A growing library of studies that go straight to the oldest sources — the Greek, the Hebrew, the Aramaic and Ge'ez — and let the texts speak in their own words.
Featured Study
What the Manuscripts Still Hold · The Prophets
The Watchers
Before there was a flood there was a fragment — and the fragment says something the finished book was made to soften.
Open the study →What you'll find inside
- Twenty chiefs, named in the Aramaic — falling did not erase the name
- A fragment older than the book of Daniel's final form
- Four archangels, four distinct remedies — not one undifferentiated wrath
- The Ge'ez list quietly drops a name the Aramaic keeps
- The "Son of Man" chapters — absent from every Qumran cave
The Collection
Studies in the Library
The Plan of God
The Gathering-Up of All Things
From the burning bush to the new creation — the Father's one plan, word by word.
Open →
The Word
The Word, the Writings, and the Voice
Logos, Rhema, Graphē — what the manuscripts mean by "the Word of God," and what they don't.
Open →
The Name
The I AM
The Name that is the verb "to be" — Being and Becoming held in one breath.
Open →
The Gospels
The Son Sees the Father
John 5:19 — the living source, word by word.
Open →
The Prophets
The Ge'ez Witness
What Europe let go of, a plateau in the Horn of Africa copied by hand for sixteen hundred years.
Open →
The Prophets
Son of Man Before the Stars
What a Jewish book written before Jesus already saw.
Open →
Christ & Cosmos
The Elohim Question
A scribe changed one word in one verse — and a cave near the Dead Sea kept the version before the change.
Open →
The Plan of God
Heaven and Earth Made New
Renewal or replacement? What the manuscripts actually say — and where they genuinely disagree.
Open →
The Name
Logan Moses Staggs
What the oldest texts and tongues actually say about a name.
Open →
The Name
Gloria: Glory, Kavod & Doxa
כָּבוֹד Kavod and δόξα Doxa through the manuscripts — what "glory" actually means.
Open →
Studies marked Original attached keep the prior session beside the manuscript rebuild — enhance, don't discard.
The library grows as each study is completed — every one held to the same standard: the earliest manuscripts, in their own languages, nothing claimed that wasn't checked.