Discipleship
-
THE TWENTY PILLARS OF RIGHT LIVING, Part 5 of 5: Walking Together in Restoration
Teshuvah is one of the most profound concepts in all of Hebrew thought. It means to turn — to stop moving in the wrong direction and return to YHWH and to the right path.
-
The Theocentric Bible: The Bible Is Not Christocentric — It Is Theocentric (Part Two)
Yeshua does not say that eternal life is knowing him. He says eternal life is knowing the only true God — and knowing Yeshua the Messiah as the one whom that God has sent.
-
THE TWENTY PILLARS OF RIGHT LIVING, Part 4 of 5: Personal Discipline and Growth
Self-control is the capacity to govern one’s own desires, impulses, emotions, and appetites in alignment with the Torah of YHWH. It is the internal discipline that makes all other virtues sustainable. Without self-control patience collapses under provocation, love yields to selfishness, and integrity crumbles under temptation.
-
THE TWENTY PILLARS OF RIGHT LIVING, Part 3 of 5: Building a Culture of Honor
Kavod literally means weight — to honor someone is to treat them as having substance, significance, and worth. In Hebrew culture honor was not reserved for the powerful and prestigious — it was owed to parents, elders, the poor, and the stranger.
-
The Theocentric Bible: The Bible Is Not About You (Part One)
The Bible is theocentric. It is centered on the God of Israel — the Father of all creation, the covenant-keeping God who makes Himself known through history, through Torah, through the prophets, and ultimately through His appointed Messiah.
-
THE TWENTY PILLARS OF RIGHT LIVING, Part 2 of 5: The Covenant of Relationships
The tongue is one of the most powerful instruments in human existence. Lashon Tehorah — pure speech — is the commitment to use words that build, heal, clarify, and honor, while refusing words that tear down, deceive, manipulate, or destroy.
-
THE TWENTY PILLARS OF RIGHT LIVING, Part 1 of 5: The Heart of the Way
Patience is the disciplined capacity to endure difficulty, delay, or provocation without losing composure, faith, or purpose. In Hebrew thought Erech Apayim literally means “long of nose” — a vivid image of one who does not flare up quickly. Patience is not passivity — it is active trust in YHWH’s timing.


