Our passion and purpose

We have a passion — born of the Spirit, we believe — to proclaim and explain certain vital but imperiled truths to the Body of Messiah and especially to believers that are recapturing their Hebrew heritage in Yeshua. For instance:

That the Advent and Apocalypse of the coming Son of Man is a cataclysmic future event; but the Kingship of God taught by Jesus is a dynamic process — a present penetration of the Lord's redemptive reigning in our lives and communities by the power of the Holy Spirit.

That for us, like Paul, there must always be but one God, the Father, and but one Lord, Jesus the Messiah, and that walking after Him requires the indwelling presence and empowerment of the Spirit of Truth.

That the once-for-all atoning work done for us by Jesus at the cross is also meant to be an ongoing redemptive work of Jesus done within us by His indwelling Spirit.

That for His death to be fully efficacious as an atoning sacrifice for mankind, the Son of Man, Yeshua, must be fully man and fully God-in-man reconciling the world to Himself.

That the Canon of Scripture which we call the Bible is inspired, authoritative and normative for our faith in the One true God and our faithfulness to His Son.

That we must treasure the Torah of Yeshua and take far more seriously His great command to fulfill it in our lives, as He did in His, by walking in authentic, sacrificial love one to another.

That we must not forget the reason we go back to the Jewish foundations of our faith is in order to go forward in greater Christian (Christ-like) faithfulness — i.e., good Jewish roots will bear abundant Christian fruit.

That the end for which the world was made, and therefore the greatest calling of our lives and the deepest joy of our souls, is found in manifesting the K'vod Adonai — the Glory of God — in the earth.

Featured Article

The Romanizing of the Jesus Movement

WHAT TODAY IS CALLED “CHRISTIANITY” actually began as a messianic movement within Judaism. It was nurtured by the fertile spiritual soil of Second Temple Judaism, which was especially diverse and vibrant in the First Century.

Read More
Reassessing the Doctrine of Original Sin and its Ramifications

Dwight takes a fresh look at the biblical text and brings some clarity to this controversial subject as well as examining its profound implications for our view of God, man, and salvation.

Learn More
FORGE where ideas take shape