Friday, March 27, 2026

SAYING THE QUIET PART OUTLOUD


The mezuzah exists because of the Shema: its core Torah text is Deuteronomy 6:4–9, beginning with “Shema Yisrael,” followed by “And you shall write them on the doorposts (mezuzot) of your house and on your gates.” The object on the doorpost is therefore a physical embodiment of the Shema’s command—literally the Shema wrapped and affixed to the doorway. The shin on the case, pointing to Shaddai and “Guardian of the doors of Israel,” just makes visible what the scroll inside is already doing: turning the words of “Hear, O Israel” into a standing sign on the threshold.

Little Details with Major Meaning

A traditional mezuzah on a Jewish home will typically have the letter shin on the outside cover.

Judaism has many objects with religious symbolism. In addition, the Jewish service is filled with liturgical oddities. From body movements to vocal levels, there are many nuances in how a highly educated and trained Jew worships. I make no claim to be one. 

Those “oddities” are actually structured, symbolic cues that embody theology: Jews pray with the whole body, not just with words.

Why all the body movement?

- Swaying back and forth (shuckling) is a traditional way to focus one’s attention and involve the whole self in prayer, often linked to the verse “All my bones shall say: Who is like You, O Lord.”

- Standing for the Amidah (literally “Standing”) expresses that one is “standing before God,” so this core prayer is almost always recited on one’s feet.

- Taking three steps back and then three steps forward before the Amidah dramatizes “approaching” the Divine and later “returning” to ordinary life.

- Bowing at set points (e.g., beginning and end of Avot and Modim) enacts humility; rabbinic sources even speak of bowing until the spine’s vertebrae loosen.

- Light breast‑beating during confessional prayers (especially on Yom Kippur) externalizes contrition and regret.

Gestures tied to specific moments

- During Kedushah (“Holy, Holy, Holy”), many rise on their toes three times with each “kadosh,” echoing the angels in Isaiah and “lifting” toward heaven.

- When the Torah is lifted or returned to the ark, people often point with a finger or the fringe of the tallit, acknowledging the Torah as the authoritative source of law and teaching.

- At the Priestly Blessing, kohanim spread their hands in the familiar “Spock” shape; Leonard Nimoy actually adapted this from what he saw in synagogue as a child.

Why the changing vocal levels?

- The Amidah is first said silently or in a murmur, emphasizing personal, inward standing before God.

- The same Amidah (or parts of it) is then repeated aloud by the leader, turning private prayer into communal proclamation and allowing those less literate to fulfill their obligation.

- Sections like Kedushah, Shema, and certain responses are chanted louder, with the congregation answering specific lines, to dramatize Israel’s role as a corporate witness (e.g., joining the angels, declaring God’s unity).

- Conversely, synagogues maintain rules of decorum—limiting chatter and shouting—so that the service remains ordered and focused, even amid strong congregational singing.

Underlying pattern

All these “nuances” form a choreography: standing, stepping, bowing, swaying, whispering, and then proclaiming together are meant to tune the worshiper to different inner states—awe, repentance, intimacy, and communal joy—across the service.

Focusing on the Center

This leads me to the shema and the liturgical oddity of how the second verse is recited.

The Shema stands at the liturgical and theological center of Jewish life as the community’s core declaration that the God of Israel alone is God and that Israel owes this one God undivided loyalty in every area of life.

The Second Line

The first verse, Deuteronomy 6:4, is straight Torah: “Shema Yisrael, Hashem Elokeinu, Hashem Echad.” "Hear, O Israel: The LORD our God, the LORD is ONE"

The next line, "Baruch shem k'vod malchuto l'olam va'ed." "Blessed be the name of His glorious kingdom for ever and ever

 “Blessed be the name of the glory of His kingdom forever and ever,” is not part of that biblical passage; it is a later liturgical addition attached to the Shema. The rest of the shema is also straight out of Torah. So the second line is an exception.

The other “oddity” is that the second line, Baruch shem kevod malchuto le’olam va’ed, is inserted after the biblical verse of Shema and is almost always whispered rather than proclaimed aloud.

