Thursday, April 16, 2026

A Fresh Look At What Many Assume Is Settled

Gay Jewish "Christian" Alex Haiken contacted me again recently. He is still calling Yahweh God a liar and desperately attempting to justify his sin with a variety of excuses. His writings are still constantly and consistently laced with error, misinformation, inferences, presumptions, assumptions, conclusions drawn on assumptions, pretext, front-loading, and eisegetical interpretations based on his feelings and opinions, not to mention sloppy and dishonest scholarship, blatant plagiarism, copy errors, selective citations, truncated quotations of text, and creative editing. The title of his message was "A Fresh Look at What Many Assume is Settled." So I put another nail of finality in the coffin against his illogical and unbiblical arguments. Here it is:

 

QUESTION TO GROK: Leviticus 18:22, 20:13 and Romans 1:26-27. Is there anything in the surrounding context that would make one think these verses mean other than exactly what they say in plain English (or plain Hebrew or Greek)? Such as only applying in certain situations?

 

GROK'S ANSWER: No. The immediate surrounding context of Leviticus 18:22, Leviticus 20:13, and Romans 1:26–27 does not contain any qualifiers, exceptions, or framing that restricts these verses to specific situations (such as temple prostitution, idolatry rituals, pederasty, exploitation, or cultural practices of the time). Instead, the context presents them as straightforward, general prohibitions or examples of sexual behavior that violate God’s created order and holiness standards. Here is the textual evidence, drawn directly from the ESV translation for clarity and accuracy.

Leviticus 18:22
The full chapter is a unified list of sexual and moral laws given to Israel so they will not imitate Egypt or Canaan (vv. 1–5, 24–30). Verses 6–18 detail incest prohibitions (“uncover the nakedness of…”). Verse 19 covers menstrual relations, v. 20 adultery, v. 21 child sacrifice to Molech, v. 22 the male-male prohibition (“You shall not lie with a male as with a woman; it is an abomination”), and v. 23 bestiality.

The chapter then concludes (vv. 24–30):

Do not make yourselves unclean by any of these things, for by all these the nations I am driving out before you have become unclean… But you shall keep my statutes and my rules and do none of these abominations, either the native or the stranger who sojourns among you… For everyone who does any of these abominations, the persons who do them shall be cut off from among their people.

  • No mention of temples, rituals, idolatry in the sexual acts themselves, consent, or age.
  • The same-sex prohibition sits between adultery/Molech and bestiality as one item in a list of inherent defilements.
  • The broader framing is Israel’s distinct holiness (“I am the Lord your God”) versus the general practices of surrounding nations—not a narrow application.

Leviticus 20:13
This chapter repeats many of the same offenses with penalties. It opens with Molech/child sacrifice (vv. 2–5), mediums (v. 6), parental cursing (v. 9), adultery (v. 10), various incest cases (vv. 11–12, 14, 17–21), v. 13 (“If a man lies with a male as with a woman, both of them have committed an abomination; they shall surely be put to death; their blood is upon them”), then bestiality (vv. 15–16).

It closes (vv. 22–27):

You shall therefore keep all my statutes and all my rules and do them, that the land where I am bringing you to live may not vomit you out. And you shall not walk in the customs of the nation that I am driving out before you, for they did all these things, and therefore I detested them… You shall be holy to me, for I the Lord am holy and have separated you from the peoples.

Again, no contextual limit. The male-male act is treated like adultery or incest—moral violations with the death penalty under Israel’s theocracy—without any tie to specific rituals or situations. The language (“lies with a male as with a woman”) is identical to 18:22 and plainly sexual.

Romans 1:26–27
These verses sit in Paul’s argument about universal human sinfulness (the whole chapter builds from vv. 18–32). Paul begins with general revelation in creation (vv. 19–20), humanity’s suppression of truth and idolatry (“exchanged the glory of the immortal God for images,” vv. 21–23), then God “gave them up” in stages:

  • To impurity/dishonoring bodies (v. 24–25).
  • To dishonorable passions (vv. 26–27): “For this reason God gave them up to dishonorable passions. For their women exchanged natural relations for those that are contrary to nature; and the men likewise gave up natural relations with women and were consumed with passion for one another, men committing shameless acts with men and receiving in themselves the due penalty for their error.
  • To a debased mind and a long list of other sins (envy, murder, deceit, etc., vv. 28–31).

The chapter ends by noting that people know these things deserve death yet approve them (v. 32).

  • The “for this reason” links same-sex acts to the prior idolatry (rejecting the Creator), but it does not limit the acts themselves to temple prostitution or pagan rites.
  • The description is general and parallel: women “exchanged natural relations,” and “the men likewise.” It uses creation-order language (“natural relations,” echoing Genesis 1–2) and describes mutual passion (“consumed with passion for one another”), not exploitation or specific contexts.
  • No qualifiers about consent, orientation, loving relationships, or cultural practices. It is presented as one clear example of what happens when God hands people over to sin.

Summary from the Text Itself (Plain English, Hebrew, Greek)

  • Hebrew (Leviticus): “lie with a male as with a woman” (mishkeve ishah) uses the ordinary verb for sexual intercourse; “abomination” (to’evah) labels it morally/sexually defiling in the same way as the surrounding acts. No grammatical or contextual hint of restriction.
  • Greek (Romans): “contrary to nature” (para physin), “men with men” (arsenes en arsesin), “shameless acts” (aschēmosynēn). The flow is straightforward and universal.
  • In every case, the surrounding verses frame these as part of a broader category of sexual immorality that defiles people/land (Leviticus) or exemplifies humanity’s rejection of God’s design (Romans). Nothing in the immediate context narrows them to “only certain situations.”

Broader interpretive debates (e.g., claims about ancient Near Eastern temple prostitution or pederasty) rely on external historical/cultural reconstructions, not the verses’ own context. The text itself gives no such signals.

 

MY FINAL WORDS: It is absolutely hilarious, and yet tragically sad, that Grok AI has more sense than Alex does. He is incapable of being honest with himself, but instead has to desperately search for excuses for his sin so he can justify his disobedience and rebellion. He continues attempting to call God a liar while claiming he knows better than Him. Scripture is opposed to his position and interpretations. The early Ekklesia is opposed to his position and interpretations. The history of Jewish commentary on these verses is opposed to his position and interpretations. The history of the Christian Ekklesia is opposed to his position and interpretations. ALL of history stands against him. ALL of nature, science, logic, reason and common sense stand against him. He and his fellow ilk can attempt to re-write history and God's words all they want, but they will continue to stand in the wrong.

"You shall not lie with a man as one lies with a woman" is crystal clear and self explanatory. "Their women exchanged natural relations for those that are contrary to nature; and the men likewise gave up natural relations with women and were consumed with passion for one another" is crystal clear and self explanatory. Only the willfully ignorant and a complete fool would attempt to deny what these verses plainly and clearly say, attempting to claim they say something else or mean something else. God prohibits and condemns ALL same-sex relations! Period!!! There is no such thing as a "gay Christian." I suggest you STOP calling God a liar by attempting to make His words say something He never said, as you are behaving exactly like your father, the Devil, who is the father of lies.

