Seed of the Woman

A friend, Wes Baker, offers these additional thoughts on Genesis 3:15 as a Messianic prophecy: “First, it seems clear to me that Rev 12 is a direct reflection on the woman and seed of Isaiah 66, which in turn is a meditation by Isaiah on Gen 3.15. Pointing out the middle step can be helpful . . . . Continue Reading »

Warrior Messiah

At the end of his comments regarding Genesis 3:15, Witherington says that “even if [the passage] were a reference to Christ, Christ solved the Satan problem not by being a warrior messiah and thus by killing but by dying on a cross!! Jesus was the antithesis of a warrior messiah when he . . . . Continue Reading »

Sermon notes

INTRODUCTION In the “burden” of Babel, Isaiah sketched the big picture of political history. In the burdens concerning Philistia and Moab, he prophesies that Yahweh will be faithful to His promise to David and will make Zion a refuge, not only for Israel but for the Gentiles. THE TEXT . . . . Continue Reading »

Protoevangelium

Back to Witherington, and I discern that nuance and subtlety are not Witherington’s style, at least not in these posts. He writes, “Gen. 3.15 is not in any way shape or form a messianic prophecy about a warrior messiah. The ‘he’ in question is the descendants of Eve of . . . . Continue Reading »

Angel

Who is the angel in Revelation 22:6, 16? Both of the verses echo the opening verse of Revelation, especially 22:6. The opening verse says that Jesus send and signified by His angel to His slave John, and earlier used the verb “show.” 22:6 states that the Lord sent His angel to show His . . . . Continue Reading »

To See Themselves Sin

A student, Leta Sundet, wrote a quite brilliant paper on Romans 7. The entire paper is posted below. “I do not understand my own actions,” Paul says helplessly. “I do the things I hate. Oh wretched man that I am! Who will deliver me from this body of death?” Christians have . . . . Continue Reading »

Real Men and Austen

A friend sent me a link to a Wall Street Journal column by William Deresiewicz describing how studying Jane Austen taught him the meaning of manhood. Reading about Elizabeth Bennet’s failures and her resulting humiliating, Deresiewicz learned what real manhood, and real education, was all . . . . Continue Reading »

Crushing heads

I skip over Witherington’s second complaint for a moment and move to #3. For this one, he uses two exclamation points!! More than once!! Witherington writes, “the enmity set between humans and ‘the serpent’ has nothing to do with an endorsement of war, it has to do with a . . . . Continue Reading »

Zombie Branch

Isaiah famously prophesies about the Branch ( netzer ) that will spring from Jesse’s root, life from the dead tree of the Davidic line. There is another branch in Isaiah: The king of Babel who tries to climb above the clouds but then falls to earth is never going to find a glorious resting . . . . Continue Reading »

Guarding the garden

Over on his blog (I can see it in the distance), Ben Witherington has been working through my book on Constantine. His latest post criticizes my biblical arguments at the end of that book. I hope to address some of his criticisms over the next few days, and I’ll start with his charge that my . . . . Continue Reading »