jesus’ superiority stems from his relationship
with God – from the reality that God is his Father and that he is God’s
Son. The familial relationship between God and Jesus conveys a
particular theological and Christological point that maintains a delicate
but distinct balance. Jesus shares God’s glory and divinity – his name is
Lord God – but he is not another god alongside the God of Israel; he is
God’s Son. God and the one through whom he is speaking are both God,
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62 You Are My Son
both Lord, both reign, and both create. Nevertheless, despite all of these
designations of dignity, the Father/Son relationship retains a distinction
between the two. Jesus is not another God, but is God because he is the
Son of God.141
The ¿rst thing the author states about him – that he is the heir of all
things – aptly sums up the rest of the chapter. Through the chapter it
becomes clear that all things include speci¿cally the worship of angels,
an eternal throne, a role in creation, a seat at God’s right hand, and a
promise that everything will be subjected under his feet. He has inherited
all things because of who he is, the Son of the Lord God. Because God
the Father has allowed his Son to inherit his name, he has granted to him
the unparalleled authority, majesty, trustworthiness, and excellency that
comes with it.
įÉÀÇË ¿¼ĠË has appointed his Son,
įÉÀÇË ¿¼ĠË, as heir of
all things.
In constructing such an exalted Christology, the author has also built a
paternal theology in which God – without compromising his supremacy
– has involved another in his actions and attributes because he has given
his name to his Son as an inheritance. Not surprising for one versed in
Israel’s scriptures, the author has asserted God’s supremacy and power.
God made the ages. All things are at his discretion to give to his Son. He
commands the angels, establishes an eternal king, and subdues enemies.
He is the majesty on high. The author is also grounded in his tradition in
his portrayal of this powerful God as a relational God. The very ¿rst
thing the author of Hebrews says in his sermon is that God is a God who
speaks, and that God has opened himself to interact with others. The
author con¿rms this portrayal with the ¿rst words of God that proclaim
he has established himself in a familial relationship of Father and Son.
Moreover, he will maintain this relationship with his Son at his right
hand until the consummation of all things. In this relationship, he chooses
to use his supremacy to give an unsurpassed inheritance to his Son and to
guarantee that he will receive it in full. By crafting words addressed to
God as God’s address to his Son, the author shows that as his Father,
God shares those things that are his particular possessions – the worship
of the angels, a hand in creation, an eternal reign – with his Son. The
author’s exegetical use of Israel’s scriptures as God’s speech portrays
God as a magnanimous Father.
141 Origen highlights the distinction captured by Father/Son language (Dial. 2).
In his analysis of Origen, Widdicombe states, ‘[t]he words Father and Son identify
distinct, subsisting realities; it is logically impossible in using them not to distin-
guish the Son from the Father’ (Fatherhood, p.87).
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1. ‘My Son’: The Appointed Heir of All Things 63
The sonship of Jesus af¿rms both his excellency and his differentia-
tion from God. At the same time, the Fatherhood of God expresses both
his sovereignty and his inclusion of another in his glory. The identities of
both God and Jesus the author constructs through the presentation of
their familial relationship set the framework for the theological, Christo-
logical, and ecclesiological vision for the remainder of the letter. That
God is this kind of Father – powerful and magnanimous – and that Jesus
is this kind of Son – eternal and sovereign – provide the groundwork for
the author’s portrayal of another dynamic in their relationship: God is the
Father who perfects through suffering and Jesus is his obedient Son.
Both aspects of their relationship allow the author to declare that he and
his congregation are also ÍĎÇĕ of God.
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2. ‘A Son’: The Suffering Heir of God’s Children 65
that the author shifts his attention from Jesus’ exaltation above the angels
to his temporary inferiority below them (2.7a, 9a). Although hints of this
terrestrial episode appear in ch. 1 (‘having made puri¿cation for sins’
1.3c), it is not until this section that the driving concern of the author
turns to the human experience of Jesus. Having ¿rmly established the
familial relationship between God and Jesus and the exalted nature of
Christ based in that relationship, the second chapter Àeshes out that
which is penultimate to the events of ch. 1 by tracing the path Jesus took
on the way to his exalted position.3
Despite this change in emphasis, the Father/Son relationship between
God and Jesus remains essential for reading this portion of Hebrews as
well. Before he sits down at God’s right hand, the ÍĎĠË will become
human and will experience death. This chapter contends that these events
are as much a manifestation of Jesus’ ¿lial status as is his exaltation. The
¿lial nature of this journey is evident in two ways. First, Jesus experi-
ences this journey in the context of the familial relationship in which he
participates with God: God the Father calls Jesus the Son to take his
place as his heir after he experienced death. Second, the author is as
concerned with the inheritance of Jesus the Son in these verses as he is in
the ¿rst chapter. The difference in this section is that the author preaches
not that God has appointed Jesus as heir of all things, but how Jesus has
attained this position and what is included in his inheritance as God’s
Son. In other words, Jesus’ inheritance includes God’s many children,
and because it does so, he must suffer death to take his place as heir of
all things. I argue these two points as I treat each section of Heb. 2.6-16
where the author’s statements about God, Jesus, and humanity are
February 2011]). Their present attachment to this salvation makes them members of
the group to whom the author refers in 1.14. The author and his readers are God’s
heirs; they are poised to inherit God’s salvation. The language of inheritance indi-
cates early on that those whom the sermon addresses are children of God. Therefore,
his exhortation that they hold fast to what they have heard – namely the message
about God’s salvation – is an exhortation that they hold fast so that they might attain
their inheritance.
3 Unlike Craig Koester (‘Hebrews, Rhetoric, Humanity’, pp.103–23) and L. D.
Hurst (‘The Christology of Hebrews 1 and 2’, pp.151–64), who see the work of
Hebrews 1 as preparatory for the main point expressed in ch. 2, I see ch. 1 laying the
foundation of God’s relationship with Jesus and Jesus’ consequent glory which then
takes a surprising turn with focus on Jesus’ humanity in ch. 2. Both pictures are
equally important for the argument of the author, but the movement from exaltation
to humiliation captures the depths of what God and Jesus accomplished for humanity
in his humiliation that a move in the opposite direction could not have. By beginning
with the exalted picture of Jesus, the shocking force of Jesus’ humanity is all the
more apparent.
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66 You Are My Son
conveyed through the lens of the familial relationship between God and
his many ÍĎÇĕ.
The arguments of this chapter contribute to my overarching thesis in
three ways. First, I show that the author continues his emphasis upon the
familial theme. The allusions to God’s Fatherhood (2.10, 11), the refer-
ences to the inheritance of Jesus (2.8), and the familial language of sons
(2.10), brothers (2.11, 12, 17), and children (2.13, 14) con¿rm that the
author has not relegated familial imagery to the ¿rst chapter. Second,
because he maintains this emphasis, the actions of God and Jesus
depicted in this section of the letter contribute to the reader’s perception
of their character. Jesus is the Son who trusts his Father to the point of
death because God the Father wills his Son to suffer so that he might be
perfected. Finally, this chapter introduces the identity of the audience of
Hebrews – the family of God – and the inheritance of salvation to which
they can look forward because they are included in the inheritance of
Jesus.
As Heb. 1.2 says, God has appointed his Son Jesus heir of all things.
Hebrews 2 describes how this appointment is realized in the relationship
between the Father and the Son by describing the vital role Jesus’
temporary inferiority in the cosmic hierarchy plays in the journey to his
exalted position. Jesus the Son of God becomes a son of man in order to
bring God’s sons and daughters into his household.
Psalm 8.5-7 LXX serves as the entry point for the author’s discussion of
Christ’s humanity. In it, he ¿nds scriptural af¿rmation of Jesus’ inheri-
tance and Jesus’ human experience, which speci¿cally includes the
human experience of death. The author also draws out of this Psalm
God’s action leading to Jesus the Son taking his place as heir of all
things and the implications of this process for humanity.
4 The characterization of the ones who praise God as children resonates with the
familial descriptions of Jesus and the audience throughout Hebrews.
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2. ‘A Son’: The Suffering Heir of God’s Children 67
who founded the great expanse of the heavens and the stars. In light of
the majesty of God, the psalmist wonders at God’s concern for humanity,
only a fraction of God’s immense creation. In addition to giving heed to
this small portion of his creation, God set the place of men and women
just below that of the angels,5 and bestows on them glory and honor.
Finally, in accord with the Genesis narrative (Gen. 1.26, 28), the psalmist
declares that God has placed people as sovereign over the things of the
earth, including beasts, birds, and sea creatures. The Psalm begins and
ends with praise to the Lord in light of his great goodness toward the
sons and daughters of men. The author of Hebrews cites vv. 5-7 and 8b
of this psalm. His citation ends with the psalmist’s proclamation that
God has subjected all things under the feet of humanity (ÈÚÅ̸ ĨÈñ̸ƸË
ĨÈÇÁÚÌÑ ÌľÅ ÈÇ»ľÅ ¸ĤÌÇı).
When the author discusses the psalm in the next few verses, he begins
by emphasizing the last line of his citation.6 For the author of Hebrews,
the phrase ‘all things’ truly means all things. The author states that when
God subjected all things, God left nothing (ÇĤ»ñÅ) that is not subjected
(ÒÅÍÈĠ̸ÁÌÇË) to him. Nothing is outside of the sovereignty of this
ÓÅ¿ÉÑÈÇË. To prepare for this point, the author of Hebrews has not cited
Ps. 8.8-9, lines that delineate ÈÚÅ̸ as various types of animals. The
psalm, by specifying “all things” as members of the animal kingdom,
limits the meaning of ÈÚÅ̸. These lines circumscribe the dominion of
the son of man to earthly things. By not articulating these lines, the
author of Hebrews makes this son of man’s dominion more expansive
than that described in the original psalm.7 In light of his comments that
5 In this verse (Ps. 8.6), and in other places in Israel’s scriptures (Job 38.7; Pss.
96.7 LXX; 137.1 LXX; Dan. 2.11; 3.92 LXX), the translators of the Hebrew Vorlage
use Óºº¼ÂÇË for -'!+ '1 or -'!+. Through linguistic means, this choice conveys
the high place angels hold in the universe.
6 Craig L. Blomberg notes the ‘somewhat belabored emphasis on all things
being in subjection to the “him” of the psalm’ (‘ “But We See Jesus’: The Relation-
ship Between the Son of Man in Hebrews 2.6 and 2.9 and the Implications for
English Translation’, in A Cloud of Witnesses: The Theology of Hebrews in Its
Ancient Contexts [Richard Bauckham et al., eds; LNTS, 387; London: T&T Clark,
2008], pp.88–99 [95]).
7 So also notes Albert Pietersma: ‘Hebrews makes it [ÈÚÅ̸] to include the
entire creation, therefore departing from the Greek of Psalm 8, and possibly from the
Hebrew as well. The appointment of the risen Christ, by God, thus comprises all’
(‘Text-Production and Text-Reception: Psalm 8 in Greek’, in Die Septuaginta –
Texte, Kontexte, Lebenswelten: Internationale Fachtagung veranstaltet von Septua-
ginta Deutsch (LXX.D), Wuppertal 20.–23. Juli 2006 [M. Karrer, W. Kraus, and
M. Meiser, eds; WUNT, 219; Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 2008], pp.485–501 [494]).
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68 You Are My Son
follow the citation, the author’s selective citation of the psalm describes
God subjecting not just animals but actually everything.
The author’s citation – and subsequent reiteration – of Ps. 8.7b
establishes a connection with the ¿rst chapter of Hebrews. The words of
the last line, ÈÚÅ̸ ĨÈñÌ¸Æ¸Ë ĨÈÇÁÚÌÑ ÌľÅ ÈÇ»ľÅ ¸ĤÌÇı, echo the lan-
guage and the theme of the previously cited scripture text in Heb. 1.13.
There, in the words of Ps. 109.1 LXX, God promises to place the Son’s
enemies under his feet (¿ľ ÌÇİË ëÏ¿ÉÇįË ÊÇÍ ĨÈÇÈĠ»ÀÇÅ ÌľÅ ÈÇ»ľÅ ÊÇÍ).8
Both psalms depict God placing something under the feet of another.
The similarity of Ps. 8.7b to Ps. 109.1 makes Psalm 8 a ¿tting text to
describe God’s actions on behalf of his ¿rstborn Son.9 Some commenta-
tors exclude any reference to Jesus in the citation of Ps. 8.7.10 For exam-
ple, Victor C. P¿tzner writes: ‘[t]hat the psalm quotation must be read as
¿rst referring to humanity becomes clear in the initial comment on the
text in verse 8b. God made no exceptions in giving humans universal
dominion.’11 Blomberg agrees and clari¿es what he thinks the author
means in v. 8b: ‘[o]nce humans were given dominion over every inch of
this planet’.12 If this is the point the author wished to make, it would serve
his argument well to quote Ps. 8.8-9. By not doing so, the comments of
the author suggest that the phrase ‘all things’ encompasses much more
than the earth alone. Although it is not a royal psalm,13 the author’s
citation and explanation of it cast it as a reference to the inheritance of
God’s Son.
While similar, these two psalm texts are not synonymous. In Psalm 8,
God subjects not just enemies, but all things (ÈÚÅ̸). The completely
comprehensive scope of God’s action thereby establishes a link with the
author’s ¿rst assertion about the Son in Heb. 1.2. In this verse, the author
states that the Son is the one whom God has appointed as heir of all
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2. ‘A Son’: The Suffering Heir of God’s Children 69
things (ÈÚÅ̸). By adding emphasis to the statement of Ps. 8.7b that God
subjects all things under his feet, the author evokes both the last and the
¿rst statements about the Son in Hebrews 1.
Psalm 8 describes a human’s sovereignty over all things. For the author
of Hebrews, this sovereignty precisely describes the inheritance God
grants to his Son (ÈÚÅ̸, Heb. 1.2). Consequently, in Ps. 8.7b, the author
¿nds a scriptural assertion of the Son’s unparalleled inheritance and
God’s act of subjecting it under his feet. In other words, for the author,
Palm 8 depicts God’s installation of Jesus as heir of everything that
rightfully belongs to him as God’s Son.
The resonance of Ps. 8.7b with Heb. 1.2 and Heb. 1.13/Ps. 109.1 LXX
also illuminates the temporal quali¿cation the author adds to the last line
of the citation. Immediately after his assertion that nothing is left in
rebellion against God’s Son (2.8b) comes the author’s admission that this
sovereignty is not yet perceivable (ıÅ »ò ÇĥÈÑ ĝÉľÄ¼Å ¸ĤÌŊ ÌÛ ÈÚÅ̸
ĨÈÇ̸̼ºÄñŸ). The scope of the Son’s sovereignty is unquestioned, but
the timing is not as settled as the psalm text suggests. Such an admission
is not due to the faulty perception of the audience, but comes because
Christ’s unchallenged sovereignty is not yet a full reality.
The author’s temporal quali¿cation regarding the time when all things
will be subjected to Jesus aligns with his previous statements about
Jesus’ inheritance. The Son has been appointed as God’s heir (1.2). An
heir is usually14 one who looks forward to the possession of his inheri-
tance.15 Moreover, Jesus awaits God’s subjection of his enemies (1.13;
cf. 10.13), with God commanding him to sit at the right hand until (ïÑË)
the time that God subjects his enemies. Interestingly, Psalm 109 exerts
inÀuence on the way in which the author is reading Psalm 8. A time will
certainly come when God will subject all things to his Son, but that time
has not yet arrived from the temporal perspective of the author and his
audience.16
The author reads a three-stage movement in the Psalm.17 First, inter-
preters of Hebrews largely agree that the author interprets the two com-
plementary phrases of Ps. 8.6 – which in the psalm describe the present
state of humanity – as a narrative of the journey Jesus experiences from
humiliation to exaltation.18 Although the author and his readers see a
Jesus who has been made lower than the angels (Heb. 2.9), he certainly
retains that lowered state no longer. As the previous chapter of Hebrews
forcefully argued, Jesus is now elevated above the angels. The author
plays upon the dual meaning of the phrase ¹É¸Ïį ÌÀ, which can function
either as an indicator of degree or as an indicator of time.19 Jesus was
lowered below the angels for a time but is now exalted above them,
where he has been crowned with glory and honor. Second, the author
makes a similar temporal distinction between the citation in Heb. 2.7b
and Heb. 2.8a.20 The psalm is correct as portraying God subjecting all
things to the Son. Hebrews’ only quali¿cation is that this event has not
yet been fully consummated. ‘But now’, the author says, ‘we do not yet
see all things having been subjected to him’ (Heb. 2.8c). Therefore, Jesus
was lowered below the angels, is now crowned with glory and honor, and
looks forward to the time when he will possess the inheritance promised
by his Father. By emphasizing the totality and futurity of the events
depicted in Ps. 8.7b, the author presents this psalm text as an af¿rmation
of the great hope that God the Father avows that Jesus, the Son, will one
day take full possession of all things, his promised inheritance.
16 So also Attridge, ‘the manifest and complete subjection of all things is yet to
be accomplished’ (Hebrews, p.72).
17 So also James Swetnam, Jesus and Isaac: A Study of the Epistle to the
Hebrews in Light of the Aqedah (AnBib, 94; Rome: Ponti¿cal Biblical Institute,
1981), p.162.
18 Attridge, Hebrews, p.72; Bruce, Hebrews, p.72; John Calvin, The Epistle of
Paul the Apostle to the Hebrews (W. B. Johnston, trans.; Grand Rapids: Eerdmans,
1963), p.56; DeSilva, Perseverance, p.109; Ellingworth, Hebrews, p.151; Grässer,
An die Hebräer, p.1:121; Johnson, Hebrews, p.90; Mitchell, Hebrews, p.66, Moffatt,
Hebrews, p.23; and Westcott, Hebrews, pp.43, 45.
19 ‘¹É¸ÏįË, ¼ė¸, į’, LSJ, p.328.
20 Contra Blomberg, who states, ‘[s]o only humanity can be spoken of as
already having had the earth in subjection to itself, however brieÀy’ (‘But We See
Jesus’, p.94). In his treatment of v. 6, the author shows that he is not bound to the
time line laid out in the psalm. He interprets it in such a way that it aligns with the
experience of Jesus described in his comments that follow.
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2. ‘A Son’: The Suffering Heir of God’s Children 71
21 If the author knows of the Danielic ‘Son of Man’ tradition applied to Jesus
(so argued Pauline Giles in ‘The Son of Man in the Epistle to the Hebrews’, ExpTim
86 [1975], pp.328–32), he does not employ it explicitly in his explanation of Psalm 8
or elsewhere in the letter. Without appealing to the gospel tradition, Mof¿tt high-
lights messianic connections to the Son of Man present in intertestamental literature
(Atonement and Resurrection, pp.125–7). ĎġË ÒÅ¿ÉļÈÇÍ, for the author to the
Hebrews, could then describe Jesus’ humanity (Attridge, Hebrews, p.74; Grässer, An
die Hebräer, p.118; Johnson, Hebrews, p.90; Koester, Hebrews, p.215; Lane,
Hebrews, p.1:47; Mitchell, Hebrews, p.65) and also his messianism. This psalm
provides the bene¿t of describing Jesus’ humanity with familial language.
22 Moffatt, Hebrews, p.23. Similarly Blomberg states: ‘[t]he ¿rst line of the
quotation is the hardest of all to ¿t into a Christological view…” (‘But We See
Jesus’, pp.93–4), and Monte¿ore concludes: ‘[i]n this ¿rst citation of Psalm viii
Jesus is not mentioned nor do the words refer to him… [O]ur writer does not apply
“the Son of Man” in Psalm viii. 4 to Jesus at all’ (Hebrews, p.57).
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72 You Are My Son
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2. ‘A Son’: The Suffering Heir of God’s Children 73
Jesus and humanity because Jesus is a human being. The author’s treat-
ment of Psalm 8 reveals that when he speaks of the Son, the title refers to
more than just his divine quali¿cations. Indeed, it points to God’s Son
who became a son of man and remained so when he was seated at the
right hand of God as God’s heir.35
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2. ‘A Son’: The Suffering Heir of God’s Children 75
for they are like the angels’. First Enoch contains a similar sentiment. Enoch is
instructed to tell the Watchers of heaven: ‘[s]urely you, you [used to be] holy,
spiritual, the living ones, [possessing] eternal life… Indeed you, formerly you were
spiritual (having) eternal life, and immortal in all the generations of the world”
(15.4, 6, [Isaac]). So also, Philo states, ‘So too, when Abraham left this mortal life,
“he is added to the people of God” (Gen 25:8), in that he has inherited incorruption
and become equal to the angels, for angels – those unbodied and blessed souls – are
the host and people of God’ (Sacr. 1.5 [Colson and Whitaker, LCL]).
39 Similarly, Attridge states, ‘[w]hat this text reveals about the Son and his
exalted status is that such status is dependent upon what happens to Jesus as a human
being, in the pre-eminently human event of his death (Hebrews, p.75; cf. Lane,
Hebrews, p.1:49).
40 The same pattern is evident in Heb. 1.3-4. Before Jesus sat down at the right
hand of the majesty on high, he made puri¿cation for sins. In the center section of
the letter, the author will show how making puri¿cation was part of the sacri¿cial
process beginning with Jesus’ experience of death.
41 The mss of Hebrews that include this line are easily explained as adjustments
to the LXX. The more dif¿cult reading that lacks this line, preserved in P46 B Dc K L
et al., is preferable (Bruce M. Metzger, A Textual Commentary on the Greek New
Testament [2nd ed.; New York: United Bible Societies, 1994], p.594).
42 This line makes the same assertion as the phrase in Ps. 8.7b. In both, God
places the son of man in an authoritative position over God’s creation (Pietersma,
‘Text-Production’, pp.493–4). It is vv. 8 and 9 – not v. 7 – that circumscribe the
dominion of this man to earthly things). Moreover, the author has already associated
the Son with the ìɺ¸ ÌľÅ Ï¼ÀÉľÅ ÊÇÍ in the citation of Ps. 101.26 LXX in the ¿rst
chapter (Heb. 1.10). Koester also asserts the similarity between Ps. 8.7a and b and
concludes, ‘[t]he omission may have been accidental, or the author may have
abbreviated the text to focus on what was most important for interpretation’
(Hebrews, p.214). What is more important to the author is the reference to Jesus’
inheritance, all things which God subjects.
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76 You Are My Son
¿¸ÅÚÌÇÍ states that Jesus is crowned with glory and honor because he
suffered death, the phrase also suggests as well that the suffering of death
results in Jesus taking his position as God’s heir. Only after he tastes
mortality does God’s Son take his place as God’s heir.
God subjects all things under the feet of Jesus because he is the Son of
God who became a son of man to the point of death. It should not be
missed, however, that he can take his exalted place as a human who has
encountered death because of the action of God. It is God who appoints
him to this position and God who subjects all things under his feet, but
God is also involved in the journey to his exalted position as well. The
author’s presentation of this aspect of the divine role begins with his
citation of Psalm 8.
Psalm 8 is an address to God and thereby attributes to him the actions
of the psalm: ‘You, God, placed him below the angels. You crowned him
with glory and honor, and you subjected all things under his feet.’ The
author clearly established in the ¿rst chapter that it was God who exalted
Jesus, and here, through the lines of the psalm, he adds that it was also
God who humbled him. Since death is the culmination of Jesus’ human
experience and the condition for his exaltation, the psalm implies that
God, as the agent of the humiliation and exaltation, is involved in the
experience of death that lead to Jesus’ position as God’s glorious and
honorable heir. In v. 9, the author con¿rms this implication in his own
words. It is by the grace of God43 that Jesus tastes death. God humbles
Jesus and gives him the grace to journey through death. This is the way
in which God bestows the gift of inheritance on his Son, the heir.
One ¿nal phrase must be noted before proceeding to the next pericope:
ĨÈòÉ È¸ÅÌĠË. Jesus’ bitter death brought about by God’s grace takes place
for everyone. With this phrase the author introduces the idea that Jesus’
journey through death to his exalted position as heir of all things (ÈÚÅ̸)
radically alters how all people (ȸÅÌĠË) stand in the face of death. The
next section of Hebrews 2 places more emphasis upon God’s action in
instating Jesus as his heir and the bene¿ts afforded to humanity that stem
from his instatement.
