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  • Exegetical Lectures and Sermons on Hebrews (Charles Hodge)

    Dr. Charles Hodge (1797-1878) skillfully engages the Greek text in a way that enhances the reader’s understanding of the details and flow of the whole. Those familiar with Hodge’s commentaries on other New Testament epistles will immediately recognize his style and method. Broad themes and fine points merge together in a coherent whole, as the commentator allows the text of Scripture to speak for itself.

    $19.75$22.00
  • Hebrews (John Brown)

    Commentaries generally belong to one of two categories. Either they aim at a devotional thoroughness which lays no great emphasis on the exact meaning of individual words, or they concentrate on such a detailed examination of the text that the spirit and power of the book is largely lost. Among the few commentators who stand between these two positions is Dr. John Brown of Edinburgh (1784-1858).

    By seeking to develop a style of exposition that was both edifying to his congregation and valuable to his divinity students, he produced commentaries which, in the words of Dr. William Cunningham, ‘formed a marked era in the history of Scriptural Interpretation’. Not behind the foremost contemporary scholars in his emphasis on correct exegesis, he nevertheless sought not only that the minds of his readers might be brought ‘into immediate contact with the mind of the Spirit’ but that their whole being might be resigned to ‘the empire of the Word of God’.

    $32.00
  • The Priesthood of Christ: Its Necessity and Nature (John Owen)

    Having studied the Epistle to the Hebrews in great depth and written the largest commentary ever composed on Hebrews, John Owen is able to give us a comprehensive guide to the subject of Christ in relation to the priesthood. He explains how the Old Testament themes such as Law and Covenant can relate to Christ’s office of Priest.

    $16.50$19.99