This working paper introduces a novel structural and operational framework for analyzing the production, transmission, and internal mechanics of early Christian literature, focusing specifically on the Epistle to the Hebrews. Moving away from traditional single-author hypotheses, we propose the "Apostolic Workgroup" Model. Utilizing concepts from contemporary network theory and textual logistics, this framework views textual composition as a collaborative, node-based process executed by an organized team (workgroup) sharing unified theological, rhetorical, and administrative objectives. By identifying structural patterns, linguistic shifts, and operational references within the text, this paper demonstrates how a collaborative network paradigm provides a more robust, empirically grounded explanation for the Epistle's unique anonymity, high rhetorical sophistication, and complex distribution history.
Ioannis Pantelidis (Tue,) studied this question.