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2. ‘A Son’: The Suffering Heir of God’s Children 77
Hebrews 2.10 reiterates the same elements that appear in the preceding
pericope. First, through his suffering, Jesus is changed. Second, it is God
who utilizes suffering in his interactions with Jesus. Finally, Jesus’
suffering directly affects many others. Consequently, these two portions
of Hebrews 2 – the citation of/comments on Psalm 8 in vv. 6-8 and Heb.
2.10 – are mutually interpreting. Together, they contribute to Hebrews’
perspective on how God’s paternal relationship with Jesus impacts
humanity. God’s will that Jesus suffer death allows him to be the heir of
everything, including God’s many ÍĎÇĕ.
44 The pronoun ¸ĤÌŊ is not as explicit as the noun ¿¼ĠË would be, leading
several patristic interpreters to argue that the author is referring to the Logos
(Athanasius, Inc. 10.3 [NPNF2 4:41]; Theodore of Mopsuestia, Comm. Hebr.
[PG66.957]; Theodoret of Cyr, Comm. Hebrews [PG82.693]). On the other hand, the
prepositional phrases and the reference to the grace of God that is instrumental in
Christ’s death in v. 8 is strong support for ¿¼ĠË as the pronoun’s antecedent (so also
Attridge, Hebrews, p.82; Ellingworth, Hebrews, p.159; Johnson, Hebrews, p.95;
Koester, Hebrews, p.227; Lane, Hebrews, p.1:55; Martin Luther, ‘Lectures on the
Epistle to the Hebrews 1517–1518’, in Luther: Early Theological Works [James
Atkinson, ed. and trans.; LCC; Louisville: Westminster John Knox, 1962], pp.19–
250 [56]; Michel, Hebräer, p.78; Mitchell, Hebrews, p.72; Spicq, Hébreux, p.1:37).
45 Describing God with prepositional phrases that point to God’s sovereignty
over creation occurs frequently in Hellenistic literature. See Ps.-Aristotle, De mundo
397b; Marcus Aurelius, Med. 4.23; Aelius Aristides, Or. 45.14; Philo, Spec. 1.208;
Diogenes Laertius, Lives 1.3; Rom. 11.36; 1 Cor. 8.6; Col. 1.16.
46 De¿ned more broadly in v. 10, the pathos of Jesus is not focused on death, as
it is in v. 9, but is expanded by the use of a plural noun to include the death
mentioned in v. 9 and other experiences of suffering as well. So also, O’Brien states,
‘[b]ecause the paragraph is framed by references to what Jesus suffered (2:10, 18),
then what it asserts must be understood in light of his suffering death’ (Hebrews,
p.103). In support as well are DeSilva (Perseverance, p.114) and Ellingworth
(Hebrews, p.161).
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78 You Are My Son
about Jesus’ experience of death. Death was not an unexpected event that
happened to Jesus; his death took place under the purview of God’s
direction. God utilized this experience of suffering to perfect (̼¼ÀľÊ¸À)
Jesus. Whereas in the psalm the author ¿nds a reference to Jesus’ glori¿-
cation and crowning following upon an allusion to his humiliation and
death, in v. 10 the author emphasizes the perfection that follows upon
Jesus’ death.
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2. ‘A Son’: The Suffering Heir of God’s Children 79
helpful way forward. He has been perfected not in the sense that he was
personally imperfect,50 but in the sense that now, after suffering, he is ¿t
to exercise perfectly his role. I argue in what follows that attention to the
familial dynamics of Hebrews shows that by being perfected, Jesus is
also made ¿t to be God’s heir who will inherit all things.
Support for the correlation of Jesus’ perfection and his position as
God’s heir is established through several connections with the previous
verses. First, as noted, the author describes God as the one for whom (»À’
ĞÅ) and through whom (»À’ Çī) all things exist. Because this description
refers to the sovereignty of God over all creation, it also establishes a
connection with Jesus’ inheritance.51 As the one through whom all things
exist, God is the creator of that which he has promised to his Son as an
inheritance (1.2). As the one for whom all things exist, God involves his
Son in his ultimate sovereignty over all things. This assertion of God’s
sovereignty thus evokes the sovereignty Jesus shares as his Son and heir.
Hebrews 2.10 provides a way to understand how the author can employ
the verb ̼¼ÀĠÑ with respect to Jesus. For Jesus to be perfected does not
mean that he was imperfect or immature. The connections with the
previous pericope (2.6-9) suggest that when God perfects Jesus, God
made Jesus ¿t to be his heir.
52 Plutarch, Is. Os. 78 (383A); Def. orac. 29 (426 B); Aristobulus (Eusebius,
Praep. ev. 13.12.7–8); Philo (Leg. all. 1.48; Aet. mund. 41); Josephus (Ap. 2.168).
53 Attridge states, ‘[t]he use of the term in this context is a rather bold move,
since in Greek and Greco-Jewish theology it would not have been thought “proper”
to associate God with the world of suffering’ (Hebrews, p.82). So also Moffatt:
‘Philo has the phrase, not the idea’ (Hebrews, p.29).
54 Attridge, Hebrews, p.82; see similarly Koester (Hebrews, p.235), Lane
(Hebrews, p.1:55), O’Brien (Hebrews, p.103), and Westcott (Hebrews, p.48).
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2. ‘A Son’: The Suffering Heir of God’s Children 81
55 For example, the Geneva Bible, NAB, NLB, and NRSV translate ÍĎÇĕ as
‘children’. The Message paraphrase moves even farther from the imagery with the
word ‘people’.
56 It is interesting to speculate how the female members of this audience might
have responded to being designated as ÍĎÇĕ and as heirs, particularly in a culture
where it was the norm for sons to inherit the father’s property (see above, p.15 n. 14).
57 Gen. 46.7; Exod. 2.10; 1 Macc. 6.15; Philo, Leg. 3.84.
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58 Jer. 3.14; 38.9; Rom. 8.14.
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82 You Are My Son
have faith in God are moving toward his Sabbath rest (4.9-10), his holy
place (6.19), his eternal city (11.10, 16; 12.22), and his mountain (12.22),
»ĠƸ functions as another description of the realm in which God dwells.59
The author also associates glory (»ĠƸ) with God (1.3) and his presence
(9.5). God is leading these people into a realm that characterizes God
himself. Just as God established a relationship with the Son in such a
way that he commands the Son to sit at his right hand, so too he estab-
lishes a relationship with humanity that is directed toward bringing his
children to the realm of his glorious presence.
59 Similarly Johnson states, ‘God’s plan is not to elevate only Jesus to his
presence and power, but other humans as well, who are his “many sons” ’ (Hebrews,
p.96). Attridge (Hebrews, p.83), Braun, Hebräer, p.59), DeSilva (Perseverance,
p.114), and Koester (Hebrews, p.228) espouse a similar interpretation.
60 Exod. 6.14; Num. 10.4; 16.2; 25.4; Deut. 33.21; 1 Chr. 5.24; 1 Esdr. 5.1;
Neh. 2.9; Isa. 3.6. See Gerhard Delling, ‘ÓÉϾºÇË’, TDNT 1:487–8.
61 Plato, Tim. 96B; Isocrates, Paneg. 4.61; Diodorus Sciculus 15.81.2; 16.3.5;
Josephus, Ant. 7.207.
62 Polybius, Hist. 2.40.2; referring to Heracles (Dio Chrysostom, Or. 33.47;
Heraclitus, All. 34.8; Aelius Aristides, Or. 40.14); Num. 14.4 (this reference includes
Joshua as an ÒÉϾºĠË); Judg. 5.2; Jdt. 14.2; 1 Macc. 9.61.
63 Attridge notes, ‘Christ as ÒÉϾºĠË ful¿lls the function of various guides
on the heavenly path’ (Hebrews, p.88). Similarly, Ellingworth states, ‘ÒÉϾºĠË in
Hebrews may have kept alive the Hellenistic metaphor of a pioneer opening a path
which others can follow’ (Hebrews, p.161).
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2. ‘A Son’: The Suffering Heir of God’s Children 83
community and the one who likewise discharges their salvation inheri-
tance’.64
As with the earlier statement about God’s leading them to glory, this
phrase also highlights the ¿lial status of those who are being saved. These
¿lial overtones of salvation are established at the end of the ¿rst chapter.
There, the author asserts that in comparison to Jesus who is seated at
God’s right hand, the angels are sent out to render service to humanity.65
In retaining the theme of family that is so pervasive throughout the ¿rst
chapter, the author portrays humanity as heirs. The angels minister to
those who are about to inherit (Á¾ÉÇÅÇÄñÑ) salvation. Following on the
author’s portrayal of Jesus as the Son whom God appointed heir (1.2),
their66 position as heirs strongly suggests that they too are God’s chil-
dren.67 Consequently, when the author designates Jesus as the author of
salvation he is, at the same time, referring to the inheritance of God’s
many sons and daughters. Moreover, since Jesus is the ÒÉϾºĠË of God’s
many sons and daughters (ÈÇÂÂÇİË ÍĎÇįË), the author draws forth another
emphasis of the term ÒÉϾºĠË: the head of a family (Exod. 6.14; Num.
13.3; 1 Chr. 5.24; 26.26; 1 Esdr. 5.1; Neh. 7.70, 71). As the perfect heir,
he becomes the one leading (ÒÉÏ – ¸ºĠË) God’s children. His leadership
on the path toward glory suggests he is in a place of authority over God’s
sons and daughters. God thus perfects Jesus as his heir through suffer-
ings so that he becomes the head of God’s family leading the many ÍĎÇĕ
to glory. Consequently, this verse suggests that when Jesus is established
as God’s heir, he takes under his care the sons and daughters of God.
III. Behold the Children Whom God Has Given to Me! Hebrews
2.11-13
The preceding exegesis of Heb. 2.10 made three points. First: God
perfects Jesus as his heir. Second: God, as a Father, is leading his many
sons and daughters to their own inheritance of salvation. These two
arguments point to the paternal actions of God and are connected by the
third point: in perfecting Jesus as his heir, God secures Jesus’ inheritance
that includes God’s many sons and daughters. The next section supports
these arguments by examining Jesus’ ¿rst speech in Hebrews (2.11-13),
wherein he reiterates his humanity, his mortality, and his subsequent
inheritance of God’s children.
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2. ‘A Son’: The Suffering Heir of God’s Children 85
Like his Father, Jesus speaks the words of Israel’s scriptures. Jesus
responds to God69 through these three citations – so divided by the
author’s introductory remarks.70 Through this method, the author con-
structs for Jesus – just as he did for God in the ¿rst chapter – a particular
ethos through his utilization of quasi-prosopographic exegesis. The
author displays Jesus’ humility through an af¿rmation of his humanity,
his trust with an allusion to his death, and his mediatorial role by his
con¿dent declaration that he possesses God’s children.
proclaimed (ÒÈûºº¼À¸) and spoken of the creations, the marvels, and the thoughts
of God. This change could be evidence that the author associated the two Psalm
speeches of Jesus.
73 Jesus is proclaiming Ìġ ěÅÇÄÚ ÊÇÍ. In the words of the psalm, Jesus is speak-
ing to God, so the name he is proclaiming is God’s name. The proclamation of this
name is the reiteration of the identity of God and the majesty associated with his
name. At the same time, because the author has declared that Jesus has inherited
God’s name as God’s Son (1.4), it is also simultaneously a reiteration of the glory
associated with the name Jesus also bears as his Son. Even here, in the midst a
strong af¿rmation of Jesus’ humanity, the author of Hebrews intimately links this
proclamation with an assertion of Jesus’ divinity.
74 Attridge, Hebrews, p.88; Thomas Aquinas, Commentary on the Epistle to the
Hebrews (Chrysostom Baer, trans.; South Bend, IN: St. Augustine’s, 2006], 2.3.130;
Braun, Hebräer, p.60; Chrysostom, Hebrews 4.5 (NPNF1 14, p.384); Grässer, In die
Hebräer, pp.134–5; Ellingworth, Hebrews, p.63; Koester, Hebrews, p.229; Lane,
Hebrews, p.1:58; Spicq, Hébreux, p.2:40; Weiss, Hebräer, p.79.
75 Hebrews, pp.164–5. The last category should also include those who postu-
late a Gnostic background (Attridge, Hebrews, p.89 n. 115).
76 Mof¿tt, Atonement and Resurrection, p.131.
77 Mof¿tt also argues, ‘in the broadest sense the term “one” most probably
connotes humanity’ (Atonement and Resurrection, pp.131–2). He goes on to argue
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2. ‘A Son’: The Suffering Heir of God’s Children 87
Jesus’ parallel statement that he will deliver this message in the midst
of the assembly (ëÅ ÄñÊĿ ëÁÁ¾Êĕ¸Ë) supports the point that his fraternal
designation is a reference to his humanity. Two contextual clues suggest
that the assembly in question is the earthly assembly of believers.78 First,
the theme of the chapter is Jesus’ entrance into the human experience. He
is an ÓÅ¿ÉÑÈÇË (2.6), lowered below the angels (2.7, 9), who shares in
Àesh and blood (2.14), and was made like his siblings in all things (2.17).
In light of this consistent emphasis, it is ¿tting to imagine that Jesus’
words also describe his earthly experience amid his siblings. Second, this
setting is supported by the resonance of this citation with Heb. 2.3.79 In
both places, Jesus is a messenger of God, proclaiming a great salvation
(2.3) and the name of God (2.12), respectively. Because in 2.3 the author
is discussing the message Jesus delivered during his earthly ministry (the
word of the Lord which was passed down to the author and his audience
by those who heard Jesus), it is likely that in his next reference to Jesus
as a messenger of God, the author is describing the proclamation of the
same message.80 In Ps. 21.23, the author sees Jesus proclaiming his
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2. ‘A Son’: The Suffering Heir of God’s Children 89
chapter – both before and after this citation – the author describes the suffering and
the death of Jesus. His suffering remains on the minds of the audience even if Jesus
does not articulate it here. Moreover, in these citations Jesus displays an attitude of
con¿dent trust in God, thus providing a model for the audience of the way in which
they should respond to God in the midst of their own dif¿culties (13.6). The author
would not be able to convey this attitude through the cry of dereliction.
85 None of the possible three references contain the pronoun. Its presence could
be the reÀection of the author’s use of a different LXX text (Attridge, Hebrews, p.90
n. 33) or his own addition in order to bring this verse into parallel with the following
citation (Lane, Hebrews, p.58).
86 The brevity of the second citation results in several possible scriptural loca-
tions from where it might come (Isa. 8.17; 12.2; 2 Sam. 22.3). The third citation’s
location in Isaiah 8 leads most interpreters to argue for Isaiah 8 as the second state-
ments’ scriptural locale as well (Attridge, Hebrews, p.90; Braun, Hebräer, p.63;
Ellingworth, Hebrews, p.168; Gheorghita, Role of the Septuagint, p.64; Koester,
Hebrews, p.231; Lane, Hebrews, p.1:59; Spicq, Hébreux, p.2:42). Gheorghita
highlights how the differences in the Septuagint reading of this text, which ‘obscure
the relationship between certain words, their referents and antecedents’ made it
attractive to a number of Christian interpreters (Role of the Septuagint, pp.64–5).
Similarly, Wagner calls attention to the way in which the third person speaker (Á¸Ė
ëɼė), who could be identi¿ed as the ÁįÉÀÇË, distinct from ¿¼ĠË, may have suggested
the voice of Christ speaking this text (‘Faithfulness and Fear’, p.103).
87 This is the reading of the LXX (ÌĠ̼ θżÉÇĖ ìÊÇÅ̸À ÇĎ ÊÎɸºÀ½ĠļÅÇÀ ÌġÅ
ÅĠÄÇÅ ÌÇı Äü ĸ¿¼ėÅ), but not the MT (' ] + C !:Lk k :L8). For a discussion
-L=% !K3
of the interpretive quality of LXX Isaiah, see J. Ross Wagner, ‘Identifying “Updated”
Prophecies in Old Greek (OG) Isaiah: Isaiah 8:11–16 as a Test Case’, JBL 126
(2007), pp.251–69.
88 This is not, of course, only a mental assent. Jesus demonstrates his belief in
God by acting out his faith in God. Todd D. Still comments, ‘[i]n this anonymous
“word of exhortation”, Christ is lauded as one who trusts in God and is trustworthy
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90 You Are My Son
before God. What is more, Christ is set forth in the letter as the example of one who
lived a faithful life and died a faithful death’ (‘Christos as Pistos: The Faith[fullness]
of Jesus in the Epistle to the Hebrews’, in Bauckham et al. [eds], A Cloud of
Witnesses, pp.40–50 [49]).
89 Attridge states, ‘[t]his citation is…an allusion to that which above all is
or ought to be the characteristic of all God’s children, their faithful reliance upon
God. The citation thus alludes to the theme of faith or ¿delity that will become
increasingly important as the test develops’ (Hebrews, p.91; see also Still, ‘Christos
as Pistos’, p.46; Wagner, ‘Faithfulness and Fear’, pp.101, 104).
90 So also Johnson, ‘[t]he point here is that the Son and his brothers are not
merely linked ontologically but also morally: as he responds to God in faith, so shall
they – or so they should!’ (Hebrews, p.99). Moffatt (Hebrews, p.33) and Vanhoye
(Situation du Christ, p.344) also see a reference to the humanity of Christ.
91 Ellingworth also sees a connection to ‘the motif of Christ’s trust in the
Father, cf. v. 17 (ÈÀÊÌĠË); 3.1-6; 12.2…’ (Hebrews, p.169).
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2. ‘A Son’: The Suffering Heir of God’s Children 91
of faith in light of the fact that he endured the cross. The latter references
to Jesus’ faith in the letter – as a faithfulness expressed in death – suggest
that Jesus shows his greatest trust in God when he dies. The context of
Hebrews 2 supports this interpretation, where before and after this verse
the author mentions the death of Jesus (2.9, 14). Moreover, an allusion to
Jesus’ death resonates with the context of Psalm 21, which describes the
impending death of the psalmist. All of these factors strongly suggest
that Jesus’ proclamation of trust in God displays the attitude he main-
tained throughout life, but most emphatically in his death. By highlight-
ing his attitude in the face of death, this citation evokes a recollection of
the event of his death as well.
92 Wagner states, ‘Jesus’ twin avowals of a close familial bond with human
beings now frame the central af¿rmation of his trust in God’ (‘Faithfulness and
Fear’, p.99).
93 Similarly Mof¿tt argues that ‘in light of the ongoing contrast between the
Son and the angels in the context, this latter declaration is probably to be thought of
in terms of the Son’s proclamation of his identi¿cation with humanity…’ (Atone-
ment and Resurrection, p.124).
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92 You Are My Son
Read in light of Heb. 2.10, however, the ȸÀ»¼ĕ¸ mentioned here takes
on another relational connection as well. There, the author depicts
humanity as ÍĎÇĕ, establishing a similarity between Jesus’ relationship to
God and their own. Since both children (2.13b) and sons (2.10) describe
humanity, then the ȸÀ»¼ĕ¸, in addition to being sons and daughters of
humanity, are also the many sons and daughters of God. As noted above,
Jesus and his brothers are from one source (ëÆ îÅĠË) by virtue of their
humanity. It is also the case that they are from one source (ëÆ îÅĠË) due to
their relationship to God. The argument from proximity suggests that it is
a viable option to view ¼đË as a signi¿er for God, the agent who perfects
in the previous verse.94 If v. 10 favors reading îÅĠË as God, v. 11b grants
even more precision. The fact that they are all ëÆ îÅĠË is the reason why
Jesus is not ashamed to address those he is sanctifying with the name
Ò»¼ÂÎÇĕ. If their derivation from a singular source results in the
relationship of brotherhood, then that implies that it is the relationship of
parentage that creates brotherhood. The author declares something even
more intimate than ‘they are all God’s creatures’.95 God is now the
source of Jesus and those he sancti¿es in the sense that he is the Father
of them all.96 By becoming their brother and experiencing death, Jesus
ensures that the children of humanity are also sons and daughters of God.
By becoming a ÍĎĠË of man and trusting God in death, Jesus establishes
the identity of the many ÍĎÇĕ of humanity as God’s own ÍĎÇĕ.
Moreover, he also establishes the future they anticipate. The relation-
ship between Jesus and the ȸÀ»ĕ¸ portrayed in this statement is one
of ownership. Jesus describes these children as people who have been
given to him. Patrick Gray helpfully points to the Roman system of
tutela impuberum as a way to understand this fraternal stewardship. He
explains, ‘[a] tutor, often an old brother, became responsible for the care
of minor children and their inheritance until they reached the age of
majority, thus heightening the older brother’s natural duty to take care
of his younger siblings. Jesus, then, is pictured as the guardian of the
audience.’97
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In his appeal to Psalm 8, Psalm 21, and Isaiah 8, the author portrays
Jesus being entrusted with God’s children when, as a ÍĎĠË ÒÅ¿ÉļÈÇÍ, he
takes his place as God’s heir of all things. Many of the other scriptures
from which the author has cited throughout Hebrews 1 and 2 contain
aspects of a similar story. God’s Royal Son takes possession of people –
including the people of God – in his role as Sovereign.100
100 One of the other texts cited in Hebrews 1, Deut. 32.43, is worthy of mention
here as well. The author of Hebrews invokes Moses’ song from Deuteronomy 32
(the author appeals to this song again in ch. 10 to assert the reality of God’s judg-
ment [10.30/Deut. 32.35, 36]) to show that when God leads his Son into the
ÇĊÁÇÍÄñž, he instructs his angels to worship his Son (1.6). Previous to this line, the
song describes the Most High distributing the nations – Adam’s sons – among the
angels of God. The people of Jacob became the allotment of the Lord’s inheritance
(v. 9). Because the author – through the voice of God – uses this text to portray an
action directed toward Jesus, it also resonates with Jesus’ sovereignty over the
children of God. For a reader who, through his Christological lens, is able to make a
distinction between the Most High (ĝ ĩÐÀÊÌÇË) and the Lord (as evidenced in Heb.
1.3 and 1.10), it is possible to see God giving the people of Israel to the Lord (i.e. the
Son) as his inheritance.
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2. ‘A Son’: The Suffering Heir of God’s Children 95
name is great, and that he has been given rest. Despite God’s rejection of
David’s request to build a house for God to live in (ÇĤ Êİ ÇĊÁÇ»ÇÄûʼÀË
ÄÇÀ ÇčÁÇÅ ÌÇı Á¸ÌÇÀÁýʸĕ ļ; 2 Sam. 7.5), God promises that David will
build a house for him (7.11). The house that God has in mind is David’s
offspring, his royal heir (7.12).
To David’s heir, God makes several important promises. First, God
will prepare (îÌÇÀÄÚ½Ñ) his kingdom, and it will be an eternal throne (¼ĊË
ÌġÅ ¸ĊľÅ¸; 2 Sam. 7.12-13, repeated in v. 16). Second, he will be the one
to build God’s house, that is, the temple. Third, as the author of Hebrews
cites, God promises to be a Father to him and that he, David’s heir, will
be a son of God (7.14). Finally, along with his kingdom and his throne,
his house will be ¿rmly established (ÈÀÊÌÑ¿ûʼ̸À) by God forever
(7.16).
When David praises God for these wonderful promises to his house
(7.18, 19), he recalls the story of when God redeemed the people of
Israel. God prepared (îÌÇÀÄÚ½Ñ) his people Israel for himself; God estab-
lished them as a people forever (ïÑË ¸ĊľÅÇË); and God became a God to
them (ëºñÅÇÍ ¸ĤÌÇėË ¼ĊË ¿¼ĠÅ). Hence, the text gives evidence of a
correspondence between God’s establishment of David’s heir and God’s
establishment of the people of Israel.