If you've ever stood in synagogue during the Shema, you've probably felt the shift. One moment the room declares, "Hear, O Israel, the LORD is our God, the LORD is One." The next, voices drop almost to a murmur: "Blessed be the name of the glory of His kingdom forever and ever." I've prayed those words for years, but only recently did I begin to notice how strange this is. The most famous verse in Judaism is shouted; the line that follows it—overflowing with talk of name, glory, kingdom, and eternity—is deliberately whispered. Once I started tracing that detail through Torah, Temple, angels, mezuzah, Passover, and even John 20, the softest words in the Shema began to sound like the loudest.

Why it is whispered

Since Moshe did not write this line into the Shema text, the sages ruled it should be recited quietly, marking it as distinct from the direct biblical quotation. That line has even been referred to as "an outsider."

Midrashim link it to Jacob: when his sons declared “Shema Yisrael” at his deathbed, he responded with this line in a subdued voice, which we echo by whispering it.

Another strand says Moshe overheard the angels saying these words; we “borrow” an angelic formula, but whisper so as not to appear to be stealing a heavenly secret.

Yom Kippur as the exception

Traditionally, the first verse is said out loud, with intense emphasis, often with eyes covered, as a public testimony to God’s unity. Immediately afterward, the community drops to a near-whisper for Baruch Shem, signaling that we have stepped from pure Scripture into rabbinic-poetic response and from bold proclamation into more intimate, almost “inside” language.

The exception is on Yom Kippur, the day of atonement, the day we read the book of Jonah, that second line is recited out loud. The reason, it is said, is based on the image that, for one day, Israel is like angels and may say their praise without restraint.

The shift from a year of whispering to one day of full voice turns this line into a liturgical barometer of holiness and eschatological hope.

Conclusion

The collusion to this blog is yet to be fully written.  I have gathered many of my thoughts and I've worked out call a number of them. In fact, I believe they are the better part of what I have to say. So, there will be a second part to this blog post in which I will exploring that "quiet second line," angelic praise, and the glory spoken of in the shema.

Wednesday, March 25, 2026

REBUTTLE TO NEW ANTI-JEWISĤ THEOLOGY


Reclaiming God’s Faithfulness: A Biblical and Historical Rebuttal to the New Anti-Jewish Theology.

Based on research & content by Jon Harris. 

A troubling wave of anti-Jewish theology is spreading across Catholic and Evangelical online spaces. It dismisses God’s covenant promises to ethnic Israel as obsolete, portrays Jewish people as uniquely cursed or manipulative, and brands any affirmation of a future role for Israel as “Zionist heresy” or dispensational novelty. Some even question Jesus’s Jewish identity or claim the modern state of Israel has no theological significance. This is not fringe; it is gaining traction among conservatives weary of politics and eager to reject anything labeled “liberal.” Yet it corrupts Scripture, undermines Christ’s humanity, and severs believers from two millennia of church teaching. A clear biblical and historical response is urgently needed.

The foundation is Genesis 12:1-3. God promises Abraham a land, a nation, and blessing to all families of the earth. He repeats and ratifies this covenant nine times in Genesis, making it unconditional by passing between the animal pieces alone (Genesis 15). The promise narrows through Isaac and Jacob (renamed Israel), whose twelve sons form the nation. Leviticus 26:40-45 explicitly foretells exile for disobedience, followed by repentance and restoration: “I will remember My covenant with Jacob… and I will remember the land.” Neither Joshua’s conquest nor Solomon’s kingdom fulfills it completely; both are partial. The prophets Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Ezekiel expand this into a future ingathering and Davidic kingdom. These texts are not symbolic abstractions. They are concrete promises tied to Abraham’s physical descendants.

