ARTICLES BY DEWAYNE
Christian Articles With A Purpose For Truth.
REST IN THE FULLNESS OF CHRIST
Too often, we try to carry the weight of our worries on our own, as if God’s provision were incomplete or His hands too small. But the Bible shows us a different way—a way of quiet trust, of stillness before the Lord, of resting in what He has already accomplished. The streams of grace flow toward those who do not push and strain but simply look to Him (Psalm 23:1–3). Our sufficiency is not in our striving, but in the sufficiency of Christ, who holds all things in His hands.
Faith is not a leap into the unknown; it is a firm step onto the solid rock of His promises. When fear whispers that you must do more, when anxiety tells you the provision isn’t enough, remember that the Lord’s grace is complete (2 Corinthians 12:9). The mountains may tremble, the seas may roar, but the heart anchored in Him stands firm. Nothing can diminish what Christ has given, and nothing can add to it.
Let your soul cease its striving. Look to Him, trust Him, and breathe in the quiet assurance that He is enough. The moment you release your grip on fear and lean fully into His promises, peace descends like a gentle river, carrying your soul to rest. Salvation, provision, and strength—all are found not in what you do but in Him who has done it all (Philippians 4:19).
Lord Jesus, help me to lay down my striving and rest in Your sufficiency. Teach me to trust Your promises, to lean on Your strength, and to find peace in the fullness of what You have done. Let my heart be still, anchored in You alone. Amen.
BDD
YOU DON’T NEED AN EXPERIENCE (YOU NEED JESUS)
You don’t need an experience; you need Jesus. So often, we search for a feeling, a surge of emotion we can cling to, as if our salvation depended on what we sense rather than what He has done. We look for thunder in the heavens or a warmth in our chest, thinking that if it’s not there, somehow we’re lacking. But the truth is far steadier than our fickle emotions. The solid ground beneath your feet is not the shifting tide of your experience—it is the finished work of Christ on the cross. Nothing you feel or don’t feel can add to it or take from it.
Salvation is not contingent on a momentary sensation. You do not have to climb the mountain of your feelings, wait for some miraculous stirring in your heart, or dance on the shore of subjectivity. Christ’s blood has spoken a better word than any experience ever could. The Bible reminds us that if we confess with our mouth and believe in our heart that Jesus is Lord, we are saved (Romans 10:9). This is not a mystical formula; it is a promise rooted in history, as real as the empty tomb and the nail-scarred hands of the risen Savior.
Faith is the key. Faith is simply trusting that what Jesus did on your behalf is enough—fully, entirely, eternally enough. It is looking at the cross and saying, “It is finished” for me, even if my heart wavers, even if my emotions fail. The Bible says that the just shall live by faith (Habakkuk 2:4), not by how they feel, not by the visions they chase, not by a momentary glow. Faith connects you to Christ immediately. It is the bridge over which the river of grace flows, straight into your soul, securing your salvation here and now.
So let your soul rest. Stop seeking the signs, stop waiting for your heart to catch up. Jesus has done it all. Look to Him. Trust Him. Believe with your whole heart. The moment you do, you are saved—not because of what happens in your experience, but because of what happened for you two thousand years ago. Nothing more is required. Nothing can add to it. Nothing can take it away. You are in the hands of the One who cannot fail, and there is your peace.
Lord Jesus, I thank You that my salvation does not depend on what I feel but on what You have done. Help me to trust fully in Your finished work, to rest on the solid ground of Your promises, and to walk in the assurance of Your love. Strengthen my faith when my heart wavers, and keep me anchored in You alone. Amen.
BDD
REVELATION AND LIVING READY IN CHRIST
The book of Revelation was written to a church living in a world full of pressure, persecution, and uncertainty. John’s visions were not distant predictions for centuries yet to come; they spoke to the realities of his day—a city in turmoil, a people tested, a kingdom that seemed under threat.
The images are vivid: dragons, beasts, seals, and two witnesses standing boldly in the midst of opposition. At first glance, it can feel mysterious or even frightening, but the heart of the message is simple: Christ is sovereign, God is faithful, and His people are called to remain steadfast and ready.
The two witnesses in Revelation 11 illustrate this clearly. They stand in Jerusalem, proclaiming God’s truth, and the world resists them. They suffer, they are cast down, and all seems lost—but God vindicates them.
Their story is not about a literal timetable or a checklist of signs; it is a picture of faithful witness in a world that resists God. The principle for us is the same: be faithful, endure opposition with grace, and let God’s Spirit guide your life.
Readiness is not about knowing every detail or predicting the future; it is about living surrendered, awake, and alive in Christ. Every moment offers an opportunity to testify to His love, to trust His power, and to walk in obedience, knowing that He who raised the witnesses and holds history in His hand is the same Christ who walks with us today.
BDD
THE THINGS THAT MAKE FOR PEACE
There is a quiet beauty in Romans 14, a tenderness that feels almost like Paul is leaning across the table, lowering his voice, and reminding us that the things that make for peace are not found in long lists or rigid codes.
If Christianity were a law code, Paul could have fixed Rome’s problem in a moment—“Here is what to eat, here is what not to eat; here is the right day, here is the wrong one.” But he refuses that route entirely. Instead of handing out rules, he hands out principles; instead of legislating the details, he points them back to the heart—back to Jesus.
They were divided over diet and days, over vegetables and meat, over which sunrise mattered most. But Paul’s answer was not a new set of commands; it was a call to charity, to conscience, to patience, to the gentle and Christlike art of leaving one another alone when Scripture leaves a matter open.
And in that refusal to turn Christianity into a checklist, the apostle tells us something profound: the kingdom of God is not eating or drinking, but righteousness and peace and joy in the Holy Spirit (Romans 14:17). Christianity is not a courtroom; it is a fellowship. It is not kept alive by rules but by relationships—first with Him and then with one another.
So Paul urges us to pursue the things that make for peace (Romans 14:19), to walk softly with our brother’s conscience, to refuse to destroy the work of God over something temporary, something passing, something smaller than the love that redeemed us.
For in the end, the Christ who welcomed us calls us to welcome each other; the Christ who bore our weaknesses calls us to bear the weaknesses of others; and the Christ who freed us from bondage invites us to live not by fear, but by grace.
And it is in that grace—in that patient, generous, principle-shaped way of life—that peace begins to rise like morning light upon the people of God.
BDD
“WHAT SHOULD WE DO ABOUT A.I.?” — USE IT!
We stand in a strange hour, an age our fathers in the faith never imagined; and yet, if you listen closely, you can almost hear them rejoicing at the possibilities. What would James A. Bryan have done with such a tool? What would Gus Nichols have accomplished with a library that answers back? What would John Wesley have written if his horse had carried not only his body but his thoughts across the world in an instant? And who can fathom what Charles Spurgeon would have done if he could take his burdened heart and pour it into something that could help him reach every corner of the earth at once? We would be blind, foolish, and wasteful not to use what God has allowed us to have in our day; every tool is a trust, every talent an opportunity, every resource a stewardship. Use AI to the glory of God (1 Corinthians 10:31).
