Thursday, March 19, 2026

MINOR PROPHET WITH MAJOR ROLE


The Book of Jonah is widely considered the most familiar book among the prophets. Yet, Christians are generally unaware that the Book of Jonah is read in temple on the holiest day in the Jewish calendar year, Yom Kippur (the Day of Atonement). Jews are generally unaware that
 Jesus calls His death and resurrection the "sign of Jonah," the only miraculous proof he would give an "evil and adulterous generation" demanding signs.  

If you asked either a Jew or Christian where else Jonah appears in Tanakh, the Old Testament, neither is likely to know about a particular appearance by Jonah that I see as highly important historically and prophetically. 

2 Kings 14:25—He restored the boundary of Israel from Lebo-hamath as far as the Sea of the Arabah, according to the word of the Lord, the God of Israel, which he spoke by his servant Jonah the son of Amittai, the prophet, who was from Gath-hepher.

(In the Hebrew text for the word "border" is translated better as "boundary.") 

The opening of 2 Kings 14:25, “He restored the boundry of Israel,” carries a greater meaning when you read it against the Bible’s whole story of broken and restored boundaries, starting in the Garden.

In Eden, God sets good boundaries—where humans may live, what they may eat, and especially the one tree they must not take from. Violating that boundary damages the relationship: sin is, at its core, stepping past the line God has drawn, and the result is expulsion from the Garden, exile from God’s immediate presence. From that point on, Scripture keeps pairing two ideas: God’s boundaries mark out life under His rule, and restoration means being brought back within those boundaries in a healed relationship.

Speaking of boundaries:

Deuteronomy 19:14 – “You shall not move your neighbor’s boundary stone set up by your predecessors in the inheritance you receive in the land the Lord your God is giving you to possess.”

Deuteronomy 27:17 – “Cursed is anyone who moves his neighbor’s landmark. And all the people shall say, ‘Amen.’” 

Proverbs 22:28; 23:10 – “Do not move an ancient boundary stone set up by your ancestors… Do not move an ancient boundary stone or encroach on the fields of the fatherless.” 

That is why the opening of 2 Kings 14:25 is so loaded. “He restored” (הוּא הֵשִׁיב) uses the שׁוּב verb of return/restore: not just “he took territory,” but “he brought back what had been lost.” It signals a small, historical act of return—God allowing Israel, for a moment, to experience being turned back from loss and judgment. “Boundary of Israel” (גְּבוּל יִשְׂרָאֵל) is covenant language: these are not arbitrary borders, but God‑given inheritance lines that define Israel’s vocation and limits, like land‑stakes that say, “Here is where My people belong under My rule.” To restore the boundary is to re‑align Israel with those God‑set limits instead of shifting them for greed; it is a picture of being put back inside the ordained space of relationship.

When you then add what Jonah is most famous for—“Arise, go to Nineveh”—another layer comes into view. Jonah is the prophet through whom God restores Israel’s boundary at home, yet he is also the prophet sent beyond that boundary to bring Nineveh back from the brink. God intends restoration in both directions: Israel’s land and Nineveh’s life. Jonah’s disobedience shows Israel’s deeper problem: they want the relationship with God “restored” inside their own borders, but they resist God’s desire to restore even their enemies. In other words, the same God who once set a boundary in the Garden to guard relationship now restores Israel’s boundary through Jonah, and then pushes that prophet beyond it, because His ultimate aim is not just repaired lines on a map, but repaired relationships—with Israel, with the nations, and, in the long arc, with humanity itself.

What “Restored” Looks Like On Earth

2 Kings 14:25–27 explains the restoration in concrete, historical terms. Jeroboam II “restored the border of Israel from Lebo‑Hamath to the Sea of the Arabah,” i.e., from the north (Hamath in central Syria) down to the Dead Sea. This essentially brought Israel back to something like the territorial extent and influence it had under David and Solomon. Land previously lost to Aram‑Damascus and other enemies, especially to the east of the Jordan was restored. This military success opened a period of political strength, economic prosperity, and outward stability for the northern kingdom (Israel). Archilogical evidence of this restoration period shows large, well‑built houses and luxury goods.

Boundaries and Purposes Collide in the Story of Jonah going to Nineveh

“Boundaries and Purposes Collide” when Jonah is sent to Nineveh. Jonah doesn't want to go outside the covenant land. He doesn't want to deliver God’s word to Israel's violent enemies, the Assyrians who are not God’s people. 

Nineveh sits outside. When God commands, “Arise, go to Nineveh, that great city,” He deliberately pushes Jonah across ethnic, national, and spiritual lines. Jonah runs because the mission itself violates his sense of where God’s mercy should stop. But God’s purpose is larger than Israel’s borders. He pursues Jonah across the sea, through the storm, into the fish, and back onto the shore to drive home that His compassion freely crosses the lines His prophet wants to keep. 

In Nineveh, boundary lines collapses: Gentile enemies hear the word, repent, and are spared, while the Israelite prophet sulks outside the city, angry that God is “too gracious and merciful.” The story becomes a collision point where human boundary‑making collides with divine purpose and God’s mission to bless “all families of the earth,” including those who don't know their left hand from their right. 

Jonah Sets Up Later Judgment of Israel

Jonah’s mission to Nineveh quietly prepares the ground for Israel’s later judgment by those same Assyrians. Assyria repents once, under Jonah, but eventually hardens again and becomes God’s rod to strike Israel. Approximately one hundred years later, in 722 BCE, the Assyrians became the superpower that conquers the Northern Kingdom and continued to threaten the Southern Kingdom during the reign of King Hezekiah. 

Jonah thus exposes a double irony: the nation that temporarily humbles itself to Jonah’s warning will later be raised up by God to destroy Jonah’s own people. The ones who enjoyed Jonah's land‑restoring prophecy under Jeroboam II—will fall to the empire whose mercy Jonah resented. His journey to Nineveh therefore foreshadows not only Gentile repentance, but also the very instrument by which God will judge Israel for refusing to repent.

Location, Location, Location

In 2 Kings 14:25, Jonah is named as “the prophet who was from Gath‑hepher”, a tiny Galilean village just north of Nazareth. The Gospels later records Nathanael’s scornful question, “Can anything good come out of Nazareth?” (John 1:46). In other words, the canon twice locates God’s prophet in the same despised backwater—first Jonah from Gath‑hepher, then Jesus of Nazareth. The greater Prophet arises precisely from the region people mock as too small and too lowly for anything great to come from there. 

God Spoke To Israel Through Jonah 

Jonah embodies Israel in miniature: a chosen prophet who runs from God, resents mercy to enemies, and needs the same grace he preaches. Jonah becomes a living parable of Israel’s own disobedience and calling. He foreshadows Gentile inclusion: Nineveh, the great Assyrian city, repents more quickly than Israel, pre‑signaling the later turning of the nations to Israel’s God. 

Jonah sets up the New Testament and Jesus explicitly points to Jonah, so that Jonah’s story—prophet from Galilee, three‑day descent and return, Gentile repentance—becomes a template that Jesus fulfills and surpasses. 

A Different Kind of Restoration

The material record and the social critiques of prophets like Amos and Hosea reveal that the prosperity which Jeroboam brought was uneven: elites flourished while injustice toward the poor grew, creating social tensions beneath the façade of success. 

Jeroboam’s restored‑but‑unequal prosperity looks a lot like the social world into which Jesus steps: In first‑century Judea and Galilee you again have impressive building projects, wealthy elites, and religious self‑confidence, while Jesus condemns exploitation, hypocrisy, and neglect of “the weightier matters of the law: justice and mercy and faithfulness.” 