The New Testament never revokes them. In Romans 9–11, Paul grieves that his “kinsmen according to the flesh” have largely rejected the Messiah, yet he insists God has not rejected them. A “partial hardening” has come upon Israel “until the fullness of the Gentiles has come in,” after which “all Israel will be saved” (Romans 11:25-26). The “gifts and the calling of God are irrevocable” (11:29). Gentiles are grafted into the olive tree whose root is Israel; they do not replace it. The “mystery” Paul reveals in Ephesians 3 is that believing Gentiles join the Jewish people of God by faith without becoming proselytes. This fulfills, rather than cancels, the Abrahamic promise that “in you all the families of the earth shall be blessed.” Jesus Himself is the singular “seed” of Abraham through whom that blessing flows (Galatians 3:16). The church is spiritual Israel composed of Jews and Gentiles, but ethnic Israel retains a distinct future.

Church history overwhelmingly confirms this reading. Justin Martyr, Tertullian, Origen, Cyril of Jerusalem, John Chrysostom, Jerome, and Augustine all taught a future mass conversion of Jews and, in several cases, a literal restoration to the land. Irenaeus and Victorinus expected a third temple in Jerusalem during end-times events. After the Reformation, Martin Bucer, Theodore Beza, and the Geneva Bible emphasized Romans 11. Puritan leaders, Oliver Cromwell’s Whitehall Conference (1655), and Dutch theologians such as Jacobus Koelman taught that ethnic Israel would return to its land and rebuild Jerusalem. Jonathan Edwards, John Gill, Charles Spurgeon, and Martyn Lloyd-Jones all affirmed a political and spiritual restoration of the Jewish people to Canaan. These were not 19th-century innovations or “Judeo-Christian” inventions; they were the plain sense of Scripture held by the church’s greatest minds.

The oft-cited “blessing and cursing” clause of Genesis 12:3 is likewise enduring. It is applied nationally to Israel in Numbers 24 and Obadiah. While the New Testament shows the church endures persecution, the grammatical sense remains: God favors those who favor His people and opposes those who maliciously harm them. Protestant giants like John Calvin and Matthew Henry applied it broadly to ethnic Israel. This does not require uncritical political support for any government. It does require rejecting the slander that Jews are permanently God’s enemies post-70 AD. Such rhetoric echoes the very supersessionism Paul refuted.

Critics claim this view is novel or politically motivated. The opposite is true. The idea that the ingathering occurred entirely before 70 AD lacks any clear pre-20th-century Christian witness. The notion that the church fully absorbs every Abrahamic promise so that ethnic Israel is irrelevant would make Paul’s Romans 9–11 argument incoherent. Affirming God’s faithfulness to Israel does not deny Christ’s exclusivity, promote dual-covenant theology, or demand open borders. It simply trusts that the same God who kept every promise to Abraham will keep His word to the descendants of Jacob. That confidence, Paul says, is the very reason Gentiles can trust the gospel.

The rise of this new anti-Jewish theology is not discernment; it is unbelief dressed as courage. It questions God’s character, severs us from our Jewish roots, and weakens the gospel’s power for “the Jew first” (Romans 1:16). The remedy is simple: read Romans 9–11 again, study the early fathers and the Reformers, and remember that the God who elected Israel has never broken a covenant. When we bless Abraham’s seed by evangelism, prayer, and truth-telling, we stand in the stream of biblical and historic orthodoxy. The promises remain. God is not finished with Israel—and that is very good news for the church.

This has immediate application today. The “protection clause” of Genesis 12:3 and Numbers 24:9 is not a blank check for Israeli policy, but it does call Gentile believers to reject malicious stereotypes that paint Jews as uniquely evil or perpetual enemies. Paul’s logic in Romans 11 is pastoral: if God keeps His word to ethnic Israel, He will keep His word to you. To deny Israel’s future is to undermine the very assurance that sustains Gentile faith. Evangelism remains “to the Jew first” (Romans 1:16). History shows that when the church prayed for Jewish conversion and opposed pogroms—as Puritans did in 1655 and Bickersteth urged in 1841—God opened doors. Today’s online contempt, whether from Catholic traditionalists or Evangelical reactionaries, is the same spirit of replacement theology that the apostles refuted. Stand firm: the olive tree still has living roots. Blessing Abraham’s descendants through gospel witness and honest history is not political naivety; it is obedience to the God who never lies.


