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Hermeneutics


What Does It Mean to Say the Bible Is “God-Breathed”? A Journey from Basic Understanding to Theological Clarity
What does it mean to say the Bible is “God-breathed”? This blog unpacks the meaning of theopneustos (2 Tim. 3:16), showing that Scripture is not merely inspiring—but the very breath of God. We explore the Bible’s divine origin, dual authorship, inerrancy, and supreme authority. We answer objections, trace historical development, and expose the real issue behind tradition and ecumenical compromise: whether God’s Word is enough. When the Bible speaks, God still speaks.


Rethinking the Threefold Use of the Law: A Biblical Challenge to a Historic Framework
Many Christians affirm the threefold use of the law—but is it actually biblical? This post challenges the popular division of God’s law into moral, civil, and ceremonial categories, showing how it distorts covenantal context, creates confusion in discipleship, and misunderstands what it means that Jesus fulfilled the law.


What Did Jesus Mean When He Said He Fulfilled the Law? Understanding Matthew 5:17 in Its Biblical and Theological Context
What did Jesus mean when He said He came to fulfill the Law? This blog explores the full meaning of plēroō in Matthew 5:17, showing that Jesus didn’t continue the Mosaic Law—but completed and replaced it with something far better. We examine common misinterpretations, including Torah observance and Theonomy, and explain why understanding this verse rightly protects both gospel clarity and Christian freedom.


Did Jesus Abolish the Law? Understanding Matthew 5:17 and Ephesians 2:15 Together andWhy This Question Matters
Did Jesus abolish the Law or fulfill it? This post unpacks Matthew 5:17 and Ephesians 2:15, explores four major views on the Law, and shows why Christ’s fulfillment brings the Mosaic covenant to an end. Believers now walk in the freedom of the new covenant, under the Law of Christ—not the Law of Moses.
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