So the Jeroboam–Amos–Hosea world becomes a historical prototype of Jesus’s world: booming economies, powerful elites, pious talk, and prophets sent to expose a prosperity that hides judgment already on the way. 

Later Jewish tradition itself laments the corruption of the priestly aristocracy around Annas. The Babylonian Talmud (Pesachim 57a), citing Abba Saul ben Batnit, famously says: “Woe is me because of the house of Hanin [Annas]… For they are High Priests, and their sons are [Temple] treasurers, and their sons‑in‑law are trustees, and their servants beat the people with staves.” This matches the picture from other sources: the “house of Annas” controlled Temple commerce and money‑changing, exacted inflated prices, and used their power to oppress ordinary worshipers.

In Jesus’ day the Temple leadership under Caiaphas, Annus's son-in-law, was widely seen as notoriously corrupt, both politically and economically. The high priesthood had become a Roman‑approved, highly political office; Caiaphas held it unusually long (about 18 years), which many historians take as a sign of his usefulness to Rome and of deep entanglement with power and money. 

The Jesus Revolution

Jesus overturns the tables in the Temple and accuses the leadership of turning God’s house into a corrupt marketplace and a refuge for exploitation, instead of a place of true worship. In the Temple courts He drives out those buying and selling, overturns the tables of the money‑changers and the seats of those selling doves, and cites Scripture: “My house shall be called a house of prayer, but you make it a den of robbers.” He is charging them with robbery, profiteering off access to God, and corrupting the very place meant to be a “house of prayer for all nations,” especially burdening the poor and the Gentiles.

Greater Than Jonah

In Kings, the word of God spoken through Jonah sets Israel’s tight boundaries given to one nation in a specific moment of history, but about 750 years later in the Gospel of Matthew 12:41, Jesus declares that “something greater than Jonah is here.” Where Jonah’s ministry secures boundary lines, Jesus’ ministry proclaims the kingdom of God without borders, sending the Word out to “all nations.” The limited land grant becomes a signpost toward a greater Promised Land—the Abrahamic inheritance expanded and transfigured into a worldwide, eschatological kingdom, the “better country” and “city” God has prepared (Hebrews 11:16).

Jesus's concern is no longer merely preserving Israel’s territory for a time, but gathering a multinational people into a renewed creation, where the knowledge of the Lord covers the earth as waters cover the sea. The prophet who once marked off Hamath‑to‑Arabah thus prefigures the Lord who claims the ends of the earth as His possession (Psalm 2:8).

Israel Is Preserved

2 Kings 14:27—"But the Lord had not said that he would blot out the name of Israel from under heaven, so he saved them by the hand of Jeroboam the son of Joash." 

Jeroboam is a sign that God’s intent is preservation‑through‑mercy, not the erasure of His people. Jesus did not come to eradicate Israel or abolish the Law, but to bring its calling to fullness—fulfilling the promises, preserving a faithful remnant, and opening Israel’s light to the nations rather than cancelling it. 

2 Kings 14:29 notes that Jeroboam’s acts “are written in the Book of the Chronicles of the kings of Israel,” which on the historical level points to royal records. Chronicles reads like a hinge: the northern kingdom’s story is being closed and archived, the Old Testament “chronicles” of failed kings are reaching their end, and the reader is being led toward a new royal record. 

Promise Keeping God

The Book of the Chronicles (1 & 2 Chronicles) delivers a message of hope and restoration to post-exilic Israel, emphasizing that God remains faithful to His covenant promises to His chosen people despite their past failures. It focuses on the importance of temple worship, the Davidic line's legitimacy, and the necessity of seeking God through repentance, prayer and charity.  

Repentance, prayer, and charity—known in Jewish tradition as Teshuvah, Tefillah, and Tzedakah—are the three pillars of the High Holy Days, believed to "cancel the harsh decree" and transform fate.

Chronicles retells Israel’s history from Adam through David and the kings, highlighting the pattern that unfaithful rulers and people bring covenant curses, culminating in the fall of Jerusalem and exile. In that sense it does “close the file” on the old monarchies: the northern kingdom is gone, Judah has fallen, the Temple is burned, and the long experiment with human kingship has ended in ruin. 

Written for a post-exilic community, Chronicles frames Israel’s history to emphasize God's enduring covenant faithfulness rather than just its failures. 2 Chronicles 36 does not stop at exile; it ends with Cyrus’ decree: permission to rebuild the Temple and go up to Jerusalem, a deliberate note of hope beyond judgment. 

2 Chronicles 36:22—Now in the first year of Cyrus king of Persia, that the word of the Lord by the mouth of Jeremiah might be fulfilled, the Lord stirred up the spirit of Cyrus king of Persia, so that he made a proclamation throughout all his kingdom and also put it in writing: 23 “Thus says Cyrus king of Persia, ‘The Lord, the God of heaven, has given me all the kingdoms of the earth, and he has charged me to build him a house at Jerusalem, which is in Judah. Whoever is among you of all his people, may the Lord his God be with him. Let him go up.’”

Israel passes through judgment into a new beginning rather than being blotted out. After the Babylonian conquest, the Jews do go back and rebuild the Temple and Jerusalem. Then came the Roman Wars and the destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem again. The Jews were scattered in the diaspora and would face nearly a 2000 years in exile, and numerous "Tisha B'Av" tragedies. Still, God did not forget His promises to His chosen people. 

The Declaration of the Establishment of the State of Israel

“Can a nation be born in a day?”

Isaiah’s question, “Can a nation be born in a day?” has, at the level of visible history, received a stunning answer: on May 14, 1948, the State of Israel was proclaimed in a single day, and the Jewish people returned to the map as a sovereign nation after nearly two millennia scattered among the nations. 

Yet even with the nation reborn, another question still hangs over the Jewish people. Jerusalem is back, but the Temple is gone. The Jerusalem Temple, destroyed by Rome in 70 CE, has never been rebuilt, and for many Jews the unresolved issue is whether that house can be raised again on its ancient hill—or whether, in some other way, God Himself will answer the deeper hope for a restored dwelling of His presence in Zion.

The world is looking for a sign. The Temple Institute is ready to rebuild the Temple and start the sacrafices. Will the Jewish people be buying animals again? 

May His will be done, on earth as it is in Heaven. Amen. 🙏

Am Yisrael Chai!



Tuesday, March 17, 2026

GOD IS IN WRITTEN IN EVERY DROP OF MILK


You Made Me Trust at My Mother’s Breasts”

Mother’s milk is as closely associated with life as anything we know. It is the first warmth, the first taste, the first lesson that we live because someone else gives. Psalm 22 dares to say God Himself is behind that moment: “You brought me out of the womb; You made me trust when upon my mother’s breasts” (Psalm 22:9). Modern lactation science is simply catching up, showing in detail how our amazing Creator has inscribed His care into the chemistry of milk.

Psalm 22: Trust Written at the Breast

Commentators on Psalm 22 note that the “trust” learned at the breast is not conscious doctrine but felt security—God causing the infant to cling and be at peace in that earliest dependence. When Katie Hinde studied rhesus macaque milk, she found mother‑to‑mother and within‑mother variation that made no sense if milk were just “fuel.” Some mothers produced richer, more energy‑dense milk, others more dilute but higher‑volume milk, and these patterns linked to infant characteristics and growth. Within a single feed, foremilk hydrates and hindmilk concentrates calories, gently teaching the baby to nurse fully and rest content. Psalm 22’s picture of God making us “trust” at the breast fits this reality: He has designed a system ordered toward bodily and emotional security.