For the complete content visit Jon Harris's Substack page @:

https://open.substack.com/pub/jonharris/p/the-new-anti-jewish-theology?utm_source=share&utm_medium=android&r=ywebo

BESA - THE CODE OF HONOR

Yesterday I walked into a local pizzeria to speak with the owner about buying his building. His name was Tony — I assumed he was Italian and Christian. To my surprise, he was Albanian and Muslim. I'm sure he notice my Kippah. His 30 year old son, standing protectively beside him, was named Zymer.

As we talked about the plaza his pizzeria was in, Zimmer asked if I knew my history and geography. Then he narrowed it to Albania. I admitted I didn’t know anything about Albania. Tony then personally made us both espresso, invited me to sit, and proudly told me how his grandmother had saved Jews on their family farm in Albania during the Holocaust — hiding them and protecting them under the ancient Albanian code of "BESA" (a sacred promise of honor and hospitality).


I was so moved by their warmth, pride, and humanity. I promised Tony and Zymer I would study the history of Albania and come back to talk more.

Wow — What a story. Here is a brief piece:

During the Holocaust, Albania was the only Nazi-occupied country in Europe where the Jewish population actually increased — from about 200 to around 2,000. Muslim and Christian Albanians sheltered refugees, issued fake documents, and refused to betray them, even at great personal risk. Almost every Jew in Albania survived.

In neighboring Kosovo, the story was more tragic under German occupation, but the spirit of Besa still shone through in many acts of courage.

I’m genuinely embarrassed I didn’t know this powerful chapter of Albanian history until Tony shared it with me over espresso. A beautiful reminder of interfaith solidarity and moral bravery in one of history’s darkest times.

Wouldn't it be amazing if the spirit of Besa rises in Iran!

What an unforgettable encounter. Now I want to visit Albania/Kosovo.Thank you, Tony and Zymer. I’ll be back soon. 🇦🇱☕️✡️ Gëzuar!


Monday, March 23, 2026

WHEN JEW-HATERS MISREAD A JEWISH BOOK

 


When Jew‑Haters Misread a Jewish Book

Last night I attended a lecture titled, "The New Anti-Jewish Theology - A Biblical and Historical Response.  The speaker was a deacon at a Christian church and the son of the Pastor.  I'd never met either of them before, but I was highly impressed and appreciative of what he said.  He opened with the following statement: 

"there is a strong current on the internet to portray Jewish people dishonestly, reject the promises made to ethnic Israel, and claim Christians who think God's covenant with Abraham still applies to modern Jews are somehow heretical. There are even voices now questioning Jesus's Jewish identity. This corrupts our hermeneutics, questions God's promises, undermines Christ's human nature, and cuts us off from our own church history." 

I was highly impressed by the presentation. What he said stayed on my mind and motivated me to write this blog post.  

Anti‑Semites today like to pose as brave truth‑tellers. They insist that Jews never own our sins, that we think we're better than everyone else because we're "chosen." As a Jew who actually reads our Scriptures, I find that claim not only offensive but absurd. If anything, the Bible is one of the most brutally self‑critical books any people has ever written about itself.

A Book That Refuses to Whitewash Us


If Jews were a people who refused to face our faults, we would not have a Tanakh full of our own rebellions, corrupt kings, failed priests, and national disasters. Moses, Isaiah, Jeremiah, and the rest do not spare us. They name our idolatry, greed, injustice, and stubbornness in excruciating detail.

We also would not have built an entire way of life around confession and repentance: daily prayers that list sins in the plural, fasts focused on self‑examination, and Yom Kippur—the Day of Atonement—where we pound our chests and beg God to forgive "the sins we have committed" in dozens of ways. A people that canonizes its own failures and centers its calendar on repentance is many things, but it is not a people that refuses to hold itself accountable.

Moses Sets the Prophetic Pattern

The pattern starts in the wilderness. Moses calls Israel "a stiff‑necked people" and warns that if we harden ourselves against Hashem, we will be driven from the land and scattered among the nations. Yet he does this not as an enemy, but as our mediator. When God threatens to wipe us out, Moses pleads for mercy, reminds Him of His promises to the patriarchs, and begs Him to stay with us.

