Caleb Claims the Hill Country of the Anakim

The division of Canaan had begun. Eleazar the priest, Joshua, and the heads of the tribes were casting lots, assigning portions to the nine and a half tribes who would settle west of the Jordan. The Levites received no land,…

The Three Feasts and the Single Place

The chapter opens with a command, not a suggestion: observe the month of Abib. That is the month of the exodus, the night of departure, the night when Egypt’s firstborn fell and Israel walked out under the moon. Moses ties…

Moses Strikes the Rock Twice

The first month of the fortieth year found the whole congregation in the wilderness of Zin, camped at Kadesh. Miriam died there and was buried there. The text gives her no eulogy, no lament. She is simply gone, and the…

The Law of Discharges and Cleansing

Leviticus 15 is one of the chapters where holiness is measured in contact, sequence, and waiting. It opens with a bodily discharge in a man and immediately names the result: uncleanness. The chapter does not speak in abstractions. It speaks…

The Fallow Year and the Angel’s Sword

The law in Exodus 23 does not move in a straight line. It jumps from courtroom ethics to the seventh-year fallow field, from the enemy’s donkey under its load to the angel with a sword who will not pardon transgression….

Joseph Interprets Pharaoh’s Dreams and Rises to Power

The two years of silence ended not with a whisper of apology, but with a sudden, frantic summons. Pharaoh’s spirit was troubled; his magicians and wise men had failed him. The chief butler, whose dream Joseph had interpreted in the…

The Bow in the Cloud and Noah’s Vineyard

Genesis 9 opens with a blessing, but it is not a simple return to Eden. God tells Noah and his sons to be fruitful, multiply, and fill the earth, yet the world they enter is marked by fear as well…

The Glass Sea and the Seven Bowls

The first thing John calls this is another sign, great and marvelous. Not a vision of the throne room this time, not a seal or a trumpet. A sign. And what it signals is unmistakable: seven angels carrying seven plagues,…

The Heart’s Quiet War

The air in the assembly room was thick, and not just with the heat of the gathering day. It was a weight Elazar felt on his skin, a prickling humidity of unspoken grievances. He sat on a low bench near…

The Restrainer and the Man of Lawlessness

The letter does not begin with comfort. It begins with a command not to be shaken. The Thessalonians had received something—a spirit, a spoken word, a letter falsely attributed to Paul—that told them the Day of the Lord had already…