Deuteronomy 32: The God Who Gave You Birth

Moses rebukes Israel: “You ignored the Rock who brought you forth; you forgot the God who gave you birth” (Deuteronomy 32:18). The language is obstetric; Yahweh is pictured as the One who labored to bring Israel into being. To forget Him is like an infant denying the mother who birthed and nourished it.

Human milk itself reflects this God‑who‑gives‑birth. It contains more than 200 distinct human milk oligosaccharides (HMOs)—complex sugars infants cannot digest but that specific beneficial bacteria can. These HMOs feed and select for microbes such as Bifidobacterium, shaping the infant gut microbiome that in turn trains immunity, metabolism, and resistance to disease. The God who “gave you birth” has hidden in a mother’s milk food not only for the visible child but for an invisible ecosystem that will guard that child’s life for years.

Isaiah 46: Carried From the Womb

To a people tempted by idols, God says, “You have been borne by Me from birth, carried from the womb; even to your old age I will carry you; I have made, and I will bear; I will carry and will deliver you” (Isaiah 46:3–4). Here the living God is contrasted with lifeless idols that must be hauled around on carts. He is the One who carries His people like a parent carries a child.

Biology reveals how this “carrying” looks in nursing. During breastfeeding, infant saliva mixes with milk at the nipple. Experiments show this interaction can trigger the production of antimicrobial substances like hydrogen peroxide at levels that inhibit harmful microbes while sparing beneficial ones. Neonatal saliva contributes key substrates that drive this system; remove the relevant enzyme, and the antimicrobial effect disappears. In this way, the mother’s body is literally carrying and answering her child’s vulnerability in real time. Isaiah 46’s promise—“I will carry”—is etched into this moment of micro‑immunity.

Isaiah 49:15: Can a Mother Forget?

“Can a woman forget her nursing child, that she should have no compassion on the son of her womb? Even these may forget, yet I will not forget you” (Isaiah 49:15). This is one of Scripture’s strongest statements of God’s unbreakable attachment, built on the most intense human bond they knew: that of a nursing mother and her suckling child.

Science shows just how deep that bond runs. Milk composition is not fixed; it changes with the baby’s age, sex, environment, and health status. Bioactive factors in milk—growth factors, hormones, immune mediators—vary across lactation and correlate with infant growth and condition. The nursing mother’s body “remembers” her child in chemical detail and adjusts her milk accordingly. When God swears that His memory of His people exceeds even this, He grounds His promise in a relationship that, by His own design, resists forgetfulness at every level.

Isaiah 66 and Hosea 11: Comfort and the God Who Bends Down

In Isaiah 66, restored Zion is pictured as a mother: “You shall nurse and be satisfied at her comforting breasts; you shall drink deeply and delight yourselves in her glorious abundance…As a mother comforts her child, so I will comfort you” (Isaiah 66:11, 13). The comfort in view is concrete—relief, protection, abundance—just as a child at the breast receives more than words: warmth, security, and perfectly tailored nourishment.

Hosea 11 adds another layer: God as parent teaching Ephraim to walk, taking them by the arms, removing the yoke, and then saying, “I bent down to them and fed them” (Hosea 11:4). The image is of a taller one stooping to bring food close, making feeding gentle instead of harsh. In breastfeeding, a parent literally bends down, lifts the child, and offers their own body as food—while, unseen, milk sugars feed microbes, milk–saliva chemistry regulates the oral and gut environment, and immune factors are tuned to the child’s current threats. The God who “bent down to feed them” has embedded that gesture of stooping mercy into the act that sustains every newborn.

Old Testament Theology in Liquid Form

These Old Testament texts together form a composite portrait of a God who births (Deuteronomy 32:18), carries (Isaiah 46:3–4), remembers the nursing child (Isaiah 49:15), comforts like a mother (Isaiah 66:13), and bends down to feed (Hosea 11:4). Modern lactation research—variation in milk composition, HMOs sculpting the microbiome, milk–saliva synergy boosting innate immunity—does not replace that portrait; it brings it into focus.

Mother’s milk is as close to “liquid Old Testament theology” as we are likely to find: a daily sacrament of dependence, remembrance, and tender design. When a child rests at the breast, biology and Scripture agree on what is happening: a life too small to sustain itself is being carried, remembered, and fed by another—and behind that “another” stands the Creator who delights to give life.

1 Peter 2.2 As newborn babes, desire the sincere milk of the word, that ye may grow thereby:


Epilogue:

To those shaped by replacement theology’s curse, convinced that God has quietly traded Israel for some newer, better people, the nursing‑mother images of Scripture speak a different word. The Lord who describes Himself as the One who births, carries, nurses, and bends down to feed Israel refuses the idea that His firstborn can simply be swapped out and forgotten. When He asks, “Can a woman forget her nursing child?” and answers, “Even if she could, I will not forget you,” He is declaring that His covenant bond to Israel is more tenacious than the fiercest human attachment and not subject to theological fashion. 

Whatever else God is doing among the nations, the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob has not weaned Himself off Israel; He remains the faithful Parent whose design in a mother’s milk proves that once He sets His love on a child, He does not replace that child with another.

P.S. Shout out to the parents of Baby Moses. 


Sunday, March 15, 2026

COME AND SEE

A major theme in the new Testament is "come and see." We believe what we see with our own two eyes. Light becomes digital testimony inside our brain. Before we are a witness for others to hear, we are a witness for ourself.

The New Testament often moves from “come and see” to “go and tell.” The inner witness precedes the outward witness. 

John’s Gospel explicitly uses the phrase “come and see” at multiple key turning points. Jesus invites the first disciples, “Come and you will see,” They “came and saw where he was staying,” experiencing him personally before they ever speak to others about him.  

Philip echoes this pattern with Nathanael. When Nathanael doubts, Philip does not argue; he simply says, “Come and see,” trusting that encounter will answer objections. It does. 

The Samaritan woman at the well does the same. After Yeshua proves he knows her, she runs back to her village and implores people to “Come, see a man who told me all that I ever did." After meeting Yeshua, her neighbors believe for themselves.

The bible is filled with signs that are meant to be “seen.”  John’s Gospel is written “so that you may believe that Jesus is the Messiah."

Some people are more stubborn and difficult to convince than others. Despite hearing the testimony of witnesses and other believers, they require their own hard physical evidence. Such is the disciple Thomas. He is like a lot of people, who will "never believe unless" they see it for themselves. 

For Thomas, "hearing" other people's testimony wasn't sufficient. He needed to hear, see and touch for himself. 

Yeshua meets Thomas where he is and states Thomas’s demands back to him. He knows Thomas just like he knows the Samaritan woman and Nathaniel. Yeshua tells Thomas, “Reach your finger here, and look at My hands; and reach your hand here, and put it into My side. Do not be unbelieving, but believing.” (20:27)

Seeing is ultimately believing for Thomas. He answered Yeshua with the few simple words, “My Lord and my God!” These words sound very similar to "The Lord is our God" in the beginning of the Shema from Deuteronomy 6.4, right after "Here, O Israel."  

Thomas’s words mark the moment Israel’s communal confession becomes personal: the God of the Shema, confessed as “the Lord our God,” is now confessed by Thomas as “my Lord and my God,” shifting faith from shared creed to direct relationship.

A personal relationship is exactly what you would expect from a God who already knows you. In Scripture, God is not discovering us; he is revealing that he has seen, searched, and known us from the beginning—think of Nathanael under the fig tree or Thomas confronted in his doubt. A confession like “my Lord and my God” is simply the human side of that reality: the moment when someone realizes, “The One who has always known me is now claiming me, and I must respond personally.”

