Accueil
| Titre : | The Hebrews Epistle in the Light of the Types |
| Auteurs : | Robert Anderson, Auteur |
| Type de document : | texte imprimé |
| Mention d'édition : | 2nd ed. |
| Editeur : | London [GB] : Pickering & Inglis, 1911 |
| Format : | x + 184 p. |
| Langues: | Anglais |
| Note de contenu : |
- Preface
- I. The authorship of Hebrews: rival claimants—The Pauline authorship: difficulties and objections—The attitude of the Roman Church to Hebrews—Dr. Hatch on “ The Holy Catholic Church ” of the Fathers—The false claims of the “ Catholic Church ”—Christ the true vine, and the covenant people the olive tree—The bearing of this on the authorship controversy. - II. The author of the Epistle is not Paul as Apostle to the Gentiles, but as “a Hebrew of Hebrews”—His sermon in Acts xiii. is the counterpart of the Epistle—Testimony of the Greek Fathers—The question of inspiration in relation to the Greek of the Epistle—The testimony of Bengel and Delitzsch to the Pauline authorship. - III. The testimony of Hebrews to the Old Testament—Its language is that of Old Testament typology—It opens at Exod. xxiv. (not at Chap, xii.) in Israel’s typical story— The Divine glory of the Redeemer—And yet “made perfect through suffering”—The Gospel of grace is not in Hebrews: it deals with the children of Abraham, not of Adam—Bishop Westcott’s erroneous teaching here (footnote). - IV. The Apostle and High-priest—The priesthood of Christ dated from His ascension—The nature and functions of priesthood—The only Christian priests are “ the saints ”: Bishop Lightfoot quoted—It is as Son of God that Christ is High-priest—The Revisers’ perversion of Heb. v. 1—The work of the Aaronic priests —The meaning of Christ’s “ offering Himself.” V. Christ came, not to found a new religion, but to fulfil the Divine religion of Judaism—Hebrews therefore enforces the truth of His Deity—“Sacrificing” is not essential to priesthood—Hebrews x. 19-22—To “come” or “draw near” to God—Meaning of “ making atonement ”—The “water of purification”: Ezek. xxxvi. and John iii.— Christian and Pagan baptism. - VI. The types present different aspects of the work of Christ— Aspects of His death toward His own and toward the world—The Passover and the Sin-offering contrasted— Meaning of the words “ bearing sin ”—The freeness of the Gospel: parable of the Great Supper—The covenants —The “ first tabernacle,” and the only Priest. - VII. “A Great Priest”—The seeming incredibility of these truths—The Priesthood in relation to God and to His people—The sufferings of Christ during His earthly life —‘1 In all points tempted like as we are ”—Gethsemane —“ Able to save to the uttermost.” - VIII. Why Hebrews deals with the Tabernacle and not the Temple—The teaching of Romans and Hebrews contrasted—The meaning of “the veil” and “the blood” —Aaron and Christ—The Sanctuary and the Synagogue —Bishop Lightfoot quoted—The warnings of Hebrews vi. and x. - IX . The “Sabbath rest” of Heb. iv.—Israel’s forty years in the wilderness—The return of Christ is the hope of His people—Why it is delayed—Canon Bernard and Dean Alford on “the Church”—Meaning of “the day”— Fronde quoted—“ The times of the restitution of all things”: Acts iii. 19-21—“The Second Advent” an unscriptural phrase—-The Sacred Calendar as a prophecy of redemption. - X. Heb. xi. the “Westminster Abbey” of the Patriarchs— Abel and his sacrifice—Enoch translated—Noah and his deliverance from the judgment—The tests and triumphs of Abraham’s faith—Isaac and Jacob—Moses and the several crises of his life—“Rahab the harlot” - XI. Further triumphs of faith : the “others” of Heb. xi. 35, 36 —Their lesson for us—Present-day cravings for spirit manifestations—Irvingism—The “Gift of Tongues”— The cult of the Spirit—The way preparing for Antichrist—Heb. xii. on “Chastening”—The sin of Esau. - XII. Is Heb. xiii. the “letter in few words ?”—Not religion, but grace—The meaning of “going forth without the Camp”—The meaning of “We have an altar”—The Passover and the Lord’s Supper—The Hebrew Christians and their splendid shrine. - XIII. Recapitulation of the argument—The covenant sacrifice—The resurrection of Christ in Hebrews—The God of Peace —The Great Shepherd—“Make you perfect” and “only me” Christians—The human touches in Scripture— Saints, Christian and ecclesiastical—Spiritual leaders —Ministry and office in the Church—The episkopoi and the diakonoi of the New Testament. - XIV. Quotations from Dean Spence-Jones and Bishop Gore, contrasting true Christianity and the cult of “the Church”—The religion of the Good Shepherd and the religion of the Crucifix—Prejudices of the Latin Fathers—The importance and value of Hebrews—The Oxford movement—Christianity is Christ, not a “religion”—Hebrews refutes these “Church” errors, and also the sham “Higher Criticism”—The profanity of the kenosis theology. APPENDICES: I. The Priests of Christendom / II. The Doctrine of the Blood / III. The “ Parousia ” / IV. The Visible Church - Index of some of the Scriptures explained or cited |
Exemplaires (1)
| Code-barres | Cote | Support | Localisation | Section | Disponibilité |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FD-L/CKHé 036 | FD-L/CKHé 036 | Livre | Compactus | Fonds livres anciens (FD-L) | Prêt sur demande Disponible |