7.12-14 God prepared a This included an God establishes a
kingdom eternal throne relationship with the
King (Father/Son)
îÌÇÀÄÚÊÑ ÌüÅ ÒÅÇÉ¿ļÊÑ ÌġÅ ¿ÉĠÅÇÅ ëºĽ ìÊÇĸÀ ȸÌñɸ,
¹¸ÊÀ¼ĕ¸Å ¸ĤÌÇı ¸ĤÌÇı ïÑË ¼ĊË ÌġÅ Á¸Ė ¸ĤÌġË ëÊ̸À ÄÇÀ
¸ĊľÅ¸ ¼ĊË ÍĎĠÅ
7.24
¸Ė ÷ÌÇĕÄ¸Ê¸Ë Â¸ġÅ ïÑË ¸ĊľÅÇË Êį, ÁįÉÀ¼, ëºñÅÇÍ
ʼ¸ÍÌŊ ÌġŠ¸ĠÇÅ ¸ĤÌÇėË ¼ĊË ¿¼ĠÅ
ÊÇÍ Êɸ¾Â
God prepared a A forever people God establishes a
people relationship with the
people (God/People)
family of Israel.101 As God’s kings, both David and his heir – who is also
proclaimed by God to be God’s son (2 Sam. 7.14) – have inherited
rulership over God’s people, and for his heir he prays this authority may
last forever.
101 The statement in 1 Chr. 28.21 also supports Solomon’s rule over the people
of Israel when David assures Solomon that everything, including the priests, Levites,
skilled craftsman, the rulers, and all the people are his to command.
102 Wagner aptly notes, ‘it is likely that the homilist has Isa. 8.17 in mind here,
though not necessarily to the exclusion of the other passages’ (‘Faithfulness and
Fear’, p.101 n. 84).
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2. ‘A Son’: The Suffering Heir of God’s Children 97
delivers him, God makes him the head of nations (v. 44), and his enemies
fall under his feet (v. 39). In light of God’s actions, the psalmist con-
fesses God among the nations and sings his name (v. 50; cf. Heb. 2.12).
The subjugation of enemies may not the only and ¿nal meaning of
these psalms. As Psalm 2 continues, it offers another path to the kings of
the earth. If they continue to stand against the Lord and his anointed (Ps.
2.2), they will be crushed under the authority of God’s Son the King. If,
however, they are willing to be instructed (ȸÀ»¼įÑ; 2.10) and seize upon
instruction (»ÉÚƸʿ¼ ȸÀ»¼ĕ¸Ë; 2.12), they can avoid God’s wrath. By
serving the Lord with fear, they can rejoice in him, albeit with trembling.
Blessing – rather than wrath – comes to all those who trust (ÈÚÅÌ¼Ë ÇĎ
ȼÈÇÀ¿Ġ̼Ë) in the Lord (ëÈ’ ¸ĤÌŊ). Psalm 2 portrays God’s Son the King
inheriting the nations, including those who are given the option to trust in
the Lord through submitting to discipline.
Similarly, in Psalm 44, the author uses the term ‘peoples’ (¸Çĕ) to
describe those who fell under the king. At the end of the psalm, however,
the psalmist declares that the peoples (¸Çĕ) will confess the king forever
and ever (44.18). Finally, in 2 Samuel 22, in addition to his enemies,
God places a people subject to David (v. 44). While these people are still
cast in a negative light,103 they are described as the people who are under
him (ĨÈÇÁÚÌÑ) and whom God disciplines (ȸÀ»¼įÑ; v. 48). Because the
author of Hebrews describes the discipline of the Lord as a distinguish-
ing feature of the children of God (12.5-11), he might have viewed this
verse in such a way that it portrays the king ruling over God’s people,
instead of God’s enemies.
In eleven out of the thirteen texts to which the author appeals in chs. 1
and 2,104 the ruler takes possession of a people. These people include the
enemies of the king and also those people who come to trust in and
praise the Lord. For those familiar with these Psalms, this current Àows
through the argument at the beginning of Hebrews. The story in these
texts resonates with the author’s assertions that Jesus, who is God’s royal
103 They are placed in parallel with foreign sons who lie (v. 45) and the enemies
of the king (v. 49).
104 This theme is not apparent in Psalms 96 and 103. Texts that include this
theme are 2 Samuel 7 and 22; Deuteronomy 32; and Psalms 2, 21 (discussed below),
44, 101 (discussed below), and 109. Psalm 8 does not exactly ¿t the pattern because
people are not speci¿ed as part of the ‘all things’. As I have argued, however, the
author’s argument in the latter part of ch. 2 includes people as part of the ÈÚÅ̸
of the psalm. Isaiah 8 does not align neatly with the pattern because the person in
question who is given possession of the ȸÀ»ĕ¸ is not a ruler. Nevertheless, because
the author understands Jesus to speak this text, it becomes the description of the
sovereign Son ruling over God’s people.
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98 You Are My Son
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2. ‘A Son’: The Suffering Heir of God’s Children 99
105 I ¿nd Moffatt’s reading of this verse largely persuasive. =ÅÇÏÇÀ when it
means ‘subject to’ is followed by a dative, in this case ÎĠ¹Ŀ ¿¸ÅÚÌÇÍ (cf. Mt. 5.21,
22). Therefore, ÒȸÂÂÚƾ is completed by »Çͼĕ¸Ë (Hebrews, p.35). It provides
a neater way to read the ‘slightly awkward dative’ (Ellingworth, Hebrews, p.174).
Nevertheless, it is not completely persuasive because ÒȸÂÂÚÆþ is so far from
»Çͼĕ¸Ë. Whatever reading is adopted, the meaning is largely clear. Those who are
rescued by Christ are freed from the slavery that the fear of death brings.
106 Pss. 6.6; 17.5; Hos. 13.14; Sir. 41.1-4.
107 E.g. Euripides, Orest. 1522; Lucretius, De rer. nat. 1.102-26; Lucian,
Peregr. 23, 33; Plutarch, Mor. 34B; 106D; Cicero, Letters to Atticus 9.2a; Tusc.1;
Seneca, Ep. 24; 30.17; Epictetus, Diatr. 1.17.25; 1.27.7-10; 2.18.30; 4.7.15–17; Dio
Chrysostom, Or. 6.42; Philo, Omn. prob. lib. 22; Leg. 17. See Gray, Godly Fear,
p.112.
108 Patrick Gray suggests that the thought of death brings fear because it is
followed by judgment and it holds in it demonic power (Godly Fear, p.113).
109 An idea found in other literature as well: Wis. 2.24; Jo. Asen. 12.9; Jub.
49.2; Ezekiel the Tragedian in Epiphanius, Pan. 64.29.6; Jn 8.44; 1 Pet. 5.8.
110 Ellingworth states, ‘[i]n this construction, ÒȸÂÂÚÆþ does not specify from
what or from whom people are liberated, though v. 14 would strongly suggest the
devil’ (Hebrews, p.174).
111 Since the devil is a supernatural and even angelic being in some literature
(Job 1.6-12; 2.1-10; 2 En. 31.3; L.A.E. 10.16, 41), Jesus’ defeat of this angel might
be one of the several reasons the author emphasized his supremacy over the angels
in the ¿rst chapter of Hebrews. For an emphatic argument of this point, see Georg
Gäbel, ‘Rivals in Heaven: Angels in the Epistle to the Hebrews’, in Angels: The
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100 You Are My Son
by his defeat of the one who held death’s power, Jesus eliminated the
power of death that cast a shadow over the entire lifetime of humanity
(2.15). Because Jesus became human and died, he is able to rescue
humanity from their slavery to fear. They are no longer the slaves of the
devil.
In the following verse, the author af¿rms the transference of posses-
sion achieved by Jesus’ death. Through death, humanity ceases to be the
slaves of the devil and becomes instead the possession of Christ. The
author states this by saying that Jesus took hold of the seed of Abraham.
The most basic picture here is that Jesus takes the descendents of
Abraham into his grasp and possession.112 It also connotes the imagery of
Jesus’ embracing humanity in order to help them.113 By participating in
human nature to its ultimate end (2.14-15), he wrested humanity from
their overlord the Devil and brought them into the grasp of Christ.
On this point, two other psalms quoted by the author in the ¿rst two
chapters serve as interesting intertexts. First, Hebrews appeals to Psalm
101 to assert the Son’s role in creation and his eternal and unchanging
nature (Heb. 1.10-12). Prior to the verses cited (Ps. 101.26-28), the
psalmist notes that the Lord heard the groaning of the prisoners and
rescued the sons of those who had been put to death (v. 21). The result is
that when peoples and kingdoms are gathered together to serve the Lord,
the name of the Lord and his praise are declared in Zion and in Jerusalem
(vv. 22-23). The Lord thus wins a people for himself by rescuing sons
who are in bondage and who have faced death. In the end, they serve him
and praise his name.
Psalm 21 LXX, which the author cites the text as that which Jesus
speaks concerning his announcement of God’s name to his siblings (Heb.
2.12), also resonates with the themes of family and deliverance. In the
closing lines of the psalm, the psalmist claims that his offspring will
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2. ‘A Son’: The Suffering Heir of God’s Children 101
serve the Lord. Because the Lord acted, presumably by delivering the
psalmist (v. 21), a people yet to be born will proclaim the righteousness
of the Lord (v. 32). God’s deliverance of the psalmist results in the
family of Israel (v. 24) – including the family of the psalmist himself, his
seed – serving and praising the Lord. If the author heard the voice of
Jesus in the psalm, it is possible to hear Ìġ ÊÈñÉĸ ÄÇÍ, not as the speak-
er’s biological offspring, but as those whom the speaker has embraced in
his possession (ÊÈñÉĸÌÇË ¹É¸ÛÄ ëÈÀ¸ĹÚż̸À; Heb. 2.16). The
speaker declares that his seed will serve and praise the Lord who is King
of all the nations because God delivered him.
Christ’s death provides the antidote to humanity’s pervasive bondage
to the fear of death. Attridge states:
Hebrews does not explain precisely how it is that Christ’s death frees
human beings from such fear [of death]. This is, in part, due to the fact
that liberation was a ¿xed part of the underlying tradition and no explana-
tion of it was felt to be required. Insofar as the Christological exposition
of the text does implicitly provide one, it consists of two elements. On the
one hand, as in the myths of a hero’s victory over death, Christ’s death is
an example of endurance. On the other hand, his exaltation de¿nitely
con¿rms his victory and provides an access to God that renders death and
the fear it inspires irrelevant.114
1
114 Attridge, Hebrews, pp.93–4.
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102 You Are My Son
VI. Conclusion
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2. ‘A Son’: The Suffering Heir of God’s Children 103
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Chapter 3
The two previous chapters sought to show the vital relationship between
Jesus’ ¿lial status and his inheritance. Because he is the Son of God, God
the Father has appointed him as heir of all things. Because he became a
son of man and passed through death, his inheritance is all-encompass-
ing, in particular it includes humanity who had been enslaved to death.
God’s paternal inclusion of his Son in his sovereignty and Jesus’
unswerving faithfulness as God’s human Son result in his session at the
Father’s right hand as heir of all things.
In the penultimate verse of Hebrews 2 – Ğ¿¼Å ĵμÀ¼ŠÁ¸ÌÛ ÈÚÅ̸ ÌÇėË
Ò»¼ÂÎÇėË ĝÄÇÀÑ¿ýŸÀ – the author succinctly states two recurring themes
of the second chapter: Jesus’ participation in the human condition and
God’s will that he participate. Jesus is made like his brothers and sisters
in all ways (Heb. 2.17).1 In the preceding verses, the author sketches out
what ‘all ways’ entails. The brothers and sisters of Jesus share in Àesh
and blood (2.14), and they anticipate death with fear (2.15). Conse-
quently, his participation in Àesh and blood and his facing of the reality
of death make it evident that Jesus became completely human, and, in
light of the author’s depictions of God’s action in the chapter in lowering
Jesus to the state of humanity (2.8-9) and in perfecting him through death
(2.10), the passive of ĝÄÇÀĠÑ is best read as a divine passive.2 It is God
1 The close connection between Jesus’ grasp of the seed of Abraham and his
becoming like his siblings suggests that reading ëÈÀ¸ĹÚż̸À in light of the
incarnation, which many patristic interpreters did (e.g., Ambrose [De Fide 3.11.86
(NPNF2 10:255)]; Chrysostom [Hom. Hebr. 5.1 (NPNF1 14:388)]), ¿ts well within
the context of the passage (Philip E. Hughes, A Commentary on the Epistle to the
Hebrews [Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1977], pp.117–19; Johnson, Hebrews, p.102;
Mof¿tt, Atonement and Resurrection, p.131). This nuance of the word does not
appear in other literature. Therefore, this meaning is suggested by the context, not
bound in the word itself.
2 This reading ¿nds support, for example, in Lane (Hebrews, p.1.64), Michel
(Hebräer, p.87), Long (Hebrews, pp.60–1), and Vanhoye (Situation du Christ,
p.368).
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106 You Are My Son
who made Jesus like his brothers and sisters in all ways. Because the
Son’s obedience to the Father’s will accomplished this transformation,
Jesus, in taking hold of the seed of Abraham (2.16), rescued them (2.15).
In addition to summarizing preceding themes of the chapter, v. 17
points forward as well. The same prominent theme – God’s actions in
bringing about Jesus’ humanity – results in a previously unarticulated
identity of Jesus:3 because he was made like his brothers and sisters in
all ways, he became a merciful and faithful high priest (2.17).4 Jesus’
priesthood becomes a dominant theme in the central section of the letter
(4.14–10.25), and remains close at hand even in the closing section
(12.2, 24; 13.12).
Even as he describes the nature of Jesus’ priesthood, however, the
author frequently integrates it with assertions of Jesus’ sonship. In ch. 3,
Jesus is both high priest (3.1) and Son (3.6) over the ÇčÁÇË of God, a term
used for the tabernacle/temple5 but employed in Hebrews predominantly
as a reference to a family/household (3.2, 5, 6; 8.8, 10; 11.7). The author
employs both cultic and ¿lial titles again in 4.14, and in 5.6 connects
God’s pronouncement about Christ’s priesthood with God’s declaration
of his status as Son. In ch. 7, the absence of any mention of Melchi-
zedek’s lineage indicates that he is like the Son of God (7.3). At the close
of ch. 7, unlike the law that appoints weak men, the word of the oath
appoints, strikingly, not a perfected ÓÅ¿ÉÑÈÇË, but a perfected ÍĎĠË as high
priest (7.28). In the summarizing statement of 8.1, Jesus is the high priest
who is in the place God has invited him to sit as his royal Son. So also in
3 ‘Son’ and ‘priest’ do not exhaust the descriptions of Jesus in Hebrews, but
interpreters agree they represent two dominant Christological foci. Loader (Sohn und
Hoherpriester) divides his analysis of the letter according to this schema, and Mikeal
Parsons calls these ‘the two predominant titles found in Hebrews’ which ‘serve to
surface the major thrust of the christological arguments found in Hebrews’ (‘Son and
High Priest: A Study in the Christology of Hebrews’, EQ 60 [1988], pp.195–216).
So also Harold W. Attridge, ‘[t]he citation of the two texts [Ps 2:7 and Ps 109:4 LXX]
serves to link the key Christological motifs of Son and High Priest’ (Hebrews,
p.146), and Paul Ellingworth, ‘[i]t is highly probable that the author’s thinking about
Christ revolves around the two poles represented by the titles “Son” (1:2) and “high
priest” (2:17)’ (Hebrews, p.67).
4 No other author of the New Testament attributes to Jesus the title of ÒÉÏÀ¼É¼įË,
or even Ď¼É¼įË. This is the distinctive mark of the author’s Christology. Expressions
of the uniqueness of this theme are found in Ellingworth (Hebrews, p.67), Johnson
(Hebrews, p.49), Koester (Hebrews, p.109), Lane (Hebrews, p.1:cxl–cxli), Spicq
(Hébreux, p.1:301), and Witherington (Letters and Homilies, p.59).
5 E.g., Exod. 23.19; 34.26; Deut. 23.19; Judg. 18.31; 2 Sam. 12.20; 1 Kgs 5.17,
19; 8.17, 20; 1 Chr. 6.33; 9.11, 13, 26.
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3. ‘My Son, You Are Priest’ 107
ch. 10, Jesus is the priest who, after presenting his one offering, is seated
at God’s right hand awaiting the subjection of his enemies – a portion of
his inheritance – under his feet (10.13). Finally, the author asserts that
Jesus is a great priest over God’s house/household (10.21). Hence, when
the author discusses the priesthood of Jesus, he does so with continuing
emphasis upon Jesus’ status as God’s Son. The familial dynamic between
God and Jesus is therefore inextricable from Jesus’ status as God’s ¿nal
high priest.
By highlighting the familial theme throughout the cultic sections of
the letter, this investigation contributes to my overall thesis in several
ways. First, and most obviously, the author builds the divine Father/Son
relationship into the fabric of his argument about Christ’s priesthood.
Second, because he consistently appeals to this relationship, the actions
of the Father and the Son in the cultic context contribute to the charac-
terization of their Fatherhood and sonship. In these sections, the author
continues the theme introduced in ch. 2: God’s fatherly actions include
both exaltation and training. In so doing, the author also continues to
emphasize the perfect faithfulness of the Son. Finally, the Son’s priestly
vocation serves to strengthen the faith of the audience, speci¿cally
because it is through his priestly offering and intercession that Jesus
secures his inheritance. Because the Son has performed and continues to
perform his priestly role, the audience can trust that he will take full
possession of his inheritance; as a result, they (as members of Jesus’
inheritance) will attain their inheritance and dwell in the household of
God.
Hence, Heb. 4.14, ‘a great high priest has passed through the heavens,
Jesus, the Son of God’, succinctly articulates the two dominant themes of
Hebrews’ Christology.6 Jesus is Son and Priest. Interpreters cannot help
but to acknowledge the presence of these identities, but have not yet
reached an interpretive consensus concerning their relationship. Is it
the case – as Deborah Rooke argues – that Jesus ‘was a priest forever,
whether he liked it or not, because of the sonship granted to him by the
deity’,7 or, conversely – as David Mof¿tt states – that ‘Jesus’ role as
priest seems therefore to be distinct from – i.e. not predicated upon – his
status as Son’?8 Moreover, Mof¿tt argues that Jesus’ sonship is not just
distinct from his priesthood but also that the proclamation of Jesus as
Son – and therefore, as king – conÀicts with the assertion of his priest-
hood for audience members who know and respect the Mosaic law.9 In
other words, does the genealogy of Jesus automatically entail his priest-
hood or does it conÀict with his priesthood? Is Jesus priest because he is
Son or in spite of the fact that he is Son?
The ‘Son/priest’ conundrum is not so easily divisible, chieÀy because
the terms ‘Son’ and ‘priest’ carry multiple meanings. In calling Jesus
‘Son’ the author denotes both his relationship to God and his relationship
to humanity; he is Son of God and son of man. Similarly, in calling Jesus
priest, the author locates Jesus in relationship to different priestly orders.
He shares similarities with the Levitical priests (4.14–5.7) but stands in
the priestly order of Melchizedek (5.6; 6.20; 7.17, 21). Knowing which
¿lial relationship and which priestly order is in play in each instance
determines the particular relationship between the two identities.
On the one hand, I agree with Mof¿tt and others who argue that Jesus’
priesthood is not ‘implicit in his status as royal Son’.10 His high priest-
hood is not automatic to his sonship; he must become quali¿ed for this
cultic role. On the other hand, I disagree with Mof¿tt that the author
treats Jesus’ lineage as a problem to be solved when he is arguing for his
status as priest. The author realizes that Jesus’ lineage bars him from the
Levitical priesthood, but also recognizes that it serves as a quali¿cation
for the Melchizedekian one. That is to say, in my opinion the author of
Hebrews does not view the two dominant roles of Christ running along
on two parallel or even clashing tracks. Instead, he describes Jesus’
sonship and priesthood as reciprocal identities both located within and
existing because of the paternal actions of God.
How does the author show the identities of Christ embedded in the
Fatherhood of God? Initially, he shows that it is God the Father who calls
Jesus to the priesthood. Then, as a compliment to that call, he empha-
sizes Jesus’ sonship as a quali¿cation to stand in the line of Melchizedek.
Next, the author appeals to the pedagogy and inheritance of Jesus as
means of quali¿cation for his priesthood. Finally, he shows how Jesus’
priestly actions secure the possession of his inheritance. All four moves
highlight God’s actions as Father in the Son’s enactment of his vocation
as high priest.
9 See especially Mof¿tt’s essay, ‘Jesus the High Priest and the Mosaic Law:
Reassessing the Appeal to the Heavenly Realm in the Letter “To the Hebrews”’, in
Problems in Translating Texts About Jesus: Proceedings from the International
Society of Biblical Literature Annual Meeting 2008 (Mishael Caspi and John T.
Greene, eds; Lewiston, NY: Mellen, 2011), pp.195–232.
1
10 Mof¿tt, Atonement and Resurrection, p.201.
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3. ‘My Son, You Are Priest’ 109
11 Albert Vanhoye links the opening of ch. 3 to the verses that precede it
through the repetition of ÒÉÏÀ¼É¼įË. He also sees this pericope as the opening of the
second part of the letter, comprising 3.1–5.10 (Structure and Message, p.24). I argue
that the allusion to Jesus’ humanity and the declaration of Jesus’ status as high priest
connect this pericope with a broader spectrum of the letter than simply 2.17–5.10.
1
12 Attridge, Hebrews, p.107.
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110 You Are My Son
13 The direct attribution of this title to Jesus is unique in the New Testament.
There is a possible allusion to Jesus as an apostle in Lk. 11.49. It is not unusual,
however, for Jesus to be described (often by himself) as the one sent from God
(Mt. 10.40; 21.37; 23.34, 37; Mk 9.37; 12.6; Lk. 4.43; 9.48; 10.16; 13.34; Jn 3.17,
34; 5.36, 38; 6.29, 57; 7.29; 8.42; 10.36; 17.3, 8, 18, 21, 23, 25; 20.21; Gal. 4.4;
1 Jn 4.9, 10, 14). Justin Martyr uses this word in reference to Jesus (1 Apol. 12.9;
63.10 [ANF p.1:166, 184]), which supports the argument that this title might be
traditional (Attridge, Hebrews, p.107 n. 36).
14 So also Attridge, Hebrews, p.107.
15 Similarly, Koester states: ‘Jesus was sent to deliver his brothers and sisters
by taking on blood and Àesh’ (Hebrews, p.249). Ellingworth sees this title as a
possible allusion to the incarnation, but makes this connection dependent upon 1.6
referring to the incarnation as well (Hebrews, p.199). It is not clear to me that the
meaning of 3.1 must depend on the interpretation of 1.6. Chapter 2 is suf¿cient to
establish that when Jesus was sent from God, he was sent as a human being, even if
1.6 refers to his exaltation over the coming realm.
16 This is reiterated in ch. 10 where Jesus, on coming into the world (10.5),
states that God prepared a body for him (Ps. 40.7-9).
17 His appointment includes both his high priesthood and his apostleship. So
also Johnson (Hebrews, p.107) and Lane (Hebrews, p.1:76). Contra Attridge
(Hebrews, p.108) and Ellingworth (Hebrews, p.202), who presume the author limits
this appointment to the priestly of¿ce.
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3. ‘My Son, You Are Priest’ 111
the duties of his priesthood, including dying so that he could offer his
own body and blood.
Jesus’ faithful attitude before God offers a ¿tting comparison to
Moses: Jesus is faithful just as Moses was faithful.21 Through the citation
of Num. 12.7, the author of Hebrews alludes to the story from Numbers
12 where the Lord chides Aaron and Miriam for speaking against Moses.
The Lord declares to them that Moses, in comparison with all the other
prophets, hears from God’s mouth and has seen the glory of the Lord
(Num. 12.8). Nevertheless, even in light of these quali¿cations, the
author of Hebrews asserts that Jesus is worthy of more glory than Moses.
Jesus’ faithfulness, however, is not the quality that makes him more
glorious. Jesus is not more faithful than Moses. Rather, the difference
between them is that while Moses is faithful as a servant, Jesus is faithful
as a son. At this point in the letter, the author’s use of the term ÍĎĠË
evokes the glory Jesus possesses as Son of the Lord God (ch. 1) and the
honor and glory he came to possess when he became a son of man
(ch. 2). Moses, on the other hand, is never speci¿cally designated as a
ÍĎĠË of God. By default he possesses the glory included in being a
descendent of Adam, but he is not equal to the glory afforded to Jesus as
man and God, both of which are included in his status as ÍĎĠË.
