Category Archives: Blogs

Archaeological Discoveries

September 13, 2025

Top 10 New Testaament Archaeological Discoveries: #8, The Erastus Inscription

It sure looks to be him! He has the same name. He did the same job. He’s from Corinth, and he lived during the middle of the first century during the ministry years of the Apostle Paul. In 1929 near the ancient theater in Corinth, Greece, archaeologists uncovered a pavement stone with a Latin inscription that reads, “Erastus, in return for his aedileship, laid this pavement at his own expense,” and Paul, writing from Corinth, writes, “Erastus, the treasurer of the city, greets you” (Romans 16:23).

Erastus was an uncommon name in Roman times, which in itself adds weight to the potential connection between this pavement stone and Paul’s Christian friend and colleague (2 Timothy 4:20; Acts 19:21-22). But there’s more! Written in Greek around 57 A.D., Paul calls Erastus a city manager or city steward. Written in Latin and dating to the middle of the first century, the Corinth inscription, carved with seven inch tall letters that were originally filled with bronze, calls Erastus an aedil, what we might call a public works commissioner, an elected official responsible for maintaining public buildings, keeping the streets in working order and overseeing the market.

Not everyone will agree, but to me it sure looks like the same guy! Once again archaeology and the Bible converge harmoniously. I look forward to meeting my brother, Erastus, one day, but not in a city with streets paved with stones. Instead, we’ll meet in a city with streets paved with “pure gold” (Revelation 21:21).

— Daniel McCabe

Our Community Seminar Series for Fall 2025

Hi, everyone! Thanks to those of you who have already signed up for the Fall seminar! At this time we have five registered, which is still five short of our desired minimum. Do you know of any others who you can recruit to join us? This is arguably my favorite seminar to teach, and it’s been super well-received in the past, so I think you’ll really like it too. But who else do you know who might like to attend? If you have been thinking about registering, please consider doing so now. I look forward to reaching our goal this week. Feel free to share this post or click on the picture below to reach our registration form.

–Daniel McCabe

Trivia

According to livingcost.org, a meal at McDonalds in the US costs about $11.00, but in Israel the same meal will cost WHAT? (Answer at bottom of page.)

Life in the Land: Sitting Shiva

As a pastor I have sat many times in homes, churches, hospitals and funeral parlors with individuals or families who have lost a loved one, and it’s been my privilege to provide a steady presence, to pray with them or to attempt a timely word of encouragement. But once the memorial service, the graveside service and the church-hosted meal for the family have all come to a close, the family quietly returns to their home to grieve alone. Sure, church members or friends may organize a meal train over the next two weeks, but even then they usually just drop off their meals at the front door without entering. Is it possible that we have forgotten how to “weep with those who weep” (Romans 12:15)? Have we forgotten even how to weep?

Shiva means “seven,” so sitting shiva is the Jewish practice of receiving guests into one’s home for seven days following the funeral of a close relative. The family stays home and doesn’t work or participate in social activities so that they are free to receive guests who come with food and flowers. Most will stay to pray, to share memories or perhaps just to sit together in a show of support, ensuring that the family isn’t isolated while they process their grief. Sometimes a shiva candle is lit for all seven days to symbolize the soul of their loved one. Sometimes the family covers the mirrors in their home to avoid any preoccupation with personal appearance; tears a small piece of cloth or a black ribbon to symbolize their heartache; or sits on the floor or perhaps on low stools in a show of humility while they mourn.

I like the practice of sitting shiva. It gives permission to grieve whereas too often we feel an unspoken pressure to return to work, to move on or to be strong when in reality grief takes time. Admittedly grief lasts more than seven days, but sitting shiva might just slow us down long enough to realize that we need the Lord and others during such difficult times more than we might think.

–Daniel McCabe

The Apostolic Fathers: Papias of Hieropolis, part 4

So far we’ve met Ignatius who was fed to the lions, Polycarp who was burned at the stake, and Clement who rubbed shoulders with emperors in Rome. Next up, Papias, the bishop or pastor of Hieropolis, a city not mentioned in the Bible, but one which often comes up in sermons on Revelation 3 when describing the location of the lukewarm church, Laodicea, which is situated in biblical Asia Minor between Colosse, known for its cold springs, and Hieropolis, known for its hot springs.

