The enigmatic third act of Genesis 4 not only describes the subtle sowing of tares that bear bitter fruit throughout the Bible but also condemns modern secular humanism. Cain’s rejection...
Analysis of the careful literary arrangement of Genesis 4 reveals the link between Cain’s tribute, Baal worship, and modern secular humanism.
The Bible’s early chapters are frustratingly short on detail, leaving them open to much speculation. However, the interpretive keys are hidden in plain sight,...
We are bidden to the forbidden feast, a table where bread and wine are not only served to us as priest-kings, but irretrievably mixed...
Nimrod was a mighty hunter “in God’s face.” Once we put him into a “Tabernacle” context, we can understand his motivation and role on...
The altar of God is barbaric and burdensome only to those who are ignorant of the horrors which it restrains. A taste of death...
The abandonment of worship was the underlying cause of the Great Flood. In contrast, the tower and city of Babel established false worship. Evil...
The modern practice of dismantling the Bible into a shambles of documents authored in response to disparate historical events rather than viewing it as...
Jacob’s sons would contemptuously combine two acts of bloodshed—a mercy commanded by God and a vengeance abhorred by God—for the sake of their own honor. There would be...
The seduction of Dinah and the retaliation by her brothers are given to us as a five-act play. Through this structure, the author cleverly links these tragic events to their...