Completed by William Tong.
AN
Concerning
this epistle we must enquire, I. Into the divine authority of it;
for this has been questioned by some, whose distempered eyes could
not bear the light of it, or whose errors have been confuted by it;
such as the Arians, who deny the Godhead and self-existence of
Christ; and the Socinians, who deny his satisfaction; but, after
all the attempts of such men to disparage this epistle, the divine
original of it shines forth with such strong and unclouded rays
that he who runs may read it is an eminent part of the canon of
scripture. The divinity of the matter, the sublimity of the style,
the excellency of the design, the harmony of this with other parts
of scripture, and its general reception in the church of God in all
ages—these are the evidences of its divine authority. II. As to
the divine amanuensis or penman of this epistle, we are not so
certain; it does not bear the name of any in the front of it, as
the rest of the epistles do, and there has been some dispute among
the learned to whom they should ascribe it. Some have assigned it
to Clemens of Rome; other to Luke; and many to Barnabas, thinking
that the style and manner of expression is very agreeable to the
zealous, authoritative, affectionate temper that Barnabas appears
to be of, in the account we have of him in the acts of the
Apostles; and one ancient father quotes an expression out of this
epistle as the words of Barnabas. But it is generally assigned to
the apostle Paul; and some later copies and translations have put
Paul's name in the title. In the primitive times it was generally
ascribed to him, and the style and scope of it very well agree with
his spirit, who was a person of a clear head and a warm heart,
whose main end and endeavour it was to exalt Christ. Some think
that the apostle Peter refers to this epistle, and proves Paul to
be the penman of it, by telling the Hebrews, to whom he wrote, of
Paul's having written to them,