But let us be very clear — you must never allow AI to do your thinking for you. It is neither honest nor healthy. The growth of the soul happens through wrestling, pondering, weighing, praying. If you hand that holy labor to a machine, you are not only cheating others; you are cheating yourself. God gave you a mind to love Him with — heart, soul, strength, and mind (Luke 10:27). Letting AI think in your place is like letting someone else run your race. You may get to the finish line faster, but you will have lost the strength that comes only by running.
But we have to use it faithfully and honestly. Do not let AI do your work for you. Do not let it do your writing for you. If you cannot write well yet, then learn. Put in the diligence. Read deeply, practice consistently, cultivate the craft the way a gardener cultivates the soil. Do not look for shortcuts. The church does not need cloned voices; the church needs your voice, shaped by Scripture, warmed by devotion, seasoned by your journey with Jesus. If AI writes your sermon, your article, your devotional, then you have offered your people a stranger’s loaf instead of your own. It is plagiarism in spirit, even if the source feels invisible; it is dishonest, and it is destructive to your soul. Do not do it.
But AI can serve you — if you keep it in its place. Use it as an editor, not as an author; as a secretary, not as a shepherd; as an assistant, not as an inspiration. It can help you polish what you have already poured your heart into. It can help you find sources you may have overlooked, strengthen arguments you have already formed, reveal blind spots you did not know you had. AI can be the kind of support that once only wealthy ministries, well-staffed churches, or full-time theologians enjoyed. It can help you clean up grammar, clarify a paragraph, restructure a sermon outline, check a reference, or find a quotation you half-remember from a book you read long ago.
In other words, AI can help you carry the water, but it must never draw the well. The well is your heart. The well is your mind. The well is the Word of God dwelling richly within you (Colossians 3:16). That is where truth is born, where conviction is shaped, where the Spirit does His sanctifying work. If you surrender that sacred ground to a machine, you are surrendering the very place where God forms your soul.
So use AI — yes, use it with gratitude and wisdom. Use it to glorify God, to sharpen your voice, to strengthen the church, to stretch your reach, to steward your gifts with excellence. But never let it replace what only you can offer. Never hand over the work God assigned to your heart. Never trade away the diligence that produces maturity, or the wrestling that produces depth, or the effort that produces fruit.
Let AI help carry the load, but you carry the calling. And whatever you do, in word or deed, do it all in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ, giving thanks to God the Father through Him (Colossians 3:17).
BDD
IF YOU WANT TO GET TECHNICAL Salvation is Not a Formula
A Biblical, Linguistic, and Theological Examination of Salvation, Faith, Repentance, and Baptism
1. SALVATION IN THE NEW TESTAMENT IS A PROCESS, NOT A PUNCTILIAR EVENT
The New Testament uses verbs for salvation that describe action over time—not a split-second transaction.
Key Greek Concepts
πιστεύω (pisteuō) — “to believe,” ongoing trust (present tense often).
μετανοέω (metanoeō) — “to repent,” to change direction, ongoing.
ὁμολογέω (homologeō) — “to confess,” to continue acknowledging.
βαπτίζω (baptizō) — “to immerse,” an act with spiritual significance, but never presented as the moment God saves.
σῴζω (sōzō) — “to save,” used in past, present, and future tenses.
Key Scriptures
Salvation past — Ephesians 2:8
Salvation present — 1 Corinthians 1:18
Salvation future — Romans 5:9–10
This alone proves salvation isn’t a one-second switch flipped by a ritual or a prayer formula.
2. DIFFERENT PEOPLE WERE GIVEN DIFFERENT INSTRUCTIONS BECAUSE THEY WERE AT DIFFERENT SPIRITUAL STAGES
If God intended a universal “magic moment,” the instructions would never vary. But they do.
A. The Philippian Jailer — Told Only to Believe
“Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and you will be saved” (Acts 16:31).
He had never heard the gospel—belief was step one and anyone who does what the New Testament calls “belief” (trusting faith) is saved.
B. The Crowd in Acts 2 — Repent and Be Baptized
They already believed what Peter preached (Acts 2:37).
Thus the next steps were:
Repent (change direction)
Be baptized (public identification)
C. Paul — Told Only to Be Baptized
“Arise and be baptized, and wash away your sins” (Acts 22:16).
But Acts 9 shows:He had already believed (“Who are You, Lord?”)
He had already repented (three days of brokenness, prayer, surrender).
Thus baptism was not the moment he became a believer; it was the moment he identified with Christ.
D. Acts 3 — Repent and Be Converted
Peter does not mention baptism because immediate baptism wasn’t physically possible for thousands gathered in the temple courts (Acts 3:19).
Conclusion
If baptism were the magic moment, the instructions would never differ.
But they do. Therefore, the magic moment theology collapses.
3. BAPTISM IS SACRED, ESSENTIAL, SYMBOLIC—BUT NEVER THE MOMENT OF REGENERATION
The New Testament emphasizes the significance of baptism while protecting it from becoming a talisman.
A. Baptism follows faith. Without faith, baptism is useless
Acts 8:36–37 — “If you believe with all your heart…”
Mark 16:16 — belief first, baptism second.
B. Paul explicitly denies baptism as the point of salvation
“Christ did not send me to baptize, but to preach the gospel” (1 Corinthians 1:17).
If baptism were the moment salvation occurs, that verse would be impossible.
C. Baptism symbolizes union—not causes it
Romans 6:3–4 makes baptism symbolic of death and resurrection; nothing in the Greek indicates that the water produces regeneration.
Greek Study:
συνετάφημεν (synetaphēmen) — “we were buried together with Him,” aorist passive.
This refers to our union with Christ, not our contact with water.
Conclusion
Baptism is commanded, beautiful, and essential for discipleship—but not the magical moment God regenerates a soul.
4. BUT NEITHER IS THE SINNER’S PRAYER A MAGIC MOMENT
We must be equally clear: prayer does not create salvation. Jesus does.
A. No one in the New Testament is told to “pray a prayer to be saved.”
Not one example exists.
Romans 10:13 (“call on the name of the Lord”) quotes an Old Testament cry for covenant rescue, not a scripted prayer.
B. Prayer without faith accomplishes nothing
Matthew 15:8
Isaiah 29:13
James 1:6–7
C. Faith precedes prayer, not the other way around
Romans 10:10 — belief comes before confession.
Hebrews 11:6 — without faith, prayer is meaningless.
Luke 18:13 — the tax collector was already repentant when he prayed.
Greek Study:
ἐπικαλέω (epikaleō) — “to call upon,” used of worship, not magic words.
It is a relationship word, not a formula word.
Conclusion
Praying is an expression of a believing heart—not the mechanism that saves it.
5. WHAT ACTUALLY SAVES? NOT A MOMENT—A PERSON.
A. Salvation is by Christ, not by a ritual
John 1:12–13 — not of the will of man
Titus 3:5 — not by works
Acts 15:11 — “we believe we are saved through the grace of the Lord Jesus”
B. Faith is the means, Christ is the power
Ephesians 2:8
Romans 3:24–26
John 3:16–18
C. The heart turns before any outward expression
Acts 16:14 — the Lord opened Lydia’s heart before baptism
Luke 23:42–43 — the thief believed, repented, confessed—all before dying unbaptized
Romans 4:3–10 — Abraham was justified before any ritual
Greek Study:
δικαιόω (dikaioō) — “to declare righteous.”