Jesus’ faithfulness as a Son suggests the relational corollary: whereas
Moses was a faithful servant to the Lord (Num. 12.6-8),22 Jesus was a
faithful Son to God his Father. It was his Father who appointed him to
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3. ‘My Son, You Are Priest’ 113
the role of apostle. In other words, it was his Father who called him to
become human. Likewise, his Father appointed him to the priesthood,
meaning that it was his Father who called him to sacri¿ce himself.
Therefore, since it was God who appointed him to these roles, it was God
who willed that he become human and die so that he could be a faithful
apostle and high priest. As in ch. 2, Jesus thus lived out his mediatorial
roles as a faithful Son in response to the will of his Father.
audience to whom he is writing (Çī ÇčÁĠË ëÊļŠ÷ļėË). With this speci-
¿cation, the author has shifted from a discussion of structures to a
discussion of households.26
Locating the readers as members of God’s household reinforces the
familial tones of the initial address in 3.1. In what could be read as a
typical address in literature of the New Testament, the author proclaims
that the readers themselves are Ò»¼ÂÎÇĖ ׺ÀÇÀ. They are the siblings
whose Àesh and blood Jesus shared and of whom he is not ashamed
(2.11, 14, 17). Moreover, they are holy (׺ÀÇÀ) ones who are being
sancti¿ed (2.11) and who share the same parentage – both human and
divine – as Jesus. As holy brothers and sisters of Jesus, they are the ones
who have been rescued from slavery to the fear of death and who are
now journeying toward the inheritance of their salvation as ÍĎÇĕ of God.
By de¿ning himself and his readers as part of God’s household, the
author locates this group of people within the inheritance of Jesus. As
God’s Son, Jesus is over all things that God builds. In line with ch. 2 and
with the citations cited by the author, Jesus’ exaltation over all things
includes God’s children, who are his holy brothers and sisters (3.1), the
audience of Hebrews themselves. The author follows his description of
Jesus’ faithfulness as a Son to his Father in becoming human and dying
with a picture of Jesus reigning over God’s family. Jesus is faithful as an
apostle, as a high priest, and as the steward over his inheritance, includ-
ing the children of God. Hence, the themes of ch. 2 appear again. God
has granted to the audience of Hebrews the honor of being his children
and the assurance of being Jesus’ inheritance.
26 Both meanings are widely attested for ÇčÁÇË: as a house (e.g., Lk. 11.17; Acts
16.34; 1 Cor. 11.34; Rom. 16.5; Josephus, Ant. 4.74), and as a household (Gen.
42.12; Lk. 10.5; 1 Cor. 1.16; 1 Tim. 3.4, 12; Hermas, Vis. 1.1.9; Sim. 7.2).
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3. ‘My Son, You Are Priest’ 115
making the readers his children. The earlier assertions that every ÇčÁÇË is
built by someone and that God is the builder of all things highlight that
because the readers are in fact the ÇčÁÇË of God, then it can be none other
than God himself who constructed them to be his household. The author
is not discussing building materials but people, not God only as a builder
of the framework but also as the One who gathers the members of a
household, a Father.
Hebrews 3.1-6 reinforces the themes of the preceding chapters. Jesus
takes on humanity and dies in response to the appointment of his Father.
Because he does so, God places him as heir of all things. For humanity,
God’s relationship with his Son means that they too can be children of
God and can look forward to dwelling in God’s house because they are
included in the inheritance of Jesus. By articulating that Jesus is faithful
as a high priest, the author also points forward in this section to the rest
of the letter where all these themes come to particular expression in the
priesthood of Jesus.
more honor (ÌÀÄû) than the structure itself. God, as the builder of all
things (3.4), has great honor. Because the author depicts God building a
household, his honor is associated with his role as the Father of that
očÁoË. Similarly, the glory that Jesus receives is that of a Son over a
servant (3.6). These connections show that the author associates glory
and honor with God’s honor as a Father and Jesus’ glory as a Son. This
association is also present in 2.7-9, the other occurrence in the letter of
both terms (»ĠƸ and ÌÀÄû) together. God’s crowning of Jesus with glory
and honor is directly linked to his appointment as heir of all things
(2.8).27 When the author asserts that Jesus did not honor or glorify
himself, it follows that it was God who did so, the author having already
established that honor and glory are qualities present within God’s
familial relationship with Jesus.28
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3. ‘My Son, You Are Priest’ 117
this psalm ¿ts in with the royal sonship motif. God is appointing the
king, his Son, to the priesthood. Second, in Ps. 109.3 LXX, the Lord
asserts, ‘From the womb, before the morning star, I begot you’.30 While
the mention of a womb suggests that God might be serving an assisting
role in the birth of this ruler, God’s use of a ¿rst person assertion,
ëƼºñÅžÊÚ Ê¼, evokes God’s parental role, particularly in the context of
Hebrews 5 in which Ps. 2.7 appears (ëºĽ ÊûļÉÇÅ º¼ºñÅžÁÚ Ê¼). The
entirety of the psalm, and particularly its third verse, suggests that God
appoints one whom he has established as his Son to the eternal priest-
hood in the order of Melchizedek.
the King was equated with God. The king did not become another Deity equal to the
Lord God (Roland De Vaux, Ancient Israel: Its Life and Institutions [Biblical
Resource Series; Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1997], p.113; Sigmund Mowinckel, The
Psalms in Israel’s Worship [BRS; Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2004], p.58).
30 This reading is unique to the LXX. The MT seems to highlight the youth of the
addressee, although the precise meaning of the Hebrew is quite dif¿cult to ascertain
(William P. Brown, ‘A Royal Performance: Critical Notes on Psalm 110:3ag-b’, JBL
117 [1998], pp.93–6).
31 Johnson, Hebrews, p.81; Lane, Hebrews, p.1:32; O’Brien, Hebrews, p.65.
32 Koester argues, ‘[o]nce the “lord” from Ps 110:1 is identi¿ed with Christ – as
was common in early Christianity – it is but a small step to identify Christ as the
priest like Melchizedek mentioned in Ps 110:4’ (Hebrews, p.109).
33 Similarly Koester states, ‘He could have observed that if Ps 110:1 refers to
the exalted Jesus, then Ps 110:4 also applies to him: You are a priest forever accord-
ing to the type of Melchizedek’ (Hebrews, p.298).
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118 You Are My Son
Having established that Jesus’ call comes from God the Father in ch. 5,
the author adds the complement that it is Jesus the Son who serves as
priest in the next section of the letter. He does so by repeating the oaths
God speaks to Jesus (5.6, 10; 6.20; 7.11, 17, 21), a member of the tribe of
Judah, the tribe from which David’s heir would come (7.14), highlight-
ing genealogy in his presentation of the story of Melchizedek (7.1-10),
and concluding this section with the assertion that God appoints a Son as
high priest (7.28).
A. The Oath
As noted above, Jesus becomes high priest because God said so. God
spoke to him, saying, ‘You are priest forever according to the order of
Melchizedek’ (Ps. 109.4 LXX; Heb. 5.6). As the author emphasizes the
34 Of the other royal psalms, only Psalm 131 and Ps. 89.5 share this feature.
35 Note the comment of Attridge: ‘Ps 2:7 appears again at Heb. 5.5, linking the
theme of Christ’s sonship to the claim that he is a priest. However Hebrews under-
stands the claim, it insists on the fundamental importance of Christ’s sonship’
(‘Psalms in Hebrews’, p.200).
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3. ‘My Son, You Are Priest’ 119
36 Evangelia C. Dafni concludes, ‘[i]t is obvious that the LXX understands the
psalm in a messianic sense’ (‘Psalm 109[110],1–3 in the Septuagint: Its Translation-
Critical, Tradition-Historical, and Theological Setting’, in Psalms and Hebrews:
Studies in Reception [Dirk J. Human and Gert J. Steyn, eds; LHBOTS, 527; New
York: T&T Clark, 2010], pp.241–59 [248]). Don Juel, summarizing the ¿ndings of
Hay, concludes, ‘…in the ¿rst century the verses in question could be read as part
of the constellation of biblical passages referring to the one coming from the line
of David. Extant Jewish tradition permits us to say at least that much. The “Son of
David” passage in the Synoptics presumes that the scribes understood the psalm
verse as a reference to the Messiah’ (‘Christ at the Right Hand: The Use of Psalm
110 in the New Testament’, in Messianic Exegesis: Christological Interpretation of
the Old Testament in Early Christianity [Philadelphia: Fortress, 1988], pp.135–50
[141]).
37 The author quotes from Ps. 110.1 in Heb. 1.13 and alludes to it in Heb. 1.3;
8.1; 10.12; 12.2.
38 Quotations of Psalm 110 appear in the Gospels (Mt. 22.44; Mk 15.9; Lk.
20.42), Acts 2.34, and 1 Cor. 15.25. Allusions to it appear in other letters as well
(Rom. 8.34; Eph. 1.20; Col. 3.1). For an analysis of this text by early believers in
Jesus, see David M. Hay, Glory at the Right Hand: Psalm 110 in Early Christianity
(SBLMS, 18; Nashville: Abingdon, 1973), and Juel, ‘Christ at the Right Hand’.
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120 You Are My Son
B. Melchizedek
At the beginning of ch. 7, the author turns his attention to the only other
mention of Melchizedek in Israel’s scriptures, found in Gen. 14.17-20.
Through the retelling of this story, the author establishes, among other
things, that Melchizedek the priest stands outside the priestly line of
Levi.
The author’s discussion of Melchizedek highlights the genealogical
differences between Melchizedek on the one hand and the Levitical
priests on the other. He designates Abraham as the patriarch and the
priests as the sons of Levi (7.4). They have come out of the loins of
Abraham and therefore those from whom they extract a tithe are their
brothers (7.5). Abraham is the one who has the promise (7.6), which in
6.13 is a promise related to his status as a father, the promise that he will
be blessed and multiplied. It can be said that Levi pays a tithe to
Melchizedek because he was in the loins of his father (7.10). Conversely,
Melchizedek is the one who does not share the same genealogy as that of
the priests (7.6). In fact, there is no mention of the ancestry of this King
of Righteousness and King of Peace, leading the author to conclude that
Melchizedek has no mother, no father, and no genealogy (Heb. 7.3).
In the author’s reading of Genesis 14, ancestry contributes to the
greatness of Melchizedek over the Levitical priests. The Levites have
the great honor of claiming Abraham the patriarch – the one to whom
God made his enduring promise – as their father. This great honor is a
detriment, however, in their ‘meeting’ with Melchizedek. As the sons of
Abraham, residing in the loins of their father, they play the same role that
he does in the story, namely, the position of the inferior one. The
Levitical priests take the place of inferiority – as evidenced by their act
of paying the tithe and by being blessed – because they, as descendants,
participate in the actions of their father Abraham.
The fact that Melchizedek blessed Abraham while Abraham gave
Melchizedek a tithe (Heb. 7.2, 6) demonstrates that Melchizedek is
superior to Abraham (7.7). And since Levi is a participant in that bless-
ing (as Abraham’s progeny; cf. 6.13), he is likewise a participant in his
father’s giving of a tithe (7.9–10).
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3. ‘My Son, You Are Priest’ 121
41 1QS 9.11. James H. Charlesworth et al. (eds), Rule of the Community and
Related Documents (vol. 1 of The Dead Sea Scrolls: Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek
Texts with English Translations; PTSDSSP, 1; Tübingen: J. C. B. Mohr, 1994), p.40.
42 T. Jud. 21.1-5. See Mof¿tt’s description of these texts in ‘Jesus the High
Priest’, p.198.
43 The adjective ʸÉÁĕÅ¾Ë also carries the negative connotation of being external,
impermanent, and corruptible. Harold Attridge cites evidence from Paul (Rom. 7.14;
1 Cor. 3.1; 2 Cor. 3.3), Ps. Democritus (C,7 [FVS II.228.25]), Sib. Or. (frg. 1.1), and
Philo (Sacr. 63) for these connotations of the term (Hebrews, p.202).
44 Mof¿tt argues that the nulli¿cation of the law means that it does not apply to
Jesus because he is in heaven (‘Jesus the High Priest’, p.229). Other interpreters
understand this phrase to indicate that the law has been abrogated presently on earth
(Attridge, Hebrews, p.203). In either case, it seems that Jesus’ lineage outside the
line of Levi keeps him outside of a system that is not the ultimate reality, whether or
not it continues to function on earth.
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3. ‘My Son, You Are Priest’ 123
Whereas the law appoints to the priesthood men, the word of the oath
that came after the law (i.e., spoken not to Moses but to David’s heir)
appoints a Son. The other priests are, of course, sons, namely sons of
Abraham and Levi as the author has just belabored. Similarly, this Son is
also an ÓÅ¿ÉÑÈÇË, as the author has boldly proclaimed in chs. 2 and 4. To
state the contrast in this way – a Son vs. men – highlights that Jesus is a
Son in a way the other high priests are not.
In Hebrews, as stated, Jesus’ status as Son is a complicated one. As I
have argued, his identity as Son of God puts him outside the line of Levi
in a way foreshadowed by the character of Melchizedek in the story of
Genesis 14. At the same time, Jesus is also a son of Judah, putting him
inside the lineage of the addressee of the oath of Ps. 109.4. These two
sonships create a logical problem. Is he inside the line of Abraham or
not? The author, in my opinion, plays upon Jesus’ dual sonship as Son of
God and son of man – so fully developed and articulated in the ¿rst two
chapters – in his reference to Jesus as the Son whom the oath appoints
in 7.28.
The word of the oath appoints a son who has been perfected forever
(7.28). In other words, in order for Jesus to be the rightful recipient of
this oath, he had to remain forever and he had to be a son. Mof¿tt’s
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124 You Are My Son
arguments for the necessity of Jesus’ resurrected life for his priesthood
provide an instructive and helpful parallel. In order to be high priest in
the order of Melchizedek, in order for the word of the oath to apply
to him, he argues, Jesus must possess eternal, abiding, forever life.45
Similarly, in order for him to be high priest in the order of Melchizedek,
in order for the oath to apply to him, he must be a son – a son of Judah to
whom the oath is spoken and a Son of God who stands outside the
Levitical line. Jesus stands outside the Levitical order and inside the
Melchizedekian one because he is God’s son, whom God made to be a
son of man. He could not be this ¿nal high priest were he not this Son.
A. Suffering
Brief references to the Son’s suffering and priesthood in chs. 2 and 4 lay
the groundwork for one of the most dramatic portrayals of Christ’s
humanity in ch. 5,46 where the author of Hebrews asserts again that Jesus’
humanity and death – willed by God his Father – work toward his
installment as high priest. As mentioned, the close of ch. 2 portrays Jesus
participating in the human condition, including suffering and death.
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3. ‘My Son, You Are Priest’ 125
Similarly, right after the declaration of Jesus’ priestly role (2.17), the
author asserts that he suffered in the midst of temptation. In other words,
in that which he suffered, he was being tested.47 Because of the con-
nection between suffering and testing in 2.18, and because it is God who
submits his Son to suffering (2.10), it is best to view God as the agent of
ȼÀɸʿ¼ĕË as well.48 God tests Jesus’ obedience in regard to death, as he
does with Abraham in 11.17, by presenting him with the opportunity to
experience death. Consequently, because he was tested by God his Father
and obeyed by experiencing the fullness of humanity in death, he is the
great high priest that he is.
A similar theme appears when the author returns to his discussion of
the priesthood at the end of ch. 4. The second statement about their great
high priest is that he has been tested in every way (ȼȼÀɸÊÄñÅÇÅ »ò
Á¸ÌÛ ÈÚÅ̸, 4.15). This portrayal of Jesus the high priest evokes his
participation in every aspect of humanity (2.17), including the testing
experienced in suffering (2.18). Because his testing is related to what he
suffered (2.18), and his suffering culminates in his human experience of
death (2.9), the range of his testing encompasses the audience’s tempta-
tions and extends even farther. The difference between his testing and
theirs is that he has faced the test of death.49 His true sympathy for them
arises from his total human journey.50 The great high priest to whom the
author and his audience appeal is able to sympathize (ÊÍÄȸ¿ñÑ) with
their weaknesses, not because he himself is weak, but because he is
strong. He was tested in the full range of human experience, including
death, yet he did not succumb to sin. In other words, his experience of
human nature – taking on Àesh and blood and dying – allowed him to
become the merciful high priest.
47 So also Attridge, ‘[Hebrews] refers to the fact that Christ in his suffering was
tested’ (Hebrews, p.96).
48 Koester, Hebrews, p.242.
49 According to the author, his audience has not yet faced this particular test
(1.4).
50 The other priests, on the other hand, moderate (ļÌÉÀÇȸ¿ñÑ) toward those
who are ignorant and deceived. In literature contemporary with Hebrews (Attridge
lists Philo, Leg. all. 3.129, 132-34; Spec. leg. 3.96; Plutarch, Frat. amor. 18 (489C);
Coh. ir. 10 (458C); Dionysius of Halicarnassus, Ant. rom. 8.61; Ep. Arist. 256;
Josephus, Ant. 12.3.2 §128, [Hebrews, p.143]), ļÌÉÀÇȸ¿ñÑ is typically used as
an indication of moderating the emotion of anger. The comparison indicates a
difference of degree between human priests and Christ in their compassion. Christ
does not just moderate his feeling toward those who are ignorant – he actively
sympathizes with them (so also Attridge, Hebrews, pp.143–4).
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126 You Are My Son
Verse 7 locates the actions of Christ and God that follow in ‘the
days of his Àesh’.51 This phrase refers to the time when Jesus participated
with humanity in Àesh and blood (2.14). In this state of humility, Jesus
offers up prayers and supplications to God, the One who has the power
to save him from death (ÈÉġË ÌġÅ »ÍÅÛļÅÇÅ Êň½¼ÀÅ ¸ĤÌġÅ ëÁ ¿¸ÅÚÌÇÍ).
Jesus’ attitude is very similar to that which he displayed in ch. 2: he
places his trust in God (as made evident by continuing to direct his
requests to God). Nevertheless, a striking difference exists between
Jesus’ attitude here and in ch. 2. There, he was singing praises to God
and proclaiming his trust (2.12-13). Here, he is offering up his requests
ļÌÛ Á¸ÉͺýË ĊÊÏÍÉÜË Á¸Ė »¸ÁÉįÑÅ.52 While contemporary readers may
interpret this as vulnerability or even weakness, for Jewish readers of the
¿rst century the picture of Jesus in v. 7 is of a person praying boldly and
sincerely.53
God honored this honest attitude of trust: Jesus was heard because of
his reverence.54 As those who know the message of salvation (2.3-4), the
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3. ‘My Son, You Are Priest’ 127
audience is aware that God did certainly rescue him from death (13.20).
At the same time, they are also aware that God did not rescue him before
death. The author has set up a classical question of theodicy. If God is
powerful and good, will he not prevent death from happening, especially
to his Son?55 Verse 8 is the author’s way of redirecting this expectation.
Verse 8 begins with Á¸ĕÈ¼É ĵÅ ÍĎĠË: ‘even though he was a son’, and
continues, ‘he learned obedience from what he suffered’. The author’s
use of ÍĎĠË here must be interpreted in light of the ÍĎĠË of 5.5. Jesus is not
just a son, but is God’s own Son. Only in this way does the exceptional
tone of the ¿rst phrase of v. 8 make sense. Even though Jesus was God’s
own Son who reÀected God’s glory, was the imprint of God’s being,
participated with God in creation, and would reign with God forever –
even though this was all true – through what he suffered he learned what
it meant to obey his Father.56
Jesus’ experiences of humanity and death culminate in him being
perfected (̼¼ÀÑ¿¼ĖË). In line with the passive surveyed in previous
sections, the passive employed here suggests that God is the one who
perfected Jesus. Because Jesus obeyed the one to whom he was praying,
he was perfected by him. Moreover, since he experienced these things as
God’s Son, the implication is that God as his Father used suffering and
death to perfect him.
Parallel to the assertion of Jesus’ perfection is a declaration of his
priesthood. Having learned ¿lial obedience through what he suffered, he
was appointed high priest by God according to the order of Melchizedek
(ÈÉÇʸºÇɼͿ¼ĖË ĨÈĠ ÌÇı ¿¼Çı ÒÉÏÀ¼É¼İË Á¸ÌÛ ÌüÅ ÌÚÆÀÅ ¼ÂÏÀÊñ»¼Á).
Jesus’ appointment as high priest is a result of his incarnation, death, and
resurrection, in other words the process by which he becomes perfect.
Perfection, priesthood, and sonship coalesce again in Heb. 7.28 and
point to Jesus’ experiences as God’s Son that shaped his priesthood.
There, the author argues that the law appoints men who have weakness,
whereas the word of the oath appoints a Son who has been perfected.57
His ‘having been perfected’ invokes the aforementioned narrative of
Jesus’ perfection. The author’s discussion of Jesus’ perfecting in chs. 2
and 5 suggests that the suffering of Jesus was not limited to but culmi-
nated in death.
The author interrupts his discussion of the perfecting of Jesus in the
Melchizedekian priesthood (5.9; 7.28) and argues that perfection results
from training (5.11-14). Because suffering is the means through which
perfection comes, the law of the Levitical priesthood provides no avenue
toward perfection for the priest himself (cf. 7.19). On the other hand,
Jesus is perfect because he completed God’s call for him to be a priest
who offered himself. Jesus has obediently endured to the end – to death
itself – the suffering to which his God appointed him (5.8; 12.2). By
taking on this role, Jesus learned to obey God through what he suffered,
and through his ultimate act of obedience became the perfected one.
Jesus’ obedient trust that he demonstrated while being perfected by his
Father allows him to meet the requirements for priesthood.58
B. Exaltation
Jesus becomes quali¿ed for the priesthood because of the suffering he
experiences that was willed by his Father. To be the ultimate and eternal
high priest, however, he must also receive the reward that comes from
his Father: the inherited blessing of exaltation.
This particular ¿lial distinction from the other high priests appears in
the author’s ¿rst statement about their ‘great high priest’, namely, that
Jesus has passed through the heavens (4.14). This declaration recalls the
exalted place Jesus has taken as God’s Son (1.3, 13; 2.8). The Levitical
priests serve on earth (8.5; 9.6-10), but Jesus has passed through the
heavens (4.14; 7.26), gone into the inner sanctum of God’s dwelling
place (6.20), and taken his seat on the right hand of God (1.3, 13; 8.1;
10.12), serving before God’s very face (8.1; 9.24). The conclusion to ch.
7 reiterates the same idea. By referring to Jesus as the one who has been
perfected (Heb. 7.28), in addition to referring to the process that quali¿ed
him to be high priest, the author also evokes the status he holds in his
perfection, his status in God’s presence as God’s heir of all things. His
status as God’s perfected and exalted heir places the administration of his
priesthood in the very presence of God in heaven. As the perfected Son
of God, he administers his priestly duties at the throne of God. In other
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3. ‘My Son, You Are Priest’ 129
where he serves as priest and reigns as Son awaiting the ultimate sub-
jection of his rightful inheritance, now won back from the control of
death and the Devil.62
In 4.14 ÍĎĠË, even ÍĎĠË ÌÇı ¿¼Çı, is a multidimensional title. The Son
of God is the one who became a son of man, experienced death, and
subsequently took his place as God’s heir. Jesus is perfected as priest
through the suffering and exaltation willed by his Father. That which
Jesus experiences as God’s Son (becoming human, dying, and being
made perfect as God’s heir) allows him to be the high priest who can
both sympathize with humanity and perform his priestly duties in God’s
presence forever. Because he is the Son who has become the great high
priest, he has experienced every aspect of the human condition and can
sympathize. Even more impressive, he can do so from the powerful
position of God’s right hand.