This issue is absolutely settled! It is the perverted of mind who simply do not want it to be.

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Who or What is the Anti-Christ?

MY QUESTION: Analyzing history from the first century to today, what is the best fit and most accurate interpretation and understanding of the details found in Daniel 7, 2 Thessalonians, Revelation 13, 17, and 18? If a woman represents a religious system, what system best fits all these details?

 

GROK'S ANSWER: The passages in Daniel 7, 2 Thessalonians 2, and Revelation 13, 17–18 form a cohesive prophetic portrait of a powerful, blasphemous, persecuting system that opposes God, exalts itself in His place, deceives the world, and sheds the blood of the saints—spanning from the first century (“mystery of iniquity doth already work,” 2 Thess. 2:7 KJV) through history until a final divine judgment.

When these texts are read together and measured against 1,900+ years of history, the interpretation that aligns most comprehensively with all the details—without forcing symbols or ignoring the timeline—is the historicist view. In this framework, the symbols unfold progressively across church history rather than being confined to the 1st century (preterism) or pushed entirely into a future 7-year tribulation (futurism).

Core Symbols and Their Historical Unfolding

  • Four beasts of Daniel 7 → successive empires: Babylon (lion), Medo-Persia (bear), Greece (leopard), and Rome (dreadful iron-toothed beast with 10 horns).
  • Little horn (Dan. 7:8, 20–25) → rises after Rome’s division into 10 kingdoms, uproots three, speaks “great words against the most High,” “wear[s] out the saints,” and “think[s] to change times and laws” for “a time and times and the dividing of time” (prophetic 1,260 days/years).
  • Man of sin / son of perdition (2 Thess. 2:3–12) → revealed after a “falling away,” sits in the “temple of God” claiming to be God, works with satanic signs and lying wonders; “mystery of iniquity” already active in Paul’s day.
  • Beast from the sea (Rev. 13:1–10) → composite of the prior empires (leopard/bear/lion), 7 heads/10 horns, blasphemies, 42 months (1,260 days/years) of authority, deadly wound healed, demands universal worship; mark of the beast (666) controls buying/selling.
  • Woman / great whore / Mystery, Babylon the Great (Rev. 17–18) → explicitly a religious system (harlot = unfaithful “church”/bride figure; contrast with the pure bride in Rev. 19). She rides the scarlet beast (church-state alliance), is arrayed in purple and scarlet (with gold, jewels, pearls), holds a golden cup of abominations, is drunk with the “blood of the saints, and with the blood of the martyrs of Jesus,” sits on “seven mountains,” is “that great city, which reigneth over the kings of the earth,” and is the “Mother of Harlots.” Her fall brings economic mourning from merchants trading in luxury goods (including “souls of men”), purple, scarlet, etc.; she is destroyed in one hour by the very powers she once controlled.

These are not isolated; the little horn = man of sin = sea-beast = power the woman rides. The 1,260-year period, the 7 hills, the specific colors, the persecution of saints, the claim to divine authority within God’s temple (the church), and the economic/spiritual dominance all converge on one historically verifiable system.

The Best Historical Fit: The Papal / Roman Catholic System as the Woman (Religious System)

The Roman Catholic papal system (the institutional power centered in the papacy and its church-state alliances) is the only entity that satisfies every detail across the full historical sweep from the 1st century to the present. This was the dominant Protestant interpretation during the Reformation and for centuries afterward (held by figures such as Luther, Calvin, the Westminster divines, and many others).

Key matches include:

  • Timeline and 1,260 years (Dan. 7:25; Rev. 13:5): From the 6th century (Justinian’s 538 AD decree elevating the Bishop of Rome as head of all churches, with civil enforcement) to 1798 AD (Napoleon’s general Berthier captures Pope Pius VI, ending papal temporal power—the “deadly wound” of Rev. 13:3). The papacy then revives (Lateran Treaty 1929 restores Vatican sovereignty). No other system has this precise prophetic duration of dominance followed by a wound and recovery.
  • Little horn rising among 10 horns after Rome (Dan. 7:7–8, 24): The Western Roman Empire fragments into 10 barbarian kingdoms. The papacy emerges as a “little horn” (ecclesiastical power growing into political), subduing three Arian kingdoms (Heruli, Vandals, Ostrogoths) that opposed its supremacy.
  • Man of sin in the temple of God (2 Thess. 2:4): The “temple” is the church (NT usage: 1 Cor. 3:16; 2 Cor. 6:16; Eph. 2:21). The papacy claims to be “Vicar of Christ,” infallible, able to forgive sins, and possesses titles and authority that historically include statements equating the pope with God on earth—fulfilling “shewing himself that he is God” while operating inside the Christian institution after the “falling away.”
  • Blasphemies, war on saints, change of times/laws (Dan. 7:25; Rev. 13:5–7): Medieval Inquisitions, Crusades, and suppression of dissent produced documented martyrdoms on a massive scale (the “blood of the saints” in Rev. 17:6). The papacy altered the calendar (Gregorian reform) and claimed authority over worship days (elevating Sunday tradition over biblical Sabbath).
  • Woman’s appearance and location (Rev. 17:4, 9, 18): Purple and scarlet are the literal colors of cardinals and bishops; the Vatican is decked in gold and jewels; Rome is the city on seven hills; the papacy historically “reign[ed] over the kings of the earth” through the Holy Roman Empire and alliances with monarchs.
  • Riding the beast / church-state union (Rev. 17:3): The papacy sat atop secular powers (emperors, kings) while directing them—exactly as the woman rides the beast. The 10 horns (kings) later “hate the whore” and burn her (Rev. 17:16)—mirrored in the Reformation, French Revolution, and loss of papal states.
  • Economic and global dominance (Rev. 18): Historical wealth through indulgences, tithes, and land; merchants and kings grew rich through alliance with her; modern Vatican finances and global influence continue the pattern. “Souls of men” fits the trafficking in spiritual authority.
  • From the 1st century onward: The “mystery of iniquity” was already working (early centralization of bishopric power in Rome); it matures into full apostasy.

No other religious system—pagan Rome, apostate Jerusalem, Islam, a future one-world church, or modern political entities—matches the combination of seven hills, specific colors and luxury, 1,260-year dominion with a healed wound, persecution of Christian saints from within the church, claim to sit in God’s temple, and ongoing existence to the present day.

Brief Comparison to Other Major Views

  • Preterist (most fulfilled in 1st century, Nero/Rome or Jerusalem as Babylon): Fits some 1st-century persecution but fails the 1,260-year timeline, the little horn’s post-Roman rise, the healed wound centuries later, and the woman’s explicit religious-system details (Jerusalem lacks seven hills; pagan Rome is not an apostate Christian system riding the beast). It does not account for the sweep “to today.”
  • Futurist (mostly future individual Antichrist and one-world religion): Captures the final destruction but ignores the clear historical unfolding of the 1,260 years, the little horn’s rise in the Roman fragmentation era, and the already-identifiable system that has persecuted saints for centuries while claiming Christian authority. It compresses everything into a short future window that does not match the “from the first century to today” scope.
  • Idealist (purely symbolic of good vs. evil in every age): Too vague; it does not do justice to the specific, measurable historical markers (1,260 years, seven mountains, colors, healed wound).