Paul argues it refers to God’s act toward the believing heart—not to outward steps.
6. PUTTING IT ALL TOGETHER: THE THEOLOGICAL CASE
A. There is no “magic moment” in Scripture.
Not faith alone, not repentance alone, not confession alone, not baptism alone, not prayer alone.
B. Salvation is the whole heart turning to the whole Christ.
And that turning expresses itself in:
believing,
repenting,
confessing,
being baptized,
abiding.
C. All these together create the picture—but none of them individually create salvation.
D. Jesus—and Jesus alone—is the agent of salvation.
He saves the one who comes (John 6:37).
He gives rest to the one who seeks (Matthew 11:28).
He justifies the one who believes (Romans 3:26).
He receives the heart that turns (Acts 3:19).
We trust Him, not a moment.
We trust Him, not our sequence.
We trust Him, not our performance.
7. FINAL DECLARATION
If you want to get technical—biblically, theologically, linguistically, historically—
there is no magical second where salvation occurs because salvation is not produced by a second; it is produced by a Savior.
Baptism is not the magic moment.
The sinner’s prayer is not the magic moment.
Jesus is the saving moment.
BDD
SALVATION IS NOT A FORMULA
In the New Testament, we see a tapestry of responses given to people according to their own hearts, their own readiness, and the particular work God was doing in their lives. The jailer in Philippi had not even heard the word of God, and so he was simply told to believe. That was the first step—the opening of his heart, the turning of his eyes toward Jesus. It was not yet a matter of ritual or outward obedience; it was a matter of faith, of grasping the promise and letting it take root in a life that had been dark with fear and uncertainty (Acts 16:31).
By contrast, in Acts 2, the people gathered on the day of Pentecost had already heard Peter’s preaching; they were convicted of their sin and ready to respond. Their instructions were to repent and be baptized in the name of Jesus Christ. Repentance was the turning, baptism was the outward testimony of that inward change—a beautiful process in which heart and hands were both engaged. And it is worth noting, they were told to do both; it was not one step alone but the harmony of belief expressed in action (Acts 2:38).
Paul, too, had his own path. He had already believed, he had already repented, and in Acts 22:16, he was simply told to be baptized. For him, baptism was not the initiation of faith but the completion of a journey already begun in the heart. It was a public sealing of an inward reality, a testimony to the world of what God had done in him. Salvation, as we can see, is never a mechanical transaction. It is never a one-size-fits-all formula.
Even in Acts 3:19, Peter’s instructions to the crowds were tailored to the circumstances. He told them to “repent and be converted,” understanding that baptism might not be possible at that exact moment. In the temple courts, a repeat of Acts 2 that soon would have likely been impossible. God’s work in the soul does not always coincide neatly with outward rites; conversion precedes ceremony, belief precedes action, and faith is always the first movement of the heart toward Him.
We must not reduce salvation to ritual or formula, or look for a single magical moment to seal it in our own hands. The only way to truly trust in Jesus, in the way the Bible calls us to trust Him, is to trust that He will do everything for us. Turn to Him, decide to rely on Him completely, and believe that He receives you the very moment you turn your heart to Him. He hears you, knows your longing, and does the work that only He can do. Salvation is not about what we do in a single moment; it is about resting wholly in Him, trusting that Jesus has accomplished it all. We do not rely on magic moments or fleeting feelings—we rely on Him.
BDD
“RULES” FOR WORSHIP
Hebrews tells us that “the first covenant had ordinances of divine service and the earthly sanctuary” (Hebrews 9:1), and in that single sentence the Spirit paints an entire landscape of worship bound by ritual. Under Moses the people came to God through shadows—careful washings, repeated sacrifices, appointed feast days, prescribed garments, and a tabernacle arranged down to the smallest detail. Nothing was left open, nothing was left free, nothing was left to the heart’s own movement toward God.
It was all holy, yes, but all temporary; it was all meaningful, but all incomplete. Their worship had weight, yet it was the weight of something waiting—waiting for Christ to come and fill every symbol with substance.
The sanctuary itself was earthly, framed in wood and gold, and though the glory of God brushed its curtains, the people themselves stood outside. A priest carried their prayers where they could not go, and a veil whispered to every worshipper that God was near, but not yet open to them.
Even the high priest, moving behind that veil once a year, did so with trembling, for the blood he brought was never enough to finish anything. It covered sin, but did not cleanse the conscience; it opened the way for a moment, but never truly welcomed the worshipper inside. Every sacrifice preached the same sermon: not yet.
Then Hebrews turns a page and the scenery changes because “Christ came as High Priest of the good things to come” (Hebrews 9:11). He did not adjust the system; He ended it. He did not walk through the veil; He tore it. The rituals did not shift—they found their fulfillment. The shadows did not deepen—they disappeared in the rising of the Son.
The old covenant gave patterns; Christ gave presence. In Him we are not kept at a distance; we are brought near. We do not wait for another to carry our praise; we come boldly ourselves (Hebrews 10:19–22). We do not offer blood that cannot cleanse; we rest in the blood that cleanses us completely (Hebrews 9:14). Everything the old covenant hinted at, Jesus completed in Himself.
Think of it this way: a child may spend years tracing the outline of a father’s face in a photo, but when the father returns home, the tracing falls from the child’s hands and the child climbs into his arms. The rituals were the tracing; Christ is the Father’s embrace.
Or imagine a traveler who once followed candlelight through a narrow passage, watching every step, but suddenly steps into the sunrise—the candles are not wrong; they are simply outshined. The old covenant led us by candlelight; Jesus calls us into the dawn.
Now worship is no longer rule-driven; it is life-driven. We do not return to incense recipes, holy garments, altars of bronze, or ceremonies repeated week after week. Worship is no longer something we perform; it is something we are. Our bodies are the living sacrifices (Romans 12:1), our hearts the true mercy seat, our lives the temple where God dwells (1 Corinthians 3:16).
We glorify God not by keeping a ritual checklist but by letting every good thing become an offering—our work, our rest, our songs, our conversations, our service, our quiet trust. And because Christ has opened the way fully and forever, we glorify God in any good way our redeemed hearts rise to Him, knowing that in Jesus the veil is gone, the distance is removed, and the life of worship is simply the life lived with God.
BDD
FREEDOM TO CELEBRATE OR NOT: CHRISTIANS AND CHRISTMAS WITHOUT LEGALISM
There are always voices—well-meaning, sincere, and often burdened—who insist that Christmas must be handled with surgical precision. Some say, “Celebrate it if you want, but keep Jesus out of it,” as if we can somehow divide our lives into tidy boxes marked secular and sacred and stand comfortably in both.
