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Deuteronomy 32:8–9 Is About Israel’s Inheritance — Not a Divine Council

  Deuteronomy 32:8–9 Is About Israel’s Inheritance — Not a Divine Council Few passages have generated as much speculative theology as Deuteronomy 32:8–9. Some claim the verses preserve a memory of a divine council or even a trace of Israelite polytheism. But when the passage is read in its covenantal and literary setting, the meaning is far more grounded and consistent with the Torah’s storyline. The text is about Israel’s inheritance of the Promised Land and YHWH’s unique covenant claim upon Jacob — not about a pantheon of gods governing the nations. Deuteronomy 32 is the Song of Moses, a poetic covenant witness delivered at the threshold of the land. It rehearses Israel’s history, anticipates future rebellion, and affirms God’s ultimate faithfulness. Poetry compresses time and theology. It is not attempting to narrate primeval cosmology; it is interpreting Israel’s story in light of God’s sovereign purposes. Verse 8 speaks of the Most High dividing the nations and fixing their bo...

The Naked Young Man in Mark 14: Not John Mark, But a Dramatic Narrative Device

  The Naked Young Man in Mark 14: Not John Mark, But a Dramatic Narrative Device Few details in the Gospel of Mark are as strange as the brief appearance of the “young man” who flees naked at Jesus’ arrest: “And a certain young man was following him, wearing nothing but a linen cloth about his body. And they seized him, but he left the linen cloth and fled naked.” (Mark 14:51–52) The scene is abrupt. The young man is unnamed. He appears without introduction and disappears just as suddenly. For centuries, readers have suggested this must be John Mark inserting himself into the story as a humble eyewitness signature. But that explanation creates more problems than it solves. The text gives no hint of identification. The figure adds no testimony. He contributes nothing historically necessary to the arrest narrative. He simply appears — and vanishes. That suddenness is not a historical footnote. It is literary. The young man functions less like an autobiographical aside and more like a...

The Myth of a Changed Sabbath: What the Book of Acts Actually Shows

  The Myth of a Changed Sabbath: What the Book of Acts Actually Shows One of the most common assumptions in modern Christianity is that the Sabbath shifted from Saturday to Sunday shortly after Jesus’ resurrection. This claim is often treated as obvious, apostolic, and beyond dispute. Yet when we turn to the Book of Acts—the one biblical document specifically written to describe the beliefs, practices, and controversies of the earliest post-resurrection church—the evidence simply is not there. Acts records disputes over Torah observance, Gentile inclusion, circumcision, table fellowship, and covenant identity in painstaking detail. If sacred time itself had been altered—if the Sabbath had been changed, replaced, or redefined—Acts would be the place where that change would appear. Instead, Acts shows uninterrupted continuity. The Sabbath Remains the Assumed Sacred Time From the earliest missionary activity onward, the Sabbath functions as the default, unquestioned time for worship a...

Jesus Never Promised a Bible: Why “Hear, O Israel” Still Matters

Jesus Never Promised a Bible: Why “Hear, O Israel” Still Matters Modern Christianity often treats the Bible as if it were the final revelation of God — the complete and flawless text handed down from heaven to humanity. Yet, if we’re being honest, Jesus never promised a book. He promised a Spirit. That difference may sound small, but it’s the line between a living faith and a literary idol. “Hear, O Israel” — Not “Read, O Israel” From the start, God’s covenant people were told to listen. Deuteronomy 6:4 begins, “Hear, O Israel,” not “Read, O Israel.” Israel’s faith was oral — it depended on hearing the word proclaimed in the assembly, not on reading private copies of Scripture. The written scrolls were kept by priests and scribes; the average person never touched or read them. The command was not “own the Word,” but obey what you hear. The foundation of faith was relational, not literary. The Layman Had No Scrolls or Bibles for Centuries For most of history, the average believer had no...

Christians Then and Now: The Inconsistency of Faith and Leadership

  Christians Then and Now: The Inconsistency of Faith and Leadership When we look back at the history of Christianity, it’s tempting to idealize the Church Fathers, the Reformers, or early pastors as paragons of virtue. Yet a closer look shows that many of them were far from morally perfect—and Christians often minimize or excuse these failings. Athanasius, one of the most influential defenders of Nicene orthodoxy, was involved in intense political and ecclesiastical conflicts, often using harsh measures against opponents. Martin Luther, the father of the Protestant Reformation, was an extraordinary scholar, yet he expressed virulent antisemitism. Augustine, arguably the greatest theologian of late antiquity, defended the use of corporal punishment for slaves, even if “kindly.” John Calvin played a role in the execution of Michael Servetus. Ulrich Zwingli supported drowning those he deemed heretical. Despite these troubling actions, Christians often study, celebrate, and quote thes...