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{{2cn| [[Blog 2025-03-29 | 2025-03-29 }} | }}
Entry Subject
Blog 2025-04-23
Blog 2025-04-22
Blog 2025-04-21
Blog 2025-04-20
Blog 2025-04-19
Blog 2025-04-18
Blog 2025-04-17
Blog 2025-04-16
Blog 2025-04-15
Blog 2025-04-14
Peter said, “I don’t know Him”—but Jesus already knew, and loved him still.
In the garden, Jesus let His body grow weak so love could win.
A baby in a basket, floated into death and drawn out to life—Moses’ story was always telling the gospel. Hidden in the reeds is the shadow of the cross.
PROMPT: Why did Jesus say that two swords would be enough?

Great question—and one that only makes sense when viewed symbolically through the lens of sensus plenior.

See if AI validates my previous work. I have said the Sword represents the word of God.
At His arrest, Jesus steps forward not as a victim, but as both Lamb and High Priest—silently offering Himself, healing His enemies, and fulfilling the Scriptures as the true beginning of the sacrifice that restores hearing and redeems the fallen bride.
In the kiss of betrayal, the unfaithful bride (Judas) offers false affection, but Jesus, the faithful Groom, receives it in silent love—turning Eden’s curse of intimacy into the beginning of redemption.
In Gethsemane, Jesus reveals the mystery of being fully God and fully man—subduing His flesh like a withered thigh, He chooses the cross in spiritual obedience, fulfilling the pattern of the second son who overcomes by surrender.
The Last Supper is not the start of a ritual but the fulfillment of Scripture: a Passover betrothal where Jesus offers His body and blood as the bride-price, uniting justice and mercy, reversing Eden’s fall, and calling the Church to discern her place as His beloved Bride through the shared covenant meal.
The Last Supper wasn’t the start of something new—it was the unveiling of what Passover had always meant: a living parable pointing to Christ, whose body and blood fulfilled the promise of salvation.
Discover how Luke symbolically portrays Christ as the unleavened bread—pure revelation who unites divine justice and mercy, fulfilling Scripture to establish eternal peace.
Discover how Luke's Passover preparations unveil Christ's perfect harmony of justice and mercy.
"Discover the spiritual depth and historical reality behind the 'three days and three nights' prophecy, exploring why Matthew and Luke use different time reckoning methods in their accounts of Jesus' death and resurrection."
Many claim to worship God in nature, but true worship is more than feelings—it is encountering God through His works and His Word.
What if the key to understanding Scripture wasn’t debate, but seeking the heart of God?
2025-03-28 Many believe the "Sons of God" in Genesis 6 were fallen angels, but what if the answer was hidden in plain sight—revealed by Luke and confirmed by the genealogy of Adam?
2025-03-27 Discover how the Hebrew language itself reveals that Jesus is the Word, the Lamb, and the Truth—hidden in plain sight from the very beginning.
2025-03-26 Why did God not call the second day of creation "good"?
2025-03-25 Why did God not call the second day of creation "good"?
2025-03-24 Why did God not call the second day of creation "good"?

What if the very name of God—Elohim—tells us why He created the universe? The secret is hidden in plain sight within the Hebrew letters.

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