But the Bible never paints such a divided life. Paul said, “Whatever you do in word or deed, do all in the name of the Lord Jesus” (Colossians 3:17). We do not go to a temple, light a candle, and then step back into ordinary life; we are the temple, and the worship does not shut off—not at midnight, not when we clock in for work, not when December rolls around. To tell a Christian to celebrate a day without Jesus is like telling a singer to breathe without air—it is an impossible request.
Then there are others who insist that celebrating Christmas is wrong because of its historical associations. They fear that if the day once touched pagan hands, it must be poisoned for all time. But if that standard is true, then we must toss out our months, our days of the week, and half the words we use.
God has never trembled because something used to be misused; He is the One who redeems, reclaims, and sanctifies. Paul reminded Corinth that “the earth is the Lord’s, and all its fullness” (1 Corinthians 10:26). If God owns everything, then nothing is beyond His ability to purify. The Christian who quietly leaves the day alone is consistent and should be respected; but the Christian who celebrates the day with joy, gratitude, and honor to Christ is just as consistent—and just as free.
Would it not be strange for believers to gush over Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer, sing about Frosty’s melting fate, decorate a tree, exchange gifts, sip cocoa, and then say, “But let’s not speak of Jesus—that would be going too far”? That is not conviction; that is confusion. It is the kind of thinking that comes only when someone has been taught to fear joy instead of receive it.
If we are free to enjoy lights, songs, and the warmth of family, then we are certainly free to let our hearts rise in praise to the One who stepped into our world, born of a woman, born under the law, so He might redeem us (Galatians 4:4–5). Legalism builds walls where the Bible has built doors. It whispers “unauthorized” where the Bible whispers “rejoice.”
The truth is simple enough for the youngest child and deep enough for the oldest saint: a Christian can leave Christmas alone with a clean conscience, and a Christian can celebrate Christmas with a clean conscience. It is not the date on the calendar that sanctifies the heart; it is the heart that sanctifies the day. If Jesus is honored, if gratitude rises, if kindness is shared, if generosity flows, then the day is well spent.
If one chooses instead to treat December 25 as any other day, that too can be done to the glory of God. What we must not do is bind one another, burden one another, or accuse one another of sin where the Bible has given freedom.
So let each believer walk in the liberty Christ purchased for them, knowing that “to the Lord we live, and to the Lord we die” (Romans 14:8). The Savior who was born into our world has freed us from fear-based religion, from the endless counting of authorized and unauthorized, from the heavy chains of tradition masquerading as holiness. Whether we hang lights or hang nothing, whether we sing carols or remain silent, we belong to Jesus—and wherever He is, freedom is.
BDD
CHRISTMAS IN GENESIS: THE FIRST LIGHT OF THE WORLD
In the beginning, when the Bible opens its first breath, it speaks of a world wrapped in darkness and then suddenly kissed by light—and in that holy unveiling, Christmas already begins to whisper. For Christmas is the story of Light stepping into our night, and Genesis chapter 1 is the first announcement that God delights to speak light where none existed, life where nothing lived, order where chaos trembled. When “God said, ‘Let there be light,’” it was more than the dawn of creation; it was the shadow of another dawn yet to come, the moment when Jesus Christ—the true Light—would shine into a world lost in a deeper darkness (John 1:9). Creation’s morning was a prophecy; Bethlehem was its fulfillment.
And as God separated light from darkness, calling one “day” and the other “night,” He was already preparing a world that would understand the One who would later say, “I am the light of the world.” The first sunrise was a promise that another sunrise would come—the rising of the Son—not in the heavens above Eden but in a manger held by a young mother in the stillness of Judea. Every created beam of light is a reflection of Him; every sunrise is a sermon about His presence; every sunset is a gentle reminder that He came to walk into our darkness so He could one day raise us into His everlasting morning.
And when God formed the earth, clothed it with waters, crowned it with sky, and draped it with fields and forests, He was crafting the very stage upon which the Savior would walk. The dust He gathered into Adam’s frame would one day be the same dust beneath the feet of Immanuel. The voice that spoke galaxies into being would one day cry as an infant, whisper comfort to the weary, and finally declare, “It is finished” from a cross lifted between heaven and earth. In creation, God shaped a world fit to receive a Redeemer; in Christmas, that Redeemer stepped inside the world He shaped.
And when God breathed life into man, giving him a beginning and a purpose, He was preparing the way for the One who would come to give us a new beginning and an eternal purpose. It is no accident that Genesis begins with life and the Gospels begin with birth. The God who said “Let there be light” is the same God who said “Fear not, for unto you is born this day.” The God who fashioned the first Adam is the same God who sent the last Adam to restore what had fallen. Creation was the opening verse; Christmas is the refrain that brings hope back into the melody.
So when we read Genesis chapter 1 at Christmastime, our hearts bow before a Christ who was not merely born into the world but was the Maker of the world; not merely the Child in the manger but the Light that chased away creation’s first darkness; not merely the reason for our season but the reason for our existence. Before there was a Bethlehem, there was a beginning—and in that beginning, God was already telling the story of His Son.
BDD
THE DAYS OF GENESIS 1 AND THE GLORY OF JESUS CHRIST
Before the first dawn broke across the empty void, before a single sunbeam touched the newborn earth, Christ already was—the eternal Word, the Light that shines before light itself. The Gospel of John does not hesitate: “All things were made through Him, and without Him nothing was made that was made.” (John 1:3) Paul says the same, declaring that in Him all things consist (Colossians 1:16–17). And the writer of Hebrews adds that the Son is the One “through whom also He made the worlds.” (Hebrews 1:2)
So when we read Genesis one, we are not merely reading ancient poetry, nor only the origin of the universe—we are reading the handiwork of Jesus Christ. The days of creation are the days He spoke into existence. The light was His command. The order was His wisdom. The melody was His design.
And when you look at those days with Christ in view, the whole cosmos begins preaching His story.
THE FIRST DAY: LIGHT RISING — A PICTURE OF HIS COMING
“Then God said, ‘Let there be light’; and there was light.” (Genesis 1:3)
Light did not begin with the sun. Light began with the voice of Christ. And in that first rising of light upon the deep, we see a picture of His entrance into our dark world.
John says, “That was the true Light which gives light to every man coming into the world.” (John 1:9)
The sunrise of day one is a prophecy in cosmic form. It whispers:
Christ will come. Christ will shine. Christ will break the night.
Every morning since Eden has repeated that sermon. With every dawn the universe testifies that the Light once rose into the world—and that Light has never gone out.
THE SETTING OF THE SUN: A PICTURE OF HIS DEATH
When God began marking time with evening and morning, He wove into creation a daily reminder of the greatest sacrifice heaven ever knew.
Evening comes. Light fades. Darkness stretches its shadow across the world.
And we are meant to remember that the Light of the world once allowed the darkness to cover Him. Jesus said, “This is your hour, and the power of darkness.” (Luke 22:53)
Every sunset preaches Calvary.
Every lengthening shadow whispers of a cross raised on a hill.
Every fading beam reminds us that the Son of God bowed His head and entered the night for us.
The world has never seen a sunset as dark as that Friday—yet even that darkness was preparing for glory.
