Two Systems. Two Words. Two Freedoms.

The Distinction the Tradition Never Made

Telos. Katargeo. One word means arrival. The other means demolition. The tradition collapsed them into one reading. That collapse became the foundation of two thousand years of confusion.

 

The Question That Was Never Asked

Every major letter Paul wrote contains language about freedom from the law. Romans, Galatians, Colossians, Ephesians, the freedom declarations run through all of them. And for two thousand years the tradition has read every one of those declarations as the same statement about the same law.

It has never been the same statement. It has never been the same law.

There were two systems operating simultaneously...    see more >>

In Defense of the Fence

and Despite for the Torah

How 46,000 Denominations Rebuilt What the Cross Demolished
and Demolished What the Cross Fulfilled

 

A Necessary Distinction Before We Begin

This document is not about the body of Christ. The body of Christ, every human being in whom the risen presence of Yeshua (Jesus) dwells, which is every human being, has no blemish, no fault, no stain. The cross accomplished that. Universally. Permanently. Without condition.

This document is about Christianity. The institutional, doctrinal, denominational structure that has claimed to represent...    see more >>

Miriam’s Freedom Reclaimed

A Freedom That Should Never Have Been Taken Away

The Torah Exalted Women. The Fence Buried Them. Christianity Kept Them Buried.

They were not wounded by the cross. They were wounded by the fence.

 

What the Torah Actually Said About Women

Before the fence. Before the Talmud. Before the rabbinical tradition built its walls. Before Christianity inherited those walls and rebuilt them in Latin and Greek and every language the gospel traveled. Before any of that, there was the Torah of Moshe (Moses). And the Torah of Moshe did not oppress women.

It exalted them.

Miriam, the sister of Moshe and Aharon (Aaron), the woman who stood at the...    see more >>