Mark Huey of Outreach Israel Ministries delivers the following message on the Torah portion for this week: Lekh-Lekha or “Get Yourself Out.”
Genesis
Mark and Margaret Huey, and John McKee discuss how many significant issues get commonly glossed over from the second Torah reading, year after year.
J.K. McKee of Messianic Apologetics responds to three categories of questions: Tanach (OT), Apostolic Scriptures (NT), and theology/Biblical Studies.
1. Is Isaiah 11:12-16 being manifested today by Jewish Believers being antagonistic to non-Jewish Believers?
2. 2 Thessalonians 1:5-10 defines eternal punishment as destruction, not torment.
3. Can you please help me understand the role and influence of the Jewish Kabbalah?
Mark Huey of Outreach Israel Ministries delivers the following message on the Torah portion for this week: Noach or “Noah.”
Biblical scholars over the past century (both Christian and Jewish) have long recognized some kind of connection between the Flood of Genesis 6-8 and the Atrahasis and Gilgamesh Epics, the two pieces of ANE mythology most widely considered.
One of the most important Tanach narratives that deserves the attention of today’s Believers—particularly as it is employed later in the Apostolic Scriptures or New Testament— is the Flood of Genesis 6-8. We all know the story too well—as only Noah, his family, and two of every animal were spared. But what many do not know is that there are other Ancient Near Eastern accounts which portray a significant flood, somehow inflicting damage on the world—that may or may not parallel what we see in Genesis. What we are to do with these accounts, the role that they play in relationship to Genesis 6-8, and what they mean have baffled many interpreters. Some believe that the ANE myths appeared first, and were later adapted by the Ancient Hebrews in the compilation of the Torah. Others believe that the ANE myths are distorted forms of the true Biblical account. And others, not surprisingly, are confused and do not know what to believe, avoiding the subject altogether.
Mark and Margaret Huey, and John McKee discuss how many significant issues get commonly glossed over from the first Torah reading, year after year.
J.K. McKee of Messianic Apologetics responds to three categories of questions: Tanach (OT), Apostolic Scriptures (NT), and theology/Biblical Studies.
1. God established a Creation order in Genesis 3:16, didn’t He?
2. Paul upholds a Creation order in 1 Corinthians 11:3, doesn’t he?
3. Where do some people get the idea of a “mutual submission” between husbands and wives?
Mark Huey of Outreach Israel Ministries delivers the following message on the Torah portion for this week: Bereisheet or “In the Beginning.”
J.K. McKee of Messianic Apologetics responds to three categories of questions: Tanach (OT), Apostolic Scriptures (NT), and theology/Biblical Studies.
1. Can people who believe in evolution be saved?
2. Is it true that “works of law” does not mean Torah compliance, generally?
3. How do you as post-tribulationists respond to the claim that we are spared from God’s wrath?