THE MORNING AFTER: A PICTURE OF HIS RESURRECTION
“And the morning…” (Genesis 1:5)
Every evening in Genesis one ends with a morning. God never leaves a day in darkness. That pattern is not an accident—it is a promise. It is the gospel written into the structure of time.
Paul says Christ “rose again the third day according to the Scriptures.” (1 Corinthians 15:4)
Every sunrise testifies:
Death is not the end.
Night cannot hold Him.
The Light will rise again.
The cosmos is built on resurrection rhythm—darkness giving way to dawn.
Creation wakes in the morning because Christ woke in the tomb. Every bird that sings at sunrise joins the choir that proclaimed, “He is not here; for He is risen.” (Matthew 28:6)
THE WHOLE COSMOS POINTS TO JESUS
The days of Genesis one are not merely the division of time—they are the revelation of Christ woven into the fabric of creation.
Light points to Him.
Order points to Him.
Life points to Him.
Morning and evening preach His gospel.
The rising sun proclaims His incarnation.
The setting sun proclaims His death.
The returning dawn proclaims His resurrection.
And Paul sums it all up:
“For of Him and through Him and to Him are all things.” (Romans 11:36)
Creation is not neutral—it is Christ-centered. The universe is not silent—it is Christ-declaring. The days of Genesis one do not merely show how God made the world; they show why: so that every sunrise, every sunset, and every turning of the earth might point straight to Jesus.
He is the Light at the beginning.
He is the Lord of the middle.
He is the Life at the end.
He is the meaning of the days, the Maker of the cosmos, and the center of it all.
And the whole creation still sings His name.
BDD
THE DAYS OF GENESIS: Why I Believe They Were 24 Hours
Let me say this at the beginning, so there is no misunderstanding: you are not saved by how you interpret the days of Genesis chapter one. Salvation rests on Christ alone — His cross, His resurrection, His mercy, His grace; not on your chronology of creation. Good and faithful people disagree on the length of those days, and the unity of God’s people does not depend on absolute uniformity on this point.
Yet, for my part, I believe the days of Genesis were normal, literal, 24-hour days — evenings and mornings, suns rising and setting, rhythms that mirror the days we still live in. And I believe this not because I distrust science, but because I trust Scripture and I trust the plain, logical way God ordered His world.
The Text Reads Like Ordinary Days
Every day in Genesis 1 ends with the same refrain:
“And the evening and the morning were the first day…the second day…the third day…”
This is the language of ordinary human experience — rhythm, sequence, boundaries. If God wanted to communicate eons, eras, or ages, the Hebrew language had ways to say that. Instead, the text chooses the cadence of sunrise to sunrise.
Moses did not describe ages of indeterminate length; he described days that any Israelite farmer could understand.
The Photosynthesis Problem: Plants Cannot Wait Millions of Years
Now here is where my conviction grows even stronger.
Scripture says vegetation appears on Day Three, but the sun, the greater light that rules the day, is not placed until Day Four.
If these “days” represent millions of years, we immediately hit a scientific wall:
Plants depend on photosynthesis.
Photosynthesis requires sunlight — steady, sustained, measurable sunlight.
Without sufficient light, plants cannot live, let alone flourish.
No plant can sit dormant for millions of lightless years waiting for a sun to turn on.
Evolutionary timeframes demand long ages; Genesis presents days that depend on God actively sustaining what He creates. The text makes perfect sense with literal days; it makes no sense with geologic ages.
One does not have to reject science to see this — one only has to acknowledge the simple, observable biology of how plants live.
A 24-hour night is harmless to a plant.
A million-year night is extinction.
But in literal days, the sequence is elegant, natural, and orderly: God creates vegetation, and a day later He ordains the light-bearers that regulate life on earth.
This is not a scientific contradiction — it is a divine choreography.
A Logical, Coherent Reading
A literal reading of Genesis 1 requires no twisting, no mental gymnastics, no manipulating the text or the science. The evening–morning structure fits. The biological requirements fit. The narrative flow fits.
The literal-day view is not naïve; it is coherent.
God is not bound by natural processes, but He is not irrational either. If He tells us how He ordered creation, the simplest reading is often the truest one.
Conclusion
And now, let me end where I began — with what matters most.
Your standing before God does not depend on whether you see Genesis 1 as literal days, literary structure, or long epochs. You are saved by the blood of Jesus Christ, not by the length of the creation week. We can reason together, study together, and even disagree together, because the unity of the Spirit is bigger than the timing of the cosmos.
I believe the days were 24-hour days. I hold it with conviction, but not with pride. And if you hold another view, I can still call you my brother or sister — because our hope is not in the days of creation, but in the Lord of all creation.
That is the truth that saves, sustains, and unites us.
BDD
THE DAY THE LORD HAS MADE
Time—this strange, steady river that carries us whether we resist or rest—was never an accident; it was born from the Word who said, “Let there be light,” and it has marched to His rhythm ever since. We divide it into seconds and minutes, hours and days, weeks and years; but beneath all our measurements stands the God who simply is—who was, and is, and is to come (Revelation 1:8). And when you step back far enough, even our calendar begins to preach.
Sunday whispers of the risen Christ; Monday echoes the ordinary mercy that meets us as the world wakes again; Tuesday and Wednesday, Thursday and Friday—names borrowed from ancient tongues, stitched together from cultures long gone—yet they still bow before the truth that each twenty-four hours comes from His hand. Saturday, the old Sabbath shadow, reminds us that rest was always meant to be found in Him, not in a calendar square.
And the more you consider it, the more startling it becomes: people long dead gave us the names, but God alone gave us the days. Humanity borrowed words from myth and memory; God gave morning and evening, the first day, then the second, until the seventh sang of completion. We named the days according to our imaginations; He numbered the days according to His wisdom. And even now, every dawn is a quiet sermon—telling us that life is not endless, breath is not unlimited, and time is a stewardship that will testify for or against us.
Time itself is both frail and fierce: frail, because it slips through our fingers like dust; fierce, because it refuses to wait for anyone. Yet Jesus stepped into time—into hours and hunger, into days and dust—and by doing so He turned every moment into holy ground. He sanctified the common. He redeemed the calendar. He filled every tick of the clock with the possibility of grace.
So, when I look at the days of the week, I do not simply see Monday’s schedule or Friday’s relief; I see opportunity; I see the call to number our days that we may gain a heart of wisdom (Psalm 90:12). I see mercy renewing itself at sunrise (Lamentations 3:22–23). I see Jesus inviting me again—come, walk with Me through this day that I Myself have made.
And perhaps that is the point: we divide time, but Christ defines it. We measure days, but Christ fills them. We speak of Monday through Sunday, but Christ is Lord of all seven—Lord of the morning and the midnight, Lord of the beginning and the ending, Lord of the day we love and the day we dread. And because He stands over time, time itself bends with gentle obedience, carrying us not toward chaos, but toward the fullness of His kingdom.
So here I am, stepping into another day with a borrowed name, but a God-given purpose. And I whisper back to the Lord who formed the first sunrise: “If this day belongs to You, then so do I. Take my minutes, take my hours—take my week—and let it all be spent in the light of Your love.”