 “Come and see” functions as an invitation to personal encounter, so that people become witnesses of what they themselves have experienced rather than second‑hand reporters.  Sèeing activates our innerwitness.

In John chapter 20 is when the disciples see Yeshua after he has risen. It is at this point in the story, after witnessing the "good news" for themselves, that Yeshua "breathed on them, and said to them, “Receive the Holy Spirit." This is the moment the disciples received the "inner dwelling" of the Spirit that Yeshua promised to leave them. 

3D Image on the Shroud of Turin

In chapter 20, Yeshua left something else significant for John and Peter, and the world, to see.  Yeshua left his burial clothes lying in the tomb. The linen cloths are Yeshua's own testimony, written by him with his own blood. The burial clothes testify of a man who was brutally beaten, crucified on a wooden tree in Jerusalem, put in the earth for three days and rose from the dead. They are the equivalent of the "sign of Jonah." The scientific evidence on the shroud of Turin is irrefutable. Don't believe me? Come and see it for yourself.  I did. 

For our 40th wedding anniversary, Mary and I visited the Shroud in Turin. It happened to be on Yom Kippur, the very same day Jews read the Book of Jonah. So my day began at the temple in Turin and then we went to see the Shroud. 

Yeshua said something deeply meaningful to Thomas near the end of John chapter 20. He said to him, “Thomas, because you have seen Me, you have believed. Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed.”

By the same token, Yeshua clearly knew that there would be stubborn people who would hold out to the end of time.  Perhaps that is who the Shroud of Turin was left for. Maybe it was meant for this generation that is looking for a sign. It is most certainly this generation that is discovering the secrets on the shroud of Turin that have been hidden for 2000 years. 

"Here, O Israel, the Lord is our God, the Lord is One." Deuteronomy 6.4. 


The image above is the first sentence of Deuteronomy 6.4, the "Shema" in an actual Torah. The Hebrew word "Shema" is the first three Hebrew letters on the right. The Hebrew word Shema means both "hear" and "obey." You should be able to notice that the last letter in the word "shema" is larger than the two preceding letters. That is the letter "Ayin." The letter "Ayin" means "eye." So in the word for "hear," we have eyes to see. 

John 9.25—He answered and said, “Whether He is a sinner or not I do not know. One thing I know: that though I was blind, now I see.”

The shroud of Turin isn't only real; It is also that the truth of the burial clothes in finally being revealed now. It is a sign for a time such as this. THIS IS A REVELATION in the making.

What scientists found about Jesus on the Shroud shocked everyone. 

Epilogue:

Making an observation...

In John’s Gospel and in Mark, I observe a striking interplay between the titles “Son of Man” and “Son of God,” especially around the passion and the stated purpose of each narrative. In Mark’s passion predictions, Jesus consistently speaks of himself as the Son of Man when announcing his suffering, death, and resurrection; the Son of Man must suffer many things, be rejected, be killed, and after three days rise again. In other words, the Markan emphasis ties “Son of Man” directly to the path of humiliation and vindication, the necessary road of the cross.

“Son of God,” however, tends to appear in Mark at climactic moments of recognition rather than in Jesus’ own passion sayings. Most notably, at the crucifixion, it is the Roman centurion who finally confesses, “Truly this man was the Son of God.” There, at the very point of Jesus’ apparent defeat, Mark places a Gentile confession of his true identity as Son of God, showing that the way of the suffering Son of Man leads precisely to the revelation of the Son of God.

John arranges the same Christological reality with a different rhetorical focus. By the time we reach John 20:31, the evangelist states his purpose: these signs are written “that you might believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God; and that believing you might have life in his name.” Earlier in the Gospel, Jesus has used “Son of Man” as a self-designation, often in connection with being lifted up and glorified through suffering, but at the conclusion John does not summarize with “Son of Man.” Instead, he draws the reader’s faith toward Jesus as “the Christ, the Son of God,” making “Son of God” the climactic confessional title that secures life.

So, putting this together, I see a pattern: in both Mark and John, “Son of Man” tends to be the title Jesus uses to describe his path of suffering, death, and exaltation, while “Son of God” emerges especially at climactic points of recognition and confession. Mark dramatizes this in narrative form at the cross, with the centurion’s confession. John crystallizes it programmatically in his purpose statement at 20:31. The result is not a replacement of “Son of Man” by “Son of God,” but a theological movement: the suffering Son of Man is precisely the one who is confessed as the Son of God, and faith in him under that title is the means of life.

Luke front-loads “Son of God” in the infancy and early ministry material: announced by Gabriel (1:32, 35), echoed at the baptism and genealogy (3:22, 3:38), and recognized by demons (“Son of the Most High God,” 8:28). At Jesus’ trial, the council links his “Son of Man” claim (enthronement at God’s right hand) directly to the question, “Are you then the Son of God?”—they see these as belonging together, even if the wording shifts.

In Matthew the same basic pattern holds—“Son of Man” is the passion title, and “Son of God” emerges at climactic recognition points. 

In Matthew, “Son of Man” is the main passion title: in the key predictions (16:21; 17:22–23; 20:18–19; 26:2, 24, 45) it is the Son of Man who suffers, is killed, and is raised. At the same time, “Son of God” is woven through the Gospel—from baptism and temptation to the disciples’ and Peter’s confessions—so that when a Gentile centurion at the cross finally says, “Truly this was the Son of God,” he, of all people, names the true identity of the suffering Son of Man.

"Seeing and believing" is the shroud's role for this "evil generation." 

John 20:29 kjv—Jesus saith unto him, Thomas, because thou hast seen me, thou hast believed: blessed are they that have not seen, and yet have believed.


Tuesday, March 10, 2026

GENESIS 12:3 RIPPLES THROUGH HISTORY

Genesis 15:6 esv —And he believed the Lord, and he counted it to him as righteousness.

What does it mean to be "chosen" by Adonai?  What does it mean to be a "light unto the nations? What does it mean to "be a blessing to all nations?" 

It sounds like a lot of pressure, but Jews took it seriously. We believed we had a role to play. To say we paid a very heavy price for that role, is an understatement. We are paying it to this day.

In this blog I will explore how Genesis 12:3 plays out in real history, as tiny Jewish communities repeatedly bless the nations that welcome them—and how those nations’ rise or decline often follows their treatment of the children of Abraham

How is it that a people who have never been more than a fraction of one percent of the world’s population keep showing up at the center of history? Why do nations that make room for the Jews so often seem to punch above their weight in wealth, creativity, and influence? Genesis 12:3 claims that God Himself stands behind this pattern: “I will bless those who bless you, and him who dishonors you I will curse.” This article asks whether the long record of the Jewish diaspora gives us any historical basis for believing that promise is still at work—and what it means for nations that welcome, or reject, the children of Abraham today.

Does history bear witness to God’s promise to Abram in Genesis 12:3? We are not merely asking whether the verse is “true” in an abstract doctrinal sense; we are asking whether the observable patterns of history support the claim that nations which bless the Jews are, in some way, blessed in return.

To even pose that question, we have to clarify what “blessing” means. For Abraham and his descendants, blessing involves God’s favor expressed in protection, fruitfulness, the preservation of identity, and the calling to be a channel of good to others. For the nations, blessing is not sentimentality toward the Jews, but the creation of legal space, social stability, and economic opportunity in which Jewish life can take root and bear fruit for the common good. When a nation “blesses” the Jews, it restrains persecution, honors their place in its social fabric, and allows their gifts to function.

