Time To Move On
“Adonai our God spoke to us … saying: ‘You have stayed long enough at this mountain. Turn, journey on…'” Are we listening when God says it is time to move?
“Adonai our God spoke to us … saying: ‘You have stayed long enough at this mountain. Turn, journey on…'” Are we listening when God says it is time to move?
There is an interesting marking on some New Testament verbs in the New American Standard Bible. In the Greek, they are actually in a different tense.
I bought my first Keith Green album, No Compromise, in 1979. Printed inside was Keith’s testimony, “It was in the spring of 1973 that I first prayed to Jesus…”
And if you look at the Biblical calendar, there isn’t a lot going on from Shavuot to Yom Teruah. Historically, though, a lot happened.
I like to sing songs in Hebrew. Since I don’t speak that language, I’m not very good at it, but I like to do it anyway. Here are a few of my favorites.
This Sabbath liturgy doesn’t require knowledge of Hebrew, using simple words and phrases that will be more meaningful as you worship.
Chesed is one of the most intriguing words in Scripture. Translated as love, lovingkindness, and mercy, there isn’t just one English word to convey its meaning.
For many, the Feasts of Adonai are our first exposure to things Hebraic, even before coming to an understanding that they are times we ought to be observing.
It wasn’t coffee; it was tea. It was a gracious act of hospitality, offering what she believed was what I wanted; but the truth was, it was something else.
Exactly what the title suggests: The New Testament with notes and commentary from Jewish scholars. These Jewish scholars do not believe Yeshua is the Messiah.