I tell you, on the day of judgment people will give account for every careless word they speak. (Evangelion, cf. Matt 12:36) Guard your tongue today, for every idle word will stand before the judgment seat of Christ.
n the first New Testament canon (144 A.D.), the earliest known Christian canon, slavery is mentioned only twice: - Onesimus is sent back “no longer as a slave but as a beloved brother” (Philemon 16) - The Law made us slaves; Christ makes us sons and heirs (Gal 4:7) Zero verses tell slaves to obey masters. Zero endorsement of the institution. Just freedom in Christ.
Two Elohim—one must be rejected. YHWH: the fickle, faithless one who forever reverses what he himself decreed! His ancient works reek of - foolishness (demanding rivers of blood and smoke), - weakness (obsessed with scrubbed cups and beds), - dishonour (shaming the already ashamed flesh), - pettiness (eye for eye, tooth for tooth), - contempt (banning foods he once called good). This jealous, bloodthirsty, contradiction-riddled Elohim is NOT the Father whom Christ revealed.
YHWH’s outstretched hands = massacre. The Father’s outstretched hands = mercy. YHWH’s prophet Moses climbs the hill and stretches out his hands so Israel can butcher the Amalekites—every man, woman, child (Exod 17:8–13). Christ stretches out His hands on the cross—not to kill a single soul, but to save the whole world.
A paradigm shift occurs when you realise that the “serpent” in Eden didn’t lie, but rather YHWH did.
Rest in the pure gift of salvation—grace alone through faith alone in Christ alone. For by grace you have been saved through faith. And this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God, not a result of works, so that no one may boast. (Epistle to the Laodiceans, cf. Eph 2:8–9)