the descendants of Heber, commonly called Jews. See Hebrew and Jews.
or Epistle to the Hebrews, a canonical book of the New Testament.
Though St Paul did not prefix his name to this epistle, the concurrent testimony of the best authors ancient and modern afford such evidence of his being the author of it, that the objections to the contrary are of little or no weight.
The Hebrews, to whom this epistle was written, were the believing Jews of Palestine; and its design was to convince them, and by their means all the Jewish converts whereverover dispersed, of the insufficiency and abolishment of the ceremonial and ritual law.