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The Tabernacle Blueprint: A Dwelling Place that Points to Christ
The Tabernacle Blueprint: A Dwelling Place that Points to Christ Long before Solomon built the temple, God gave Moses a detailed plan for a portable sanctuary. The tabernacle wasn’t just an ancient tent—it was a visual prophecy of God’s desire to dwell with His people and of the ultimate presence of Christ among us.
2 min read


Head Coverings and Gender Roles: Honor, Order, and the Glory of God
Head Coverings and Gender Roles: Honor, Order, and the Glory of God. Few passages in Paul’s letters have stirred as much debate as 1 Corinthians 11:2–16, where he addresses head coverings and the roles of men and women in worship. For some, it is a straightforward command: women must cover their heads in church. For others, it is purely cultural and irrelevant today.
3 min read


Iconography: Images, Idols, and the Distortion of Worship
Iconography: Images, Idols, and the Distortion of Worship. From gilded icons in Orthodox cathedrals to painted statues in Catholic basilicas, sacred images play a massive role in the worship practices of millions. Iconography is defended as an ancient, holy tradition — but biblically, icons and religious images are a distortion of true worship. Their origins are not in the New Testament church, but in later cultural developments. And their defense collapses under the weight o
3 min read


Book of Psalms Summary: The Hymnal of Heaven and the Heartbeat of the Messiah
Book of Psalms Summary: The Hymnal of Heaven and the Heartbeat of the Messiah. The Book of Psalms—known in Hebrew as Tehillim (“Praises”)—is the largest book in the Bible and the most quoted in the New Testament. Far from being a disorganized collection of Hebrew poetry, Psalms is a divinely inspired anthology of worship, theology, and prophecy, often functioning as a prophetic commentary on the life of Jesus Christ.
5 min read


What the Bible Actually Says About Worship
What the Bible Actually Says About Worship. The confession of Israel, “Hear, O Israel: YHWH our God, YHWH is One,” locates worship in God alone. That axiom remains unchanged throughout Scripture, yet the coordinates of worship—its where, when, and how—shift dramatically as redemptive history moves from Sinai’s tabernacle to the risen Christ. This chapter traces that movement, showing why genuine worship today cannot be reduced to geography, architecture, or performance.
4 min read
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