Multi-part arcs — expositional walks through whole books, and topical series that follow one question through the text.
An expositional walk through Genesis — creation, fall, flood, Babel, and the patriarchs — in the order the text gives them, from the Hebrew.
From Egypt to Sinai to the tabernacle — Israel's deliverance and the covenant that formed a nation, passage by passage from the Hebrew.
Nine parts on men and women in the text — from Genesis 1 through the household codes to Phoebe, Priscilla, and Junia — testing every claim against the Hebrew and Greek.
A four-part reading of Ezekiel 38–39 — the coalition, the hooks in the jaws, the cleansing of the land, and the great sacrifice.
The firstborn, the youngest chosen, the seventh and the eighth — four studies on how the text repeatedly passes over the expected heir.
Three parts testing dispensationalism's claims — rightly dividing, the covenants from Abraham to Christ, and the restitution of all things — against the actual text.
Where demons appear in the Old Testament, how they differ from fallen angels, and what happened between the testaments to turn silence into storm.
What the text actually says about baptism — its meaning, and the age at which it begins.
What the kingdom of heaven is in Matthew's own vocabulary — and who the text says will not inherit it.
Jesus explained some parables and left others unexplained — the explained ones are the keys for reading the rest.
Is 1 Enoch one book or five? And does the New Testament know the Parables' Son of Man? Textual evidence, not tradition.
Reading the Apocalypse by its own Old Testament vocabulary — its light sources and Mystery Babylon.
Who Yavan (Greece) is in the prophets, and whether Daniel 8 has already run its course — two parts on a name the text keeps using.