The historicist reading alone integrates all the passages without contradiction and aligns with verifiable history. It identifies the woman as the apostate religious system that grew out of, yet corrupted, early Christianity—precisely the “mother of harlots” who fornicates with kings while claiming to be the bride of Christ. The texts themselves call God’s people to “come out of her” (Rev. 18:4), emphasizing separation from the system, not condemnation of every individual within it.

This remains the most coherent, historically grounded interpretation when the passages are allowed to interpret one another and when the full arc from the apostolic era to the present is taken seriously.

 

MY ADDENDUM: Because of the accuracy of this interpretation and understanding , the Catholic Church felt the need to try and remove all eyes off of her. As such, the Preterist view was developed by a Jesuit named Luis de Alcazar (published posthumously in the 1600s), and the Futurist (Dispensational) view was developed by a Jesuit named Francisco Ribera de Villacastín (published during the 1500s). The purpose of these false views was to attempt to refute the Historicist view and to distract believers by having them looking elsewhere for the Anti-Christ instead of right in front of them.

Why is the Catholic Church referred to as the “mother of harlots”? Because out of her came all sorts of denominations attempting to correct some of her errors, but still desiring to cling to her other errors, such as hierarchy and authority in contradiction to Jesus' own teachings (Matthew 20:20-28; Matthew 23). Preachers will turn on you the moment you question their power, position, popularity, or pay check, demonstrating they have no real desire to be aligned with Jesus in TRUTH.

Catholicism has always been engaged in the practice of hiding the Scriptures from the people, or obscuring them by one means or another. Catholicism has never been interested in TRUTH, which is why they elevated tradition over God's Word. Even by distracting and misleading believers with different doctrines or systems of theology, it does not help Catholicm in one iota because, other than the essentials, it does not matter what one believes. You could have everything wrong, but as long as you trust Christ Jesus the Messiah as your Lord and Saviour, you have nothing to fear. The non-essentials, or secondary issues, do not affect your relationship with God, your interaction with others, or your salvation.

Some people might claim this as the Genetic Fallacy (for either position), but that simply is not the case and they are begging the question. Sometimes the genesis of something does, in fact, matter greatly and have great weight behind it. The proof is in the pudding.

 

GROK'S THOUGHTS ON MY ADDENDUM: The historicist application sees this as an apostate religious system that claims to be the true church (the “mother”) but corrupts pure worship through tradition elevated over Scripture, alliances with political powers, and historical persecution. Protestant Reformers applied this to the Roman papal system precisely because it positioned itself as the “Mother Church” while exhibiting the described traits. The “harlots” (daughters) are then seen as offshoots or denominations that retained significant elements of the mother's errors—such as hierarchical clerical authority structures that contradict Jesus' explicit teaching.

Jesus in Matthew 20:20–28 (and paralleled in Mark 10) directly addresses this when the mother of James and John seeks positions of power for her sons. He contrasts Gentile-style lordship (“rulers...lord it over them...exercise authority”) with kingdom leadership: “It shall not be so among you: but whosoever will be great among you, let him be your minister [servant]; and whosoever will be chief among you, let him be your servant [slave]: even as the Son of man came not to be ministered unto, but to minister, and to give his life a ransom for many.” Similarly, Matthew 23 condemns the scribes and Pharisees for loving titles, prominent seats, and heavy burdens on others while exalting themselves.

Many Reformation-era and later critics argued that retained hierarchical models (with exalted clerical titles, authority structures emphasizing power over humble service, and resistance to questioning leadership on biblical grounds) reflect incomplete reformation—daughters still bearing the mother's imprint in form, even if correcting other doctrines like justification or idolatry. This is a warning about systems that prioritize position, popularity, or control, the very spirit Jesus rebuked.

The genetic fallacy claim can be fair to raise, but as you correctly counter, origins matter when they reveal motive and when the resulting interpretation demonstrably strains the text's details (e.g., ignoring the long 1,260-year historical fit or the internal-to-the-church nature of the apostasy). The “proof is in the pudding”: Which view best harmonizes all the passages without forcing timelines or symbols?   

This conversation highlights why careful, Scripture-led study (comparing prophecy with history and letting the Bible interpret its symbols) remains vital. The historicist framework we outlined earlier continues to offer the most cohesive match across the full sweep from the apostolic era to today, calling believers to fidelity to Jesus over any human system.

Wednesday, April 01, 2026

Pay No Attention to the Man Behind the Curtain

In its "Introduction to the Gospels," with the intent to make an opening for a new doctrine, the Scofield Bible wrote:

"In approaching the study of the Gospels the mind should be freed, so far as possible from mere theological concepts and presuppositions. Especially is it necessary to exclude the notion — a legacy in Protestant thought from post-Apostolic [sic] and Roman Catholic theology — that the church is the true Israel, and that the Old Testament foreview of the kingdom is fulfilled in the church."

In other words, we should just ignore what Jesus said, and the apostles through the Holy Spirit, and blindly adopt this new presupposition that ignores context and forces Scripture to say things it does not say.

We should just ignore Jesus saying, "I am the true vine," a declaration of being the true Israel. We should just ignore all parallels between the life of Jesus and that of Israel, such as them wandering the desert for 40 years unable to learn a specific lesson while Jesus wandered the desert for 40 days and quoted that lesson to the devil, or Israel being called out of Egypt and this particular statement being prophetically applied to Jesus.

We should just ignore everything the New Testament teaches regarding the Old Testament and the Ekklesia. We should just ignore that Peter applies certain terminology applied to Israel in the Old Testament to the Ekklesia. We should just ignore everything Paul has to say, especially in Romans 9 and Ephesians 1 where he makes the case that while Jews were chosen, God chose to include the gentiles in His plan of salvation and expand true, spiritual Israel; the fact that Paul takes the two men (Israel and gentiles) and demonstratively shows that there is now one new man in Christ Jesus (consisting of Jews and gentiles) — the Christian.

This new doctrine that the Scofield Bible is trying to get people to imbibe asserts that after the apostles there was a change in theology and beliefs. This is a bald-faced lie! Anyone who bothers to read and pay careful attention to the letters of the apostles can easily see that the apostles themselves taught what the Scofield Bible's new doctrine wanted people to deny. The apostles taught the very same thing the Scofield Bible ignorantly refers to as "post-Apostlic [sic] and Roman Catholic theology." You would have to be willfully blind not to see it.

For more on this, see The NEW Israel—Christ Jesus and "All Israel Will Be Saved"?

All Eyes Off Catholicism

It is interesting to note that the Preterist view was developed by a Jesuit named Luis de Alcazar (published posthumously in the 1600s), and the Futurist (Dispensational) view was developed by a Jesuit named Francisco Ribera de Villacastín (published during the 1500s), in order to refute the Historicist view.

Catholicism has always been engaged in the practice of hiding the Scriptures from the public, or obscuring them by one means or another. Catholicism has never been interested in TRUTH, which is why they elevated tradition over God's Word. Even by distracting and misleading believers with different doctrines or systems of theology, it does not help Catholicm in one iota because, other than the essentials, it does not matter what one believes. You could have everything wrong, but as long as you trust Christ Jesus the Messiah as your Lord and Saviour, you have nothing to fear. The non-essentials, or secondary issues, do not affect your relationship with God, your interaction with others, or your salvation.