BDD
Christmas 2025: THE PRINCE OF PEACE
When Isaiah calls Jesus the Prince of Peace, he is not describing a ruler who simply prefers tranquility or promotes calm when circumstances allow it. He is pointing to the One in whom peace lives, from whom peace flows, and through whom peace reigns. Peace is not a mood or a moment—it is a Person; and when He draws near, the storms inside us begin to lose their voice. The world offers a peace that drifts like morning fog, but Jesus gives a peace that settles in the bones and anchors the soul (John 14:27). When He steps into a life, He brings the kind of stillness that circumstances cannot undo.
Peace with God is a full-grown flower that blooms from the bud of justification. In that same spirit, we might say the Prince of Peace does not simply hand us comfort—He establishes reconciliation, then stands guard over the heart He has reconciled. His presence becomes the sentinel at the inner door, holding back fear, guilt, and the old voices of accusation (Philippians 4:7). The world’s peace is like a sandcastle—impressive until the tide comes in. Christ’s peace is like a fortress—unshaken because the Prince Himself dwells there.
Picture a storm-torn sea—dark skies, restless waves, no direction in sight. That is the heart without Christ. But when the Prince of Peace speaks, He says what He once said on Galilee, “Peace, be still” (Mark 4:39), and the waves bow before their rightful King. Nothing in you can silence that storm—but everything in Him can. His peace is not borrowed strength; it is His own authority resting over your chaos.
Or imagine a trembling sheep trying to navigate a valley filled with shadows and imagined threats. The Prince of Peace walks ahead, steady and sure. His rod drives back the dangers, and His voice steadies the heart of the one who follows (Psalm 23:1–4). Spurgeon said, “The presence of Jesus is the death of fear.” And that is why we cling to Him: wherever He goes, peace goes with Him.
Scripture keeps pointing us toward this same truth:
“This One shall be peace” (Micah 5:5).
“In Me you may have peace” (John 16:33).
“We have peace with God” (Romans 5:1).
“He Himself is our peace” (Ephesians 2:14).
Peace made “through the blood of His cross” (Colossians 1:20).
Every verse, every story, every whisper of the gospel pulls our hearts back to the same place: peace is not something we chase—it is Someone we follow. And when the Prince of Peace rules the heart, the war within quiets. His government brings rest; His presence brings confidence; His grace brings wholeness; and His voice brings that deep soul-calm that nothing in this world can steal.
Because He is the Prince of Peace—
and where the Prince reigns, peace reigns too.
BDD
HELD FAST Attachment and the One We Are Meant to Cling To
We all carry our own attachment issues—little fears, old wounds, quiet insecurities that whisper, “Don’t get too close… don’t trust too deeply… don’t hold on too tightly, because you might get hurt.” Life teaches us to keep our guard up, to stay half-hearted, to lean away rather than lean in.
But the gospel calls us in a completely different direction: toward a Person who will not abandon us, misuse us, betray our trust, or disappoint our hope. If there is anyone in heaven or on earth we’re meant to be attached to, it’s Jesus.
He does not push us away; He draws us in. He invites us to abide—to remain—to settle down in Him with the kind of soul-confidence that heals all the fragile parts inside us (John 15:4–5). Every time someone failed us, He remained faithful. Every time someone withheld affection, He offered more. Every time someone walked out, He stayed. When your heart finally realizes that Jesus does not flinch when you come close, something begins to break loose inside you: the fear of attachment, the dread of trust, the reflex to withdraw.
Look at Scripture—every healing, every calling, every moment of grace rests on someone attaching themselves to Jesus. The woman who touched the hem of His garment; the blind man who cried out to Him; the disciples who left everything and followed Him; the thief on the cross who turned his dying head toward Him. These weren’t casual connections—they were attachments of faith, surrender, need, dependence, hope.
Jesus never said, “Keep your distance.” He said, “Come to Me” (Matthew 11:28).
He never said, “Stay guarded.” He said, “Abide in Me.”
He never said, “Protect yourself from disappointment.” He said, “I will never leave you nor forsake you” (Hebrews 13:5).
He never said, “Figure out life on your own.” He said, “Without Me you can do nothing” (John 15:5).
Attachment issues are real—but Christ is more real still. Your heart may tremble, your past may protest, your fears may flare—but Jesus is steady. He is safe. He is the One you were made to cling to. And when you finally attach yourself to Him—fully, honestly, humbly—the anxieties loosen, the fears shrink, and your soul finally finds something solid enough to rest upon.
Because in Him, attachment isn’t a risk.
It’s healing.
It’s home.
It’s salvation.
And it’s the relationship your heart was created for.
BDD
IF YOU WANT TO GET TECHNICAL: Why Salvation Must Be a Decision, Not a Transaction
If you really want to get technical about salvation—if you want to chase it down to its linguistic roots, its biblical patterns, its Old Testament shadows and New Testament fulfillments—you quickly discover that salvation cannot possibly be a cold, mechanical, transactional event. The Bible simply never treats it as a ritual that automatically “activates” grace.
Instead, from Genesis to Revelation, salvation is always portrayed as a decision—a personal, relational turning of the heart toward God.
It is always a matter of;
trust,
faith,
surrender,
and response.
And if someone insists on going the scholarly route, the languages themselves push you right back to the same conclusion.
Old Testament Patterns: Salvation Begins With Heart–Decisions
In the Old Testament, salvation is tied to trust, the Hebrew word bāṭaḥ—to lean on, to confide in, to place one’s weight upon (Psalm 37:3–5). That is a decision, not a transaction.
When Naaman the Syrian came to Elisha (2 Kings 5), the entire story hinges on whether Naaman would decide to obey, to trust, to submit. Washing in the Jordan was not magic water. The miracle wasn’t triggered by a ritual—it was released by a heart that finally chose humility and belief.
The same is true with Rahab in Joshua 2; her salvation was not because she mastered Israel’s theology, but because she decided, with trembling faith, “The Lord your God, He is God.” The pattern is unmistakable: God saves people who choose to trust Him.
New Testament Words That Destroy the Transaction Model
When we cross into the New Testament, the language becomes even clearer.
The key word for “believe” is πιστεύω (pisteuō)—which does not mean “to agree with facts.” It means “to trust, to rely on, to commit oneself to.” It’s a relational word, a word of dependence.
And the word for faith, πίστις (pistis), carries the same idea: loyalty, trust, leaning your life on Christ. You cannot make pisteuō into a mechanical switch. It demands a decision.
Then there’s μετάνοια (metanoia), repentance: not a ritual, but a change of mind, a reorientation of the heart—again, a decision.
Even ἐπικαλέω (epikaleō), the word for “call on” the Lord (Romans 10:13), literally means to appeal to, to invoke, to consciously ask for help.
None of these words function like buttons on a religious machine. They all require a person—heart, soul, and will—to turn to Christ.
Biblical Examples: Salvation Always Comes Through Personal Response
Look at the woman who touched the hem of His garment (Matthew 9:20–22). Her salvation didn’t come because she triggered a spiritual mechanism; it came because she decided to reach out in faith. Jesus said, “Your faith has made you well”—your pistis, your personal trust.