With that in view, we can look across the centuries and ask: where have Jews been received, protected, and allowed to flourish—and did those host societies simultaneously experience unusual forms of blessing themselves?

A small people, large impact

From a demographic standpoint, the Jewish people are remarkably small. Even today, Jews are well under one percent of the world’s population, scattered in diaspora communities among much larger majorities. Yet this tiny people has repeatedly exerted an influence on the intellectual, cultural, and economic life of their host nations that is vastly disproportionate to their numbers.

This is not a claim of superiority; it is an observable reality that invites theological reflection. A people that should, by all natural measures, have disappeared many times over has not only survived, but has often risen to positions of prominence in trade, finance, scholarship, and public life wherever they have been given room to operate. That disproportion itself can be read as part of the Abrahamic blessing: “I will make of you a great nation… and you shall be a blessing.” The smallness of the people only sharpens the impression that something more than demographics is at work.

Historical snapshots of “those who bless you”

Across history, the pattern repeats in different settings. A few key examples:

- Early Diaspora cities: After the Second Temple’s destruction, Jews settled in major Mediterranean cities such as Alexandria and others under Hellenistic and Roman rule. Where they were granted communal rights and allowed to trade, study, and govern their own affairs, those cities often became lively commercial and intellectual hubs. When tensions boiled over into riots and repression, both Jewish life and broader civic health suffered.

- Muslim Spain (al‑Andalus): In medieval al‑Andalus, Jews lived for centuries as protected minorities and rose to prominent roles in administration, medicine, diplomacy, and learning. This coincided with a Golden Age of Jewish poetry, philosophy, and biblical commentary—and with Muslim Spain’s own high point as a wealthy, cultured, scientifically advanced society. As tolerance eroded and ended in expulsion, Spain’s long decline from premier power to secondary status followed in the centuries after.

- The Dutch Republic: In the 17th century, the Netherlands opened its doors to Sephardi Jews fleeing Iberian persecution and to Ashkenazi Jews from Central and Eastern Europe. Amsterdam, sometimes nicknamed a “Jerusalem of the West,” gave Jews room in trade, finance, and crafts. At the same time, the Dutch Republic—small in territory—enjoyed its Golden Age, becoming a leading naval, commercial, and financial power with outsized cultural influence.

- England and the British Empire: After expelling Jews in 1290, England readmitted them in the 17th century and gradually extended full civil emancipation by the 19th. As Jews entered Parliament, finance, and the professions, the British Empire rose to the height of its global reach. It is simplistic to say Britain prospered *because* it blessed the Jews, but the overlap between Jewish emancipation and British ascendancy fits the biblical pattern at least typologically.

- The United States: From early on, America offered Jews a relatively high degree of religious freedom and, after independence, formal equality. The U.S. became home to one of the world’s largest Jewish communities, deeply integrated into civic life. Jewish immigrants and their descendants have contributed heavily to industry, finance, science, medicine, law, the arts, and philanthropy, even as the United States itself rose to global preeminence as an economic and military superpower.

Elsewhere—the Ottoman Empire, certain Italian city‑states, parts of Central Europe—there were seasons when Jews found safe haven, took part in the commercial and cultural life of their hosts, and shared in periods of prosperity. When favor was revoked through restrictions, expulsions, or worse, the loss of Jewish communities often foreshadowed broader national decline.

How Jews have blessed the nations

Genesis 12:3 emphasizes God blessing those who bless Abraham, but Genesis 12:2 reminds us that Abraham and his seed are themselves called to be a blessing. Historically, that calling has shown up in many tangible ways:

- Science and mathematics: Jewish thinkers have contributed disproportionately to fields such as physics, chemistry, economics, and mathematics, often at the forefront of modern theory and discovery.  

- Medicine: Jewish doctors and researchers have helped pioneer treatments, found hospitals, and advance public health, especially in the modern era.  

- Art and culture: Jewish composers, authors, filmmakers, and artists have played major roles in shaping the cultural imagination of Europe and America in music, theater, film, and literature.  

- Law and justice: Jewish jurists and activists have been prominent in civil rights, labor protections, and human rights movements, often drawing on biblical and rabbinic traditions of justice and mercy.  

- Philanthropy and social welfare: Jewish benefactors have funded schools, universities, hospitals, and charities that serve far beyond the Jewish community, embodying an ethic of tzedakah—righteous, obligated giving.

When nations allow Jews to live, work, and worship in peace, they are not simply “being nice” to a vulnerable minority. They are making room for a stream of gifts to flow into their own national life. The blessing is not merely mystical; it is incarnated in the real, cumulative contributions of a very small people whose impact, by any reasonable measure, should not be as large as it is.

What history has shown

History is not a controlled experiment. We are dealing with providence, not a mechanical formula. Geography, leadership, technology, and countless other factors shape the fortunes of nations. We must resist turning Genesis 12:3 into a crude equation: “Treat the Jews well, and you will automatically prosper.”

Yet if we read history with a biblical imagination—attentive both to complexity and to the constancy of God’s character—a pattern emerges. Again and again, nations that have made room for the children of Abraham, granting them protection, dignity, and the freedom to contribute, have seen Jewish communities blessed in their midst and have often experienced their own seasons of unusual strength, creativity, and prosperity. Conversely, those that have systematically dishonored, dispossessed, or destroyed their Jewish populations have, sooner or later, tasted something of the curse they sowed.

History does not “prove” Genesis 12:3 the way an equation proves a theorem. But it does bear witness that the God who spoke those words has not left Himself without a testimony in the rise and fall of nations—and that the fate of a tiny people still tilts the scales of history in ways the world cannot quite explain.

The story doesn’t end there...the Jews were chosen for another reason.

The Hebrew Bible (Tanakh) contains numerous prophecies promising a future, human, Davidic king—the Messiah—who will bring peace, restore Israel, and rebuild the Temple. In other words, the same God who quietly vindicates His promise in the background of history intends, at the end, to step fully onto the stage—and when He does, the question of how the nations have treated the children of Abraham will no longer be an obscure footnote in history, but a central line in the final script.

Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God, the Lord is Echad (one). (Deuteronomy 6.4)

John 10:30—I and the Father are one.

Have Jews been "a blessing to all nations?" Has the Hebrew bible been a light?  Is David the line of the Messiah? By the same token, have the Jews been a curse to the nations that curse us?  

What do you believe? 


Epilogue:

“I know, I know. We are Your chosen people. But, once in a while, can’t You choose someone else?”

Tevye from Fiddler on the Roof

Thursday, March 5, 2026

ANCIENT PEOPLE ECHO

ARE THE MEDES MAKING A COMEBACK? 

The ancient Medes (or their modern descendants, often identified as the Kurds) are seen as shadowed in the end-times destruction of "Babylon the Great"—a future symbol of global evil (Revelation 17–18).

There is an ancient overlap: land and people. The first map is Iran. The map below shows an ancient territory, also near the Caspian Sea, that was once "Media" and controlled people the bible called the "Medes." 

Many Kurds proudly claim descent from the ancient Medes, an Iranian people who built a powerful empire in the 7th–6th centuries BCE in the Zagros region overlapping modern Kurdistan.

This belief is deeply embedded in Kurdish national identity and folklore: the Kurdish national anthem (Ey Reqîb) explicitly declares "We are the children of the Medes and Cyaxares" (referring to the Median king), and some Kurdish nationalists date their calendar from 612 BCE, the year the Medes helped topple the Assyrian Empire.


Today, the Kurds are the world's largest stateless ethnic group (roughly 30–45 million people), speaking Kurdish (a Northwest Iranian language) and proudly claiming ancient Median ancestry as a core part of their national identity and folklore.