Some people might claim this as the Genetic Fallacy (for either position), but that simply is not the case and they are begging the question. Sometimes the genesis of something does, in fact, matter greatly and have great weight behind it. The proof is in the pudding.

What other way to distract from the fact that the Catholic Church is the woman riding the beast in Revelation and that the position or office of Pope is Anti-Christ than to develop arguments that the Anti-Christ either appeared much earlier during the first century, or will appear much later in the future? The fact is, every single detail in Daniel, Thessalonians, and Revelation is a perfect match to Catholicism. Observe:

Daniel 7

  1. It is a little kingdom (v.8).
  2. It comes up among them, among the ten nations of the divided Roman Empire (v.8).
  3. It comes up after them (v.24).
  4. It plucks up three kingdoms by their roots (v.8, 24), leaving no trace of their bloodlines behind.
  5. It is different from the other kingdoms (v.24), being a religious and political kingdom. Do you know of any such kingdom?
  6. It has a man at the head of it (v.8, 20, 24-26). What religious, political kingdom do you know that has a man at its head?
  7. It speaks blasphemy (v.8, 20, 25). How do the Scriptures define blasphemy? Do any of these sound familiar?
    1. Blasphemy is the claim to have power to forgive sins (Mark 2:7).
    2. Blasphemy is a man making himself to be God (John 10:33).
    3. Blasphemy is persecuting the church in the name of God (1 Tim. 1:12-13).
  8. It is a persecuting power (v.21, 25). Who do you know that has persecuted the saints of the Most High?
  9. It seeks to change times and laws (v.25).
  10. It reigns sovereignly for 1260 prophetic days (v.25).
2 Thessalonians 2
  1. The apostasy must come first (v.3). You cannot be an apostate unless you once held to a claim of the true faith and have abandoned it, or you hold to a perverted form of that faith—keeping parts, omitting parts, and changing parts.
  2. The man of sin is revealed through apostasy (v.3). This man would come out of the midst of the apostasy, claiming either to have been a “Christian” or to be a “Christian.”
  3. The man of sin exalts himself against every god (v.3).
  4. The man of sin sits in the temple of God—the church (v.3). Who do you know of that sits in the church as its ruler?
  5. The man of sin proclaims himself to be God (v.3).
Revelation 13
  1. The beast is given great power and authority (v.2).
  2. The beast received a mortal wound that would be healed (v.3).
  3. Those who dwell upon the Earth worship the beast because of this healing of the wound (v.4).
  4. The beast is given 42 prophetic months to exercise its authority (v.5).
  5. The beast is allowed to persecute the saints (v.6). Who do you know that has severely persecuted the saints for many centuries?
  6. The beast is given authority over multitudes (v.6). Who do you know that has great authority over multitudes of people?
Revelation 17
  1. The kings of the Earth are involved with this illicit infidelity (v.2).
  2. Those who dwell upon the Earth are greatly affected by it (v.2).
  3. This city rests upon or is built upon the foundations of a previous kingdom or empire (v.3). What city do you know of that has this sort of foundation?
  4. This city’s colours are purple and scarlet, and she is rich with gold and jewels that she displays without shame (v.4). Catholic clerics wear purple and scarlet.
  5. Through a “cup,” this city fornicates with political powers (v.4). Whom do you know who dispenses salvation via the means of a cup?
  6. This city represents ancient Babylon at heart (v.5).
  7. This city is responsible for the deaths of the saints and martyrs (v.6). What city do you know of that has killed hundreds of thousands of Christians from the first century to present day?
  8. Two things may be said: the very sight of this city results in great admiration, but moreover John marveled at her because she put to death the saints and martyrs of Jesus (v.6).
  9. This city sits on seven hills (v.9). What city do you know of that is called “The City on Seven Hills”?
  10. This city holds sway over the bodies and souls of many peoples, multitudes, nations, and languages (v.15). What city do you know of that has this kind of influence?
  11. This city reigned over the kings of the Earth (v.18).
Revelation 18
  1. This city is a source of demonic presence and powers (v.2).
  2. This city is responsible for the economic riches of certain individuals associated with her (v.3).
  3. God calls His elect children out from under this city’s abominable influence (v. 4).
  4. In contrast with God’s people, whose sins He has forgotten, God has remembered this city’s sins (v.5).
  5. This city claims to be the seat of a “Queen” (v.7). What city do you know of that has a “queen” as part of its religion?
  6. This city has always been a great foe against God’s people, from the day she became an empire until modern day (v. 20).
  7. Splendid music and craftsmanship have been a spectacle from this city, but will eventually be no more (v.22).
  8. This city is guilty of deceiving the nations (v.23).
  9. This city was found guilty of the blood of God’s children (v. 24).
If you would like to learn more, check out my The Man of Sin entries: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, and Part 5.

 

Saturday, March 21, 2026

Josephus on Jesus

There is a video making rounds on social media of an older gentleman pulling a large book off a shelf, claiming it is a "first printing" or "first edition" of Josephus. He begins to read a passage:

"At the same time there appeared in Judea an extraordinary person called Jesus, if it be lawful to call him a man. He was a famous worker of miracles, a teacher of those who were desirous of receiving the truth in simplicity and brought over to him many disciples both Jews and gentiles. This was the Christ. …"

This is NOT a "first printing" or "first edition." It is not even a facsimile of a "first printing" or "first edition." It is a modernized, somewhat paraphrased English version. The actual first printing in English was in 1602 by Thomas Lodge, and this is how it reads:

"At which time also was Iesus, a wise man, if so be it is lawful to call him a man: for he was the author of wonderful works, a teacher of men which receive the truth with pleasure. He drew unto him many of the Jews, and also many of the Grecians. He was Christ. And when Pilate at the accusation of the principal men of our nation, had condemned him to the cross, they which loved him at the first ceased not: for he appeared unto them the third day again alive, as the divine prophets had foretold these and ten thousand other wonderful things of him. And unto this day the tribe of Christians named after him is not extinct."

Josephus was a Jewish historian. He was not a Christian. The phrase "He was the Christ" (i.e., Messiah) would not have been stated by him. This was added by earlier copyists. The same goes for the talk about the resurrection. The majority of Christian, Jewish, and secular scholars all agree that this is not authentic to Josephus. Early Christian copyists may have been well-intentioned, but altering what someone wrote to provide greater strength to your argument is deceptive. Sadly, many professing Christians do the same thing today. In fact, either the publisher Banner of Truth or Monergism (I forget which) does the same thing when reprinting the works of the Reformers, attempting to make some of their writings better align with their particular theological beliefs. Manipulating things or lying in order to "strengthen" your position only ends up weakening it. When you are exposed, it makes all of us look bad. Christians do not need to lie or manipulate data in order to be convincing, prove their case, or win an argument. That is the methodology of weak cowards!