The same Moses who announces exile also sings of return. He tells us that when we repent, God will gather us back and have compassion. From the start, judgment and mercy are woven together: severe family rebuke inside an unbreakable covenant.

Isaiah and Jeremiah: Severe Mercy, Not Erasure

Isaiah and Jeremiah walk the same road. Isaiah speaks of "rebellious children" who have grieved their Father and brought covenant curses on themselves. Jeremiah pictures us as an unfaithful wife whose spiritual adultery leads to the devastation of Jerusalem and exile.

But even as they predict horror, they promise hope. Jeremiah speaks of "a time of trouble for Jacob" unlike anything before—and in the same breath says "he shall be saved out of it." Exile is not God gleefully destroying "those Jews." It is a severe mercy: the painful consequence of our disobedience, intended to bring us to our knees so He can raise us up again.

A Prophetic Template for Days Like These

The prophets do not just see our past; they look ahead to storms that sound very much like our present. Jeremiah's "time of trouble for Jacob" envisions deep distress from which God Himself will rescue us. Zechariah foresees a day when "all the nations of the earth" gather against Jerusalem and the city becomes a "heavy stone" that injures everyone who tries to lift it.

If you look at today's rising Jew‑hatred and the bizarre global fixation on Israel and Jerusalem, you are not watching a random glitch in history. You are watching an old prophetic template light up again. I am not claiming to speak as a prophet; I am simply saying that what we see fits under the prophetic umbrella our own Scriptures opened long ago.

Chosen for Responsibility, Not Flattery

All of this sits under a larger calling. As hard as these texts are on Israel, Hashem is using us—Israel, the tribes, the divided kingdoms, and finally the Jews—as His chosen object lesson, a light to the nations about who He is and how He deals with His people. We were chosen not for flattery, but for responsibility.

Our job is to bear His Name, to embody His Torah, and to let our history of sin, judgment, repentance, and restoration become a beacon for the world. I say "we" very deliberately. I am writing as a Jew inside this story, not as an outsider taking shots at "the Jews," but as someone trying to read our own Scriptures with love, fear, and sympathy.

Why Modern Jew‑Haters Are "Off Message"

Seen from here, the modern Jew‑hater is completely off message. He accuses us of never admitting our sins while waving a Bible that is overwhelmingly Jewish in language, authorship, and content. He sneers that we think we're morally superior, but he ignores our culture of self‑critique, confession, and atonement.

Under the prophetic umbrella, that self‑critique is not a bug; it's the design. The prophets understood themselves as sent to correct kings, priests, and people alike. They attacked idolatry, corruption, and oppression, and they did it at great personal risk. In many ways, the Hebrew Bible is the world's earliest and fiercest manual in blaming yourself before God. That's exactly the aspect of our tradition the antisemite has never bothered to learn.

Enter Yeshua: Inside the Story, Not Against It

Into this already Jewish, already prophetic story walks Yeshua. He does not arrive as a stranger starting a new religion against us. He comes as one more prophet‑and‑more, sent by the God of Israel to Israel, addressing the same stiff‑necked yet beloved people Moses, Isaiah, and Jeremiah confronted.

He speaks our Scriptures. When He clashes with the Pharisees and other leaders, He quotes Isaiah: "You hypocrites, well did Isaiah prophesy of you." His "woes" in Matthew 23 sound just like the old prophetic oracles: searing denunciations of leaders whose hypocrisy is dragging the people toward disaster. 

Tears, Not Hatred: Yeshua as Mediator

The climax of that chapter shows His heart. After the woes, Yeshua breaks down in lament over Jerusalem: "O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, thou that killest the prophets… how often would I have gathered thy children together, even as a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings, and ye would not!" Those are not the words of a Jew‑hater. They are the words of someone who loves His own people and is desperate to shelter them from the judgment their choices are inviting.

Like Moses on the mountain, Yeshua acts as a mediator. Moses pleaded with God to turn from His fierce anger and spare Israel; God relented. Yeshua, hanging on a Roman cross, prays, "Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they are doing." In His parable of the barren fig tree, when the owner wants to cut it down, the vinedresser begs, "Give it one more year." Again and again, He stands between Israel and the axe, asking for one more chance, one more year, one more act of mercy.