The woman who washed His feet with her tears (Luke 7:36–50) is another example. She didn’t understand the theological complexities of atonement or justification. She simply chose to come to Christ with love and repentance, and He said, “Your faith has saved you.”
Then there’s the centurion (Matthew 8:5–13) who believed Jesus could heal with just a word. His salvation moment was a heart–decision: “Only speak the word, and my servant will be healed.” Jesus marveled at this man’s faith—not his doctrinal completeness.
Even the Apostles Were Called to a Decision First, Understanding Later
When Jesus called the disciples, He did not hand them a doctrinal exam. He said, “Follow Me.” The Greek is ἀκολούθει μοι (akolouthei moi)—a command that means “come after Me, join Me, commit yourself to walking with Me.” They understood little. Their theology was messy. Their expectations were confused. But they made a decision, and Jesus accepted it fully. Their salvation began not with encyclopedic understanding, but with a choice. Knowledge grew, but trust came first.
The Technical, Scholarly, Linguistic Bottom Line
If someone insists on approaching salvation with technical precision, the languages, contexts, and narrative patterns of Scripture all collapse into one unshakable truth: salvation must be a decision. A heart response. A turning of the will toward Jesus.
Every Greek word involved in the salvation process—pisteuō, epikaleō, metanoia, akoloutheō—demands personal engagement, not passive ritual.
Every example in the Gospels shows people receiving life because they trusted Jesus, not because they executed a flawless procedure.
Every Old Testament precedent points to a God who saves those who lean on Him, not those who perform mechanically.
If you want to get technical—deeply technical—salvation is the very opposite of a transaction. It is a living, breathing decision to trust the One who gave Himself for us. It is simple because God made it simple. And it is relational because God Himself is relational.
Christianity begins not with a system, but a Savior; not with a formula, but a choice; not with a transaction, but a decision of the heart to trust Jesus Christ.
BDD
A DECISION, NOT A TRANSACTION A Devotional on the Simplicity of Salvation
Some people try to make salvation sound like a technical exchange—an almost mechanical process where you understand a set of doctrines, check a few boxes, and somehow that produces a saved soul. But nothing in the New Testament reads like that. Every person who found salvation in Jesus made a decision—a heart–choice of trust, a personal turning toward Him.
Salvation is not a cold transaction; it is a living response. It is a soul saying, “I need You,” and finding Him already leaning in with grace. Christianity cannot be reduced to concepts, formulas, or intellectual precision. It has to be about trusting Christ Himself.
Look at the woman who touched the hem of His garment (Matthew 9:20–22). She did not submit a doctrinal statement; she reached out with trembling faith. She had one simple thought in her heart—“If I can just touch Him…” She decided to come to Jesus, even though she was afraid, even though she felt unworthy, even though she didn’t understand everything. And Jesus said, “Your faith has made you well.” Not your comprehension. Not your theological accuracy. Your faith—your decision to trust Me.
Then there was the woman who anointed His feet with her tears (Luke 7:36–50). She came with a broken heart and a lifetime’s worth of regret. She said no words at first—just love, humility, repentance, and trust. Her actions were messy but sincere, and Jesus honored her decision to come. He said, “Your faith has saved you. Go in peace.” Again, not her technical knowledge, not her moral résumé—her faith.
Consider the centurion in Matthew 8:5–13. He didn’t understand the covenant of Abraham, the temple system, or all the layers of Jewish expectation. But he knew this: Jesus had authority, and he trusted Him completely. He made a decision—“Lord, just say the word.” Jesus said He hadn’t found faith like that in all Israel. Not because the centurion mastered doctrine, but because he believed in Christ with a clear and simple trust.
And think of blind Bartimaeus (Mark 10:46–52). He cried out, “Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me!” People tried to silence him, but he kept calling. When Jesus asked, “What do you want Me to do for you?” the man answered honestly—and Jesus healed him. Salvation began with a decision of the heart, not a lesson in theology. He believed, he asked, and Jesus answered.
Put all of this together and you see it plainly: salvation is always personal, always relational, always a matter of deciding to trust Jesus. You don’t get saved by taking a class. You don’t get saved by mastering doctrines that even the apostles spent years trying to understand. You don’t get saved by decoding mysteries, solving theological puzzles, or becoming the smartest person in the room.
You get saved the same way every soul in Scripture did—by deciding to come to Him, to trust Him, to reach out to Him. Christianity cannot possibly be a technical operation; the New Testament does not allow it. It must be a decision of the heart.
Doctrine helps you grow. Truth matters deeply. But the moment of salvation itself is beautifully simple: Jesus is willing, and the heart must decide.
BDD
EVIDENCE FOR A CREATOR MADE SIMPLE
There’s a basic rule everyone understands, even without being taught: things don’t just appear for no reason. If you walk outside and see a bicycle sitting in your driveway, you don’t think, “Wow, that just popped into existence!” You assume someone put it there. If something is designed, organized, and purposeful, you know it came from a designer. That’s the most basic evidence for a Creator: the universe looks designed because it is designed. The order, the beauty, the laws of nature—none of those things happen by accident.
Think about the laws that run everything. Gravity never forgets to work. Your heart beats because the rules of biology are dependable. Math doesn’t change its mind. The universe behaves like someone set it up with precision and intention. Scientists can predict eclipses down to the second—not because the universe is chaotic, but because it is incredibly orderly. Order is a sign of intelligence, not randomness.
Then there’s the question of life. Even the simplest living cell is like a miniature factory—full of instructions, energy systems, repair mechanisms, and information codes. We don’t have to be biologists to get the point: information always comes from a mind. If you see a message written in the sand at the beach—even something simple like “Hello”—you don’t say, “The waves wrote that.” Information points to an intelligence, and DNA is the most detailed information system known to mankind. It didn’t write itself.
And what about you? Humans think, feel, love, create art, dream, argue, worship, and search for meaning. We’re not mindless matter. We’re not machines made of chemicals. Everyone knows instinctively that right and wrong are real, that life matters, that people have value. Where does that come from? Physical material can’t produce moral conviction or emotional depth. Those things point to a moral, personal Creator who made us in His image.
Finally, there’s the reality that every culture across history—no matter how far apart—believed in some kind of higher power. People don’t naturally drift toward atheism; they drift toward worship. Why? Because deep down, we all sense the same thing: This world didn’t create itself. We didn’t create ourselves. Something bigger, wiser, older, and more powerful stands behind it all. And the Bible simply gives a name and a story to the Creator humanity already knows must exist.
In the end, believing in a Creator isn’t blind faith—it’s the most natural conclusion a thinking person can reach. The universe is too organized, life is too complex, people are too meaningful, and existence itself is too impossible to come from nothing. Something doesn’t come from nothing, life doesn’t come from non-life, and meaning doesn’t come from accidents. The simplest explanation is still the truest one: In the beginning, God created.