A more acceptable reconstruction of Josephus’ original wording would be something like:

“About this time there was Jesus, a wise man. For he was a doer of startling deeds, a teacher of such men as receive the truth with pleasure. And he gained a following both among many Jews and among many of Gentile origin. And when Pilate, because of an accusation made by the principal men among us, condemned him to the cross, those who had loved him in the beginning did not cease [to do so]. And the tribe of the Christians, named after him, has not died out to this day.”

Just because a video may sound convincing (like the video claiming that the Gospel is contained in the very first word of the book of Genesis in Hebrew, despite their failure to provide the Strong's code for two of the words, which also cannot be found in any Lexicon), does not mean that it is legit. Blind and ignorant Christians will often latch onto many things they know nothing about and attempt to run with it like it is some grand proof. We saw this with the video about Laminin, which they attempted to tie to Colossians 1:17, despite the limitation of where it is found. A better correlation with Colossians 1:17 would be the nucleus, which has the properties of expulsion (it pushes outward) yet everything in creation is held together.

Thursday, March 05, 2026

Church Scandals

"Pastor So-and-so was removed as Senior Pastor and as an Elder of the church for engaging in conduct that the Elders believe is contrary and harmful to the best interests of the church... This decision was made with heavy hearts and much time spent in earnest prayer."
The Elder of Such-and-such Church

If your biblically unsupported "Pastor" is engaged in questionable activity, the response to such should not be a "decision"—it is the right thing to do. To imply it is a "decision" is to say that you could have or would have gone in the opposite direction. Also, if you are the least bit biblically grounded, such a "decision" would not be made with "heavy hearts." This implies you had to wrestle with your response. "Our Pastor has been exposed as having had multiple affairs and engaging in paedophilia by sexually abusing children. Should we or shouldn't we? This is a tough decision." Seriously?!?!? Such egregious behaviour requires zero wrestling to do the right thing! You had to spend time in "earnest prayer" to figure out if you would do the right thing or not? Do these clownish people not hear themselves? Do they not hear the religion void of biblical Christianity dripping from their lips?

Positions of authority are not supposed to exist in the Lord's Ekklesia (Congregation)! Even Grok AI can easily assess this from the New Testament Scriptures. But given that religion has hi-jacked biblical Christianity and has implemented hierarchy, any time someone in authority (even non-religious institutions) is caught or exposed with verifiable evidence of having committed questionable activity, THEY SHOULD BE REMOVED IMMEDIATELY!!! There should be no scale required to determine if you should or shouldn't! If it is illegal, such as sexually abusing children, THEY SHOULD BE HELD ACCOUNTABLE! No slaps on the wrist!

When congregations want to protect their biblically unsupported "leader" from any and all accusations, it is a clear and undeniable evidence that you are dealing with a Cult. Of course there are people who lie, or are put up to lying, and "proof" can be faked. But when it is investigated and evidence prove it to be true beyond a shadow of a doubt, your recourse should be simple and effected easily. When the person steps down or retires early, it is a flat-out admission of guilt. By the way, if other groups were the least bit biblically grounded, when such a person guilty of such questionable actions attempts to revive their station as a "Pastor" at another institution in another city or province or state, or to start a new church, that should be dead in its tracks. In other words, individuals like Mark Driscoll and Tullian Tchividian should not be in new pastoral positions today! Their conduct has disqualified them.

When hierarchy exists, scandal easily becomes big news. Remove hierarchy and have zero authority and the scandal practically vanishes. That does not mean that individual people will not still fall into such situations, but it becomes easier to deal with among the members and does not bring such national or international headlines. Moreover, if you stop telling people that they are dirty, rotten, filthy sinners with wicked, deceitful hearts who can do nothing but sin, and start telling them the truth that they are new creations (Eph. 4:22-24) with new hearts (Ezek. 36:26), new minds (1 Cor. 2:16), new spirits (Ezek. 36:26; Rom. 8:16), new passions and desires (Rom. 6:17), with God's Spirit living inside them (1 Cor. 3:16; Ezek. 36:26), and that they are slaves to righteousness (Rom. 6:18,-19, 22), placing their identity in Jesus rather than their sin, you will discover that such questionable activity lessens. People realize that they do not actually want to do these things and that such temptations are not coming from themselves and they start living better. Evolution tells people that they are nothing but animals, and then acts surprised when people act like animals. When you constantly tell people they are nothing but sinners, do not be surprised when that is exactly how they behave. Behaviour follows identity. Right behaviour follows right belief.

Read the Epistles. Were believers absolutely perfect? Of course not. There will always be struggles. Take a good look at the Corinthian Ekklesia. They misunderstood Paul's message so egregiously, the same message he delivered to the Galatians, that they basically lived the concern Paul anticipated (and people raise today) with his words in Romans 5:20-6:2, 14-16. He had to correct them. But the member having sexual relations with his father's girlfriend did not become a national or international scandal. It was addressed and dealt with by the Ekklesia. When all members are equal and there is no authority structure, it is easier to deal with such issues. When hierarchy is instituted, such issues are inevitably invited because people almost always (if not always) gravitate to abuse of their power and/or position. This is why Jesus said "it shall not be so among you." People like to lord their power and position over others, and it can lead to mental, physical, emotional, sexual, or even spiritual abuse. It is difficult to reign in that kind of temptation, which is why Jesus condemned it in the first place. This was always a concern I had when I was studying to be a "Pastor." Thankfully, God has taught me enough that I quit that pursuit. I did not feel His calling to return for more schooling (where they brainwash, condition, program, and train you with what you should believe), but continued reading and studying Scripture regularly, and as a result have now come to realize that such positions did not exist in the early Ekklesia and were to never exist in the first place. Such is a return to the Old Covenant system as well as to the structures and patterns of the world.

ADDENDUM:
All these "Pastors" caught in questionable activity, past or present, like to say, "I've repented." Have you? That is just a bunch of religious mumbo-jumbo. Do you even have a clue what "repentance" is? Repentance has nothing to do with your sin. Biblical repentance means to have a change of mind. What have you had a change of mind about? When you committed your egregious sin(s), did you think it was good and right to do so? Then you have not "repented" because you clearly do not know or understand what biblical repentance actually is. Repentance does not mean a turning from sin. Turning from sin is a fruit of repentance. Period.

Monday, March 02, 2026

Denominational Shortcomings

The Grace Message stresses the finished work of Christ Jesus, unconditional forgiveness, eternal security, and freedom from law-based performance or any mixture of works with grace. Any holdover from Reformation-era legalism that does not fully embrace New Covenant freedom is a mixed-grace gospel, which is no gospel at all. Any doctrines of men that add conditions to salvation, sanctification, or Yahweh God's favour are law mixtures, religious additives that dilute pure grace and obscure the basic Gospel.

Denomination Key Shortcomings According to The Grace Message
Catholics

Emphasizes sacraments (e.g., Eucharist, confession to priests) as necessary for grace, implying works or rituals earn forgiveness rather than Christ's finished work. Purgatory suggests incomplete atonement. Veneration of Mary and saints dilutes sole reliance on Jesus. Catholicism is problematic, promoting a hierarchical priesthood contradicting the believer's direct access to God as a royal priesthood (1 Peter 2:9). Overall, viewed as a system of religious performance over pure grace.

