This site explores salvation history, where Christian doctrine unfolds across centuries of faith, promise, and divine fulfillment. Flowing from that witness, ἵνα πιστεύσητε ὅτι Ἰησοῦς ἐστιν ὁ Χριστός, ὁ Υἱὸς τοῦ Θεοῦ, καὶ ἵνα πιστεύοντες ζωὴν ἔχητε ἐν τῷ ὀνόματι αὐτοῦ — the name that breaths.
Monday, December 8, 2025
The Language Of Faith
Faith speaks in the ordinary: in the way someone keeps walking despite exhaustion, in the way forgiveness is offered when bitterness would be easier, in the way trust is extended even when disappointment has been familiar. It is not bound to sacred spaces, but woven into the fabric of daily existence.
Faith is a language of paradox. It is both silence and song, both question and answer. It thrives in uncertainty, yet insists on meaning. It is the unseen grammar of resilience, shaping how we endure loss, how we celebrate joy, how we imagine futures not yet visible.
Faith does not demand eloquence. It can be clumsy, hesitant, even wordless. Yet it communicates through gestures: a hand held, a promise kept, a hope carried forward. It is less about what is said than about what is lived.
Faith is the language of those who believe that light can break into darkness, that love can outlast despair, that tomorrow can hold more than today. It is not confined to creeds or institutions. It is the quiet insistence that life has meaning beyond what can be measured.
Wednesday, December 3, 2025
The Covenant And Israel’s National Identity
"The one distinguishing feature of the state that eventually emerged as 'Israel' seems to have been its concept of statehood. Under the old regime of Canaan, political power had always gone hand in hand with possession of a city, which in turn meant that real power always resided in the hands of just a few privileged people. But the kind of state that developed under the influence of the covenant from Mount Sanai was underwritten by a different understanding of human society, in which class structure had no part to play. For a nation whose corporate identity was forged out of the story of a group of people who had been slaves, it was difficult to justify any one individual claiming a position of personal superiority, for in the beginning they had all been nobodies, and the only thing that made them a nation was the undeserved generosity of God. Israelite national identity was always firmly based on their understanding of the nature of God, and this was to have far-reaching consequences not only during the formative period of their history, but also throughout their entire existence as a nation. It meant that all elements of their population were of equal importance, and their ultimate responsibility was not to some centralized power structure, but to God alone."
John Drane, Introducing the Bible, p. 66
Daniel 9:18 Is An Overlooked Witness To Sola Fide
In verse 18, Daniel says plainly: “We do not present our pleas before you because of our righteousness, but because of your great mercy.” This is the heart of his prayer. He acknowledges that Israel has no bargaining chips, no moral credit to offer. Their only hope is God’s compassion. In simple terms, Daniel is saying: “We don’t deserve this, but we’re asking because You are merciful.” That posture is what later Christian theology would call faith, a reliance on God’s character rather than human achievement.
Exegetically, the verse is powerful because it strips away any notion of works‑based righteousness. Daniel does not appeal to Israel’s history, their covenant identity, or even his own personal faithfulness. Instead, he grounds the entire prayer in God’s mercy. This anticipates the New Testament’s teaching that justification is by grace through faith, not by works of the Law. Paul’s declaration in Romans 3:28, that a person is justified by faith apart from works, finds a clear Old Testament echo here.
Though passages like Genesis 15:6 and Habakkuk 2:4 are often cited in discussions of Sola Fide, Daniel 9:18 is rarely mentioned. Yet it deserves attention as one of the clearest Old Testament statements that human righteousness cannot serve as the basis for approaching God. In plain words, Daniel reminds us that salvation has always been about mercy, not merit. His prayer is a timeless witness to the truth that our standing before God rests on His grace alone, received by faith.
Counting Bodies, Losing Credibility: Volf’s Thesis Refuted
Equally problematic is Volf’s framing of modern conflicts as “Christian wars.” The United States, though majority-Christian, is a secular republic whose wars are driven by geopolitics, not theology. To describe Iraq or Afghanistan as “Christian wars” is a distortion that erases the complex motives of statecraft and reduces them to religious caricature. Coalition forces include atheists, Jews, Muslims, and others, yet Volf insists on branding these conflicts as Christian. This rhetorical sleight of hand ignores the fact that the Christian just war tradition has often condemned such interventions, showing that Christianity provides moral tools to critique violence rather than justify it. To blame Christianity for wars waged by secular states is to confuse cultural demographics with theological causation.