Born in 60 A.D. shortly before the destruction of Jerusalem by the Romans in 70 A.D., Papias evidently knew both Polycarp and the apostle John, but he’s especially known for some early statements that he made about the compilation of the Bible. In his five-volume work, “Exposition of the Sayings of the Lord,” Papias argues that of the four Gospels—Matthew, Mark, Luke and John—Mark is the earliest and that Mark drew his information from the Apostle Peter (cf. 1 Peter 5:13, “Mark, my son”). Given that 93% of Mark’s Gospel is included in both Matthew and Luke, Markan priority is still the prevailing theory held by modern Bible teachers. Papias is also known for his statement that the disciple Matthew, whose Gospel targeted a Jewish audience, had previously recorded many of Jesus’ teachings in Hebrew, which he later used as a resource when writing his Greek Gospel, the one included in our New Testaments. Lastly, Papias believed that Jesus would return to earth one day to physically reign for one thousand years, a view that I hold and one which follows quite naturally from a normal reading of Revelation 20:2-7, where John repeats this number six times in six short verses. Maranatha!

Nothing is known of Papias’ death in the early to mid-second century, but along with Ignatius, Polycarp and Clement he rounds out the Hall of Fame of men known to history as the Apostolic Fathers, men from the first century who knew and learned from one or more of the twelve apostles, but particularly Peter and John. These men showed a remarkable faith in Jesus and a resolve to make his name known to their congregations and to the world. May we too live with that same resoluteness for the Lord all our days.

— Daniel McCabe

The High Priestly Prayer of John 17, part 4

Jesus says in v. 12, “While I was with them, I kept them in Your name, which You have given Me. I’ve guarded them and not one of them has been lost.” They are unified now at this point “except the son of destruction.” There was one who was always in God’s sovereign plan to have been lost “that the Scripture might be fulfilled” and, of course, that’s Judas Iscariot, the one who would betray Jesus. You’ll remember that in the garden Judas leads a contingent of soldiers to come and arrest Jesus. He’s the one who was determined to be “the son of destruction that the Scripture might be fulfilled.”

But what Scripture might this be? While Jesus doesn’t specifically say, a couple of strong contenders come to mind. We have Psalm 41, for example, where David describes the betrayal of his close friend, Ahithophel, who later hangs himself. There are correlations between Ahithophel’s betrayal of David and Judas’ betrayal of Jesus.

Also, perhaps Psalm 109, which again talks about a betrayal of David. Here David wishes essentially that the betrayer would have no more posterity, that he would be replaced, and that his office be filled by another. As you may know Peter cites this psalm as a reason for replacing Judas with Matthias in Acts 1. So Jesus knows that Judas Iscariot was always going to be lost. He’s the son of destruction. Other than Judas, Jesus has lost none. None whom Jesus was supposed to keep have been lost.

Now Jesus again turns in prayer to what’s coming next. He says in v. 13, “But now I am coming to You, and these things I speak in the world that they may have My joy fulfilled in themselves.” The disciples faced a tough future, so they better buckle up because what they’re about to live out will be very tough. Even so they would have Christ’s joy fulfilled in them if they stayed unified as they were supposed to and as they lived out the life of ministry before them. Nothing would make Jesus happier than for them to live that out.

He says in v. 14, “I have given them Your word and the world has hated them because they are not of the world just as I am not of the world.” So how can Jesus say that the disciples are not of the world just as He was not of the world? We can certainly understand how Jesus wasn’t of the world. After all, He’s God and He descended into the world and walked around it for about 33 years. But the disciples were born in sin and they’re fully human and only human. However, since we have been adopted as God’s sons and daughters, then we can say that the world is no longer our home or even our origin. Being of this world then is no longer our nature, therefore the world will hate Jesus’ disciples. Because Jesus is not of the world, neither are the disciples anymore, and the world hates that which is not its own. So the disciples will have a tough time “because they are not of the world just as [Jesus] is not of the world.”

Jesus is obviously realistic, however. He says in v. 15, “I do not ask that You take them out of the world,” for if God just took them home at that point, they would have no ministry before them. They couldn’t testify to Jesus. They couldn’t go on to proclaim His name and see more people saved. If God snatched us out of this world as soon as we’re saved, then there’s no one left in the world to testify for Him. After we’re saved, it’s natural to all want to be home. We want to be in heaven, but we have work to do, and God lays before us many great tasks that He will work through us for His glory. The disciples had especially great tasks ahead of them, so Jesus prays for them. He’s not asking that the Father take them out since they have to be in the world, but “that You keep them from the evil one.”

Jesus does care for them and He does want to protect them. The devil would certainly be after them. He would prowl about like a roaring lion seeking to devour the disciples, so Jesus prayed for their protection.

He says again in v. 16, “They are not of the world, just as I’m not of the world,” and then in v. 17 he prays what He wants for them, “Sanctify them in the truth. Your word is truth. As you sent Me into the world, so I have sent them into the world, and for their sake I consecrate Myself that they also may be sanctified in truth.”