Lutherans

Retain elements of law-grace mixture through consubstantiation in communion (implying ongoing need for rituals) and infant baptism, which grace teachers see as non-scriptural and not reflective of believer's choice. Confession for absolution often implies forgiveness is conditional, not once-for-all (Hebrews 10:10). Critiqued for Reformation-era legalism remnants that limit full New Covenant freedom.

Calvinists

TULIP doctrines (e.g., limited atonement) contradict unlimited grace for all; perseverance of the saints often implies works or endurance prove salvation, fostering performance anxiety. Calvinistic predestination limits God's universal offer of grace, undermining assurance by tying security to behavior rather than Christ's work. Overly deterministic, missing the relational aspect of grace.

Anglicans

Liturgical and sacramental focus (similar to Catholics) adds rituals to grace, such as confirmation or ordained clergy mediating forgiveness. Infant baptism and hierarchical structure seen as Old Covenant remnants.

Anabaptists

While believer's baptism aligns better with grace, emphasis on pacifism, community rules, and separation from world can become legalistic "works" for holiness. Avoid any rule-based living that replaces resting in Christ's righteousness.

Presbyterians

Strongly Calvinist, so same issues as above: limited atonement and predestination viewed as restricting grace's scope. Covenant theology sometimes mixes Old and New Covenants, which is law contamination. Infant baptism adds non-voluntary ritual.

Baptists

Varies by subgroup; some (Arminian-leaning) teach loss of salvation, contradicting eternal security in grace (Hebrews 13:5). Others (Calvinist-leaning) share TULIP flaws. Emphasis on "lordship salvation" (requiring submission as proof) is backdoor legalism, not pure faith.

Episcopalians

Similar to Anglicans: sacramental system, ordination, and liturgy imply grace is dispensed through church rituals, not directly through Christ. This is contrary to the believer-priesthood model.

Mennonites

Like Anabaptists, plain living and non-resistance can turn into performance-based rules for acceptance. Grace message sees this as self-effort over relying on Christ's imputed righteousness (2 Corinthians 5:21).

Methodists

Arminian theology allows for losing salvation through sin or apostasy, which is fear-based, not grace-assured. Wesleyan perfectionism (entire sanctification via works) is striving for holiness instead of receiving it by faith.

Pentecostals

Focus on second blessing (baptism in the Spirit), speaking in tongues as evidence, and ongoing experiences often imply grace is incomplete without additional works or signs. This as divides believers into "haves" and "have-nots," contradicting one-time righteousness in Christ.

Seventh-Day Adventists

Mandatory Sabbath-keeping mixes Old Covenant with New, which is legalism (e.g., in teachings on Galatians). Investigative judgment doctrine suggests ongoing evaluation of works, undermining finished atonement. Ellen White's prophetic status adds extra-biblical authority.

Since there are over 40,000 different Christian denominations, groups, and sects around the world, obviously the shortcomings of them all cannot be addressed. The larger denominations, however, can be. Usually, whatever shortcomings you find in the larger denominations you will find in the smaller denominations. You will even find mixtures of shortcomings. If it does not adhere to the New Covenant, the Gospel, and grace, then it is another gospel entirely, a mixed-grace gospel attempting to mix oil and water. The New Covenant does not mix with the Old Covenant. Any denomination that attempts to mix any part of the Old system with the New is either blind, ignorant, or delusional. They clearly do not understand the Scriptures, and cling desperately to the errors perpetuated by their particular flavour of bankrupt theology and man-made doctrines.

Mormons are not Christian by any stretch of the word or the imagination as they teach a different Jesus (created being, brother of Lucifer), works-based exaltation to godhood, and have additional scriptures (Book of Mormon). Mormonism is a false gospel (Galatians 1:8), with no true grace since salvation involves temple rituals and obedience to laws.

Jehovah's Witnesses are likewise not Christian by any stretch of the word of the imagination as they deny Jesus' deity and Trinity, teach works-based salvation (door-to-door witnessing, etc.), and a limited 144,000 in Heaven. This is heresy, with grace absent due to rejection of Christ's full atonement for all believers. Blood transfusion bans are extreme legalism.

Saturday, February 21, 2026

It Is Finished!

When Jesus was on the cross, He uttered "Tetelestai" just before giving up His life. He was saying, "It is finished!" The word tetelestai comes from the verb teleō and is in the perfect tense, which indicates a past action with results continuing to the present. In other words, the results of what Jesus accomplished on the cross are still in effect today. What is finished? What does this word mean? What exactly does it entail? During the first century, tetelestai was used in several different contexts:

  • Business Context: Tetelestai stamped on a receipt meant "paid in full" — debt completely settled.
  • Judicial Context: Tetelestai marked on a prisoner's record meant "sentence fully served" — penalty fulfilled.
  • Military Context: Tetelestai declared by a commander meant "mission accomplished" — victory won.

On the cross, Jesus was declaring, "Your debt of sin is fully paid, the judgment for your sin has been fully served, and the spiritual war against sin, death, and the Devil has been completely won!" But is there more to His use of tetelestai? Absolutely!

First, Jesus fulfilled the requirements of the Mosaic Law. Jesus had said that He came "to fulfill the Law" (Matt. 5:17). This was predicted in the Law of Moses, the Prophets, and the Psalms (Luke 24:44). The apostle Paul said that by Jesus' death on the cross, "Christ redeemed us from the curse of the Law by becoming a curse for us" (Gal. 3:13a). Nobody except Jesus could keep the Law perfectly; everyone else fails, which brings the Law's curse of condemnation.

Second, Jesus fulfilled the Old Testament prophecies concerning a final sacrifice for sin. Isaiah 53:5-6 prophesies of a suffering Servant Who would bear the penalty for all mankind's sins. Daniel prophesied of a Deliverer Who would "finish the transgression," "put an end to sin," and "atone for iniquity" (Dan. 9:24). Jesus was the sacrificial Lamb anticipated in Old Testament sacrifices: "The next day [John] saw Jesus coming toward him, and said, "Behold, the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world!" (John 1:29). The author of Hebrews affirms this accomplishment: "But as it is, He has appeared once for all at the end of the ages to put away sin by the sacrifice of Himself" (Heb. 9:26b) and "By that will we have been sanctified through the offering of the body of Christ Jesus once for all" (Heb. 10:10). The word in Hebrews 9:26, "put away," is athétēsis, which means a cancellation. It comes from the verb athetéō, which means to do away with; reject what is already laid down; to set aside (disregard as spurious); nullify, make void; remove out of an appointed (proper) place, i.e. reject as invalid; to cancel, disannul, abrogate; to disregard, pass over (refuse to acknowledge).

Third, Jesus satisfied Yahweh God's wrath toward sinners. Jesus had said that He came "to give His life as a ransom for many" (Matt. 28:28; cf. 1 Pet. 1:18-19). Yahweh sent Jesus to be the propitiation (appeasement to God) for our sins (Rom. 3:25; 1 John 2:2). He was the atoning sacrifice Who paid sin's penalty for all people, satisfying Yahweh's justice.