BDD
IF YOU WANT TO GET TECHNICAL ABOUT WHAT HIS NAME IS
Something else to get legalistic about. Something else to distract believers from Christ about. Something else to confuse unbelievers seeking truth about. Sigh
If people really want to get technical about the name of Jesus—and some absolutely do—then fine. Let’s get technical. Let’s step out of the Facebook memes and YouTube prophets and go straight into the actual languages, the history, the manuscripts, and a little plain old common sense. Because the louder someone shouts, “You MUST say Yeshua,” the clearer it becomes that they haven’t done the homework.
Let’s start with their big claim: “His real name is Yeshua, and using any other version is wrong, pagan, or powerless.” That sounds dramatic—but the more technical you get, the worse that argument gets.
1. If you want to get technical, His name in the New Testament was not Yeshua—it was Iēsous.
This is the first thing the “Hebrew-name-only” crowd does not want to talk about.
They shout “Yeshua! Yeshua!” as if the apostles walked around writing Hebrew script on every wall they could find. But the entire New Testament was written in Greek—not Hebrew, not Aramaic, not a mixture—Greek.
And in Greek, the name given for Jesus is:
Ἰησοῦς — Iēsous.
If someone insists we must use His “original name,” then logically they should stop saying Yeshua and start saying Iēsous. But they won’t.
Why?
Because their argument only works if you stop halfway through history, grab a little Hebrew, ignore the Greek, ignore the translation process, and ignore the gospel going into the whole world.
2. If you want to get technical, His name changed languages long before English existed.
Names change form as they move across languages—that is normal, universal, and unavoidable.
The Hebrew Yehoshua becomes the later Hebrew/Aramaic Yeshua.
Yeshua becomes Iēsous when written in Greek.
Iēsous becomes Iesus in Latin.
Iesus becomes Jesus in English.
There is nothing unusual here.
Ask the “Hebrew-name-only” folks a very simple technical question they can’t answer:
If God demands the original pronunciation, which stage of the original do you mean? The long form (Yehoshua)? The shortened form (Yeshua)? The Greek form the apostles used (Iēsous)? Or the Latin form used in the church for 1,000 years?
They cannot answer that. Not one of them.
3. If you want to get technical, the apostles themselves preached the Greek name to Gentiles—and God blessed it.
Paul preached in Greek.
Peter preached in Greek.
Luke wrote in Greek.
Mark wrote in Greek.
The early church sang, prayed, baptized, evangelized, and died for the name Iēsous—not “Yeshua.”
So let’s ask the question they can’t answer:
Why would God inspire the New Testament in Greek if He refused to honor the Greek name?
If “Yeshua-only” was the rule, every apostle broke it—and God apparently approved, because He poured out the Spirit on Greek-speaking believers in the name of Jesus Christ.
4. If you want to get technical, translation is not a sin—it is the entire point of mission.
If the only acceptable pronunciation of the Savior’s name is the Hebrew version, then Christianity falls apart in about five seconds.
Here’s the question they really can’t answer:
What about the millions of believers who do not speak Hebrew or English?
Do Chinese believers have to say “Yeshua”?
Do Africans?
Do Koreans?
Do Spanish believers?
Do tribes with no written language?
If the answer is yes, then salvation depends on exact pronunciation—something Jesus never taught, the apostles never required, and Scripture never suggests.
If the answer is no, then the whole argument collapses immediately.
5. If you want to get technical, Acts 4:12 refutes their entire doctrine.
Peter said:
“There is no other name under heaven given among men by which we must be saved.”
He was not describing a pronunciation.
He was describing a Person—the crucified and risen Christ.
If the power is in the syllables instead of the Savior, we have lost the gospel itself.
6. If you want to get technical, their argument depends on a magical view of language, not a biblical view of salvation.
They treat the name of Jesus like a spell that only works if the wording is correct. That is not Christianity—that is superstition.
The gospel is not preserved by sound waves; it is carried by faith in the Son of God.
If you place your trust in Jesus—
in English,
in Spanish,
in Greek,
in Swahili,
in Mandarin—
He hears you.
And if someone truly believes God ignores prayers unless you use their preferred Hebrew pronunciation, then ask the simplest technical question of all:
So which pronunciation saved the thief on the cross?
They cannot answer that either.
Final technical conclusion
If we want to get technical, the New Testament name is Iēsous.
If we want to get historical, the early church used that name across the Greek-speaking world.
If we want to get linguistic, names naturally adapt to different languages.
If we want to get biblical, salvation is in the Person, not the phonetics.
If we want to get practical, billions of believers worldwide will never pronounce Hebrew.
And if we want to get honest, the “Yeshua-only” movement collapses under its own weight the minute you look at the facts, the languages, or the common sense of the gospel. We know that these people must love Jesus and we respect that. But this doctrine is total nonsense.
His name in English is Jesus.
And Heaven has zero problem with that.
BDD
HIS NAME IS JESUS—ALWAYS HAS BEEN, ALWAYS WILL BE
Every now and then somebody pops up online with that tone—you know the one—telling everybody, “You have to call Him Yeshua.” And they say it like they just discovered the secret password to Heaven, and the rest of us have been doing it wrong for two thousand years. Honestly, it’s one of the strangest hills anybody could choose to die on.
His name, in English, is Jesus. You and I don’t live in first-century Judea. We don’t speak ancient Hebrew. We don’t order lunch in Aramaic. We speak English. And in English, the name that has been preached, sung, loved, proclaimed, and lifted up for centuries is Jesus.
And the funny part is this: not a single person in the New Testament ever says, “Now make sure you pronounce it exactly like this, or else.” What they do say is that “there is no other name under Heaven given among men by which we must be saved” (Acts chapter 4 verse 12). And the point isn’t the syllables; the point is the Person.
Salvation isn’t a pronunciation contest. It’s not God leaning over the rail of Heaven saying, “Sorry, almost—but you didn’t roll the ‘sh’ correctly.” That whole idea collapses the moment you think about all the languages in the world. Are we going to tell Chinese believers, African believers, and South American believers that they all have to sound like a first-century Galilean fisherman or God won’t listen? It’s nonsense.
And here’s what makes the whole thing even more ridiculous: the New Testament wasn’t written in Hebrew anyway—it was written in Greek. And the Greek name is Iēsous. So if somebody wants to get picky about “the original name,” they’re already skipping right over the language the apostles actually used when they wrote the Scriptures. They preach Jesus in Greek, the gospel goes to the nations, and from that point forward His name naturally takes shape in the language of the people who call on Him. That’s how it works. Always has.
So when somebody tries to intimidate you or over-spiritualize it—“You must say Yeshua”—just smile and move on. We’re not saved because we know the secret Hebrew version. We’re saved because the Son of God died and rose again. The angels rejoice when a sinner repents; they don’t stop the celebration to check the vowel sounds. His name is Jesus in your Bible, Jesus in your prayers, Jesus in your preaching, Jesus in every hymn you’ve ever sung—and Heaven has no problem with that.
Honestly, the whole “Yeshua or nothing” argument falls apart the moment you breathe on it. If you know Him, if you trust Him, if you love Him, and if you call on His name with a believing heart, then Heaven hears you just fine. And His name, in English, is Jesus. Always has been. Always will be.
BDD