Salt Covenant · Part 4
The Salt Covenant: The Transfer Agent and the Diagnostic of the Ground
The Parable of the Sower is a diagnostic of the ground where the Salt Specialist acts as a Transfer Agent to break the surface tension of the heart.
Every article, in order. 13 total.
Salt Covenant · Part 4
The Parable of the Sower is a diagnostic of the ground where the Salt Specialist acts as a Transfer Agent to break the surface tension of the heart.
Salt Covenant · Part 3
By understanding Cation Exchange Capacity (CEC) and Osmotic Pressure, we discover how our presence as Salt Deposits gives the world the "grip" it needs to hold onto the Word of God.
Salt Covenant · Part 2
Jesus isn't just giving a compliment—He is identifying us as mineral catalysts legally bound to trigger the Kingdom's nutrients in every environment we enter.
Salt Covenant · Part 1
The Grain Offering in Leviticus is not a ritual. It is a chemistry lesson in what it costs to bring something acceptable before God.
The devil's existence does not threaten God's sovereignty. It confirms it.
God is not humble and never claimed to be. Understanding divine sovereignty changes everything about how we approach Him.
Seeing Jesus in Every Part of the Passover Every detail of the Passover, the lamb, the blood, the bread, points forward with precision to Jesus Christ.
The Cost of Compromise · Part 3
The road back from compromise is narrower than the road in, but it is never closed to those who are willing to walk it.
The Cost of Compromise · Part 2
When believers choose convenience over conviction the cost is rarely paid immediately, but it is always paid in full.
Satan's first move in the garden was not temptation but distortion, twisting God's character until the lie felt more believable than the truth.
The Cost of Compromise · Part 1
Compromise rarely announces itself. It begins with small concessions that feel reasonable until the line you swore you would never cross is far behind you.
Not every hardship is punishment from God. Understanding the difference between discipline and affliction changes how we walk through suffering.
Christ did not merely bear our sin, He became it, taking on the full weight of what we are so we could receive what He is.