Dec 15, 2025
What sort of work do the Scriptures forbid on the Sabbath? What sort of work is allowed? Attention to the Hebrew words used in connection with the Sabbath and in other contexts sheds some light on these questions. Dr. Baruch Kvasnika is President of Jerusalem Seminary, which equips believers to understand their faith...
Dec 8, 2025
Toward the close of his short letter to Philemon, Paul offers to pay any debt Onesimus may owe Philemon, and adds (ESV), “I, Paul, write this with my own hand: I will repay it—to say nothing of your owing me even your own self.” The last words are often viewed as heavy-handed, but are better understood as an...
Dec 1, 2025
In an important line, Paul is frequently understood to be referring to at least two laws, the law of Moses, which the apostle is no longer “under,” and a law of Christ, which he is still “under” (1 Cor. 9:21). Jewish parallels and the Greek words Paul uses suggest, however, that it is Paul’s commission...
Nov 24, 2025
In the opening line of Mark’s Gospel Jesus is referred to as “the Son of God,” except that the Greek phrasing in this instance, somewhat non-typically, lacks any definite article. That this idiom echoes imperial propaganda is seen to be likely when a Roman centurion employs the same wording as he observes how...
Nov 17, 2025
When the king of Egypt is first introduced in our OT book of Exodus he is not named, nor thereafter. But the book itself in Hebrew is called “Names,” and even the midwives are named (Exod. 1:15). Egyptians tended to treat the kings of their enemies the same way. Dr. Oliver Hersey is the 11th president of Jerusalem...