Their homeland, Kurdistan, spans four countries, with a significant portion in northwestern Iran (Iranian Kurdistan, home to ~8–12 million Kurds, about 10% of Iran's population). This region holds strategic importance due to its mountainous Zagros border with Iraq, access to trade routes, natural resources (including water and arable land), and proximity to key geopolitical flashpoints.


In relation to Iran, the Kurds' location makes them a potential internal pressure point—especially amid recent tensions, where Iranian Kurdish opposition groups (with bases often in Iraqi Kurdistan) have been discussed in reports as possible levers for unrest, uprisings, or buffer zones along the western frontier, heightening Tehran's long-standing securitization and repression of Kurdish demands for rights and autonomy.

BIBLICAL ECHO

The Medes appear in several Old Testament prophecies, primarily linked to the judgment and destruction of ancient Babylon:

- Isaiah 13:17-19 states: "Behold, I will stir up the Medes against them [Babylon]... Their bows will strike down the young men... And Babylon... shall be as when God overthrew Sodom and Gomorrah."

- Jeremiah 51:11, 28 describes God arousing "the kings of the Medes" to destroy Babylon as vengeance for His temple, leading to its desolation.

These prophecies were partially fulfilled historically in 539 BCE when the Medo-Persian Empire (under Cyrus, with Median involvement) conquered Babylon without total destruction or eternal desolation.

In some interpretations of end-times prophecy, these passages are seen as having a dual fulfillment—a near-term historical one and a future eschatological one. They link to prophecies in Jeremiah 50–51 (Babylon's utter, permanent ruin) and Revelation 17–18 (the fall of "Babylon the Great," often interpreted as a future revived or symbolic Babylon as a center of evil). In this view, the Medes (or their descendants) will play a role in attacking and destroying this end-times Babylon.

WHAT AM I SAYING...

You're probably going to hear a lot about the Kurds over the next few days. Here's what that actually means, and I quote:

"The Kurds are the most organized, most battle-tested opposition force inside Iran. They have been fighting this regime since its first day. They are exactly the type of resource we need, boots on the ground that no amount of air power can replace. They will be one piece of a larger puzzle that decides whether what comes next is stability or chaos.

It is reasonable to assume that U.S. Special Operations personnel, most likely 5th Special Forces Group whose area of responsibility is the entire Middle East, along with CIA intelligence personnel on the ground, are already working alongside Kurdish networks in those provinces.

This is exactly how the U.S. operated in Afghanistan in 2001, advisors on the ground, the fireflies before the storm. 

We have used the Kurds before, as many as eight times by some accounts. And each time we left them high and dry. When you heard about Saddam Hussein gassing his own people by the thousands, those were the Kurds. They have paid more than once for backing the wrong side of a promise made in Washington. More than one Green Beret that has left part of his body, heart, and soul with the Kurdish people."

Wars have a way of redrawing maps. If the Kurds are going to step up again in Iran, perhaps when this war is over there will be a place on the map for the Kurds. A real place on the map is long overdue.

The Biblical Connection

I have not worked out the prophetic connection to the Medes and current events. But I do find it intriguing that there are many of the old players and places on the scene in current conflicts.  The past, present and possible future seen to be coming together somehow. In other words, things seem biblical. 🙏



Tuesday, March 3, 2026

TODAY IS PURIM. SO WHAT?

Scroll of Esther

Daniel 4:17—“‘The decision is announced by messengers, the holy ones declare the verdict, so that the living may know that the Most High is sovereign over all kingdoms on earth and gives them to anyone he wishes and sets over them the lowliest of people.’


Did you know that the story of Purim in the Scroll of Esther is treated in special ways than any other bible story? 

Purim is known as the holiday of the "Hidden Miracle" (nes nistar). The Rabbis treat Esther as a "Second Torah," demanding Torah‑like treatment, and a ritual vehicle for revealing God’s hidden hand in exile. 
Purim doesn’t just recall a past miracle; it creates an ongoing obligation for Jews to read a specific text—Megillat Esther—every year on a set date. Plus, the megillah (scroll) itself is treated as an object of Commandment for Jews—the scroll is halachically defined and guarded: The parchment, ink, scored lines, scroll form, all have specified requirements to consciously elevate Esther status to near Torah. Other narratives can be retold; but Esther must be "read from a dedicated Megillah" for all generations. 

Twist of Fate
The Scroll of Esther is a paradox within a paradigm. It is the most “secular” book in Tanakh: no explicit Divine Name, no open miracles, no mention of Jerusalem, everything couched in court intrigue, politics, and coincidence. Yet precisely this book, is the one the rabbis insist must be read in public from a sanctified handwritten scroll, twice every Purim. 

The Hidden Name Of God
In the plain Hebrew text of Esther, the Tetragrammaton (YHWH) never appears, which is unique in Tanakh and matches the theme of God “hiding His face.”

Traditional and modern interpreters note several acrostics where the initial or final letters of four consecutive words spell YHVH (יהוה) and once Ehyeh (אהיה), which is "I Am*" in key verses (e.g., Esther 1:20, 5:4, 5:13, 7:7, 7:5). 

Esther is “coded” with hidden Names, visual letter anomalies, and a carefully mirrored structure that all reinforce its core theme—God is hidden in the story, but nothing in the story is random. 

Pay Attention Christians
Even if you are a Christian, the Book of Esther is in the bible, so you must at least wonder what the rabbis saw in Esther that made it so special and important. Just because you are not "under the law" doesn't mean there is no value in understanding what Jesus would have heard in temple every year. Besides, it is a great story.

Saving the Jews
The Book of Esther tells how the Jews of the Persian Empire were delivered from a genocidal decree engineered by Haman.  Any parallels come to mind? 

An Observation for "Believers" 
"Followers of the way" found Yeshua in the Tenach. Some see foreshadowing throughout the Hebrew bible. So is there a possibility that Yeshua's "mark or sign" is hidden in the Scroll of Esther? Well, first I'd ask, what is Yeshua's mark or sign? It is the Hebrew letter which represents a mark or sign, naturally. That is the "cross" or "X", which is the 22nd Hebrew letter "Tav." 

Is the "X" found in the Megillat Esther? Before I answer that question, I want to ask you, "is there any other book in the Hebrew bible that specifically mentions a "mark or sign," an "X" associated with salvation? Ezekiel chapter 9 is the answer. Among the Hebrew prophets, Ezekiel 9 is the only place that explicitly speaks of a protective mark on the forehead in this way. 

In Ezekiel 9:4 the man in linen is told to put a tav‑mark on the foreheads of those who “sigh and groan” over Jerusalem’s abominations, marking them for protection.  

X Marks the Spot
Back to Esther. Is the "mark or sign", the X, hidden in the scroll? Actually, the entire book is structured like an “X". Esther is a large chiastic (inverted, mirror‑like) design: the first half of the book and the second half line up as reversed reflections of each other, with a central pivot where everything turns. Each element in the first half has a “flipped” counterpart in the second half, which is why you can diagram the book as an X.

Many place the intersection in chapter 5-6: the night the king cannot sleep, he has the chronicles read to him. 
Esther is distinctive in how perfectly its chiastic center and mirrored halves embody v'nahafoch hu, the complete reversal of fortunes in the Purim story.  That's when the King realizes Mordechai has never been rewarded. From that moment, Haman’s rise reverses into his fall. Haman’s plot and his ambitions to be like the King are crossed out and inverted, and Mordechai’s and Israel’s fate is turned from death to life. 