The sovereign place that belongs to Jesus as Son where he sits as high
priest elucidates a symbiotic element of the relationship between Jesus’
¿lial and priestly identities. Jesus’ priesthood is possible because of what
he experiences as God’s Son, but it is also true that his priestly acts are
the means by which he secures his inheritance, a promised inheritance of
all things, which includes God’s many sons and daughters. His priestly
service supports the attainment of his inheritance in two ways. First, his
priestly offering makes possible his brothers’ and sisters’ inheritance,
namely eternal salvation. Second, through his priestly intercession he
aids his brothers and sisters so that they can attain their inheritance. By
establishing the possibility of salvation and leading his brothers and
sisters into their inherited place in God’s household, he secures the
human portion of his own inheritance.
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3. ‘My Son, You Are Priest’ 131
In great contrast to the offerings that are not able to cleanse the
conscience, the priestly service that Christ renders in which he offers his
own blood in the greater and more perfect tent affects precisely this
internal puri¿cation (9.14). The author consequently draws a close con-
nection between Jesus’ priestly offering and the New Covenant. Because
Jesus puri¿es the conscience, he brings about the covenant of which
Jeremiah spoke. Now, in addition to God forgetting sins, God can also
inscribe his laws on the inner parts of his people (10.16-17).
The author portrays this thorough removal of sin as an inheritance.
Hebrews 9.15-17, in discussing the effectiveness of a covenant/testa-
ment66 makes a vital contribution to this theme. God’s will to grant the
inheritance of eternal salvation was not available until a death occurred
(9.15). In other words, while the testator lives, the covenant is not in
force (ĊÊÏį¼À). The death that made this salvation possible is the death of
Jesus because it resulted in the redemption of the transgressions com-
mitted under the ¿rst covenant. Just as his death released humanity from
the power of the devil (2.14), so also it released humanity from the chains
of transgression. When he has dealt with sin, those called by God are
able to receive the promise of their eternal inheritance (ÌüÅ ëȸºº¼Âĕ¸Å
ÌýË ¸ĊÑÅĕÇÍ Á¾ÉÇÅÇÄĕ¸Ë, 9.15), or in the words of 5.8, to receive their
eternal salvation. The author has now made clear that the inheritance to
which they look forward is a salvation from both death and sin.
Salvation in Hebrews, however, is not only a negative concept, a
salvation ‘from’, but also a salvation ‘for’. At the close of ch. 9, the
author says that Christ was offered once to remove the sins of many.
Having done so, he will appear a second time to bring salvation to those
who are eagerly awaiting him (9.28). He removed sin; therefore, he can
now bring salvation. Hence, those who will inherit salvation are both
delivered from the consequences of death and sin and anticipate partici-
pation in the presence of God.
As the author shows how Jesus’ priesthood is different from that
prescribed by the law, the author emphasizes that he brings a better hope
that allows nearness to God (7.19). It is Jesus, as the abiding priest who
never dies, who is able to save unto the utmost67 those who approach God
66 Attridge highlights this shift in meaning and the reason for it: ‘[t]he notion of
the inheritance secured by Christ’s death leads to a general principle about what a
»À¸¿ûÁ¾ requires’ (Hebrews, p.255).
67 The phrase ¼ĊË Ìġ ȸÅ̼ÂñË can indicate both qualitative and quantitative
completeness. Both meanings capture what the author portrays about salvation
through Jesus (Attridge, Hebrews, p.210; Koester, Hebrews, p.365; O’Brien,
Hebrews, p.274).
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3. ‘My Son, You Are Priest’ 133
through him (7.25). His blood and Àesh allow entrance to the holy place
inside the veil (10.19). What provides the hope is God’s oath issued to
the inheritors of the promises (6.17). To be with God is their inheritance
of salvation.
By establishing his brothers’ and sisters’ eternal salvation in God’s
presence, Jesus opens the door for the ¿nal consummation of his own
inheritance.68 The author describes the destination toward which the
people of God are moving as glory (2.10), God’s house (3.6), and Mount
Zion where God dwells (12.22-24) – all of which connect their salvation
with entrance into the presence of God. The author also shows that in
these places Jesus reigns over those who dwell there:69 he is the leader
of those who are being led into glory (2.10), he is set over the house of
God (3.6), and he is the mediator who allows entrance to the mountain
(12.24). Because their salvation consists in being cleansed from sin and
obtaining entrance into the presence of God, Jesus’ provision of this
salvation brings God’s many children into God’s sovereignty and hence
under his authority as well. This brief sketch of Hebrews’ soteriology
shows that when humanity comes into its inheritance of salvation, Jesus
takes possession of his own inheritance.
B. Intercession
The audience of Hebrews, however, has not yet attained their inheritance
of salvation; they do not yet dwell in the presence of God. Therefore, in
order to attain his own inheritance, Jesus aids his brothers and sisters on
their journey to God through his priestly intercession. The word for
intercession occurs only once (7.25), but the theme of Jesus’ continued
priestly service on behalf of his brothers and sisters ¿gures prominently
throughout Hebrews.
This aspect of his priestly ministry ¿rst appears after the author’s
initial designation of Jesus as high priest (2.17-18). The suffering he
experienced associated with his testing allows him to give aid (¹Ç¾¿ýʸÀ)
to his brothers and sisters who are also tested so that they will not give
70 Attridge also concludes that ‘the word constitutes a “promise” for Christians
because of the status it accords Christ as heavenly intercessor and “forerunner”…
The analogy established between Christ and the anchor of hope is certainly inten-
tional and signi¿cant’ (Hebrews, pp.182, 184). Similarly Johnson states: ‘[t]hat his
present hearers have this encouragement “safe and sure” is certainly linked not only
to God’s speech but also to God’s action in exalting Jesus to his right hand as Lord’
(Hebrews, p.171).
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3. ‘My Son, You Are Priest’ 135
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3. ‘My Son, You Are Priest’ 137
the author’s last attribution of the title Ď¼É¼įË to Jesus, he is the great
priest who provides access to God’s holy place by his blood and through
his Àesh. They now can boldly go inside the veil because their high priest
reigns over God’s house (10.21; cf. 3.6). Through his priestly work, they
are sancti¿ed members of this household and heirs of God. In ch. 10, the
audience hears – from Jesus himself – his intention to offer himself up.
This is an indispensable passage for describing God’s will that his Son
suffer so that he might secure the inheritance of God’s many children and
thereby secure his own inheritance of all things.
VII. Conclusion
1
75 Lidgett, Sonship and Salvation, p.34.
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138 You Are My Son
unlike the previous high priests who had to offer sacri¿ces for them-
selves and for others often, Jesus offered the sacri¿ce of himself once
(7.27). In Hebrews 9 and 10 also, Jesus’ priestly sacri¿ce for sins (1.3)
that he offers to God is himself (9.14, 25). This consists of offering his
own blood (9.12; 10.19; 12.24; 13.12) and his own Àesh (10.19). Jesus
accomplishes sancti¿cation by offering the body he has taken on (10.10,
14). The anomaly in his situation is that Jesus meets the requirement for
the priesthood in unexpected ways. He becomes human, and then he
offers himself as a sacri¿ce. The process by which he is perfected is the
same process by which he is quali¿ed to become a high priest. Jesus
endures this process as a faithful and obedient Son because this is the
path of suffering his Father willed for him.
Having been perfected, Jesus takes his place at the right hand of God.
There, he performs his priestly ministry in God’s presence, in the real
tabernacle not built by hands (9.11). As priest, he is higher than the
heavens and sits in this celestial position as God’s royal Son. He is able
to enact his priestly service in the very throne room of God in heaven
because this is the place where he has been invited to sit by God his
Father. He has access to God and this makes his priestly service exceed-
ingly better than that of any previous high priest.
Finally, Jesus’ priestly acts are the way in which he wins his inheri-
tance of God’s many sons and daughters. The author correlates Jesus’
priesthood and inheritance in two ways. First, his priesthood secures the
eternal inheritance of salvation for God’s many sons and daughters. The
presentation of his body to God sancti¿es them, and establishes their
salvation from sin and into God’s presence. In other words, he makes the
New Covenant, wherein their sins are forgiven and they are drawn into
the people and family of God, a reality. Second, his intercession before
the face of God aids them on their journey. In this realm, he is the only
priest who is able to intercede forever so that he can save forever all
those who are approaching God through him, thereby opening the way
for his ¿nal eternal possession of all things.
As the Son of God in the line of Melchizedek, Jesus is appointed to
the priesthood as a Son by his Father. He is the Son who has suffered in
the act of giving himself in death and thereby has become perfected. By
portraying the suffering Jesus experiences in preparation for his priest-
hood as the will of God his Father, the author displays the character of
both the Son and the Father. He continues to paint Jesus as the ultimate
example of an obedient and faithful Son. The previous chapter sought to
show the ways in which the author depicted the humble and faithful
character of Jesus in his willingness to become human and to trust God
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3. ‘My Son, You Are Priest’ 139
even to the point of death. The author continues to refer to these actions
throughout the letter as he discusses the way in which Jesus is perfected
and is quali¿ed to serve as high priest. When he is established as high
priest, he also reigns sovereignly over those whose inheritance of salva-
tion he has established. God his Father prepared him for the priesthood
through suffering so that he might establish the inheritance of salvation
for many others and subsequently attain his own inheritance of all things.
Jesus could not be the ultimate heir were he not to secure his inheritance
in his role as high priest, and Jesus would not have been high priest were
it not for the call, suffering, and exaltation he experienced in relationship
with God his Father.
The perfecting of Jesus which results in his placement as God’s heir
and priest is also one important way the author constructs the nature of
God as Father. When the author describes these events, he portrays the
character of Jesus in response to actions of God. When the author
describes the suffering of Jesus – that he takes on a human body and dies
– God is the One who wills this process. In addition to portraying God as
a Father who grants to his Son an unparalleled inheritance, the author
shows that God the Father uses suffering to perfect even his ¿rstborn Son
so that he might be the perfect heir and high priest.
If the Father used suffering to perfect even his sinless Son, the
audience should expect no less in their interactions with God. Consider-
ing Jesus’ perfecting as the action of God his Father reveals the way in
which the author lays the groundwork for his exhortation in ch. 12 to
which I turn in the following chapter. The dynamics of God’s paternal
relationship with Jesus show the audience the kind of children they
should be in light of the Father to whom they belong.
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Chapter 4
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4. ‘My Son’: The Assembly of the Firstborn 141
endure the discipline that they are presently experiencing. God declares
them to be his children and their experience of dif¿culties and hope,
resembling those of Jesus the Son, con¿rms that they all share the same
Father.
Unlike Jesus, however, they have not yet ¿nished the race. The third
section of the chapter, therefore, analyzes the admonitions and warnings
that follow the citation and interpretation of Prov. 3.11-12. The author
presents ways they can endure their ¿lial training, and delineates atti-
tudes they should avoid so as not to forfeit the race of faith they are
running (12.1-2). The warnings the author has issued throughout the
letter1 culminate in the author’s appeal to the story of Esau. Through it,
the author shows the great consequences they would face if they squan-
dered their birthright and consequently lost their promised inheritance.
Despite their intensity, these admonitions and warnings are not the
author’s ¿nal word. The fourth section of the chapter turns to the assur-
ances the author issues at the close of his sermon concerning the blessed
future awaiting his congregation. First, the author follows the warning
about Esau with a glimpse of the inheritance that awaits his readers as
ÍĎÇĕ of God. He locates his audience at the edge of the mountain of God
at the top of which the ÈÉÑÌÇÌĠÁÇÀ are celebrating. In light of that which
lies ahead, the author exhorts them not to resist God who is speaking. By
adhering to the one who speaks to them in his Son (ëÅ ÍĎŊ, 1.2), they will
continue to have before them the model of their own ¿lial relationship
with God and the reward that comes to those who abide in it.
His next assurance is even grander. By keeping their eyes focused and
their ears attuned to the familial relationship between God and Jesus,
they will also have before them the reality of Jesus’ status as the reigning
heir of all things.2 They have nothing to fear because in addition to the
fact that God is their helper (13.6), God is also the One who raised Jesus
1 The author has asserted that his audience should pay attention to what they
have heard, lest they drift away (2.1). They should not harden their hearts like the
wilderness generation (3.8–4.11). The author warns that it is impossible to renew to
repentance those who fall away (6.6). Moreover, if his audience continues willfully
sinning, he asserts that there will no longer remain a sacri¿ce for their sins (10.26).
2 My argument that Jesus provides both the model and the means for the audi-
ence to be the children of God ¿nds support in the writings of the early Church
Fathers. Peter Widdicombe concludes that, for Origen, ‘[t]he Father–Son relation is
the means by which creation is brought into being and it is also both the means and
the model for the subsequent restoration of that creation to the knowledge of God, a
restoration that entails our coming to sonship and the knowledge of God as Father’
(The Fatherhood of God from Origen to Athanasius [Oxford Theological Mono-
graphs; Oxford: Clarendon, 1994], p.63.
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142 You Are My Son
from the dead and established him as Lord of all (13.20). Jesus’ status as
the reigning, glorious Lord and heir – a status promised by his Father and
secured by Jesus’ sacri¿cial death, victory over death, and living inter-
cession – balances the author’s warnings. The author empowers them to
run boldly toward their inheritance with the knowledge that they are a
part of that inheritance of Jesus Christ, the reigning Son of God.
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4. ‘My Son’: The Assembly of the Firstborn 143
same time, the plural term ‘promises’ (ëȸºº¼Âĕ¸À) suggests that not just
the promise of the priesthood is in view, but also the promise of sonship
(Heb. 1.5; 5.5), the fountainhead from which the priestly promise springs.
The New Covenant has four distinguishing features, each of which
resonates with the status of the members’ of the New Covenant as chil-
dren and heirs of God. First, this is an internal covenant in which God
places his laws into the minds of the covenant participants and writes
them upon their hearts (Heb. 8.10). Earlier in this chapter of Jeremiah
from which the quotation comes, the author describes the one who has
God’s words in him as God’s beloved son and delightful child (Jer. 38.20
LXX). Hence, Jeremiah establishes a connection between the internal
impartation of God’s law and the status of being God’s child. Second,
this covenant establishes God as the God of these people and they as his
people. The statement Á¸Ė ìÊÇĸÀ ¸ĤÌÇėË ¼ĊË ¿¼ĠÅ, Á¸Ė ¸ĤÌÇĖ ìÊÇÅ̸ĕ ÄÇÀ ¼ĊË
¸ĠÅ is a common covenant formula appearing throughout Jeremiah
(7.23; 11.4; 24.7; 38.1; 39.38) and other prophets (Zech. 8.8; Ezek. 11.20;
14.11; 36.28; 37.23; cf. Jub. 1.24-25). Nevertheless, its appearance
in Hebrews resonates clearly with God’s early statement to Jesus in
Heb. 1.5.
The close similarity suggests the possibility that the same relationship
pertains between God and his covenant people as that which exists
between God and Jesus: the relationship of father and child. This is
supported by the fact that earlier in Jeremiah 38 LXX God expresses
precisely this relationship with his New Covenant people, saying ‘I
became a Father to Israel and Ephraim is my ¿rstborn’ (38.9), and
‘Ephraim is my beloved son, a child to delight in; because, since my
words are in him, I will remember him with remembrance’ (38.20).
Third, this covenant eliminates the need for introduction to God because
best to view the promises of 8.6 as, primarily, God’s promise to Christ that he would
be a priest forever in the order of Melchizedek (contra Paul Ellingworth, who sug-
gests that Ps. 110.4 cannot be in view because ‘that stage of the argument is now
past’ [(Hebrews, p.411]). It is true that the author does not again refer to Melchi-
zedek, but Ellingworth’s conclusion is without warrant in view of the fact that
Christ’s priesthood is a major focus of chs. 9–10, before the second citation of
Jeremiah 38 (Heb. 10.16-17).
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144 You Are My Son
everyone, from the least to the greatest, will know God (Jer. 38.34; Heb.
8.11). The comprehensiveness of the extent of this knowledge – God is
known by all (ÈÚÅ̼Ë) – invokes the inheritance of Jesus by which he
brings all things, including all people, under his domain and therefore the
domain of God. Finally, this covenant issues forth in God’s mercy and
eternal forgetfulness of the sins of the covenant members (Heb. 8.12). In
the following chapters, the author will explicate how Jesus’ experiences
as God’s Son result in forgiveness for God’s many sons and daughters.
For those attuned to the connections within the letter and/or the connec-
tions within the larger context of Jeremiah 38, the New Covenant citation
solidi¿es the audience’s status as children of God.
A. The Proverb
Hebrews 12.4-11 centers on a citation from Proverbs 3. These verses8
are one of two places in Israel’s scriptures where the discipline of God
6 Among the scriptures of Israel, Exod. 4.22-23; Deut. 32.6; Isa. 63.16; 64.8;
Jer. 3.19; 31.9; Hos. 11.1-3, and Mal. 2.10 declare the paternal/¿lial relationship
between God and Israel most explicitly.
7 The New Testament documents are much more proli¿c in their use of Father-
language for God than in Israel’s scriptures. Salient examples include Jesus’
teaching on prayer (Mt. 6.9; Lk. 11.2) and the greetings in the Pauline letters (Rom.
1.7; 1 Cor. 1.3; 2 Cor. 1.2-3; Gal. 1.1; Eph. 1.2; Phil. 1.2; Col. 1.2; 1 Thess. 1.1;
2 Thess. 1.2; 1 Tim. 1.2; 2 Tim. 1.2; Phlm. 3).
8 This proverb, like this section of the epistle, begins with an exhortation against
forgetting (Prov. 3.1; Heb. 12.5 ëÈÀ¸ſÚÅÇĸÀ). In addition, both include a promise
of peace (Prov. 3.2, 17, 23; Heb. 12.11) and healing (Prov. 3.8, 22; Heb. 12.13) to
those who heed the instruction given. Other similarities between this chapter of
Proverbs and the letter as a whole include examples of trust (ȼÈÇÀ¿ļË) in God’s
wisdom (Prov. 3.5, 23) and in God (Heb. 2.13); drawing near (뺺ĕ½Ñ) to wisdom
(Prov. 3.15) and to God (Heb. 7.19); the steadfastness (ÒÊθÂûË) of wisdom (Prov.
3.18) and the anchor of hope (Heb. 6.19); the inheritance of glory that comes to the
wise (Prov. 3.35) and to those whom God is saving (Heb. 1.14; 2.10). These
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4. ‘My Son’: The Assembly of the Firstborn 145
similarities show the resonance of the Epistle with much of Proverbs 3, the primary
difference being that this section of Hebrews lacks the emphasis on the wisdom of
God—although, as discussed, the author uses language resonant with wisdom litera-
ture in his discussion of the Son in Hebrews 1 (see above, pp.21–24).
9 The other instance is Deut. 8.5: ‘Á¸Ė ºÅļÊþ Ìĉ Á¸É»ĕß ĞÌÀ ĸË ¼ċ ÌÀË È¸À»¼įʸÀ
ÓÅ¿ÉÑÈÇË ÌġÅ ÍĎĠÅ ¸ĤÌÇı ÇĩÌÑË ÁįÉÀÇË ĝ ¿¼ĠË ÊÇÍ È¸À»¼įʼÀ ʼ’ (And you will know in
your heart that as a certain man disciplines his son so also the Lord your God will
discipline you). This verse from Deuteronomy does not ¿t as well within the author’s
argument for two primary reasons. First, the lack of the vocative ÍĎñ makes it less
direct and also less familial. In addition, it casts God’s discipline as that which will
happen in the future, whereas Proverbs speaks of God’s discipline as a present
reality for those in God’s family. As the following discussion will show, the audi-
ence of Hebrews is not awaiting God’s discipline, but must endure it in the present.
These are the only two verses that juxtapose God’s paternal character with his use
of ȸÀ»¼ĕ¸. Second Samuel 7.14 includes the same idea with different terminology.
God promises that he will punish (ëÂñºÆÑ ¸ĤÌġÅ ëÅ ģÚ¹»ÑЪ ÒÅ»ÉľÅ) the heir of David
if he is unjust.
10 To which the author of Hebrews appeals (Heb. 12.9-10). See also Deut. 8.5;
21.18; Prov. 13.24; 19.18; 23.13; 29.17; Wis. 11.10; Sir. 7.23; 30.2, 13; Seneca, Ben.
5.5.2-3; 24.1-2.
11 The same assertion appears in the Psalms of Solomon: ‘He will warn the
righteous as a beloved Son, and his discipline is as of the ¿rstborn’ (Ps. Sol. 13.9),
and ‘your discipline on us is as on a ¿rstborn only son to turn away an obedient soul
from obtuse ignorance’ (Ps. Sol. 18.4). God’s discipline of his people is also evident
in Deuteronomy. Their experiences in the wilderness were God’s tests to see
whether or not they would keep his commandments. Similarly, they needed to know
that once they went into the land, God would discipline them as any father would
(Deut. 8.2-5). Wisdom of Solomon reiterates this picture of God’s interactions with
this generation. ‘For when they were tested, even though being disciplined in mercy,
they knew how the ungodly, being judged with anger were being tortured. For on the
other hand, these you tested warning as a father, but those you examined, condemn-
ing as a severe king’ (Wis. 11.9-10). Josephus also interprets God’s discipline of the
wilderness generation as evidence of God’s paternal relationship with them: ‘Moses
came now boldly to the multitude, and informed them that God was moved at their
abuse of him, and would inÀict punishment upon them, not indeed such as they
deserved for their sins, but such as parents inÀict on their children, in order to their
correction’ (Ant. 3.311 [Whiston]).
The idea of God’s paternal discipline appears also in 2 Baruch where the author
asserts that which the Jews of his time are experiencing (dated to 100 CE) is the
impartial judgment of God: ‘[t]herefore, he did not spare his own sons ¿rst, because
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146 You Are My Son
he afÀicted them as his enemies because they sinned. Therefore, they were once
punished, that they might be forgiven’ (2 Bar. 13.9-10, Klijn). Similarly in the Dead
Sea Scrolls, a prayer of the group asserts Israel’s status as God’s son and God’s
correction that comes along with being his child (‘You have called Israel “My son,
my ¿rstborn” [Exod. 4.22], and You have chastened us as a man chastens his child’
(4Q504 3.5-7 [Wise]).
Philo reÀects on God’s discipline of the wilderness generation from Deuteronomy
8 and Solomon’s general admonishment about God’s discipline of his people from
Proverbs. Philo concludes: ‘[s]o we see that reproaching and admonition are counted
so excellent a thing, that they turn our acknowledgement of God into kinship with
Him, for what relation can be closer than that of a father to a son, or a son to a
father?’ (Congr. 177 [Colson and Whitaker, LCL]; See also Opif. 156 where God the
Father of all ¿ttingly punishes Eve and the serpent).
The educative role of the divine Father also appears in non-Jewish Greco-Roman
literature. In De providentia, Seneca asserts that God, ‘the all-glorious parent, being
no mild taskmaster of virtues, rears, as strict fathers do, with much severity’, and
also ‘[t]hose whom God approves, whom God loves, he toughens, examines, and
exercised’ (1.5 [Basore]). About Heracles, Epictetus notes that as Zeus’s own son,
he ‘accepted orders, toiled, and exercises’ (Diatr. 3.26.31). Hence, the author of
Hebrews’ assertion that God disciplines his children is an expected description of
what God, as a Father, properly does.
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4. ‘My Son’: The Assembly of the Firstborn 147
12 The author uses ÂñºÑ in some form more than any other word to introduce
scriptural citations as speech (Heb. 1.5, 6, 7, 13; 2.6, 12; 3.7; 4.3, 7; 5.6; 6.14; 7.21;
8.8, 9; 9.20; 10.5, 30; 12.5, 26, 31; 13.5). ¸ÂñÑ is used twice (5.5; 11.18).
¸ÉÌÍÉñÑ and ξÄĕ each appear once (7.17 and 8.5 respectively).
13 As stated previously, God speaks the citations in Heb. 1.5, 6, 7, 8-9, 10-12,
13; 3.9-11; 4.3, 5; 5.5, 7; 6.14; 7.17, 21; 8.5, 8-12; 10.30, 37-38; 11.18; 12.26; 13.5.
