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In an extremely solemn pronouncement, the author then set forth the tragic alternative to the progress they desired the readers to make. If they did not advance, they would retreat. Should anyone so retreat, their situation would be grim indeed.
Hebrews 6:4–6 is considered by many to be the most difficult interpretative passage in all the book of Hebrews, and some would say in the entire New Testament. Because so much of the interpretation of the warning passages as well as the entire epistle hinges on this paragraph, considerable attention to its exegetical, historical, and theological aspects is mandated. Most attempts at analyzing this passage fall into the trap of putting theology before exegesis. The Greek syntactical structure of 6:4–6 is difficult to untangle in an English translation. The three verses make up one sentence in Greek. The subject of the sentence actually does not appear in the text until v. 6 with the infinitive translated “to be brought back.”