That is a prayer that we all must have for ourselves. How are we to be sanctified? How are we to grow in our holiness and be further conformed to the likeness of Christ? How is it that any of us are sanctified? It’s by the truth, which is the Word of God. That’s the only way that we can truly grow closer to God, by knowing Him more, by being in the Word of God. Only as we know God more and learn more of the truth and of His will for our lives can we have hope to ever be sanctified.

–Adam Keim

Answer to the Trivia

C. $15.40

WAIT!

The Lord is my light, so whom should I fear? The Lord is the stronghold of my life, so whom should I dread? (Psalm 27:1).

Recently on a sojourn along the coast of Maine, we docked in the little harbor town of Searsport, population 2,649. We wandered through the doors of The First Congregational Church, established in 1815 and meeting every Sunday since then—that’s some 210 years of worship.

As we walked down the aisle, arriving at the altar, I noticed an open Bible, opened to Psalm 27:

1 The Lord is my light and my salvation—
whom shall I fear?
The Lord is the stronghold of my life—
of whom shall I be afraid?
2 When the wicked advance against me
to devour me,
it is my enemies and my foes
who will stumble and fall.
3 Though an army besiege me,
my heart will not fear;
though war break out against me,
even then I will be confident.
4 One thing I ask from the Lord,
this only do I seek:
that I may dwell in the house of the Lord
all the days of my life.

One of the most beautiful of the Psalms, I stood before the altar and read its words, from beginning to end. I read the many verses that decry the enemies we will fight and the trauma we will experience, but the very end—the final summation—is a crescendo that ends on a positive note, saying: “Wait for the Lord; be strong and take heart and wait for the Lord.”

No matter what difficulties we are facing and how bleak the future may seem, we need to wait for the Lord. He will not forget us, and He will walk with us through any affliction, as we dwell in His house all the days of our life.

Wait upon the Lord. Wait upon the Lord!

Sometimes True Stories

10 SIGNS OF A HEART ALIGNED WITH GOD

A heart that repents quickly

A heart that forgives easily

A heart that loves lavishly

A heart that gives generously

A heart that believes unwaveringly

A heart that praises continually

A heart that serves humbly

A heart that trusts completely

A heart that obeys willingly

A heart that longs for His presence

– 0 –

A famous movie line in the 1973 film Magnum Force, Clint Eastwood stated “A man’s got to know his limitations.” Blaise Pascal stated “There are two kinds of men, the righteous who believes themselves sinners: the rest, sinners, who believe themselves righteous.” The righteous understand their limitations and accept the gift of Grace. The others exalt themselves and stumble. Don’t be a stumbler!

– 0 –

The gospel transforms who you are and why you’re here—proclaim it boldly, even when it costs you. God uses unexpected people to build His Church. Take risks on others for the sake of the gospel. Jesus still works through His people to bring hope and salvation. Set your hope on the resurrection and point others to Christ. Andrew Evans

Quotes You Can Use

Just a handful of mistakes will take you from fellowship and lead you to denial. Dan Shock

In everything the middle course is best: all things in excess bring trouble to men. Plautus

The benefit of accountability is evident throughout scripture. Tony Ferguson

Never try to have more faith – just get to know God better. And because God is faithful, the better you know Him, the more you’ll trust Him. John Ortberg

Don’t spin your wheels and stress. Take a deep breath, center yourself and make a plan. Douglas Adams

When people live life like the gambler who knows when to hold and when to fold, they learn too quickly that without God, they will be losers no matter how much you rake in from the world…it will all disappear someday. Dwight Short

And whenever you stand praying, if you have anything against anyone, forgive him, that your Father in heaven may also forgive you your trespasses. (Mark 11:25). Resentment is destructive.

One important key to success is self-confidence. An important key to self-confidence is preparation. Arthur Ashe

The question is this… what are we doing with the gifts that we have been given? Old Lazy Dog-Marty Stubblefield

What fruit is coming from your life? Dan Shock

Peace is the presence of God, not the absence of conflict. Tony Ferguson

Being a Christian isn’t always easy, but it’s worth it. Andrew Evans

When there is something I don’t like in the Word, the problem is not with the Word. It is with me!!! R.C. Sproul

How a person handles trouble will reveal where his or her faith is living or dead, genuine or imitation, saving or non-saving. John Macarthur.

Your feedback is welcome and if you want to contribute your ideas and thoughts, address all items and comments to [email protected].

© Thoughts on Life Copyright 2025

Sufganiyot

September 6, 2025

Life in the Land: Sufganiyot

My favorite doughnuts are the jelly-filled and cream-filled. I also like blueberry cake doughnuts! So one day I’m walking through the famous Jerusalem Market, Machane Yehuda, and I see a corner shop with trays of a Jewish dessert called, sufganiyot. I immediately thought, “Doughnuts! Yum!” but then I’m told that sufganiyot are different from doughnuts.

