We Will Return
Abraham tells the servants to wait while he and Isaac go up the mountain to worship. Then he says something that should stop every reader cold — we will worship and we will return to you. Both of us. Before the knife is raised, before the ram appears, Abraham already knows how this ends.
Go Without Knowing Where
Yehovah tells Abram to leave everything and go to a land He will show him. Not a land He names. Not a destination He describes. A land He will show him along the way. That distinction is the entire teaching.
The Provision for the One Who Missed It
Some men came to Moses troubled because they had missed Passover through no fault of their own. They did not shrug and move on. They asked why they should be kept from Yehovah's appointed time. What Yehovah said in response is one of the most overlooked provisions in the entire Torah
Counted by Name
The book of Numbers opens with a census and most readers treat it as the most skippable section in the Torah. But the Hebrew word used for numbered is not a military term. It is a covenant word - and it changes everything about what Yehovah is actually doing when He counts His people.
When the Community Breaks the Covenant
Leviticus 26 is the most direct chapter in the Torah about what happens when a covenant people walks away from Yehovah's instruction. The blessings are collective. The curses are collective. And the faithful remnant does not escape either one.
The Land Is Mine
Yehovah gives Moses the Shemitah and Jubilee laws on the mountain - not in a courtroom or a legislature but on Sinai itself. That location is not a geographic detail. It is a theological statement about who actually owns the ground beneath your feet.
The Book of Acts: They Didn't Leave Torah at the Cross
The disciples never stopped keeping Torah. Not one of them. This series walks through all twenty-eight chapters of Acts to show what authentic faith in Yeshua actually looked like in the first century — and what it should look like today.
Acts Chapter 1: Between the Promise and the Power
Yeshua had ascended. The Spirit had not yet come. In that gap between promise and fulfillment, a hundred and twenty people did the only things they knew to do — they obeyed, gathered, and prayed. What happened next changed everything.
Acts Chapter 2: The Day Yehovah Signed His Work
The Spirit fell on Shavuot — the feast commemorating Torah at Sinai — and nothing about that was an accident. Fire came down again, three thousand were added, and the called-out community began living in a way the world could not explain.
When Yehovah Shuts the Door
Everyone knows the flood came. Almost nobody knows Yehovah gave a seven day warning, that the ark rested during Sukkot, or that the day Noah walked out of the ark may be the same day Yeshua walked into heaven. The flood narrative is hiding patterns most believers have never been shown.