The Church didn’t begin in cathedrals or councils, but in the shock of an empty tomb and the breath of God filling ordinary people. These works trace that moment forward—how revelation became doctrine, how obedience became theology, and how the voice of the Shepherd still cuts through every fence we’ve built since. This isn’t a new gospel or a new movement. It’s a return to the faith once delivered, heard again in the language and clarity of its first witnesses.
These writings are part of a long restoration project: recovering the faith as the Apostles actually taught it, before centuries of commentary and cultural drift reshaped it. I’m not offering novelty. I’m returning to origins — to the texture, language, and lived reality of the earliest Christians. Each work builds on the next, tracing a single thread: How do we follow Christ as they did — with clarity, conviction, and a faith that is lived, not marketed?
When read in sequence – You should feel led through Hearing->Thinking->Encountering->Understanding->Living->Shepherding
The Foundation of Hearing and Thinking
- Hermeneutics: Hearing What God Actually Said
- Theology: What It Is and Why It Refuses to Stay in One Box
The Birth of Faith Itself
- What They Knew Before There Was Theology
- The Moment God Made Himself Known
The Recovery of Apostolic Substance
- Restoring Apostolic Faith
The Narrative Spine
Theology is not about parsing out Greek or Hebrew verbs. It isn’t see the faith the way I do because I had a group of letters behind my name on a business card.
Theology is looking at life, and the very world around us through God’s eyes. Making Him the center of everything, and allowing everything else to fall into place around Him as gravity. Theology isn’t talking about God, It’s talking with Him while we walk it out together. As per His original design.