Welcome to our website where we explore the Bible! Pleasure to meet you here!
May your journey into the world of the Holy Scriptures be engaging and inspiring!

You can change reading language: uk ru


Parallel

← (Hebrews 2) | (Hebrews 4) →

Darby Bible Translation

New Living Translation

  • Jesus Our Apostle and High Priest

    Wherefore, holy brethren, partakers of [the] heavenly calling, consider the Apostle and High Priest of our confession, Jesus,
  • Jesus Is Greater Than Moses

    And so, dear brothers and sisters who belong to God anda are partners with those called to heaven, think carefully about this Jesus whom we declare to be God’s messengerb and High Priest.
  • who is faithful to him that has constituted him, as Moses also in all his house.
  • For he was faithful to God, who appointed him, just as Moses served faithfully when he was entrusted with God’s entirec house.
  • For *he* has been counted worthy of greater glory than Moses, by how much he that has built it has more honour than the house.
  • But Jesus deserves far more glory than Moses, just as a person who builds a house deserves more praise than the house itself.
  • For every house is built by some one; but he who has built all things [is] God.
  • For every house has a builder, but the one who built everything is God.
  • And Moses indeed [was] faithful in all his house, as a ministering servant, for a testimony of the things to be spoken after;
  • Moses was certainly faithful in God’s house as a servant. His work was an illustration of the truths God would reveal later.
  • but Christ, as Son over his house, whose house are *we*, if indeed we hold fast the boldness and the boast of hope firm to the end.
  • But Christ, as the Son, is in charge of God’s entire house. And we are God’s house, if we keep our courage and remain confident in our hope in Christ.d
  • Do Not Harden Your Hearts

    Wherefore, even as says the Holy Spirit, To-day if ye will hear his voice,
  • That is why the Holy Spirit says,
    “Today when you hear his voice,
  • harden not your hearts, as in the provocation, in the day of temptation in the wilderness;
  • don’t harden your hearts
    as Israel did when they rebelled,
    when they tested me in the wilderness.
  • where your fathers tempted [me], by proving [me], and saw my works forty years.
  • There your ancestors tested and tried my patience,
    even though they saw my miracles for forty years.
  • Wherefore I was wroth with this generation, and said, They always err in heart; and *they* have not known my ways;
  • So I was angry with them, and I said,
    ‘Their hearts always turn away from me.
    They refuse to do what I tell them.’
  • so I swore in my wrath, If they shall enter into my rest.
  • So in my anger I took an oath:
    ‘They will never enter my place of rest.’”e
  • The Dangers of Unbelief

    See, brethren, lest there be in any one of you a wicked heart of unbelief, in turning away from [the] living God.
  • Be careful then, dear brothers and sisters.f Make sure that your own hearts are not evil and unbelieving, turning you away from the living God.
  • But encourage yourselves each day, as long as it is called To-day, that none of you be hardened by the deceitfulness of sin.
  • You must warn each other every day, while it is still “today,” so that none of you will be deceived by sin and hardened against God.
  • For we are become companions of the Christ if indeed we hold the beginning of the assurance firm to the end;
  • For if we are faithful to the end, trusting God just as firmly as when we first believed, we will share in all that belongs to Christ.
  • in that it is said, To-day if ye will hear his voice, do not harden your hearts, as in the provocation;
  • Remember what it says:
    “Today when you hear his voice,
    don’t harden your hearts
    as Israel did when they rebelled.”g
  • (for who was it, who, having heard, provoked? but [was it] not all who came out of Egypt by Moses?
  • And who was it who rebelled against God, even though they heard his voice? Wasn’t it the people Moses led out of Egypt?
  • And with whom was he wroth forty years? [Was it] not with those who had sinned, whose carcases fell in the wilderness?
  • And who made God angry for forty years? Wasn’t it the people who sinned, whose corpses lay in the wilderness?
  • And to whom sware he that they should not enter into his rest, but to those who had not hearkened to the word?
  • And to whom was God speaking when he took an oath that they would never enter his rest? Wasn’t it the people who disobeyed him?
  • And we see that they could not enter in on account of unbelief;)
  • So we see that because of their unbelief they were not able to enter his rest.

  • ← (Hebrews 2) | (Hebrews 4) →

    Updates history Updates history

    © UA biblenet - 2025