Divine Reversal
V'Nahafoch Hu” (וְנַהֲפוֹךְ הוּא) is a Hebrew expression that means “and it was reversed” or “the opposite happened.” It comes from the Book of Esther and describes the reversal of fortune at the end of the Purim story, in which the Jews avert the evil decree against them.

The concept of a "reversal" is central and essential to the Purim story.  What seems like "luck," is not. Watch this video by Messianic Rabbi Jason Sobel for a better explanation. 

The Hebrew word for "luck," "fortune," or "destiny," is מזל, pronounced "mazel" or mazal. 
You've probably heard it used in the Hebrew/Yiddish phrase "mazel tov" (meaning "good luck" or "congratulations") to celebrate milestones. It is rooted in auspicious "alignment of stars" or a "constellation". The implication is that what seems like "luck" is actually a heavenly or divine flow.  The bible story that is a clear example of heavenly control is the Book of Job.

Job 38:31–33—“Can you bind the chains of the Pleiades or loose the cords of Orion? Can you lead forth the Mazzaroth* in their season, or can you guide vthe Bear with its children? Do you know wthe ordinances of the heavens? Can you establish their rule on the earth?

* Hebrew word מַזָּרוֹת (Mazzaroth) which means "constellations." It is a reference to the Hebrew Zodiac. It shares a Hebrew root with Mazel מזל.
See also "mazalot" in 2 Kings 23:5.

Isaiah 42:5— Thus says God, the Lord, who created the heavens and stretched them out, who spread out the earth and what comes from it, who gives breath to the people on it and spirit to those who walk in it:


Conclusion:
With what is being played out in modern day Persia with the modern day Haman, if ever there was a time to give the Book of Esther more serious attention it is this year.  

Like in the Book of Esther, just because we cannot see God at work does not mean He is absent.


Footnote
* אהיה (Ehyeh) is a Hebrew term meaning "I Will Be" or "I Am" derived from the root hayah (to be/exist). Famous from Exodus 3:14 as part of "Ehyeh Asher Ehyeh" ("I Am that I Am" or "I Will Be Who I Will Be"), it signifies God’s eternal existence, presence, and promise to be with His people

Adonai Nissi
The phrase "Adonai Nissi" ("The LORD is my Banner" or "The LORD is my Miracle") is directly associated with the theological themes of Purim, though it originates from a different biblical event. The phrase is from Exodus 17:15, where Moses builds an altar named "Adonai-Nissi" after defeating the Amalekites.

The Connection to Purim: Haman, the villain of the Book of Esther, is identified as a descendant of Agag, a king of the Amalekites.

Theological Link: Purim celebrates the reversal of fortune and the miraculous victory over Haman (an Amalekite). Therefore, the fight against Amalek, which established God as "Nissi" (my banner/miracle), is the thematic foundation for the celebration of God’s hidden miracles and salvation on Purim. 

While Adonai Nissi is not a traditional greeting used on Purim (which is Purim Sameach), it is frequently cited in teachings about the spiritual significance of the holiday. 

Epilogue:
Perhaps there is a hint in Esther's name. It was Hadassah, which is "Myrtle," but it was changed to Esther which means "Star."  The holiday of Purim is followed by Passover. When you think of a Star and heavenly signs, the Star of Bethlehem may come to mind.  





Monday, March 2, 2026

PLAY ON A KINGLY NAME


This whole reflection began with a timely reminder.

Over the weekend a friend and I flew out of town for a conference on how to study the Scriptures. The teacher walked us through tools and patterns I’ve worked with for years, but hearing them freshly laid out still sharpened my attention.

The next day, that same friend was eager to make use of what he’d learned. In conversation he mentioned that his morning Bible reading had been in Numbers, in the story of the daughters of Zelophehad, and he focused on one figure called Milcah. He said her name just came off the page at him. It nagged at him because he was sure he’d seen a name like that somewhere else in Scripture, but he couldn’t quite place it.

In that moment, something clicked.

I’ve thought a lot about that scene in the garden where Peter cuts off the servant’s ear. I’ve always sensed it was a message to the king, some kind of prophetic gesture aimed beyond the surface of the narrative, but I never quite knew what that message was. As my friend spoke about Milcah, with those study tools freshly in mind, the connection suddenly came into focus.

There was the bridge I’d been looking for all along—the link between Milcah and the servant in the Garden: Malchus. The story of Peter’s sword and the servant’s ear snapped into place in a new way, and the “message to the king” began to take shape.

Play on a Kingly Name

Both Milcah (מִלְכָּה) and Malchus share the same Semitic root (מֶלֶך) as melech, “king.” Milcah is the feminine form from that same root, meaning “queen” or “ruler.”

Malchus: The King’s Servant and the Cut-Off Ear

Malchus enters the Gospel story almost as a footnote. He is the servant of the high priest, part of the arresting party that comes for Jesus under cover of darkness. He is a “king’s man” of sorts—embedded in the religious establishment, close to the center of power, the kind of servant who quite literally serves as the ear of the high priest.

Peter does what zealous hearts always think is necessary in moments like this. He reaches for the sword. To Peter, this is covenant loyalty. This is how you defends the Messiah. One slash, and Malchus’ right ear is on the ground.

It is an ugly picture of religious zeal in the flesh: sincere, misdirected, and ultimately destructive. Peter is willing to die for Jesus, but in his own way. He is ready to shed blood to keep the kingdom on track with his expectations of how a Jewish Messiah should be defended.

I’m also struck by how much the scenes themselves resemble each other. In both cases I picture a crowd, a public moment thick with tension, and leadership under pressure. The daughters of Zelophehad stand before Moses, the priest, the chiefs, and the whole congregation with a hard question about inheritance hanging in the air. In the garden, a crowd sent from the chief priests and elders presses in on Jesus with swords and clubs as Peter lashes out and Malchus is struck. In both settings, the question is the same: will those in charge truly hear what God is doing in front of everyone?

Jesus rebukes Peter: “Put your sword back.” The kingdom will not advance by the same tools the world uses. Then Jesus does something almost shockingly gentle. He reaches out and heals the ear of the man who has come to help arrest him. The servant of the high priest—the ear of the high priestly system, we might say—is restored by the one that system is trying to crush.

I’ve always felt that this is a message to the king. But what precisely is being said?

At the simplest level, the scene is a rebuke of violent zeal. You cannot cut your way into obedience. You cannot slice ears open so people will finally listen. Peter’s sword doesn’t open hearing among Israel; it only severs it. If the Jewish leadership, if the high priest himself, is ever going to truly hear, it will not be because a zealous disciple swung harder. It will be because the true King stooped to heal.

Malchus becomes a sign-act aimed at the leadership of Israel. The servant who listens for the high priest has his ear cut off by misguided zeal and restored by the very man they’ve declared a threat. The message is there for anyone with eyes to see (and ears to hear): your zeal is maiming the very people you claim to shepherd; the King you oppose is actually restoring what your system is destroying.

The leadership has to put on its ears.

Milcah and the Daughters of Zelophehad: A Plea for Inheritance

Into this, my friend brought another story: the daughters of Zelophehad in Numbers 27.

Their situation is simple and devastating. Their father has died in the wilderness. He has no sons. Under the existing pattern, the line effectively ends there. No son, no continuation of the name, no portion in the land. These daughters stand on the edge of erasure. No husband to cover this gap. No brother to carry the line. Just five women, and a looming loss of inheritance.

But these women do something bold. They come forward.