By way of comparison, Jesus speaks the scriptures in Heb. 2.12, 13 and 10.5-8. The
author highlights the Holy Spirit as the speaker in Heb. 3.7-11, 15; 4.4, 7; and 10.16-
17. Moses voices Heb. 9.20 and Heb. 12.21, and the author attributes the verse in
Heb. 2.6 to a nondescript ÌÀË. Finally, he puts Heb. 13.6 on the lips of himself and his
readers. This delineation shows that God speaks close to twice the citations (21) as
all the other speakers combined (13). The number of verses spoken also represents
the propensity of the author to present scriptural citations as God’s speech. God
speaks 30 of the verses in Hebrews, while the speeches of the other speakers add up
to 21 verses.
14 This is true even in ch. 1, where God is clearly the speaker (1.1), but in
the introductions to the citations the author does not mention ¿¼ĠË in 1.5, 6, 7, 8, 10,
or 13.
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148 You Are My Son
The second point in favor of reading this citation as the speech of God
is that it is introduced as a text that is spoken to the audience members as
sons and daughters. Since the author states that it is addressed to them as
sons, he implies that the one speaking this citation is their Father. Desig-
nating them in this way draws upon the ¿lial identity the author utilized
for his readers throughout the letter. Previous to this point, the author of
Hebrews depicts the audience as sons and daughters of God (2.10; 3.6).
Moreover, the ¿lial status of the addressees in relation to God is the
emphasis of the explanation that follows (Heb. 12.7, 9). Because the
letter consistently portrays them as the children of God, that strongly
suggests that God is the Father who is speaking to them.
One hurdle to the interpretation that God speaks these verses from
Proverbs is that the citation itself speaks about God in the third person
(the discipline of the Lord, when you are reproved by him, the Lord
disciplines, he whips every son whom he receives). On the other hand,
this poses no problem for the author in several previous instances. For
example, in the ¿rst chapter of Hebrews, this phenomenon occurs twice.
At Heb. 1.6, the author does not adapt the citation so that God says, ‘Let
all my angels worship’. Instead, God refers to himself as God when
he calls the angels, Óºº¼ÂÇÀ ¿¼Çı. Likewise in his speech to his Son in
v. 9, God does not say ‘I have anointed you’, but instead ‘your God has
anointed you’. The clearest example of this occurs in Heb. 10.30. There,
the author presents two different verses as the speech of God. First-
person speech appears in the former, but the verse uses third-person
speech to convey the latter. God speaks Deut. 32.36 (‘The Lord will
judge his people’) – which is in its context the word of Moses – right
after saying, ‘Judgment is mine; I will repay’. The evidence of these
citations suggests that the author has no dif¿culty with casting third-
person speech about God as the speech of God himself. Because this
scripture is spoken and because it is spoken to those who are designated
as children, it is most likely that God the Father speaks this citation to the
audience as his sons and daughters.15
15 Those who also view this as God’s speech include Günther Bornkamm,
‘Sonschaft und Leiden’, in Judentum, Urchristentum, Kirche: Festschrift für Joachim
Jeremias (Walter Eltester, ed.; BZNW, 26; Berlin: Töpelmann, 1960), pp.188–98
[196]); A. B. Davidson (The Epistle to the Hebrews [Handbooks for Bible Classes
and Private Students; Grand Rapids. Zondervan, 1950], p.136); Johnson (Hebrews,
p.320); Kistemaker (Hebrews, p.374); Koester (Hebrews, p.526); Lane (Hebrews,
p.2:420); J. C. McCullough (‘The Old Testament Quotations in Hebrews’, NTS 26
[1980], pp.363–79); Peterson (Hebrews and Perfection, p.173); and Weiss (Hebräer,
p.3:321).
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4. ‘My Son’: The Assembly of the Firstborn 149
Proverbs include only ÍĎñ before the command against taking lightly the
discipline of the Lord.17 The textual witness of Hebrews, however,
suggests that in his citation of Prov. 3.11 God calls the addressee ‘my
son’ with the addition of ÄÇÍ after ÍĎñ.18
Beginning with ÍĎñ ÄÇÍ gives to the whole citation a more personal
tone.19 To preface a command with ÍĎñ adds a more intimate dimension to
the command, and this intimacy is compounded by calling the addressee
my son. Moreover, the inclusion of this ¿rst-person pronoun puts
emphasis on the speaker. Beginning with this pronoun frames the entire
speech with the voice of God conveyed through ¿rst-person speech.20 In
addition to an increased presence of the speaker, the appearance of the
ÄÇÍ more emphatically suggests the speaker’s role as a Father, compared
with the presence of ÍĎñ alone. The addressee is not just any son, but
belongs to the speaker as son. The pronoun ÄÇÍ brings emphasis on
God’s role as the speaker of this citation and also on God’s role as the
Father of the addressees.
16 The presence of the pronominal suf¿x in the MT indicates that the author
of Hebrews could be citing from a Hebrew Vorlage (Attridge rejects this outright
[Hebrews, p.367]) or an unattested Greek textual variant that reÀects this Hebrew
reading.
17 The exceptions are mss 23, Clement of Alexandria, Chrysostom, and
Theodoret. Ellingworth suggests that these are assimilations to the text of Hebrews
(Hebrews, p.368).
18 Some mss of Hebrews eliminate the ÄÇÍ, including D* 81 614 630 and 1241s.
This elimination is best explained by an adjustment to the majority LXX reading.
Most commentators view the ÄÇÍ as an addition by the author (Attridge, Hebrews,
p.361; Delitzsch, Hebrews, p.2:312; Ellingworth, Hebrews, p.648; Lane, Hebrews,
2:420; Spicq, Hébreux, p.2:392; Steyn, Quest, p.338 n.73;Witherington, Hebrews,
James and Jude, p.330). This is supported by Philo’s citation of this verse. When he
quotes Prov. 3.11-12 in a discussion about bene¿cial afÀiction, he does not include
the גÇÍ (Congr. 177).
19 Delitzsch refers to the addition of ÄÇÍ as ‘more tender and mother-like’
(Hebrews, p.2:312). Lane (Hebrews, p.420), McCullough (‘Old Testament Cita-
tions’, p.320), Mitchell (Hebrews, p.271), and Spicq (Hebréux, p.2:392) also
highlight the personal tone supplied by this pronoun.
20 The author achieves a similar effect in 10.30 when ¿rst person speech
precedes and therefore sets the tone for how the third person speech about God is
heard as the speech of God himself.
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150 You Are My Son
21 The only difference is that in Heb. 12.5 the ÍĎĠË is in the vocative case.
22 Ellingworth, Hebrews, p.648. Attridge makes a similar remark (Hebrews,
p.361).
23 The author asserts that God is speaking to the audience in the very ¿rst verse
of the sermon (1.1), and God speaks about their fathers through the Holy Spirit in
3.9, and also God talks about his righteous one in 10.38, but it is not until 12.5 that
God addresses the audience directly.
24 As stated above, it is impossible to determine if the author added the ÄÇÍ or
was simply using a translation that more closely resembled the MT. Whatever the
case, I do not think the similarity between his quotation in 1.5 and 12.5 was lost on
him.
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4. ‘My Son’: The Assembly of the Firstborn 151
his children and himself as their Father. Just as he did with Jesus, God
makes this familial relationship a reality through his word – calling them
ÍĎñ ÄÇÍ – and through his act – receiving them. Hebrews 12.5-6 solidi¿es
the audience’s identity as the children of God as well as God’s initiative
in the establishment of his relationship with them.
25 This is the case in Prov. 4.1; 8.10; Acts 7.22; 22.3; 2 Tim. 3.16; Sir. 1.27;
50.27; Wis. 1.5; 3.11; Josephus, Vita 196, 359; Philo, Leg. 3.167, 244.
26 ¸À»¼ţ¸ is used this way in Prov. 5.12; 22.5; Lk. 23.16, 22; 1 Cor. 11.32;
2 Cor. 6.9; 1 Tim. 1.20; 2 Tim. 2.25; Sir. 33.25; Philo, Leg. 2.90.
27 Clayton Croy (Endurance in Suffering: Hebrews 12.1–13 in Its Rhetorical,
Religious, and Philosophical Context [SNTSMS, 98; Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1998], p.89), DeSilva (Perseverance in Gratitude, p.449), Charles
H. Talbert (Learning Through Suffering: The Educational Value of Suffering in the
New Testament and in Its Milieu [Zacchaeus Studies: New Testament; Collegeville,
MN: Liturgical, 1991], p.71), and Thompson (Hebrews, p.254) are some who
highlight the punitive nature of the quotation.
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152 You Are My Son
but prospective (instilling maturity so that they might ¿nish the race).28
Croy concludes that the ȸÀ»¼ĕ¸ of God of which the author is speaking is
not God’s punishment, but God’s training.
In her review of Croy’s work, Cynthia Long Westfall cites ‘the
warnings in the discourse, the writer’s accusation that they had regressed
in their spiritual understanding, and the exhortation in 12.1 to get rid of
entangling sin’ to argue that ‘the concept of correction is as relevant to
the immediate context [of Hebrews] as it is in the quotation of Prov.
3.11-12’.29
Westfall is correct to point out that the author harshly criticizes his
audience in the ¿fth chapter, accusing them of becoming lazy (ÅÑ¿ÉÇĕ)
and in need of being taught that which they themselves should be
teaching (5.11-12), and suggesting that because they are stymied in their
growth, they are in need of correction. Nevertheless, the author follows
this accusation with the encouragement that just as they are presently
ministering to the saints, they should show the same haste toward the
certainty of hope until the end (6.11). If they do so, they will not become
lazy (ÅÑ¿ÉÇĕ). As is the case with many of the author’s warnings, he
softens his harsh word with an assurance. Therefore, some ambiguity
exists as to whether or not he views his audience as lazy. On the one
hand, he does think they should be teachers by now rather than remain
in need of basic instruction (5.12). On the other hand, although he
expresses a concern about their laziness, he does not think them too
immature to discuss the dif¿cult word about Melchizedek he introduces
at 5.10. Consequently, Westfall’s charge of spiritual regression ¿nds
only partial support in the text.30 Moreover, even if the author does think
that his audience is truly lazy, the best remedy for that laziness might not
be whipping but exercise. In other words, training might be the best
pedagogical solution, rather than correction.
The author’s exhortation in 12.1 to put off easily besetting sin is
equally ambiguous. It could be that the author envisions his addressees
entangled in sin and needing to let go of it; if so, it would be the sole
reference to such present entanglement with sin in the letter. On the other
28 This summary of his main arguments appears on pp.2–3. Other recent com-
mentators on Hebrews also adopt this interpretation of ȸÀ»¼ĕ¸, including DeSilva
(Perseverance in Gratitude, p.447), Johnson (Hebrews, p.319–20), Thompson
(Hebrews, pp.251–2), and Witherington (Hebrews, James, and Jude, p.330).
29 Cynthia Long Westfall, Review of C. N. Croy, Endurance in Suffering,
JSNT 76 (1999), pp.121–2.
30 Paul Andriessen also cites the author’s statement in 6.12 as evidence that he
does not think the audience is lazy (‘La communauté des “Hébreux”: Était-elle
tombée dans la Relachement?’, NRTh 96 [1974], pp.1054–66 [1057]).
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4. ‘My Son’: The Assembly of the Firstborn 153
Jesus learns to obey through suffering even though he was a Son. It also
appears in Heb. 7.28 where Jesus is the Son who has been perfected.
Since suffering is the vehicle that leads to perfection (2.10; 5.5), this
suggests that Jesus is the Son who experienced suffering in order to
become perfect and to sit in God’s presence.
Three times in ch. 2, the author implies that God perfects Jesus
through sufferings precisely as his Father. First, the author’s presentation
of the Father/Son relationship is apparent in the terms he uses to describe
humanity in vv. 10-11. Those whom God is leading are the many ÍĎÇĕ,
and they are those whom Jesus is not afraid to address as brothers. That
implies that God is portrayed in these verses as a Father. Second, as
discussed in Chapter 2, one viable interpretation of the ambiguous ëÆ îÅĠË
in Heb. 2.11 is that it refers to descent from a common father. Third, the
reference to God’s use of testing (ȼÀÉÚ½Ñ) in 2.18 is paralleled in other
texts that speak about God’s fatherly discipline. In the proverbial tradi-
tion this term is put into close association with ȸÀ»¼ĕ¸ in Wis. 3.5 and
Sir. 4.17, as well as the education by God as a Father in Wis. 11.9–10.
¼ÀÉÚ½Ñ therefore becomes another way of describing the divine Father’s
process of bringing his Son to perfection.33
Adding to these portrayals of the suffering of the Son, the author
summarizes Jesus’ participation in suffering – and subsequent victory –
at the beginning of Hebrews 12. There he states that after Jesus endured
death on the cross and the shame that came with this death, he took his
seat at the right hand of God’s throne. The language the author uses in
this summation reiterates that Jesus takes part in these events as God’s
Son. First, the use of ̼¼ÀÑÌûË recalls the process of perfection Jesus
experienced as God’s Son at the hand of his Father (2.10; 5.8-9; 7.28).
Moreover, the statement that Jesus endured (ĨÈñļÀżÅ) the cross fore-
shadows the author’s description of endurance (ĨÈÇÄñÅÑ) as endurance of
God’s paternal discipline (12.5-11). Because Jesus is being held up as an
example for the audience (12.2), this also suggests that Jesus’ endurance
is a Son’s endurance of his Father’s discipline. Finally, Jesus’ session at
God’s right hand, as the ¿nal allusion to Ps. 109.1 LXX in the letter,
evokes the theme of Christ’s inheritance. After his endurance of the
33 Pamela Eisenbaum draws the same conclusion: ‘God created the circum-
stances by which Jesus was tested. In other words, Jesus’ sufferings are the direct
result of God’s discipline insofar as God is Jesus’ Father’ (‘The Necessity of
Discipline, and the Pursuit of Perfection in Hebrews’, in Asceticism and the New
Testament [L. E. Vaage and V. L. Wimbush, eds; New York: Routledge, 1999],
pp.331–53 [341]).
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4. ‘My Son’: The Assembly of the Firstborn 155
suffering through which God his Father perfected him, Jesus took his
place as the royal Son and heir whom God invites to share in his
sovereignty over all things.
These passages suggest that God displays his Fatherhood in ways that
utilize suffering to make his Son perfect. The paternal role in which God
uses suffering resonates with the topos of divine paternal discipline, or
ȸÀ»¼ĕ¸.
To state that readers should understand God’s perfecting of Jesus as
God’s ȸÀ»¼ĕ¸ is not a novel idea. Several interpreters of Hebrews view
Jesus’ perfecting as an educative process,34 and L. K. K. Dey argues in
precisely these terms saying, ‘…the author [of Hebrews] has interpreted
the suffering, temptation, and death of Jesus…as an education (paideia)
which leads to progress/betterment and in the end to perfection’.35 Dey’s
connection between perfection and ȸÀ»¼ĕ¸, however, has not remained
unchallenged. Harold Attridge charges that Dey’s notion of ȸÀ»¼ĕ¸ is
ill de¿ned. Hebrews, Attridge says, emphasizes suffering ‘in a way that
the Greek proverbial tradition does not’.36 Attridge’s critique highlights
a problem in Dey’s analysis. Dey argues that there is a tradition in
Hellenistic Jewish literature that understands suffering and temptation as
the ‘ “paideia” which leads to perfection’, citing Philo (Somn. 2.107; Quis
Her. 73), Wis. 1.9-10; 12.22; 2 Macc. 6.12, 15, 27-28, 31 and 4 Macc.
10.10-11.
The problem is that in none of these texts is ȸÀ»¼ĕ¸ explicitly linked
with perfection. In one passage Philo connects the phrase ĸ¿¼ėŠȸ¿¼ėÅ,
to which the author of Hebrews appeals in Heb. 5.8, to perfection, and in
another he joins the same phrase to the experience of children. Neither of
these texts, however, mentions ȸÀ»¼ĕ¸. On the other hand, the texts from
the LXX speak of dif¿culties Israel experiences as God’s fatherly ȸÀ»¼ĕ¸,
but in no instance do these lead speci¿cally to perfection for those who
are being disciplined.
If God’s perfecting of Jesus can be understood as God’s fatherly
ȸÀ»¼ĕ¸ of Jesus, it is not because these two terms were explicitly linked
in a tradition already available for the author. Instead, viewing Jesus’
perfecting as his ȸÀ»¼ĕ¸ ¿ts in the thought world of Hebrews because of
the correspondence between God’s relationship to Jesus and God’s
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4. ‘My Son’: The Assembly of the Firstborn 157
41 Hence, Johnson is correct to counter that ‘one would not endure in order to
bring about discipline’ (Hebrews, p.320).
42 Croy reads the verse in this way, saying that endurance is ‘interpreted as
God’s ȸÀ»¼ĕ¸ in 4-11’ (Endurance in Suffering, p.199), and that the conclusion of
the author is: ‘[a]ccept your situation (i.e. endure it) as discipline (7a)’ (Endurance
in Suffering, p.200).
43 Koester, Hebrews, p.528.
44 Koester chooses not to insert the precise experience that should be endured
due to his interpretation that the ‘context downplays the magnitude of the listener’s
suffering (12.4)’ (Hebrews, p.528). Although the fact that they have not endured
death lessens the degree of what they are experiencing, it also extends the length.
Because they have not died, they still have much to endure. Hence, it is appropriate
to see a reference to the sufferings of the audience as that which they should endure.
So also Lane: ‘[t]he trials of the community are seen as disciplinary in nature’
(Hebrews, p.2:422).
45 Hence, Attridge is correct to assert the paraenetic effect of the motif of Jesus’
education in 5.8: ‘the effect of the motif here is primarily paraenetic. Although
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158 You Are My Son
Hebrews does not use hortatory language at this point, a concern for the audience is
transparent’ (Hebrews, p.153). Nevertheless, I question if this theme is ‘primarily
paraenetic’. Attridge indicates that any Christological speculation about the nature of
Jesus’ learning ‘can be misdirected’ for the reason that ‘Jesus is presented as one
who “learns obedience” (ĨȸÁÇûÅ) in the midst of suffering because that is what the
addressees are called upon to do’ (p.153). The rhetorical situation helps to shape this
particular way the Christology of the letter comes to expression. Nevertheless, it is
not simply a move prompted by the needs of the addressees, as if it did not reÀect the
author’s deeper theology. The reality of the Christology—Jesus’ experience as
God’s Son—in concert with the theology—God’s action as Jesus’ Father—is the
ground for the paraenesis the author presents to his audience.
46 Attridge interprets the phrase this way, holding up the difference between
‘arbitrary subjective judgment’ and ‘what is objectively “bene¿cial”’ (Hebrews,
p.363). The contrast sharpens if the ¿rst phrase is not read as judiciously for the
biological fathers. It is possible that they disciplined their children according to what
seemed best for them and not for their children. The phrase is so read by Chry-
sostom: ‘they afÀict chastisement…ful¿lling [their own] pleasure oftentimes, and
not always looking to what was expedient’ (Hom. Heb. 29.3, Gardiner [NPNF1
p.14:500]). This interpretation also appears in Johnson (Hebrews, p.322) and Martin
Luther (‘Lectures on Hebrews’, p.232).
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4. ‘My Son’: The Assembly of the Firstborn 159
47 ‘Spirit’ can be a term used to refer to humanity (Attridge lists Dan. 5.14;
Rev. 22.6; Hermas, Vis. 3.12.3; and Philo, Somn. 2.273). The comparison here is
between their biological fathers, and God who is not so directly related to them by
Àesh and blood. The use of this phrase, ‘Father of spirits’ also points to the
relationship God shares with the audience that goes deeper than biology. He created
their inner being, and his rewards affect their ultimate destiny (cf. ‘spirits of just men
made perfect’ [Heb. 12.23]).
48 This divine terminology, never extant in the LXX, appears in the New Testa-
ment only in the letters of Paul (Rom. 15.33; 16.20; 2 Cor. 13.11; Phil. 4.9; 1 Thess.
5.23). Delitzsch describes this as ‘one of Paul’s favourite designations for God’
(Hebrews, p.2:402). Clare K. Rothschild puts this phrase forward as evidence that
‘the author of Hebrews intentionally conforms here to Pauline usage’ (Hebrews as
Pseudepigraphon: The History and Signi¿cance of the Pauline Attribution of
Hebrews [WUNT, 235; Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 2009], p.69).
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49 Attridge, Hebrews, p.405 n.14.
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160 You Are My Son
God shares with his children aspects of his own identity: sovereignty
with his Son, and life, holiness, righteousness, and peace with many sons
and daughters.
Moreover, God’s fatherly perfection of his ¿rstborn Son makes possi-
ble the rewards awaiting his other children at the end of their journey. In
order to provide life, God, through the perfecting of his Son (2.10; 5.8-
9), has freed them from the fear of death (2.15) and opened up a living
way to God’s throne (10.20). Similarly, just as Jesus’ journey as God’s
Son ransomed them from the grip of death, so too did it set them on the
road to holiness (2.11; 10.10, 14, 19). Jesus’ actions in response to his
Father freed them from the grip of death and sin so that they can submit
to the Father of Jesus Christ – their own Father – and take on his charac-
ter. God’s paternal relationship with Jesus provides both the model and
the possibility for the rewards his many sons and daughters will reap at
the end of their training.
What, then, about perfection? If the author is identifying a correspon-
dence between the suffering Jesus endured and the suffering his audience
is enduring, a similar correspondence should exist between the results of
their endurance. Just as Jesus was perfected through suffering, so too
should the audience of Hebrews become perfect through the suffering
God their Father utilizes to discipline them.
As shown above, righteousness and a share in holiness result from
God’s ȸÀ»¼ĕ¸ in ch. 12. In several places earlier in the letter, the author
connects righteousness and holiness with perfection. First, in Heb. 5.14,
the author chides his audience over their dullness with respect to their
ability to hear (ÅÑ¿ÉÇĖ º¼ºĠŸ̼ ̸ėË ÒÁǸėË). He takes up the common
moral-philosophical trope contrasting those who partake of milk with
those who partake of solid food (Heb. 5.12).50 He describes the individ-
ual who partakes of milk as a babe (ÅûÈÀÇË) and those who have solid
food as the mature ones, the ̼¼ĕÑÅ. His other description of the ÅûÈÀÇË –
as one who is ÓȼÀÉÇË ÂĠºÇÍ »ÀÁ¸ÀÇÊįÅ¾Ë – implies that what differentiates
the ̼¼ĕÑÅ is that they have been tested by this word of righteousness.
Their possession of the habit (ïÆÀÅ) of discerning good and evil shows
that they can not only hear the righteous word but also act upon it. They
possess this habit because their senses have been trained (º¼ºÍÄŸÊÄñŸ).
This discussion reveals one of the de¿nitions the author attributes to the
̼¼ĕÇÑ word group. The ̼¼ĕÑÅ, in contrast to infants, are mature
people who have been trained.
50 Isa. 28.9; 1 Cor. 3.2; 1 Pet. 2.2; Odes 19.1ff.; Philo, Agr. 9; Migr. Abr. 29;
Congr. 19; Somn. 2.9; Omn. prob. lib. 160; Epictetus, Diatr. 2.16.39; 3.24.9; Seneca,
Ep.88.20.
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4. ‘My Son’: The Assembly of the Firstborn 161
51 Epictetus, Diatr. 2.18.27; 3.12.7; Isocrates, Nic. 10; Philo, Mos. 1.48;
Plutarch, Lib. ed. 2D-E. Croy discusses the close association between ºÍÄŸÊĕ¸
and ȸÀ»¼ĕ¸ as two different, yet closely related, types of training (Endurance in
Suffering, pp.158–9).
52 Walters also highlights the correspondence between these passages and
concludes that ‘[b]eing Ìñ¼ÀÇË does after all involve the capacity of making moral
judgments, and increasingly so. Such moral growth is by the instructive, disciplining
grace of God’ (Perfection in New Testament Theology, p.112).
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162 You Are My Son
perfect Jesus is the same suffering that prepares Jesus to be high priest,
the author portrays the high priesthood of Jesus as that for which Jesus
is quali¿ed because he experiences and endures the ȸÀ»¼ĕ¸ of his Father.