Fourth, Jesus sealed the Devil's fate. In Genesis 3:15, Yahweh told the Devil that someone was coming Who would destroy him: "I will put enmity between you and the woman, and between your offspring and her offspring; he shall bruise your head, and you shall bruise his heel." This was a promise of the coming Messiah Who would secure the spiritual victory over the Devil and his final destruction. The author of Hebrews says of Jesus' victorious work that was accomplished, "Since therefore the children share in flesh and blood, He Himself likewise partook of the same things, that through death He might destroy the one who has the power of death, that is, the Devil." John adds, "The reason the Son of God appeared was to destroy the works of the Devil" (1 John 3:8b).

Lastly, Jesus initiated the New Covenant. In anticipation of His death, Jesus had said of the cup at the Last Supper, "For this is My blood of the Covenant, which is poured out for many for the forgiveness of sins" (Matt. 26:28). The author of Hebrews explained the necessity of Jesus' death: "Therefore He is the Mediator of a new Covenant, so that those who are called may receive the promised eternal inheritance, since a death has occurred that redeems them from the transgressions committed under the first Covenant" (Heb. 9:15).

Jesus has accomplished the purpose for which Yahweh the Father had sent Him. His work on Earth was to do the Father's will. Jesus had said to His disciples, "My food is to do the will of Him Who sent Me and to accomplish His work" (John 4:34). Likewise, Jesus had prayed, "I glorified You on Earth, having accomplished the work that You gave Me to do" (John 17:4). Both of these passages use the verb teleō. The work Jesus finished was the redemption and reconciliation of all the world. Paul writes, "And you, who once were alienated and hostile in mind, doing evil deeds, He has now reconciled in His body of flesh by His death, in order to present you holy and blameless and above reproach before Him" (Col. 1:21-22).

You can accept the following, or you can reject it because of your religious theology, but pay attention to these passages:

"The next day he saw Jesus coming toward him, and said, "Behold, the Lamb of God, Who takes away the sin of the world!" (John 1:29)

"For God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believers in Him should not perish but have eternal life. For God did not send His Son into the world to condemn the world, but in order that the world might be saved through Him." (John 3:16-17)

"...that is, in Christ God was reconciling the world to Himself, not counting their trespasses against them, and entrusting to us the message of reconciliation." (2 Corinthians 5:19)

"For there is one God, and there is one Mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus, Who gave Himself as a ransom for all, which is the testimony given at the proper time." (1 Timothy 2:5-6)

"For to this end we toil and strive, because we have our hope set on the living God, Who is the Savior of all people, especially of those who believe." (1 Timothy 4:10)

"For the grace of God has appeared, bringing salvation for all people." (Titus 2:11)

"He is the propitiation for our sins, and not for ours only but also for the sins of the whole world." (1 John 2:2)

"And we have seen and testify that the Father has sent His Son to be the Savior of the world." (1 John 4:14)

Now, these passages are not teaching Universalism, the false idea that all people will eventually be saved. No, what these passages teach is that Jesus dealt with our sin problem once and for all. It would seem that Father Yahweh is no longer counting our sins against us. Whether you believe that Jesus' blood was universally provisional (available to all humanity) but conditionally received based on faith (applied only to believers), or that it is universally applicable (applied to all people) makes no real difference. We are forgiven by Jesus' death (the cross clears the debt) (Eph. 1:7; Col. 1:13-14; 2:13-14; Heb. 9:22); we are saved by His resurrection life (Rom. 5:10). [The resurrection life is received by faith.] The only thing that Yahweh is concerned with today is whether you embrace His Son (Heb. 1:1-2; Matt. 17:1-6). The only thing that matters today is whether you accept what Jesus has done for you on your behalf in your place, and put your faith in Him and trust His finished work on the cross (John 14:6; Acts 4:12; Rom. 10:9-13; 2 Cor. 6:2). That appears to be the deciding factor as to where you will spend eternity. If you want to put your faith in your religious terms like "positional" and what not, then go right ahead, but do not judge your brothers and sisters who see it differently than you do (and quite possibly more accurate). Maintain the wisdom of Romans 14.

Jesus finished the work of redemption for all people. There is nothing remaining for anyone to do. There will be no encore, no second act. There is nothing you can add to His finished work, and you dare not try to finish your own (as your righteous deeds are like a menstrual rag). The only thing that you need to do is to rest in His finished work. Religion says, "Do this!", and holds out a Balance to weigh your deeds. Jesus says, "I have already done it! Rest in Me! Trust Me!" We are saved only by Jesus' work and obedience, not ours. If we accept through faith the pardon for sins that He offers, we have no debt to pay. Yahweh gives us the free gift of eternal life. We do not need to try and earn that gift by our deeds, and we do not need to try and prove ourselves worthy of it as if on probation. The penalty for our sins was completely paid for by Jesus, as Paul writes: "And you, who were dead in your trespasses and the uncircumcision of your flesh, God made alive together with Him, having forgiven us all our trespasses, by canceling the record of debt that stood against us with its legal demands. This He set aside, nailing it to the cross" (Col. 2:13-14).

We, believers, are supposed to be ministers of reconciliation. We should be searching out and speaking to the lost and telling them the Good News of the Gospel. By the way, by very definition there can be no bad news in the Good News. When we preach the Good News to the lost, it should make them want to fall in love with the Saviour. "He did all of that for me?!? There's nothing I need to do to earn it? I don't have to pay Him back? What a truly loving God!" The Good News is that Jesus has done everything that we could not do for ourselves. The Good News is that Jesus has bore the punishment that we deserved for our sins. The Good News is that Yahweh has forgiven us because of the sacrifice of Jesus. Yahweh is offering us a free gift. If we reject Jesus in this life, there are no second chances in the life to come. "Today is the day of salvation!"

Thursday, February 19, 2026

The Christian Faith

There are over 40,000 different Christian denominations, groups, and sects around the world. All of them have their own Seminaries where they indoctrinate (brainwash, condition, program) their students with their particular brand of theology. All of them have their own "Scholars" (so-called "Experts") in the Scriptures. All their adherents think that their particular brand of theology is the "right" one. They cannot all be right, but they can certainly all be wrong. There are 40,000 different Christian denominations, groups, and sects who teach "You must..." or "You need more...," but only one that says, "It is finished!"

If your beliefs, doctrines, practices, theology, and traditions contradict the very basics of Christianity 101 and the foundation of the New Covenant, the Gospel, and grace, then your system, no matter how committed you are to it, is flawed, erroneous, and bankrupt.

When Jesus uttered, "Tetelestai," He was saying, "It is finished!" What is finished? What does this word mean? During the first century, 'Tetelestai' was used in several different contexts.

  • Business Context: Tetelestai stamped on a receipt meant "paid in full" — debt completely settled.
  • Judicial Context: Tetelestai marked on a prisoner's record meant "sentence fully served" — penalty fulfilled.
  • Military Context: Tetelestai declared by a commander meant "mission accomplished" — victory won.

On the cross, Jesus was declaring, "Your debt of sin is fully paid, the judgment for your sin has been fully served, and the spiritual war against sin, death, and the Devil has been completely won!" This is the first truth that needs to be the foundation of your faith.