The Spiritual Roots of Jew‑Hatred

The New Testament, read in continuity with the Tanakh, does not endorse Jew‑hatred. If anything, it unmasks the spiritual deception behind it. It speaks of an accuser—Satan—who slanders God's people and of a dragon who rages against the "woman" often understood as Israel and her offspring. It describes Satan going out "to deceive the nations," uniting them in a final rebellion that brings judgment on the deceiver and those who follow him.

From that angle, antisemitism is not just another prejudice. It looks like one of the clearest fingerprints of this deception: an irrational, global hatred focused on the people and city bound up with God's revealed plans. When Christians participate in that hatred, they are not being "biblical." They are letting the accuser's voice drown out their own Jewish Messiah's tears.

Bad Theology, Old and New

Historically, many Christians were taught that the church had replaced Israel—that God was essentially done with the Jews and our story had been superseded. In that framework, our ongoing exile and lack of a homeland seemed to prove the point.

Those readings were shaky even then. After the rebirth of Israel, they look especially thin. The existence of the State of Israel doesn't settle every prophecy chart, but it does force anyone who claims God is "finished with the Jews" to stop speaking so confidently for God. Modern Jew‑haters, whether religious or secular, often drink from those old wells of resentment and replacement theology while pretending to be "pro‑Bible."

Why This Matters Now

I am not claiming prophetic status. I am simply saying that what we are seeing fits under a prophetic umbrella that our own Scriptures—and, I would add, the New Testament—have already described.

The irony is devastating. The prophets, and Yeshua standing in their line, are far harder on Israel than any modern antisemite, but they do it from inside the covenant, in love, to save and restore. The Jew‑hater, standing outside the story, uses that family discipline as ammunition for contempt. In doing so, he shows that he has not understood the Scriptures he quotes, the God they reveal, or the people whose book he is misusing.

Saturday, March 21, 2026

GREATEST BOOK EVER


When I call the Bible the greatest book ever written, I am not using that phrase lightly. It is the single most printed, translated, and distributed book in human history, and it has shaped law, art, literature, education, and philosophy more than any other text. It is a library rather than a pamphlet—dozens of books written over many centuries by many authors—yet it holds together as one coherent story running from creation to new creation. Its claims have been tested, attacked, defended, and examined against history and archaeology, and it continues to stand at the center of serious discussion. More importantly, it does not just inform; it addresses. Generation after generation, people encounter in its pages a wisdom that exposes the heart, a word that comforts, and a voice they come to know as God’s own. For that reason, I do not just treat it as great literature. I treat it as a living word that tells the truth about the world, teaches me how to live, and gives me a sure hope in the face of death.

As books and stories go, the Bible really does have it all. It contains intrigue, romance, sacrificial love, betrayal, violence, tragedy, and hard‑won victory. It introduces every type of person—saints and scoundrels, kings and peasants, prophets and skeptics—and places them in the middle of wars, famines, court dramas, miracles, exile, and homecoming. It does not shy away from pain and suffering, yet it also holds out great joy. That breadth is not just for entertainment. It means that wherever I look in Scripture, I find some thread that speaks to real human experience and, ultimately, points back to the God who is weaving all of those stories toward redemption.

 Jesus as Israel's Story in Person

As I've studied the Gospels alongside the Old Testament, one pattern keeps coming into focus: Jesus is consistently retracing and concentrating the experience of the Patriarchs and of Israel as a whole. These are not just occasional echoes. They form a coherent way of reading His life as Israel's story in person.

Abraham: Lech Lecha and Faith in the Unseen

I start with Abraham. Abraham's "lech lecha" call is faith in its rawest form. He leaves land, kin, and security with nothing but God's promise about a land he has not seen. He has no visible evidence of fulfillment, only a word. That looks a lot like the kind of faith Jesus commends in John 20:29, where those who believe without seeing are called blessed.

