Messianic Apologetics Grounded in Scripture and Covenant.
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The Bible Through the Lens of God’s Covenant with Israel
This study is a work in progress and will undergo many edits in the coming weeks.
Abstract Overview
The Bible Through the Lens of God’s Covenant with Israel is a comprehensive biblical walkthrough that explores Scripture as a unified covenant narrative centered on Hashem’s enduring relationship with Israel—the physical descendants of Abraham.
Rather than approaching the Bible through inherited theological systems or later doctrinal frameworks, this study follows the storyline of Scripture itself. From the calling of Abraham and the establishment of the Sinai Covenant to the promises of the prophets, the mission of Messiah, and the hope of the age to come, the covenantal thread of Hashem’s faithfulness to Israel runs consistently throughout the biblical text.
By reading Scripture within its historical, literary, and covenantal context, this series seeks to recover interpretive themes often obscured in modern theology. It re-embeds Yeshua and the apostles within their Jewish world, restores the Torah to its covenantal framework, recognizes the Jewish identity of Paul, and reclaims the Gospel as the apocalyptic proclamation of the Kingdom—rooted in Israel’s prophetic hope and extending to the nations.
This walkthrough functions both as a theological exploration and an apologetic resource for Messianic Jewish and Messianic Gentile believers, as well as for anyone seeking to understand the Bible within its original covenantal structure.
By tracing this narrative from Genesis to Revelation, readers are invited to rediscover the coherence of Scripture, the continuity of Hashem’s promises, and the central role of Israel within the unfolding plan of redemption.
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Clarifying Common Theological Assumptions About Covenant and Torah
This study is a work in progress and will undergo many edits in the coming weeks.
Abstract Overview
Building upon the covenantal framework established in The Bible Through the Lens of God’s Covenant with Israel, this section applies that interpretive lens to commonly debated theological questions.
Many assumptions about Jesus, Paul, the Law, and the identity of Israel rest on interpretive traditions that developed long after the apostolic era. These studies examine those assumptions in light of Scripture’s covenant narrative and Second Temple Jewish context.
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Classical Apologetics
This study is a work in progress and will undergo many edits in the coming weeks.
Abstract Overview
This section explores the historical and rational foundations of the biblical faith. Addressing questions about the existence of God, the reliability of Scripture, the identity of Jesus, and the resurrection, these studies engage both reason and evidence with careful analysis.
Rather than assuming belief, classical apologetics asks whether faith in the God of Israel and in Yeshua the Messiah is intellectually credible and historically grounded. By examining philosophical arguments, historical testimony, and the coherence of the biblical worldview, these studies seek to demonstrate that faith is not opposed to reason, but deeply supported by it.