Biblical Interpretation
-

Modern theology often tries to explain Jesus with categories the New Testament never uses. Yet Scripture roots his identity in Israel’s story, not abstract metaphysics. His prayer, obedience, and Spirit-anointed mission reveal the true shape of Sonship—and invite us to recover a Christology grounded in narrative, not speculation.
-

Israel stumbled over her own Messiah not because she lacked zeal or covenant devotion, but because God fulfilled His promises in a way that overturned long-held expectations. The stone God laid in Zion—fulfilled in the crucified and risen Jesus—did not match the forms Israel assumed God’s faithfulness must take. Paul insists this stumble is neither…
-
This post challenges the popular idea that Christians must support modern Zionism to be faithful to Scripture. Rooted in New Testament theology, it shows how Jesus and Paul redefined land, election, and inheritance — not around a nation-state, but around the Messiah who gathers a global people into God’s new creation.
-
This article challenges the popular Pre-Tribulation Rapture view, not as heresy, but as a modern and misguided teaching that distorts the gospel’s bigger story. By recovering a historic and biblical vision of Christ’s return, it calls the Church to endurance, witness, and resurrection hope—not escapism.
-
Christians have long found hope in the promise of Christ’s return, but not everyone agrees on how that promise will unfold. While debates over the “rapture” can be passionate, the New Testament calls us to unity, humility, and hope. Rather than dividing over the details, we’re invited to fix our eyes on what matters most:…