Finally, the essay’s one-sidedness is glaring. Volf emphasizes Christian failures while ignoring Christianity’s transformative contributions. The abolition of slavery, the rise of universities, the nurturing of science, and the birth of humanitarian movements were all profoundly shaped by Christian thought and activism. Moreover, the Christian just war tradition has influenced secular international law, including the principles behind the Geneva Conventions. To present Christianity only as a source of violence is not balance but caricature. It is a polemical indictment masquerading as historical reflection.
Tuesday, December 2, 2025
Seeing In A Mirror Dimly
Growing Into Wholeness
Thursday, November 20, 2025
Lost In Translation? Not When It Comes To 1 Corinthians 6
The Greek words malakoi and arsenokoitai were not used in a vacuum. Paul chose them deliberately, and translators across centuries have wrestled with their meaning, not because they were unclear, but because language and culture evolve. Saying “we cannot understand what Paul meant because we are modern” is like saying we cannot understand ancient laws against theft because we now have credit cards.
1 Enoch And The Collapse Of Purgatory: A Canonical Contradiction In Catholic Theology
The Roman Catholic Church teaches that purgatory is a divinely revealed truth, an intermediate state where souls undergo purification before entering heaven. This doctrine is affirmed by the Council of Florence, the Council of Trent, and the Catechism of the Catholic Church (CCC 1030–1032). It undergirds practices like indulgences, prayers for the dead, and the offering of masses for departed souls. Yet one of the most influential apocalyptic texts of the Second Temple period, 1 Enoch, presents a vision of the afterlife that directly contradicts this teaching.
In chapter 22 of 1 Enoch, the patriarch is shown a vision of Sheol, the realm of the dead, divided into four “hollow places” where souls await judgment. These compartments are fixed and final:
- The righteous rest in peace.
- The wicked suffer torment.
- The unjust await condemnation.
- The slain cry out for justice.
This eschatology stands in direct contradiction to the Catholic doctrine of purgatory. According to Rome, souls who die in a state of grace but are not fully purified undergo a process of sanctification. 1 Enoch offers no such intermediate state. It denies the possibility of change after death, rendering prayers for the dead and indulgences theologically meaningless.
The contradiction is not merely interpretive, but structural. If purgatory is a revealed truth, then 1 Enoch is a theological error. But if 1 Enoch reflects the dominant Jewish view of the afterlife in the centuries leading up to Christ, then the Catholic doctrine of purgatory represents a departure from that tradition, not a fulfillment of it.
To understand the weight of this contradiction, one must consider how purgatory diverges from Jewish thought. In Second Temple Judaism, the religious context of Jesus and the earliest Christians, there was no unified doctrine of the afterlife, but several themes were consistent:
- Immediate postmortem judgment: Many Jewish texts, including 1 Enoch, Jubilees, and 4 Ezra, describe souls being assigned to fixed fates upon death.
- No postmortem sanctification: The idea that souls could be purified after death was largely absent. Righteousness and repentance were matters of this life, not the next.
- Resurrection and final judgment: Jewish eschatology emphasized a future resurrection and divine judgment, not a purgatorial interim.
The problem deepens when one considers the issue of Rome's claims concerning infallible certainty and canon formation. 1 Enoch was widely read in Second Temple Judaism, quoted in the New Testament (Jude 14–15), and cited by early church fathers such as Tertullian, Clement of Alexandria, and Origen. It shaped early Christian eschatology and angelology. Yet it was excluded from the Catholic canon.
Meanwhile, 2 Maccabees, a text that aligns in certain respects with purgatory through Judas Maccabeus’s offering for the dead, was canonized. This selective inclusion suggests a theological bias in canon formation. Rome embraced texts that supported emerging doctrines and rejected those that contradicted them, even if the latter were more historically and theologically influential.
This raises a critical issue: Was the canon formed by divine inspiration or theological convenience? If 1 Enoch was excluded despite its patristic reception, and 2 Maccabees was included to buttress purgatory, then the canon reflects not just revelation but editorial preference.
The tension between 1 Enoch and Catholic dogma exposes a fault line in Rome’s theology of the Bible. For those outside the Roman Catholic Church, this contradiction serves as a cautionary tale: when tradition overrides coherence, error becomes enshrined. 1 Enoch is not a minor blemish. It is a theological counterweight that demands reckoning. This discussion does not aim to reopen debates about canon formation, but rather to highlight a pattern in how the Roman Catholic Church engages with tradition.
Wednesday, November 19, 2025
The Pre-Existence Problem: Wisdom 8:19-20 And The Limits of Catholic Interpretation
“As a child I was naturally gifted, and a good soul fell to my lot; or rather, being good, I entered an undefiled body.” (Wisdom 8:19-20, NRSVCE)
This passage, nestled in a reflection on the pursuit of divine Wisdom, seems to suggest that the speaker’s soul existed prior to embodiment and was assigned a body based on its moral quality. That idea, however, stands in stark contrast to Catholic doctrine. Further, the idea that someone is born with wisdom or goodness challenges the Catholic emphasis on original sin and the need for grace. If the soul is already good and wise, then what role does baptism or sanctifying grace play?