It is not inconsequential that the author’s portrayal of the perfecting of
Jesus in the priesthood of Melchizedek is interrupted by the author’s
de¿nition of perfection as the result of training (5.11-14).53 That which
Jesus experiences in preparation for his reign as God’s heir and God’s
high priest is the ȸÀ»¼ĕ¸ of his Father.
Because he faithfully and obediently endured God’s ȸÀ»¼ĕ¸, he serves
as the ultimate example of the perfect Son. He endures God’s ȸÀ»¼ĕ¸ so
that he might be perfect. The correspondence in relational status and
result adds support for the thesis that the audience experiences God’s
ȸÀ»¼ĕ¸ not as correction, but primarily as training toward maturity. Just
as it was the will of his Father that Jesus suffered so that he might be
perfected, so also God’s ȸÀ»¼ĕ¸ causes the many ÍĎÇĕ to experience suf-
fering so that they might reach the realm where God’s perfected children
dwell. The nature of God’s Fatherhood as manifest in his relationship
with Jesus is the same nature God displays toward the audience: disci-
pline for the sake of ultimate perfection.
After con¿rming the ¿lial connection between the audience and Jesus
by highlighting the audience’s status as God’s ÍĎÇĕ, the author points to
the similarities between his audience’s and Jesus’ experience of God’s
Fatherhood in two ways. First, the suffering Jesus experiences as God’s
Son through the will of his Father shows that the author draws a connec-
tion between the dif¿culties Jesus experiences and those experienced by
his audience. Just as God’s ¿rst speech to Jesus portrayed what he
experiences of God’s Fatherhood in these last days – the attainment of
his position of honor as God’s heir – so also, the citation of Prov. 3.11-12
describes the paternal discipline which presently characterizes God’s
loving familial relationship that the audience of Hebrews experiences as
God’s children in these last days.
Second, the similarity between Jesus and the audience is reinforced by
the author’s presentation of the bene¿ts that come to those who endure
God’s training. For both, suffering results in perfection, which is a state
in which the child comes to share in the characteristics of the Father so
that they can dwell in his presence. After being perfected through suffer-
53 Similarly, James Thompson notes, ‘[u]nlike other paraneses, this one does
not serve as the transition to a new theme. It stands as the interruption of the theme
of the High priesthood of Christ’ and argues that ‘Heb 5.11–14…is fundamentally
important for illuminating the theological assumptions and intention of the author of
Hebrews’ (Christian Philosophy, p.19).
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4. ‘My Son’: The Assembly of the Firstborn 163
ing, Jesus reigns next to God sharing in God’s sovereignty over all
things. The audience members are presently enduring God’s discipline
and will subsequently come to share in his qualities so they can celebrate
on Mt. Zion. The author has made clear to them that these realities – life,
holiness, righteousness, and peace – are theirs, if only they endure. The
addressees of Hebrews are privileged to stand in the same relationship
with God as does Jesus. God, therefore, expresses his paternal role with
both Jesus, the son of man, and the audience of Hebrews by utilizing his
ȸÀ»¼ĕ¸ to bring them to perfection.
A. Positive Instructions
Because the audience of Hebrews, unlike Jesus, is still in the midst of
experiencing God’s ȸÀ»¼ĕ¸, the author employs the exhortation that
follows to instruct his audience how they might be able to help one
another to endure it. He does so with four injunctions. First, he calls his
listeners to restore (ÒÅÇÉ¿ĠÑ) certain de¿ciencies.54 He describes the hands
of some of those among the group as ȸɼÀÄñŸË. ¸Éĕ¾ÄÀ describes that
which is drooping or weak,55 but can also describe that which is weak to
the point of inactivity.56 Correspondingly, he describes their knees as
ȸɸ¼ÂÍÄñŸ, a verb that connotes both weak things57 and things that
are weak to the point of being paralyzed.58 After this restoration, those
who are impeded or, if taken in its stronger form, even halted in their
ability to keep moving, can fully join in the race.
54 The weak hands and wobbly knees constitute a phrase that also appears in
Isaiah (35.3) and Sirach (25.23). In Sirach, the weak hands and knees are the result
of living with an unpleasing wife. More similar to the passage in Hebrews, Isaiah 35
describes the great joy of those whom the Lord is saving and gathering to Zion
(35.10; cf. Heb. 12.22). This great promise encourages those who have not yet
attained this salvation to keep their strength until they see it become a reality. In
addition, the transition out of the wilderness (Isa. 35.1; cf. Heb. 3.8, 17), the glimpse
of the glory of the Lord (Isa. 35.2; cf. Heb. 1.3; 2.7, 9), and the encouragement
offered in this text (Isa. 35.4; cf. Heb. 12.5) strengthen the possibility that the author
of Hebrews is alluding to this text to encourage his readers to press on to Zion just as
Isaiah encourages his readers to do the same.
55 Deut. 32.36; T. Job 18.3; Diodorus Siculus 14.105.2; Philo, In Flacc. 10;
Josephus, Ant. 6.35.
56 Sir. 4.29; 1 Clem. 34.1.
57 Gen. 19.11; Diodorus Siculus 20.72.2.
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58 Lk. 5.18, 24; Diodorus Siculus 18.31.4.
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164 You Are My Son
To this the author adds the second injunction that they should make
straight paths for their feet (ÌÉÇÏÀÛË ĚÉ¿ÛË ÈÇÀ¼ė̼ ÌÇėË ÈÇÊĖÅ ĨÄľÅ), an
allusion to Prov. 4.26 (ĚÉ¿ÛË ÌÉÇÏÀÛË ÈÇĕ¼À ÊÇėË ÈÇÊĕÅ).59 He issues his call
to make straight paths for the sake of those with crippled limbs (ÏÑÂĠË),
whose hands and knees are not functioning at their full capacity. Making
the paths straight ensures that the weak ones will not be put out of joint
(ëÁÌÉñÈÑ). If this were to happen, they would be paralyzed and would
not be able to continue on the path. If, however, the readers make straight
paths, the weak would not be disquali¿ed from the race, but would instead
be healed (12.13). Straight paths – in addition to making the race easier
to run – will also repair the maladies of the members of their group.
The third and fourth charge is for the audience to pursue peace with all
and to pursue holiness. In v. 11, peaceful fruit was the reward that came
to those who allowed themselves to be trained by God’s discipline.
Similarly, God’s own holiness is that which God gives to his children
who remain under his discipline (12.10). God is training them so that
they might share in his holiness and attain peace. God sets the path that
leads to these things. Nevertheless, their response should be to keep
moving toward that quality God has promised to give them. As an added
motivation, the author asserts that those who do not have holiness will
not be able to see the Lord (12.14). Those who are not holy will not be
able to enter his holy place.
All four of the author’s exhortations involve forward movement.60
First, they are to restore the knees needed for walking. Second, they
should make straight paths. Third and ¿nally, they should follow after
both peace and sancti¿cation. In sum, they need to keep running the race
set before them (12.1), and to aid the members of their community who
are having a dif¿cult time doing so, so that they can all attain the bene¿ts
promised by God to his children.
B. Negative Examples
The author follows the instructions for these positive steps with negative
warnings, which culminate in the story of Esau, a story of disregarding
59 The fourth chapter of Proverbs also shows many resonances with the author’s
instructions in Hebrews 12. It begins with a call for children to listen to the instruc-
tion (ȸÀ»¼ĕ¸) of their father (4.1), and continues to address the listener as a son (ÍĎñ,
4.10). For the child who heeds the instruction, the father promises life (4.22, 23; cf.
Heb. 12.9) and healing (4.22; cf. Heb. 12.13).
60 Ernst Käsemann sees in the verbs of motion ‘a clear picture of the conspicu-
ous position of our motif [the wandering people of God]’ in the ¿nal chapters of the
letter (Wandering People, p.100).
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4. ‘My Son’: The Assembly of the Firstborn 165
61 DeSilva states that ‘the “root of bitterness”…has the power to threaten the
community precisely with regard to its peace (“causing trouble”) and sanctity (“and
many have become de¿led through it”)’ (Perseverance in Gratitude, p.457).
62 Hos. 2; 3.1; Isa. 57.8-9; Jer. 2.20; 3.2, 9; 13.27; Ezek. 16; 23; 43.7, 9.
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63 Lev. 10.10; 1 Sam. 21.5; Ezek. 22.6; 44.23.
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166 You Are My Son
and trading it for the temporary enjoyment of one meal (Gen. 25.32-34).
He favored meeting his immediate physical need for food rather than
considering the longstanding blessings of his birthright.
In v. 17, the author proceeds directly to the other major event in the
life of Esau. As Isaac was nearing death, he did not bestow upon Esau
the blessing of the ¿rstborn (Genesis 27). This is the place where the
author of the Hebrews leaves the story – in the fact that Esau was
rejected. As the narrative continues in Genesis, Isaac does issue some
sort of blessing upon Esau. Even though it ends on a slightly positive
note – that Esau will not be in slavery forever (Gen. 27.40) – Esau surely
does not interpret it in a positive light. After the ‘blessing’ is pronounced,
Esau holds a grudge against his brother who has tricked him and wishes
to kill Jacob (Gen. 27.41).
The author of Hebrews reiterates the ¿nality of Esau’s rejection by
asserting that he was unable to ¿nd a place for repentance (ļ̸ÅÇĕ¸Ë º¸É
ÌĠÈÇÅ ÇĤÏ ¼īɼÅ). Interpreters have attributed the action of ļ̸ÅÇĕ¸ to
both Isaac and Esau. If it refers to Esau’s action,64 then the word indi-
cates that he was not able to revoke the consequences of selling his
birthright. Esau functions, then, as an example of a person who could not
undo his careless action. This very negative view of Esau ¿nds attesta-
tion in much of the rest of the Old Testament and in intertestamental
literature. In the Minor Prophets, for example, Jacob is the loved brother
and Esau is the hated one (Mal. 1.3). Esau is covered with shame and cut
off forever (Obad. 1.10), and Esau's punishment is not revoked (Amos
1.11). Jubilees says that all Esau’s deeds were ¿erce (19.14). He was
malicious since youth, devoid of virtue, and lacked the ability to do what
is right (35.10-13). The pseudo-blessing of Isaac on Esau also includes
the note that after Esau removes the yoke of his brother, he will ‘surely
sin completely unto death and [his] seed will be rooted out from heaven’
(Jub. 26.34, Wintermute). Philo paints Esau as one who was ‘crafty in
wickedness’ (Leg. 3.2, Colson and Whitaker), and his story provides the
stimulus for saying that ‘the bad man is based on vice and passion’
(Sacr. 81, Colson and Whitaker).
On the other hand, other interpreters have read ļ̸ÅÇĕ¸ as a change in
the mind of Isaac pertaining to the situation of Esau.65 If interpreted in
this way, Esau was asking Isaac to revoke the mistaken blessing he had
given to Jacob and, instead, give Esau the blessing of the ¿rstborn. When
Esau begged to receive the blessing and found no place for repentance,
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4. ‘My Son’: The Assembly of the Firstborn 167
that indicates that Esau could not convince Isaac to change his mind and
give him a genuine blessing (Gen. 27.36-40), even though he asked with
tears (Gen. 27.34).
The particular attribution of ļ̸ÅÇĕ¸ is not ¿nally determinative for
the interpretation of this warning. The way in which the author retells the
story implies that Esau was ineffective either to undo his own deed or to
change the mind of Isaac because Esau had squandered his status as the
¿rstborn son. With no mention of the deception of Jacob, Esau’s inability
to inherit the blessing becomes the consequence of giving up his birth-
right. Whether the turnabout is Esau’s or Isaac’s has little consequence
for the ¿nal result. Both Esau’s selling of the birthright and Isaac’s
giving away of the blessing remain unchangeable realities. In the
author’s retelling of the story, Esau is culpable for his own misfortune,
suggesting that he had a hand in his irremediable situation.
By joining the events in Esau’s life in this way, the author highlights
the close connection between the status of being a ¿rstborn child and
inheritance. Because Esau thoughtlessly gave up the ¿rst, he lost the
ability to attain the second. By appealing to the sobering highlights of
Esau’s story, the author casts his departure as a turning away from one’s
family, uniting again the concepts of endurance and ¿lial status (12.4-
11). Esau’s misstep was that he did not hold on to what would have
given him the many bene¿ts that belong to the ¿rstborn child. Because
he forfeited his status as the ¿rstborn, he lost the blessing that came with
it. He could not get it back, even though he pleaded his case with tears.
The author thus lifts up his story as a chilling negative example for the
readers.
The example of Esau provides a stark reiteration of the warnings that
appear previously in the sermon.66 In ch. 6, the author describes someone
who has partaken of God’s Spirit, God’s word, and God’s power. If that
person falls away (ȸɸÈĕÈÌÑ), it is impossible for him to repent. This is
because he has shamed God’s Son. With slightly different language, in
ch. 10, the author asserts that if a person sins willfully after knowing the
truth, there is no longer a sacri¿ce for her sins but only an expectation of
judgment. In so doing, she insults God’s spirit, regards the blood by
which she was sancti¿ed as common, and tramples on God’s Son (10.26-
31). These are not minor offenses. The author seems to be describing
nothing short of apostasy.67
The dire warning made explicit in the story of Esau is just that: a
warning, not a fact. Therefore, the author follows this account with two
encouragements for his audience. They stand at the very foot of the
mountain of God where God’s children dwell, and they are privileged to
hear God continue to speak to them as a Father through his Son.
A. Two Mountains
Despite the intensity of this warning, the author is quick to assure his
readers that the great misfortune of Esau does not presently apply to
them. On the contrary, in the rhetorical climax of the letter,68 the author
‘[d]oes any father in his senses disinherit a son for his ¿rst offence? Only when great
and repeated wrong-doing has overcome his patience, only when what he fears
outweighs what he reprimands, does he resort to the decisive pen; but ¿rst he makes
an effort to reclaim a character that is still unformed, though inclined now to the
more evil side; when the case is hopeless, he tries extreme measures’ (Clem. 1.14.1
[Basore]).
68 Witherington states, ‘[a]s would be expected in the peroration of epideictic
rhetoric, our author chooses to ¿nish quite literally in a blaze of divine glory, using
highly emotive rhetoric to bring his argument home and indelibly imprint it in the
audience’s mind… From a rhetorical viewpoint the ¿nal exhortation is in the
emphatic position, and one may conclude that this is what our author has been
working toward all along as a climax to his discourse’ (Letters and Homilies, p.336).
Those who also view this section as climactic include Ellingworth (Hebrews, p.669),
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4. ‘My Son’: The Assembly of the Firstborn 169
locates them at the foot of the very mountain where all of God’s ¿rstborn
children are celebrating the attainment of their inheritance.
Earlier, in Hebrews 3–4, the author warned his readers not to pattern
themselves on the disobedience displayed by the wilderness generation.
He alludes to that story again in Hebrews 12, however, in order to
declare to his audience that they are in a different position from that of
the wilderness generation. They have not approached the same mountain.
Approach or movement toward something is an important theme in
Hebrews. In all seven instances, the verb ÈÉÇÊñÏÇĸÀ is used to describe
coming before God (4.16; 7.25; 10.1, 22; 11.6; 12.18, 22), but Heb.
12.18 is the only instance in which the author uses fearful language to
describe approaching God. He paints a picture of an ominous place
burning with ¿re and surrounded in darkness, gloom, and a windstorm.
Trumpets blast and a voice speaks words such that those who hear beg
for silence. Here, the author is recounting the story of the wilderness
generation standing before Mt. Sinai (Exodus 19). It is such a powerfully
holy place that even if a beast touched the mountain, it would have to be
stoned (Heb. 12.20/Exod. 19.13). It is striking that his ¿rst description
of the place is ‘that which can be touched (о¸ÎÑÄñÅĿ)’. Since this
mountain can be touched, it holds the prospect of death. The author
asserts that this place was so fearful that even Moses, whom he holds up
as an exemplary character earlier in the letter (3.1-5; 11.24-28), proclaims
his fear and shows it bodily through trembling.
Juxtaposed to this terrifying scene towers the mountain the audience
has approached. They have come to Mt. Zion, the mountain associated
with Jerusalem, the city of King David (2 Sam. 5.7; Pss. 2.6; 101.2).
Because Jerusalem is the dwelling place of the temple, by extension it is
also designated as the dwelling place of God (Pss. 9.12; 19.13). For
Hebrews, Zion is the city of the living God, a descriptor of God the
author utilizes throughout the letter (3.12; 4.12; 9.14; 10.31; 12.11).
Finally, the author names the mountain as Jerusalem. In the case of
Hebrews, as for other authors of the time (2 En. 55.2; Philo, Somn.
2.250; Gal. 4.26; Phil. 3.20), it is a heavenly Jerusalem, aligning with
69 Jesus did not take hold of the nature of angels (2.16), and so the angels serve
as ministers to those people who Jesus did aid.
70 To be legally registered (ÒÈǺÉÚÎÑ) also appears in Lk. 2.1, 3, and 5.
Attridge (Hebrews, p.375 n.72) also notes that a registry in heaven is a recurring
theme (Exod. 32.32; Ps. 68.29 LXX; Isa. 4.3; Dan. 12.1; Lk. 10.20; Rev. 13.18; 17;
Hermas, Vis. 1.3.2; Sim. 2.9).
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4. ‘My Son’: The Assembly of the Firstborn 171
Having described this place as the city of the living God, the author
then says explicitly that God is there. He describes God as the judge of
all, a rather ominous description that highlights the paradoxical nature of
the community’s ability to approach this mountain. God is judge; never-
theless, they can approach with con¿dence. This paradox is intensi¿ed
by the fact that there with God are the spirits of righteous people who
have been made perfect. The three-word description (ÈżįĸÊÀ »ÀÁ¸ĕÑÅ
̼̼¼ÀÑÄñÅÑÅ) draws upon themes established earlier in the chapter
where the author portrays God as a pedagogical Father. In v. 9, the
author describes God as the Father of spirits, who disciplines his children
so that they might attain righteousness. Moreover, Jesus learns obedience
through the process God uses with him as his Father (2.11; 5.8-9; 7.28).
Jesus, who is perfect in faith through his obedient action (12.2), has per-
fected the faith of the congregation (10.14). These people have been
included in the dwelling place of God because God, through his fatherly
actions with Jesus and with his many sons and daughters, has prepared
them to pass the test of his judgment.
Finally, the people join in this gathering as God’s faithful children
because the way has been opened to them through the mediator of the
New Covenant (12.24), Jesus himself. His sprinkled blood, as the author
argues in other places (Heb. 9.12, 14; 10.19; 13.12), gives them access to
God.71 The author describes this blood as that which speaks better than
the blood of Abel. The author asserted in 11.4 that even though Abel
died, he still speaks because the faith expressed in his gift to God showed
him to be righteous.72 In comparison, Jesus’ blood is not all that speaks
for humanity. Jesus himself – unlike Abel – is alive to intercede before
God (7.25) because he has been exalted as heir to the right hand of his
Father.
With the warning that follows, he shows that this is not the case. They,
like the Israelites before Sinai, stand at the foot of the mountain. They
are not yet at the top. Because they do not yet reside in this heavenly
Jerusalem, his admonition for them therefore is this: watch out so that
you do not resist the One who is speaking. The author does not want
them to make the same mistake of the wilderness generation who resisted
the God who spoke to them and were consequently punished by being
denied entrance to the Promised Land (Exod. 20.19; Ps. 95.7-8; Heb. 3.7-
8, 15; 4.7). Since God is speaking to them not from an earthly mountain,
but from heaven itself, they have even less hope of turning away from
his voice without recompense. To buttress this warning, the author adds
that the One speaking to them has promised to shake both the heavens
and the earth. Nothing shakable can withstand his thunderous voice
(12.26). Finally, he leaves them with a chilling picture of who God is.
Quoting Deuteronomy, the author asserts that ‘our God is a consuming
¿re’ (Deut. 4.24; 9.3).74
at Mount Zion when Jesus was cruci¿ed’ (Hebrews, p.223). Similarly Bruce states,
‘“You have come” may denote their conversion to Christianity… So, by virtue of
their accepting the gospel, the readers of this epistle had come to that spiritual realm
some of whose realities are detailed in the following clauses’ (Hebrews, p.355).
74 This description of God resonates with that in Exodus 24, a narrative to
which the author alludes in Heb. 9.19-20. After the covenant ceremony involving
blood in vv. 3-8, Moses and his colleagues come up onto the mountain of God. This
action, however, departs from the instructions of vv. 1-2. At the beginning of this
chapter, God told Moses that only he would be allowed to draw near to the Lord. His
companions could ascend with him and worship at a distance, but they were speci-
¿cally commanded not to draw near (ÇĤÁ 뺺ÀÇıÊÀÅ). Moreover, the people were
prohibited even from coming up with Moses and the others (24.2). After the ceremony,
however, the necessity of distance is absent, and, most strikingly, Moses is not singled
out. There, together they see (v. 10). The last time they saw anything, in Exodus 20,
it was the mountain smoking. That sight resulted in fear, trembling, and the
observers removing themselves at a distance from God (Exod. 20.18). According to
the LXX, in ch. 24, however, this small group of Israelites not only sees the place
where the God of Israel stands, but also even dines there.
After this intimate and more inclusive event, Moses and Joshua go up higher onto
the mountain. While they ascend, the sons of Israel remain at the foot of the mountain
watching. On this occasion when they see the manifestation of the glory of the Lord
appearing now not just as smoke but as a consuming ¿re (ÈıÉ ÎšºÇÅ), the text makes
no mention of their fear. At the close of the Sinai episode, the people of Israel look
up on the mountain and see the Lord’s glory as a Àaming ¿re. Hence, like Moses and
Joshua, the righteous spirits who have been perfected dwell with this ¿re unscathed
and those observing the ¿re from the ground need not be afraid.
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4. ‘My Son’: The Assembly of the Firstborn 173
The designation of this ¿ery God as the One who is speaking (ÌġÅ
¸ÂÇıÅ̸) recalls a recurrent theme throughout the letter. Throughout,
the author has portrayed God speaking to the audience (1.2; 3.7–4.7; 8.8-
12; 10.30-31, 37-38; 12.5-6). The ¿rst thing the author says about
himself and his audience in the ¿rst sentence of the sermon is that they
are people to whom God is speaking (ëÂÚ¾ʼŠ÷ÄėÅ, Heb. 1.2). More-
over, because God speaks to them ëÅ ÍĎŊ, God’s speech is embodied in
the relation of the Father and the Son. It is, therefore, paternal speech.
Consequently, since God’s speech in the last days is delivered as a Father
and, in these last days, God is speaking to the audience of the sermon,
the audience hears God speaking to them as a Father. His speech points
them to the relationship that makes him Father, the relationship between
himself and Jesus, the Son. This relationship reminds them of the suffer-
ing Jesus experienced through the will of his Father and the subsequent
honor and glory he attained from his Father. They are reminded that as
children of God their lives can follow the same pattern.
Since they hear God speaking as a Father (1.2), they are given bold-
ness to reply to God in the same way Jesus does: as children. In support
of the author’s exhortation that they embrace a lack of covetousness
(ÒÎÀÂÚɺÍÉÇË), the author brings forth God to speak for the ¿nal time,
saying: ÇĤ Äû ʼ ÒÅľ ÇĤ»’ ÇĤ Äû ʼ ëºÁ¸Ì¸ÂĕÈÑ (Heb. 13.5).75 This
assurance gives the audience, for the ¿rst time, boldness to speak the
scriptures. They speak the words from Psalm 117: ÁįÉÀÇË ëÄÇĕ ¹Ç¾¿ĠË, ÇĤ
Îǹ¾¿¾ÊÇĸÀ, Ìĕ ÈÇÀûʼÀ ÄÇÀ ÓÅ¿ÉÑÈÇË,76 and they proclaim the Lord as
their helper (Heb. 13.6). In light of all this, they do not have to fear the
action of any person. They give voice to a stance of trust in God similar
to the attitude of trust that Jesus himself articulated, ëºĽ ìÊÇĸÀ ȼÈÇÀ¿ĽË
ëÈ’ ¸ĤÌŊ (2.12).77
75 This statement resonates with several texts from the LXX, including Gen.
28.15; Deut. 31.6; Josh. 1.5. Attridge suggests that both Philo (Conf. ling. 166) and
the author of Hebrews might be citing from a variant of Deut. 31.6, 8.
