Paul’s Conflict in Antioch and Its Historical and Exegetical Impact

Paul’s conflict with Peter in Antioch (Gal. 2:11-14), often considered together with his conflict with Barnabas (Acts 15:15-21), is widely known and has been the subject of much debate since the days of the early church fathers. During the first several centuries, the Antioch incident was frequently cited to blame either Peter or Paul, depending … Read more

The Root of Apostasy: Hebrews 12 and the Reception of Deuteronomy 29:18–19

While past studies on apostasy in Hebrews have disproportionately focused on the warnings in Hebrews 6:4–12 and, to a lesser extent, Hebrews 10:26–31, I argue that the use of Deuteronomy 29:18–19 in Hebrews 12:15, the last of the book’s five warning passages, is uniquely illuminating to the author’s theology of perseverance and apostasy. This becomes … Read more

The Divine Spy: A New Accounting of Archegos and Prodromos in Hebrews

Hebrews scholars have noted the significance of the Christological titles, ἀρχηγός and πρόδρομος, in the author’s argument (2:10; 6:19; 12:2). However, an Old Testament background has remained elusive, leading many to favor a Hellenistic origin for the terms. This study argues that the story of the Kadesh rebellion (Numbers 13–14) is the background for both … Read more

“Galatian Pneumatikoi restoring Transgressors by the Pneuma that produces Gentleness (Gal. 6.1)”

In most translations of Galatians 6.1, Paul directs the “spiritual” (οἱ πνευματικοί) among the Christ-followers in Galatia to restore transgressors in their midst “in a spirit of gentleness” (ἐν πνεύματι πραΰτητος). Such translations, and those like it, have often led interpreters to think that Paul is here being sarcastic or polemical with the designation “spiritual.” … Read more

Salvation Is Death: Aporias and the Subversion of Judgment in Revelation

The Book of Revelation is often described as perplexing, bewildering, or even impenetrable—terms that signal what cognitive pragmatics would call a “pragmatic failure.” Readers encounter moments of interpretive impasse, or aporias, in which the text seems to contradict itself or defy coherence. These aporias are not accidental. Rather, I argue that they function as deliberate … Read more