Abraham's move into an unseen future becomes, for me, a prototype of both Jesus' own obedient path and the disciple's call. Jesus walks toward the cross with the same reliance on the Father's promise. His followers are then asked to trust a crucified and risen Messiah they have not seen, on the strength of the testimony and the Spirit.

Abraham Offers Isaac on Mt. Moriah (Genesis 22:1-19)

Isaac: The Offered Son and the Path Through Death

Isaac adds another layer. In the binding of Isaac, the son of promise is laid on the wood and surrendered to death, then given back as if from the dead. The father is asked to put the promise itself on the altar. In Jesus this pattern becomes reality rather than rehearsal. The Father does what Abraham was spared from doing. The Son is not just nearly sacrificed; He actually dies and rises.

Isaac's near‑death and restoration anticipate the crucifixion and resurrection. The promised blessing going out to the nations travels along the path of a beloved son who passes through death.

Jacob: Birthright, Wrestling, and New Identity

Then there is Jacob, whose story centers on the birthright and on a transformed identity. Jacob schemes, grasps, and deceives around the birthright, while Esau despises it and sells it for food. That birthright is more than property; it is the covenant line and inheritance. In that sense I can see Esau as a figure for Israel‑according‑to‑the‑flesh, richly privileged yet treating the inheritance lightly when confronted with the Messiah. Jesus, on the other hand, is the legitimate Firstborn. He does not grasp; He receives the inheritance from the Father and shares it. The birthright is not discarded; it is secured in Him.

Jacob's wrestling at Peniel gives me a picture of the way identity is changed in encounter. Jacob wrestles through the night with God's messenger, is wounded, yet receives blessing and a new name: Israel. The struggler with God is turned into the one who prevails with God. That is a small‑scale, anticipatory form of what I see in Christ and His people.

Jesus wrestles through Gethsemane and the cross, dealing with sin, death, and the spiritual powers. He emerges in resurrection as the triumphant Firstborn of a new humanity. Then He gives His disciples a new identity: Simon becomes Peter, and all who are in Christ become new creation. Jacob's limp and name change are like an Old Testament sketch of the death‑and‑resurrection pattern that will later be worked out in the church.

Covenant, Land, and the True Heir

The Patriarch stories sit against the backdrop of covenant and land. Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob all receive repeated promises of land, descendants, and blessing. But the New Testament presents Jesus as the Seed of Abraham who actually inherits and distributes this promise at its deepest level. The "land" opens out into a renewed creation, a "city with foundations," and the kingdom of God.

For me, this means Jesus is not just walking in parallel to the Patriarchs; He is moving their story to its intended end. He is Abraham's trusting pilgrim, Isaac's offered son, and Jacob's transformed heir, leading the people into their final inheritance.

Israel as Firstborn and the Priority of the Jew

All of this is wrapped up in how Scripture speaks about Israel as God's child. Israel is called "my son, my firstborn." God's dealings with Israel are fatherly, including discipline. He does not want to leave His first child. Even when Israel plays an Esau‑like role by despising the birthright in Christ, the overall thrust of the story is that God persists, warns, disciplines, and still aims at restoration.

Jesus being sent "to the lost sheep of the house of Israel" and the gospel being described as "to the Jew first" fit that. The Messiah comes first to Israel as an expression of God's intent to save His chosen people, not bypass them.

The Twelve: Israel Reconstituted Around Jesus

This is where the Twelve matter. The number is not random. Twelve apostles mirror twelve tribes. Jesus is not constructing a brand‑new people with no relation to Israel. He is reconstituting Israel around Himself. The disciples are Israel‑in‑miniature, the children He does not leave, gathered around the Son. From that renewed Israel the mission goes out to the nations.

In that sense, the children God continues to deal with become the disciples first and then all who are joined to Christ.

Not Replacement, but Recapitulation

This way of reading Jesus as the recapitulation of Israel's story is different from a simple "replacement" idea. I am not saying that the church replaces Israel and Israel is finished. I am saying that God remains faithful to Israel's calling by concentrating Israel's vocation, promises, and destiny in the Jewish Messiah, and then grafting both Jews and Gentiles into that one story.

