Abraham answers God’s call in 2091 B.C.E., leaving his homeland to embrace God’s promises of land, seed, and blessing, modeling faith in action.
The Old Testament: Its Most Difficult Passages Explained
Explanations of the most difficult Old Testament passages showing God’s justice, mercy, and consistency with biblical inerrancy.
The New Testament and Its Canon: A Defense of Divine Origin and Authority
The New Testament canon was not created by councils but recognized early by the church through apostolic authority and divine inspiration.
Statistical Proof Of The Bible’s Cohesive Formation: Why Sixty-Six Books Over Sixteen Centuries Converge Into One Inerrant Revelation
The Bible’s unity across 66 books and 16 centuries is statistically impossible by chance, demonstrating one inerrant revelation from the one Divine Author.
Who Was Jesus’ Father? A Biblical and Historical Examination of Jesus’ Paternity
Jesus had no human father. The Bible teaches He was miraculously conceived by the Holy Spirit, fulfilling prophecy and confirming His divine origin.
Introduction to New Testament Textual Criticism: A Scholarly Guide to the Restoration and Reliability of the Greek Text
Textual criticism of the New Testament determines the original wording of Scripture through manuscript analysis, ensuring biblical reliability and accuracy.
Transmissional Errors in the New Testament: A Scholarly Examination of Scribal Variants
Explore transmissional errors in New Testament manuscripts, from unintentional mistakes to intentional changes, and how textual criticism restores the original text.
Jesus’ View of the Bible: An Examination of His Perspective on Scripture
Jesus affirmed the absolute authority, inspiration, and reliability of the Scriptures, using them to teach and fulfill prophecy throughout His ministry.
The Inerrancy of the Bible
The doctrine of inerrancy asserts the Bible's complete truthfulness in its original manuscripts, supported by God's nature and Jesus's teachings.
Christian Ethics: A Comprehensive Analysis Based on Biblical Inerrancy and the Historical-Grammatical Method of Interpretation
Christian ethics is a God-centered framework grounded in Scripture, emphasizing absolute moral standards derived from God's character and teachings.