They stand “before Moses, before Eleazar the priest, and before the leaders.” It’s crucial that the priestly leadership is explicitly mentioned. This is not a private chat; this is a formal, covenantal, legal appeal in the presence of the people’s highest human authorities. They lay out their case plainly: Why should our father’s name disappear just because he had no son? Give us a possession among our father’s brothers.

They are not asking for sentiment; they are asking for justice within the covenant. They are asking that the kingly-legal system recognize their claim.

Moses does exactly what leadership is supposed to do in such a moment: he brings their case before the Lord. And here is where the story turns. The Lord affirms them. “The daughters of Zelophehad speak right.” Then He issues a new statute for Israel: when there is no son, daughters are to receive the inheritance.

In other words, a plea from those with no portion triggers a real adjustment in the administration of inheritance. The practical outworking of the law is widened to include those who were about to be written out of the story.

Reading this through the name “Milcah” highlights that royal dimension. If we think of her as a queenly, royal-feminine figure, she becomes a picture of vulnerable royalty: one who bears a royal destiny but stands uncovered, with no human guarantee of inheritance, appealing to God’s appointed mediator for a share in the land.

And leadership is expected to hear it. The priest, the elders, the entire judicial structure must recognize what God has said: “They speak right.” They must adjust their thinking, their practice, their law‑handling to match what the King has revealed.

They need to put on their ears.

Malchus and Milcah: Kingship, Ears, and Inheritance

Here is where the connection between Malchus and Milcah began to crystallize for me.

On the one hand, Malchus: the king’s servant, the ear of the high priestly establishment, wounded by misguided zeal, then healed by the rejected King.

On the other hand, Milcah: the uncovered woman, standing with her sisters before Moses, demanding a rightful place in the inheritance, and heard by God in such a way that the legal order of the covenant is expanded to include her.

Both stories revolve around leadership and hearing.

In the wilderness, the leadership of Israel—Moses, the high priest, the elders—must hear a plea from those with no portion and allow God to show them a broader justice than they had yet conceived. The result is a change in how inheritance is handled.

In the garden, the leadership of Israel—embodied in the high priest’s household—must see that their zeal has deafened them, that their system is cutting off ears while the true King restores them. The result, if they will receive it, is an invitation to repent of their violence and let their hearing be healed.

In both cases, God is pressing a point on those who sit closest to the center of religious power: put on your ears. Remember your own Scriptures. You’ve seen this pattern before.

You have already watched God widen the circle of inheritance in response to a just plea. You have already watched Him affirm the claim of those who, by default, would have been disinherited. You ought to recognize what is happening now.

If the daughters of Zelophehad are a sign that the King once expanded the law of inheritance, then Malchus in the garden is a sign that He intends to do it again in a deeper, more radical way—this time not just for daughters in Israel, but for all those who stand with no natural claim to the promises.

Peter’s Education: From Sword to Shepherd

Sitting in the middle of all this is Peter.

He is the one who swings the sword at Malchus. He is the one whose zeal maims the ear of the high priest’s servant. And he is the one Jesus rebukes and then later restores on the shore of Galilee.

“Do you love me?”  

“Lord, you know that I love you.”  

“Feed my lambs… tend my sheep… feed my sheep.”

The contrast is stark. In the garden, Peter tries to defend Jesus with steel. By the Sea of Tiberias, Jesus calls Peter to defend the flock with love. In the garden, Peter’s zeal cuts off hearing. By the sea, Jesus charges him to become a voice that feeds and guards and gathers.

Peter has to learn that the kingdom is not advanced by zeal that mirrors the world’s violence, but by cruciform, shepherd‑like care. He must learn to trust the King who heals ears, instead of trying to secure the kingdom by force.

Later, in Acts, that lesson will widen again when Peter is sent to Cornelius. The same Peter who once maimed the ear of the high priest’s servant will be the one to announce to a Gentile household that the Holy Spirit has been poured out on them as well. The man who swung the sword at a “king’s man” will become the herald who opens the inheritance to those far outside the kingly center of Jerusalem.

Milcah and the Expanded Inheritance

Here is where the daughters of Zelophehad begin to sound like a prophetic preview of the Gentile story.

Like those daughters, the nations had no natural claim in the land, no line in the genealogies, no tribal slot in Israel’s map. They were strangers to the covenants of promise, with no inheritance line to appeal to. No husband, no father, no brother within Israel’s structures to guarantee them a portion.

And yet, in the Messiah, a case is brought before the King.

Jesus, the true Son and Heir, does what Moses could only prefigure. He stands before the Father with the claim that those who are “not a people” should become His people; that those far off should be brought near; that those who have no inheritance in the law should receive an inheritance in the promise. In Him, the Church, the Gentile “Milcah,”—the queen with no husband—comes under the covering of the Bridegroom‑King and receives a place in the kingdom.

If Zelophehad’s daughters once caused the Lord to widen the practical administration of the inheritance inside Israel, the cross and resurrection proclaim, in an even greater way, that those who were outside are now fellow heirs. The law of inheritance is fulfilled and expanded so that in Christ, Jew and Gentile become co‑heirs.

The Message to the Leadership: Put On Your Ears

So what is the “message to the king” in the garden? And how does Milcah help clarify it?

It is not that the Lord Himself lacks hearing. He is the one who heard the daughters’ plea. He is the one who sees Malchus’ wound. He is the one who sends His Son to open the way for the nations.

The crisis of hearing lies with the leadership—with the high priest, with the elders, with all those who sit at the center of religious power and pride themselves on guarding the covenant.

They are the ones who must put on their ears.

They should remember Milcah—those daughters standing before Moses and the priest, asking for an inheritance, and being vindicated by God. They should read that story and ask themselves whether the God who once widened the inheritance for overlooked daughters might be doing something similar in their own day.

They should look at Malchus—their own servant, the ear of their own household—wounded by a disciple’s zeal and healed by the very man they are trying to destroy. They should see in that act a sign that their zeal has gone terribly wrong, that the King they oppose is the only one truly restoring Israel’s hearing.

The tragedy is that, by and large, they do not make the connection.

But the sign remains. For anyone willing to read these stories together, Milcah and Malchus stand side by side as a quiet but piercing word to every generation of religious leadership:

- Do not assume your current boundary lines of inheritance are final.  

- Do not harden your ears against the cry of those with no portion.  

- Do not trust the sword of zeal where the King is busy healing ears.  

- Do not forget that the God of Zelophehad’s daughters is the same God who, in Jesus, is writing a global will.

The high priest needs to put on his ears. The church’s leaders need to put on theirs. Because the King is still listening, still healing, and still expanding His inheritance in ways that surprise those who think they already know exactly who belongs inside the story.

CONCLUSION:

The New Testament itself invites this kind of listening: “these things happened to them as examples and were written down for our instruction,” and we are to “compare spiritual things with spiritual,” letting one Spirit‑breathed text shed light on another until the larger message comes into focus. 

Paul says that “whatever was written in earlier times was written for our instruction,” so that through the Scriptures we gain endurance, encouragement, and hope. That’s a warrant to go back to stories like the daughters of Zelophehad and ask what they’re still saying to us now

Paul also says that “these things happened to them as examples and were written down as warnings for us,” speaking specifically about events in the wilderness. That invites us to read Israel’s history as a patterned set of examples meant to shape the church’s discernment. 

SHEMA
I hope those with ears to hear and eyes to see can draw deep understanding from this play on kingly names.  

Epilogue:

Peter’s zealous reflex's are a reflection of the Zealous Maccabees who united Israel approximately 150 years BC. The Maccabees made Israel's first treaty with Rome, even before Rome was an Empire. The Romans brought the crucifixion.  I see this a relevant to my explanation.