Concerning one of these passages, Gregory Lanier and William Ross wrote: “Hebrews 1:6 makes a vital Christological point by drawing on wording from Deuteronomy 32:43 that is supplied only by the Greek tradition and is absent altogether (it seems) from the MT” (Authority, p. 9). Gregory Lanier and William Ross added: “It is clear enough that Hebrews 1:6 is influenced by the Greek in some way in making this profound Christological claim—or, at least, it was not influenced by a Hebrew text that agreed with the MT” (pp. 10-11). Douglas Woodward commented: “Deuteronomy 32:43 provides us another distinctive affirmation of the deity of the Messiah—remarkable, that is, if you are reading the LXX’s account” (Septuagint, p. 60). Douglas Woodward asked: “Was the author of the Letter to the Hebrews reciting and expositing words that were present in the Septuagint but had been removed from the proto-Masoretic text by the rabbis at Jamnia in Judah?” (pp. 60-61). Concerning Deuteronomy 32:43, Douglas Woodward claimed: “Here we see two vital phrases completely dropped from the Masoretic Text, ‘Let all God’s angels worship him’ and ‘Let all the sons of God strengthen themselves in him’” (Rebooting, Part One, p. 120). Richard Longenecker referred to “the discovery that [Dead Sea Scroll] 4QDeut 32.43 parallels in its Hebrew the Greek of the LXX” (Biblical Exegesis, p. 151). Michael Heiser asserted: “Deuteronomy 32:43 in the Dead Sea Scrolls has three poetic pairings” while “the Masoretic Text reading has removed or altered parts of two of the pairings” (I Dare You, p. 46). Lawrence Bednar noted: “Further evidence of the existence of an advanced amplified parallel Hebrew text for the LXX arises from finding a Qumran Hebrew manuscript giving Hebrew-text authority to the amplified LXX quotation of Dt. 32:43 in Heb. 1:6 of the New Testament (i.e. Let all the angels of God worship him)” (Inerrancy, p. 57).