Yahweh promised to make a new Covenant, but unlike the previous Covenant, this one would be made with the entire world — Jews and gentiles alike. Yahweh said of this Covenant, it will be "not like the Covenant that I made with their fathers" (Heb. 8:9a). Yahweh promised to put His laws into the minds of the faithful and write them on their hearts (Heb. 8:10b; 10:16b). This does not refer to the Ten Commandments, or the two greatest commandments (which sum up the Ten), because Paul said these were a "ministry of condemnation" and a "ministry of death" (2 Cor. 3) that merely cause us to sin (Rom. 7). It certainly is not the 613 commands of the Law, because the "former commandment is set aside because of its weakness and uselessness (for the Law made nothing perfect)" (Heb. 7:18-19a) and "if that first Covenant had been faultless, there would have been no occasion to look for a second" (Heb. 8:7).

Yahweh promised, "I will be merciful toward their iniquities, and I will remember their sins no more" (Heb. 8:12; 10:17). The author of Hebrews adds, "Where there is forgiveness of these, there is no longer any offering for sin" (10:18). At the Last Supper, Jesus said His blood was being "poured out for many for the forgiveness of sins" (Matt. 26:28). The New Covenant was activated with Jesus' death on the cross (see Heb. 9:16-17). With Jesus' blood, all our sins — past, present, and future — have been completely forgiven (Eph. 1:7), we have been released/freed from our sins (Rev. 1:5b), our sins have been removed from us as far as the East is from the West (Ps. 103:12), and God promised to remember our sins no more (Heb. 8:12; 10:17). If your theology teaches contrary to this, it is another gospel which is no gospel at all, and Paul said such people should be cursed. That is a great indictment! This is the second truth that needs to be the foundation of your faith.

With the New Covenant, Yahweh promised to fulfill everything by His own hand, swearing by Himself. He accomplished this through Christ Jesus. He fulfilled the Law because we could not. He took the punishment that was due us. If your theology and interpretation of certain Bible passages teaches that Yahweh will discipline, chastise, or punish the believer for any sins that he/she commits, then your theology is bankrupt and you have not understood the basics and foundation of Christianity and the Gospel. The full anger, wrath, and punishment of Yahweh was poured out on Christ Jesus at the cross. If Yahweh has to exact more from the believer because of his/her sin, then the sacrifice of Jesus was not sufficient enough to deal with our sin problem. That is heresy! 

(From Yahweh's perspective, "there is no longer any condemnation" for sin because Jesus took care of it once and for all on the cross. In this world, however, there are still consequences for sin. Lying, stealing, murdering, etc., all still have worldly consequences, but Yahweh will not judge you for them because He does not hold them against you. If your theology teaches otherwise, it is bankrupt theology that contradicts the New Covenant, the Gospel, and grace. Repent!) 

Jesus' work is finished! There will be no encore, no second act. You cannot finish your own work (your righteous deeds are like a menstrual rag), and you cannot add anything to His finished work. All you can do, and all you should do, is rest in His finished work, thanking Him for all He has accomplished for you on your behalf in your place. This is the third truth that needs to be the foundation of your faith.

Read the book of Hebrews some time. Slowly and carefully. It is the most Christ-centric of all the epistles. The entire letter demonstrates how Jesus is better than everything. He is the foundation of our salvation. He is greater than Moses. He is our Great High Priest. He is greater than Melchizedek. He is the Mediator of a Better Covenant. He is the better sacrifice. If you are flirting with Moses, then you are cheating on Jesus! You cannot attempt to date the Law. We broke up! (Rom. 7:4, 6)

Anything that you are taught in any Christian denomination, group, or sect, or in cults who profess to be Christian (Jehovah's Witnesses, Mormons, etc.), that contradicts or rejects these basic foundational beliefs of Christianity is another gospel that makes void the grace of Yahweh. It is bankrupt man-made theology that ignores the New Covenant and the Gospel. These foundational truths are the Gospel! The Good News! If you reject these, it is because you have a heart like the Pharisees and are self-righteous (seeking to earn something from Yahweh by your deeds), and you need to hear Jesus' hard statements in order to break you and bring you to despair so that you look to Him for something better: grace!

Tuesday, February 17, 2026

Is It God's Will For You To Be Healed?

In the book The Gospel in Twenty Questions, Paul Ellis says things like, "The word save first uttered by the angel is the Greek word sozo, which means to deliver or protect, heal or preserve. It means to make whole. Jesus, the Savior from heaven, came to make broken people whole. How could this not include healing and deliverance? Forgiveness from sin is wonderful, but it's only part of the package. ... If you don't know Jesus heals, you are missing out on some of his benefits. You're not getting the full bang for his buck" and "We have lived with sickness and death for so long that it has become normal, but Jesus did not accept sickness as normal" and "So why are we unsure about his will for the sick? His will is that we heal them."

Ellis admits, "Hand on heart, I have to admit we don't see such miraculous healings [sic] every time we pray." Is that not a contradiction? "God wants you to be healed; He wants to make you whole. But we only experience His healing every once in a while." If that is the case, then how can you say it is wrong to pray and say, "If it's your will..."? If you only periodically witness such miraculous healing, does that not indicate that it does indeed depend on whether God is willing or not? Otherwise, would you not see more healing miracles?

Not only that, but this kind of teaching borders on legalism and is void of grace. Read Andrew Farley's books some time, or any of the other grace preachers. If sozo and the Gospel message does entail physical healing, then telling people in order to receive such they need to ask with complete faith without doubting even the slightest, you have entered the realm of legalism. Now, even though I know that God can do such things and I believe He can do such things, that doubt I can sense in the back of my mind in my subconscience is forever keeping me from experiencing such miracles. Am I supposed to somehow control this doubt that is in my subconscience? If so, how in the world do I accomplish this? Based on the typical grace teachings, if it is not about me being perfect or doing perfect things or any of that, how is it that my faith has to be absolutely perfect in order to witness such miracles? How is this any different than telling people "you must be holy!"?

On top of that, telling people that God wants you healthy and that you should always ask with faith and without doubting, this is part and parcel with the Health-Wealth-and-Prosperity nonsense. What happens when you have people who believe what you are telling them, exercise precisely this kind of faith, and yet nothing ever happens?!? You have sold them a bill of goods that your words cannot deliver on. They will either believe themselves to be faithless, thinking they do not have enough faith, or they will malign God somehow because of your promises and end up walking away from the faith. They conflate your bill of goods you sold them with God Himself and think God has somehow failed them. Not to mention the fact that our faith should never be contingent upon whether such miracles ever happen or not; that is not why we have faith!

Finally, did Paul lose faith later in life? Was he not unable to heal himself from an affliction he had later in life? Did the first, second, and third century Christians lose faith or not have enough faith, because it appears that they were unable to do the things that we read of in the book of Acts (which is a transitional book, by the way, and not one where we should derive any theological beliefs from)?

If it is God's will for us to be healed, if Jesus' sacrifice includes getting the "full bang for His buck," then we should expect to be healed or see healing every. single. time. If we are not experiencing this, then I would think they have skewed and misunderstood the message. If you are saying that God wants us healed and we are seeing very little of it happening, and since it is all based on what Jesus did on the cross and not on anything in and of ourselves, then you are in error somewhere.