76 Psalm 117 LXX includes several themes emphasized in Hebrews: the psalmist
declares that the Lord became salvation to him (vv. 14, 28; cf. Heb. 1.14), that the
Lord disciplined him (v. 18; cf. Heb. 12.4-11), and that the Lord did not hand him
over to death (v. 18; cf. Heb. 2.15-16).
77 Attridge eloquently notes: ‘[b]y the ¿nale of Hebrews, the followers of Jesus,
in the person of the homilist and his audience, have assumed the role of Jesus in
his dialogue with God. Their prayer of the psalm is what Heb. 13.15 calls for, an
acknowledgement of God. Their prayer af¿rms their faith in God’s ¿delity, a faith-
fulness that trumps all threats of judgment’ (‘The Psalms in Hebrews’, p.212). So
also J. Ross Wagner states: ‘Jesus’ solidarity with the community…implies that
these “children” and “brothers” will emulate his attitude of trust. This expectation
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174 You Are My Son
C. Benediction
The author reinforces the con¿dence of the audience with his closing
benediction (13.20-21) in which he points to Jesus’ status as the reigning
Son and heir of God. Here, he calls God the God of peace (ĝ ¿¼ĠË ÌýË
¼ĊÉûžË).79 The God of peace made peace an attainable reality for the
audience when he raised Jesus up from the dead. For the fourth time in
the letter, God is portrayed as the one who leads his children (1.6; 2.10;
8.9). Previously, he led Jesus, his ¿rstborn Son, into the ÇĊÁÇÍÄñž (1.6),
but here the focus is that out of which he is leading Jesus, the realm of
comes to explicit expression as the sermon approaches its hortatory climax’ (‘Faith-
fulness and Fear’, p.104).
78 Heather Gorman argues that the author puts emphasis on the juxtaposition of
positive and negative appeals: ‘[a]ppeals to negative pathos never stand alone as an
end in themselves. They work together with positive appeals toward the greater goal
of encouraging a group of weary Christians to maintain their faith in spite of their
suffering’ (‘Persuading Through Pathos: Appeals to the Emotions in Hebrews’, RQ
54.2 [2012], pp.77–90 [88]).
79 This description of God appears in the Pauline letters (Rom. 15.33; 16.20;
2 Cor. 13.11; Phil. 4.9; 1 Thess. 5.23).
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4. ‘My Son’: The Assembly of the Firstborn 175
V. Conclusion
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4. ‘My Son’: The Assembly of the Firstborn 177
before them their own dif¿cult contest, and they should also respond
with faithful endurance. The author then comforts them with the assur-
ance that their trying experiences are the ȸÀ»¼ĕ¸ of God their Father.
The path that Jesus takes as God’s Son provides hope for the audience.
After he endured God’s ȸÀ»¼ĕ¸, he took his honorable and glorious seat
at God’s right hand, where he awaits the consummation of his universal
inheritance. Because the audience is experiencing God’s ȸÀ»¼ĕ¸ just as
Jesus did, they too can look forward to receiving their reward. The author
motivates them by vividly portraying the greatness of the inheritance that
awaits them. The audience of Hebrews can be assured that as they
endure – supported by God himself through Jesus’ priesthood – they will
join in the joyous assembly of God’s ¿rstborn.
The second way in which Jesus’ sonship corresponds to the ¿lial
status of the audience of Hebrews is that Jesus’ status as heir – promised
by his Father and secured by his sacri¿cial death, victory over death, and
living intercession – balances the author’s warnings with the assurance
that they are a part of this guaranteed inheritance. This study has sought
to show how the author of Hebrews offers this stalwart assurance to his
audience. First, in his appeals to various scriptures throughout the
opening sections of Hebrews (1.5–3.6), the author speci¿es that as the
heir of all things, Jesus’ inheritance includes the children of God. Sec-
ond, he shows throughout the letter how the suffering that Jesus endures
is the way in which Jesus wins and sustains the human component of his
inheritance through the sacri¿ce and intercession enacted in his priest-
hood. Consequently, although his warnings against squandering their
inheritance present real possibilities, they are only that: possibilities
whose volume is tempered in the presence of the resounding voice of
God, who in speaking to them ëÅ ÍĎŊ declares that they are the inheri-
tance of Jesus. As such, the ‘Hebrews’ can be con¿dent that they will
attain their own inheritance of salvation among the assembly of the
¿rstborn. They can run boldly toward their inheritance because they
know they are the inheritance of Jesus Christ, the reigning Son of God.
As children of God, the audience of Hebrews can trust that their
experience of God’s ȸÀ»¼ĕ¸ will lead to the possession of their inheri-
tance, just as it did for Jesus, because, as children of God – those to
whom God is speaking in his Son – they are the inheritance of Jesus. The
author can be so intense in his warnings because his claim of what God
the Father has done in concert with his Son, Jesus, is so comprehensive.
He leaves them with the assurance that Jesus is now glori¿ed forever as
the Lord who will inherit all things. As the children of God, they are part
of the inheritance that Jesus has won through death and continually
sustains through his priestly intercession. Their boldness and boast of
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178 You Are My Son
hope is grounded in the fact that God is faithful (10.23). He has promised
to place all things under the feet of his Son in his household, including
his many sons and daughters, the ‘Hebrews’ themselves.
Just as the author begins his sermon with a picture of the family of
God, so too he brings it to a close by appealing to this relationship.
God’s Fatherhood, constituted in the reality of Jesus’ sonship, surfaces
throughout the entirety of the letter creating the concomitant ¿lial
identity and hope of the audience. Second, the training the audience is
experiencing and the reward to which they look forward continue to
point to the character of God as Father and remind the audience of Jesus’
faithful response as Son. It is in the ¿nal section that the author fully
discusses the pedagogical side to God’s fatherly nature. Finally, the
closing sections of the letter also offer the fullest picture of the audi-
ence’s identity and inheritance, including the guaranteed inheritance of
Jesus upon which both rest.
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CONCLUSION
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Conclusion 181
quotations), and that God is the Father of men only appears in connection with the
discipline of suffering (12.9)’ (The Epistle to the Hebrews [IB, 11; New York:
Abingdon, 1955], p.599).
2 For example, Paul Ellingworth states, ‘…in Hebrews as a whole, Christ’s
Sonship is a major theme, but “Father” is not prominent as a title for God (12.9)’
(Hebrews, p.114). Similarly, Hugh Monte¿ore says, ‘[The author of Hebrews]
employs [the catena] to describe the status of the Son, not that of God the Father.
Nowhere else in this Epistle is God described as the Father of Christ’ (Hebrews,
p.45). Even J. Scott Lidgett tends to downplay the theme of fatherhood: ‘[t]his
doctrine [the Fatherhood of God] is assumed throughout the Epistle, but is only
explicitly stated towards the end’ (Sonship and Salvation, p.13) and ‘[a]nd while the
writer says nothing expressly about the Fatherhood of God, the whole of the Epistle
turns upon Sonship’ (Sonship and Salvation, p.93).
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Conclusion 183
Father is to miss the author’s dominant picture of God and Christ and,
consequently, to miss one of the most compelling ways he supports the
exhortation to his audience.
Second, I argue that the author’s paternal presentation of God is the
foundational image in his theology. God is certainly a holy God with
whom humans could not dwell had Jesus not granted access through his
death, resurrection, session, and intercession. Yet this access is won
because of the way in which God disciplines and grants an inheritance
to his Son. When humans come into his presence, they do so as his
children. In highlighting the paternal motif, I call into question the pre-
siding theological motif in David DeSilva’s 1995 monograph, Despising
Shame and in his subsequent commentary on Hebrews, Perseverance in
Gratitude. DeSilva argues that the author constructs a particular picture
of God in order to inÀuence the behavior of the readers. With this argu-
ment, my reading of Hebrews is in complete agreement. I disagree,
however, with the picture of God DeSilva constructs. For him, the author
of Hebrews’ primary theological image is that of God as the divine
Benefactor or Patron.3 In this imagery, Jesus is the ‘patron of the
Christian community and [serves] as broker of the patronage of God’,4
and the author and his audience are often described as the ‘friends’ or
‘clients’ of God.5 While some reviewers found this interpretation insight-
ful,6 many more, like myself, questioned the ¿ttingness of imposing this
language on the text.7 Bene¿ts and gratitude clearly play a role in the
soteriological narrative of Hebrews. Nevertheless, the author of Hebrews
does not use patron language (¼Ĥ¼Éºñ̾Ë) for God or for anyone else in
his sermon.
3 For example, Despising Shame, pp.181, 210–11, 220, 231, 234, 242, 247, 248,
256, 258, 259, 260, 262, 264, 266, 296, 308, 315, 318; Perseverance in Gratitude,
pp.50, 59, 63, 113, 121, 238, 349, 504.
4 DeSilva, Despising Shame, pp.26, 211, 220; Perseverance, p.433.
5 DeSilva, Despising Shame, pp.236, 238, 240; Perseverance, pp.58, 63.
6 These include Peter Davids, CBQ 60 (1998), pp.363–5; Clayton N. Croy, ATJ
29 (1997), pp.143–5; and Paul Ellingworth, EvQ 74 (2002), pp.77–8.
7 James Thompson’s critique is apt: ‘[t]hese categories – honor and shame,
patron and client, advantage and disadvantage – are so thickly superimposed on
Hebrews that they distort the reading of the text’ (ResQ 43 [2001], pp.187–9).
Attridge (Bib 82 [2001], pp.584–6), Arnold S. Browne (JTS 52 [2001], pp.285–7),
Iain D. Campbell (Them 28 [2002], pp.82–4), David M. Hay (Int 55 [2001], pp.191–
2), Don Howell (JETS 42 [1999], p.161), Koester (CBQ 62 [2000], pp.749–50),
Stephen Motyer (Anvil 18 [2001], pp.138–9), and Charles Talbert (PRSt 28 [2001],
pp.141–2) raise similar concerns.
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184 You Are My Son
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Conclusion 185
sin of ingratitude,12 those described in the warning passages add the sin
of parental disrespect.13 The danger before them is that they might
dishonor their Father, an even more dreadful atrocity than the disrespect
of a Patron.
Consequently, recognizing the gravity of the offense actually increases
the salvi¿c assurance offered by the passage. Whereas a patron might
take offense at any number of missteps and cease to offer bene¿ts, only
very serious and repeated misdeeds quali¿ed a son to be disinherited.14
The audience can trust that as heirs of salvation (1.14) they will attain
their salvation, if they avoid the grave sin of apostasy. Even more assur-
ance comes from knowing that they are the inheritance of Jesus, the
sinless son, who will never do anything to squander his inheritance of all
things.
Some reviewers charge that DeSilva’s patron/client metaphor results
in a picture of God as a heavenly overlord whose grace is downplayed in
the emphasis on the reciprocity demanded of the readers.15 Jason A.
Whitlark offers one of the most extended critiques on this front in his
monograph, Enabling Fidelity to God: Perseverance in Hebrews in Light
of the Reciprocity Systems of the Ancient Mediterranean World.16
Whitlark argues that DeSilva has a ‘backward-looking attitude’ that
privileges gratitude for past bene¿ts over faith in the promised future as
the motivating factor in the exhortation.17 More fundamentally, he argues
that DeSilva operates with an ‘optimistic anthropological assumption’
which must af¿rm that ‘Jesus’ bene¿ts are based upon his estimation of
the believer’s worth and reliability to make an equitable return for
bene¿ts received’.18 DeSilva assumes that human beings do have the
capacity to ‘engage in a relationship of reciprocity with God’, whereas
Whitlark argues that Hebrews operates with a more pessimistic anthro-
pology that assumes humans must be transformed from within before
they can respond to God.19
Ultimately, I think these critiques are not fair. DeSilva convincingly
shows that the system of reciprocity is entirely one of grace. Ideally, the
benefactor freely gives and the client freely responds in gratitude.20 His
appeal to this metaphor, while enlightening in its revelation of the culture
of the ancient world, does not fully capture the pathos of the author of
Hebrews’ argument. By attending to the author’s portrayal of God as a
Father, my analysis avoids the problems associated with DeSilva’s
theological model. First, it avoids projecting a title upon God without
attestation in the letter and seeks to allow the author – through his
exposition of Israel’s scriptures and God’s revelation in Jesus Christ – to
de¿ne who God is and, subsequently, what God’s Fatherhood entails. In
so doing, my interpretation of Hebrews highlights the depth of
relationship between God and his people. By God’s initiative, humanity
is brought into relationship with him as their Father. In this relationship,
God has even more right to deserve their respect and obedience (12.9).
Moreover, the audience can be con¿dent that, short of the apostasy of
disdaining one’s place in God’s family (12.16), this relationship will
endure. A patron/client relationship simply does not convey the intimacy
and endurance that a familial relationship naturally does.
Third, the author’s emphasis on God’s paternal relationship with Jesus
provides a forceful argument for a high Christology in the letter,21
advancing the work of scholars who advocate for the same christological
stance. For example, John Webster draws from the exordium to argue for
the divinity of Jesus in Hebrews. About the phrase ëÅ ÍĎŊ, he states,
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Conclusion 187
‘[t]he real force of the phrase here is to locate the being of the Son in
God, and so to reinforce his uniqueness’. Moreover, ‘[b]ecause God’s
speaking ëÅ ÍĎŊ is God speaking in person, it requires us somehow to
conceive of a repetition or differentiation within the being of God
himself’.22 I noted that the author surrounds his use of wisdom/word
terminology in Heb. 1.1-4 with royal references to Jesus’ status as God’s
heir. Webster reaches the same conclusion when he says ‘[w]hat matters
is not the putative background of what is said in (for example) Wisdom
Christology, but the identity of the one by whom this divine action is
undertaken’.23 My investigation provides support for the prominence of
Christ’s ¿lial identity in the ¿rst four verses by highlighting the author’s
emphatic portrayal of the relationship between God and the Son
proclaimed in Heb. 1.5 by God himself. The relationship depicted there
suggests that God’s Son, who shares the name of his Father, is God’s
personal heir who has reigned alongside God since before creation and
who will reign with God the Father forever.
In a similar way, my investigation strengthens arguments for Christ’s
divinity that are drawn from some interpreters’ discussions of Melchize-
dek. For example, Jerome H. Neyrey argues that the alpha-privitive
statements about Melchizedek in 7.3 – ÒÈÚÌ¾É ÒÄûÌÑÉ Òº¼Å¼¸ÂĠº¾ÌÇË –
reÀect common topoi of Hellenistic philosophy on what constitutes a true
god. In the context of Hebrews, the statement ultimately describes not
Melchizedek, but Jesus.24 Richard Bauckham supports this argument with
evidence from Jewish sources and argues that
when adopted into the context of the Jewish understanding of God, such
hellenistic god-language undergoes an important re-functioning. It
becomes monotheistic language… [W]hat the author of Hebrews says of
Melchizedek in 7.3 is precisely what he said of Christ in applying the
words of Ps 102 to him in chap. 1. In both cases, this is the full eternity of
the only true God.25
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Conclusion 189
sovereignty and hence became the heir of all things that were promised
to him as God’s Son. Drawing together the various arguments of David
Peterson, my interpretation con¿rms that
…the context gives a very broad perspective on what that perfecting
involved. In the ¿rst place, it must have something to do with this ascen-
sion and enthronement as the one ‘crowned with glory and honour’,
destined to rule over all in ‘the world to come’ (verses 5-9). In the second
place, it must include ‘the suffering of death’, which is the ground of his
exaltation (verse 9), the means by which he robs the Devil of his power
and delivers his people from ‘lifelong bondage’ (verses 14-15), and the
means by which he expiates the sins of the people (verse 17). Finally, it
may be seen to involve his whole incarnate experience, by means of
which he became ‘a merciful and faithful high priest’ (verse 17), but
particularly his suffering, which equipped him to help those who are
similarly tested.29
Jesus has to suffer into order to be perfected as God’s heir most impor-
tantly because there is something amiss in creation itself. God’s human
creation has been captured by the power of death.
Sixth, and closely related to the explication of Jesus’ perfection, is the
way in which the paternal/¿lial relationship in Hebrews informs the
relationship between Jesus’ status as high priest and Son. I have argued
that the author’s consistent assertion of God’s Fatherhood and Jesus’
sonship suggests that ‘Son’ is the dominant identity from which ‘high
priest’ arises as a vocation.31 His priestly call arises out of the ¿lial
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Conclusion 191
Messianism and the Priestly Christology of the Epistle to the Hebrews [STDJ, 74;
Leiden: Brill, 2008], pp.13, 38), but he also notes both that Jesus is priest because
‘God appointed him to the of¿ce’ (p.25) and that ‘The author has an understanding
of Jesus as priest which has resulted from conscious, sustained theological reÀection
on Ps 2:7 and Ps 110:1, 4’ (p.38).
32 David Peterson captures both well. First, he asserts that Jesus’ perfection
achieves the perfection of the audience: ‘[t]hey are to remember the whole process
by which he was perfected as their saviour and high priest in order to appreciate the
help he can give for running the race that is set before them (12.1ff.). His life of
obedience, his sacri¿cial death and heavenly exaltation are the means by which he
was perfected. Believers in turn are perfected by the very actions and accomplish-
ments that perfect Christ’ (Hebrews and Perfection, p.186). Second, he articulates
Jesus’ role as model: ‘[t]he perfecting of Christ “through suffering” provides a
pattern for Christian discipleship. Christians share to a certain extent in the same
struggle or contest that Christ endured and, because he pioneered the way, they have
the prospect of enjoying his victory if they share his faith and manifest the same sort
of perseverance in the face of hostility and suffering’ (Hebrews and Perfection,
p.187). Similarly, Mof¿tt states, ‘[i]f they endure, they will receive their inheritance.
Not only is this exempli¿ed by Jesus, but because of who Jesus is and what he has
done, their hope for that inheritance is even more secure’ (Atonement and Resurrec-
tion, p.301).
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192 You Are My Son
Each member of the audience must endure until the end, but I argue
that Jesus’ ultimate position as Sovereign and Savior and Heir has
already been guaranteed. The emphasis falls upon what has taken place
in the familial relationship between God and Jesus. The audience of
Hebrews participates in this relationship because of the actions of God
and Jesus, but is not responsible for bringing all of salvation history to its
culmination.
Responsible interpretations of Hebrews cannot deny that the author is
legitimately concerned that the audience of Hebrews might turn away
from their participation in Christ. This is a real and terrifying possibility.
If they fall away, they do so to the extent that they repudiate who God
has already declared them to be: his own children. This rejection,
however, is only a possibility that has not yet been actualized. As God’s
children, supported by the aid of the Father (13.8) and the intercession of
the Son, the author is con¿dent that they will reach the promised rest
where they dwell with all God’s ¿rstborn children in God’s household.
This con¿dence rests not just on Jesus’ example of traversing a similar
path, but also on the status he attains at the end of this path. Jesus’ prom-
ised aid means a great deal to the audience, most especially because he
administers his bene¿ts from his position as God’s heir. God’s promise
(1.2, 13; 2.8-9) and Jesus’ victory (2.15) result in Jesus’ status as heir
apparent of all things. It is this reality that most assures the audience of
the security of their identity and future.
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33 Gray, ‘Brotherly Love’, p.343.
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Conclusion 193
II. Conclusion
In the ¿rst moments and in the closing thoughts of the sermon, the author
of Hebrews presents God’s nature as a Father. There and in between, he
describes the dynamics of God’s Fatherly character: granting to his son
an unparalleled inheritance, his own name, and the roles and honors that
come with it, and subjecting his Son to the process of perfecting so that
humanity too can be God’s own ÍĎÇĕ. In this relationship, the Son attains
his inheritance of all things. This theological motif provides a framework
in which major portions of the letter ¿t into a coherent picture of one
early believer’s attempt to propel his own brothers and sisters into the
home of their faithful Father.
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BIBLIOGRAPHY
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INDICES
INDEX OF REFERENCES
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Index of References 207
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Index of References 209
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Index of References 211
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Index of References 213
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Index of References 215
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Index of References 217
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Index of References 219
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Index of References 221
INDEX OF AUTHORS
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Index of Authors 223
Hübner, H. 36 Mof¿tt, D. 20, 53, 55, 71–4, 79, 86, 87, 91,
Hughes, P. E. 1, 2, 33, 79, 105, 166 105, 107, 108, 121, 122, 124, 126, 129,
Hurst, L. D. 43, 65, 188 175, 188, 191
Hurtado, L. W. 54 Monte¿ore, H. 20, 38, 53, 68, 71, 126, 182
Motyer, S. 183
Johnson, L. T. 1, 20, 23–5, 33, 35, 56, 68– Moule, C. D. F. 57
72, 74, 77, 82, 85, 87, 88, 90, 92, 100, 105, Mowinckel, S. 117
106, 110–12, 117, 126, 131, 134, 142, 148,
152, 156–8, 167 Neyrey, J. H. 187
Juel, D. 119 Nickelsburg, G. W. E. 35
Käsemann, E. 6, 20, 43, 53, 164, 188 O’Brien, P. T. 1, 77, 80, 117, 132
Kennedy, G. 14, 31 Osborne, G. 130, 131
Kistemaker, S. J. 1, 44, 57, 148
Koester, C. 1, 6, 7, 32, 56, 65, 71, 73, 75, Parsons, M. 106
77, 79, 80, 82, 85, 86, 89, 92, 100, 106, Peeler, A. 56
110, 117, 125, 126, 131–3, 135, 148, 156, Peterson, D. 53, 78, 79, 130, 148, 153, 155,
157, 166, 169, 183, 188, 189 190, 191
Kögel, J. 4, 78, 79 Petuchowski, J. J. 49
Kraus, M. 31 P¿tzner, V. C. 5, 68
Kurianal, J. 79 Pietersma, A. 67, 75
Pritchard, J. B. 116
Lane, W. L. 1, 2, 4, 24, 40, 51, 56, 71, 73, Purdy, A. C. 181, 182
75, 77, 79, 80, 85–7, 89, 92, 105, 106, 110,
117, 126, 127, 148, 149, 153, 156, 157, Quinn, R. D. 68
166, 169, 175
Lee, A. H. I. 44 Rascher, A. 28, 51, 85, 181
Lehne, S. 2, 142 Rooke, D. W. 107
Lewicki, T. 2, 3, 49, 85 Rothschild, C. K. 159, 175
Lidgett, J. S. 5, 13, 79, 83, 137, 182
Lierman, J. 112 Schenck, K. L. 14, 20, 23–7, 29, 45, 73, 78
Loader, W. R. G. 1, 6, 53, 72, 106 Scholer, J. M. 78
Long, T. 30, 79, 105 Silva, M. 79
Luther, M. 77, 127, 158 Smillie, G. 2
Solin, H. 20
Mackie, S. D. 7, 44, 51, 85 Son, K. 169
Marcus, R. 156 Sowers, S. G. 23
Mason, E. 64, 190, 191 Spicq, C. 2, 20, 21, 23, 30, 51, 59, 68, 72,
Matthews, E. 19, 20 77, 86, 89, 92, 106, 135, 149, 166
McCormack, B. L. 46, 102, 124 Steyn, G. J. 30, 38, 48, 149
McCruden, K. B. 78, 79, 190 Still, T. D. 90
McCullough, J. C. 148, 149 Stuckenbruck, L. T. 20
Meier, J. P. 40 Swetnam, J. 70
Meiser, M. 36
Metzger, B. M. 75, 76 Talbert, C. H. 151, 183, 185
Michel, O. 53, 59, 72, 77, 105, 153 Thiessen, M. 156
Mitchell, A. C. 12, 30, 70, 71, 77, 84, 149 Thompson, J. W. 1, 33, 51, 52, 78, 127, 151,
Moffatt, J. 2, 20, 43, 68, 70, 71, 79, 80, 90, 152, 162, 183
99, 156, 181 Thompson, M. M. 37, 39
Treier, D. J. 17
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