The Catechism of the Catholic Church is unequivocal: each human soul is created directly by God at the moment of conception (CCC, 366). Rome rejects both the Platonic notion of the soul’s pre-existence and any reincarnationist framework. The soul does not “enter” a body from a prior state of existence. Rather, body and soul are created together in a single act of divine will. Thus, any suggestion that a soul existed before the body, or that it was rewarded with a particular body based on prior goodness, poses a serious theological problem.
Roman Catholic scholars and apologists have offered several strategies to neutralize the apparent contradiction. Yet each defense, while creative, ultimately fails to resolve the tension without stretching interpretive credibility.
One common approach is to treat the passage as poetic or allegorical. Some argue that the speaker is simply expressing a sense of innate virtue or divine favor from early childhood. However, the phrase “being good, I entered an undefiled body” implies a chronological sequence: goodness precedes embodiment. This is not easily dismissed as metaphor, especially in a book that otherwise engages in serious philosophical reflection.
Another defense points to translation ambiguity. It has been suggested that alternative renderings of the Greek text might soften the implication of pre-existence. Yet, the dominant Greek manuscripts support the standard translation. The syntax and vocabulary, particularly the use of “entered” and “being good," reinforce the idea of a soul that pre-exists the body. There is little linguistic basis for a radically different interpretation.
A third strategy appeals to cultural context. It is often noted that the Book of Wisdom was written in Alexandria and reflects Hellenistic philosophical currents, particularly Platonism. While cultural context explains the presence of Platonic ideas, it does not excuse theological error in a text deemed divinely inspired. If the passage affirms a false anthropology, it raises doubts about the doctrinal reliability of the book itself. Roman Catholic theology has long tried to baptize Greek philosophy, but this passage shows the cost of that synthesis, sometimes the ideas do not fully align.
Some defenders also cite pseudonymous authorship. Since the book is written in the voice of Solomon but not by him, the passage might reflect a literary persona rather than a doctrinal claim. This defense sidesteps the issue. If the Roman Catholic Church accepts this book as canonical, then its theological content, regardless of literary device, must be reconcilable with doctrine.
Wisdom 8:19–20 forces a deeper question: Can a canonical, inspired text contain theological ideas that the Catholic Church later rejects? Catholic theology holds that Scripture is inerrant in matters of faith and morals. If this passage teaches a metaphysical error, it challenges that principle. Rome typically resolves such tensions through the lens of the Magisterium: Scripture must be interpreted in harmony with Tradition and authoritative teaching. But in this case, the interpretive gymnastics required to align Wisdom 8:19–20 with Catholic anthropology are unusually strained.
Wisdom 8:19–20 remains one of the most theologically awkward verses in the Catholic apocrypha. While the Church of Rome continues to affirm the Book of Wisdom as inspired and doctrinally sound, this passage exposes the failure of harmonization efforts.
Created Unequal? Sirach 33:10-13 And The Failures Of Roman Catholic Canon Theology
This passage does not merely describe the diversity of human experience. It asserts that God actively creates some people to be exalted and others to be cursed, not based on their choices or actions, but by divine decree. This is not providence, but fatalism. It is not justice, but arbitrary inequality. And it is not Christian. It is a theological relic that undermines the very heart of the gospel.
The Roman Catholic Church teaches that every human being possesses inherent dignity and is called to holiness. Yet Sirach 33 suggests that some are created for dishonor from the outset. This is not a matter of vocation or role. It is a metaphysical hierarchy baked into creation itself. The passage echoes a deterministic worldview more akin to pagan fatalism than to the biblical vision of a just and merciful God.
The implications are profound. If Scripture is to be the foundation of doctrine, then the canon must be theologically sound. By including Sirach 33:10–13, the Catholic Church has compromised that foundation. It has embraced a text that undermines the universality of grace, the justice of God, and the equality of persons. And in doing so, it has exposed the fragility of its own canon theology.
This passage is not a minor blemish, but a theological fault line. It calls into question the criteria by which Rome discerns inspiration, the consistency of its doctrinal commitments, and the integrity of its teaching authority. For those outside the Catholic fold, it serves as a cautionary tale: when tradition overrides truth, error becomes enshrined. It is a verse that cannot be harmonized, cannot be excused, and cannot be ignored. And for those who seek a faith rooted in justice, mercy, and truth, it is a verse that demands rejection, not reverence.