Bible Verse Picker

Random Verse from Hebrews

303 verses across 13 chapters.

Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen.

Hebrews 11:1KJV

Drawing from 303 verses

Hebrews is one of the richest books in the New Testament, thirteen chapters written to Christians who were tired and tempted to drift away from their faith.

Nobody knows for certain who wrote it. The book itself is anonymous, and Christians have suggested Paul, Barnabas, Apollos, and others down the centuries. Whoever wrote it knew the Old Testament deeply and wrote some of the finest Greek in the Bible.

The big idea of Hebrews is that Jesus is greater. Greater than angels, greater than Moses, greater than the old priesthood and its sacrifices. He is the great high priest who understands our weakness and invites us to approach God with confidence.

Chapter 11 is the famous hall of faith, a roll call of people like Abraham, Sarah, and Moses who trusted God without seeing the full picture. Chapter 12 follows with a call to run our own race without giving up, looking to Jesus the whole way.

Key themes include perseverance, faith, the sufficiency of Christ, and encouragement not to give up meeting together.

A random verse from Hebrews is a good fit when your faith feels worn down. The whole book was written for people on the edge of quitting, so its encouragements are practical and its warnings are honest.

Many of the most quoted verses in Scripture live here, including lines about the nature of faith, the throne of grace, and the promise that God will never abandon his people.

Use the tool above to pull a random verse from Hebrews whenever you need steel in your spine and rest for your soul.

Frequently asked questions

Who wrote the book of Hebrews?
No one knows for certain. The letter is anonymous, and Christians have proposed Paul, Barnabas, Apollos, and others through the centuries. Its place in the Bible has never depended on settling that question.
What is Hebrews 11 about?
Hebrews 11 is often called the hall of faith. It describes what faith is and then walks through Old Testament figures like Noah, Abraham, and Moses who trusted God's promises without seeing them fulfilled in their lifetimes.