<P> The text as it has been passed down to the present time is internally anonymous, though some older title headings attribute it to the Apostle Paul . </P> <P> The style is notably different from the rest of Paul's epistles, a characteristic noted by Clement of Alexandria (c. 210), who argued, according to Eusebius, that the original letter had a Jewish audience and was written in Hebrew and later translated into Greek, "some say (by) the evangelist Luke, others...(by) Clement (of Rome)... The second suggestion is more convincing, in view of the similarity of phraseology shown throughout by the Epistle of Clement and the Epistle to the Hebrews, and in absence of any great difference between the two works in the underlying thought ." He concluded that "as a result of this translation, the same complexion of style is found in this Epistle and in the Acts: but that the (words)' Paul an apostle' were naturally not prefixed . For, he says,' in writing to Hebrews who had conceived a prejudice against him and were suspicious of him, he very wisely did not repel them at the beginning by putting his name ."' </P> <P> This stylistic difference has led Martin Luther and Lutheran churches to refer to Hebrews as one of the antilegomena, one of the books whose authenticity and usefulness was questioned . As a result, it is placed with James, Jude, and Revelation, at the end of Luther's canon . </P> <P> Some theologians and groups, such as Jehovah's Witnesses, who continue to maintain Pauline authorship, repeat the opinion of Eusebius that Paul omitted his name because he, the Apostle to the Gentiles, was writing to the Jews . They conjecture that Jews would have likely dismissed the letter if they had known Paul to be the source . They theorize that the stylistic differences from Paul's other letters are attributed to his writing in Hebrew to the Hebrews, and that the letter was translated into Greek by Luke . </P>

Who is the author of hebrews written to