Jesus is Israel's story in person. The church is Israel renewed in Him, not Israel erased.

New Covenant, Spirit, and New Creation

The covenant and the Spirit sharpen this further. Jeremiah speaks of a new covenant in which God will write His law on hearts and forgive sins. Ezekiel talks about a new heart and a new Spirit so that people actually walk in God's ways.

The cross is where the covenant is "cut," through the shedding of blood. Jesus uses covenant language at the Last Supper, calling the cup "my blood of the covenant." Once that blood is shed, the risen Jesus breathes on the disciples and says, "Receive the Holy Spirit." That act looks to me like the immediate application of what the cross secured. The same God who promised to inscribe His law on hearts now gives the Spirit to do it. This is new covenant and new creation coming together.

The Feasts as Contours of His Work

The feasts reinforce this pattern. Passover is fulfilled in Jesus as the Lamb whose blood brings deliverance. Unleavened Bread and Firstfruits connect naturally to His sinless life and to His resurrection as firstfruits from the dead. Pentecost finds its fulfillment in the outpouring of the Spirit on the church.

The later feasts point forward to the consummation: final atonement applied, the gathering of God's people, and God dwelling with them. The festival calendar becomes a set of contours that Jesus' story fills out.

Jonah: Boundaries and Mercy to Enemies

Jonah is a smaller but striking piece in this larger picture. In 2 Kings, Jonah is associated with defining Israel's borders. In the book of Jonah he is sent beyond those borders to Nineveh, Israel's enemy, and he is angry when God shows mercy there.

Jesus identifies Himself with Jonah in speaking of the "sign of Jonah." Jonah's three days in the fish anticipate Jesus' death and rising. Jonah's mission to enemies he hates sets up a contrast with Jesus' mission to enemies He dies for. In that way Jonah highlights both Israel's struggle with God's mercy to outsiders and Jesus' role in carrying that mercy across every boundary.

Reunion, Older Brothers, and One Family


Parasha Vayishlach: Overcoming Anger and Reconciling
At the end of all these parallels, I find it natural to think about reconciliation. The reunion of Jacob and Esau is a picture of estranged brothers meeting again in unexpected embrace. The parable of the prodigal son shows a father rejoicing over the younger son's return while the older brother stands outside, resenting the party.

Those scenes help me imagine what God intends between Jew and Gentile, Jew and Christian. God wants the family back together. The Father is glad to see prodigals come home from the nations. The firstborn son is still adjusting to the wideness of that mercy. But the goal is the same in each picture: one reconciled household, with the elder and younger, Jew and Gentile, Israel and the church, sharing the joy of the Father in the crucified and risen Son.

Why This Makes the Bible the Greatest Book

To me, these kinds of patterns are one reason the Bible really is the greatest book ever written. It is not just a collection of religious sayings, but a single, intertwined story in which the lives of Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Jonah, Israel, and Jesus all interlock. The same narratives that shape Israel's history turn out to be the very patterns in the Gospels, and then of our own: call and trust, sacrifice and resurrection, wrestling and new identity, exile and homecoming, division and reconciliation. These are the greatest stories ever told because they are true, and because they carry lessons about how to live—how to trust what we cannot see, how to receive a new name, how to forgive—and also how to look at death, not as the end of the story but as the place where God brings His people through into a better country.

A New Beginning

The Hebrew alphabet itself hints at this pattern. It begins with Aleph and ends with Tav, and in its ancient form Tav was written as a cross‑shaped mark, a sign or seal of completion and covenant. In that sense, the Tanakh comes to its literary “Tav,” its ending, with promises, patterns, and unfinished tensions still on the table. Jesus then steps onto the scene and picks up the story right where the Hebrew Scriptures leave off. He goes to the actual cross that Tav only hinted at, and in doing so He carries the alphabet, the covenant, and the entire narrative from its ending in Israel’s book to its fulfillment in His own death and resurrection.



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 chosen 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." Yeshua reminds us of Jonah from the cross, no less! 

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 isn't given a chance say "I told you so," but there was a time in my life when I thought it. 

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!


Epilogue:

Speaking of "boundaries," consider the following:



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.