The Hebrew word, sufganiyah (the singular form of sufganiyot), essentially means “sponge” and refers to the airy texture of the fried dessert. I’ve heard and even read attempts at differentiating between a sufganiyah and a doughnut, but for me it amounts to a difference without a distinction though a few Jewish flavor combinations of a sufganiyah may be new to you like the ones filled with lychee cream, halva or the savory ones filled with shawarma.

Israelis especially enjoy sufganiyot at Hanukkah whether they purchase them at local bakeries or make them at home. In the 1920s the Israeli Labor Federation declared sufganiyot the official food of Hanukkah, and along with other fried foods, such as latkas (potato pancakes) and schnitzel (thin, boneless cuts of meat), they remind the Jews of the miraculous multiplication of oil in the temple during the time of the ancient Maccabees.

Which sufganiyah do you want to try?

– Daniel McCabe

Check out YouTube!

Our New Community Seminar Series for Fall 2025

We still need a few more to register for our Fall seminar before we can launch! You’ll not only profit from it, but you’ll really enjoy it! Register and invite others to join you.

Topic: “The Greatest Biblical Archaeological Discoveries of All Time”—our weekly multimedia presentation will cover such finds as the Dead Sea Scrolls, Hezekiah’s Tunnel, the Pilate Stone and more.

Teacher: Dr. Daniel McCabe, MACE, ThM, DMin—Executive Director of Shalom Y’all Ministries, former Instructor at the College of Biblical Studies and Pastor of Cullman Bible Church

Location: Golden Corral at 1720 Cherokee Ave SW in Cullman, Alabama

Time: Mondays, 6:00-7:15 pm, starting September 22, eight weeks

Cost: Free—you can attend the seminar without purchasing a buffet or you can choose to enjoy a meal before, during or after the seminar. All ages are welcome to attend.

To Launch: We need a minimum of 10https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wt7GBTksUYY people to sign up for the seminar before we can launch, so please let us know of your interest by clicking on the attached link.

Trivia (Answer below)

Approximately how many Jews living in Israel today have accepted Jesus as the Messiah?

A. 200

B. 2000

C. 20,000

D. 200,000

The Apostolic Fathers: Clement of Rome, part 3

I bet you couldn’t tell me even one thing that John Tyler did during his presidency. Did you even know that the United States had a president by that name? I’m one of those who did because my high school football team played the Lions of John Tyler High School every year, but John Tyler only became president because William Henry Harrison died thirty-one days into office after catching pneumonia at his inauguration.

So I wouldn’t be surprised or the least bit offended if you didn’t know the name of Clement of Rome. History variously lists him as either the second, third or fourth bishop of Rome with Peter being usually listed as the first. Apart from a questionable account of Clement’s martyrdom which claims that he was tied to an anchor and thrown into the sea, not a lot is known of his personal life unless, of course, he is one and the same with the Clement mentioned by Paul in Phil. 4:3 who labored alongside him. Paul’s letter to the Philippians almost certainly originated in Rome, so it’s a reasonable possibility.

Some argue that Clement was a Roman Jew connected with the distinguished Flavian family, the dynasty of three emperors—Vespasian, Titus and Domitian—and thus with the imperial household within which Christianity found an early foothold, according to Phil. 4:22. Most sources date Clement’s time as bishop to approximately 92-99 A.D., perhaps even a little later, and during those years he wrote a letter to the church at Corinth. Showing knowledge of Paul’s earlier correspondence with the Corinthian church in which Paul addressed serious internal problems, including sexual sin, the misuse of spiritual gifts and infighting, it’s both ironic and heartbreaking that decades after Paul’s first letter, Clement addresses ongoing problems in the church, particularly internal division centered around the deposition of the church’s elders by a younger faction.

All this leads to the truth that if sin is left unaddressed, it will not right itself. May we humble ourselves in the face of our own personal and church challenges and consider others more highly than we do ourselves so that we may find a personal peace that secures for us a reputation of godliness rather than a reputation for being selfish and power-hungry.

– Daniel McCabe

Scripture Study: The High Priestly Prayer of John 17, part 3

Having prayed for Himself, Jesus now prays for His disciples. He says in v. 6, “I have manifested Your name to the people whom You gave Me out of the world.” Jesus is thinking of His eleven disciples, but also of every other disciple in His day who received Him, those whom God had elected and entrusted to Jesus “whom You gave Me out of the world.” Jesus manifested the Father’s name to those people. “Yours they were, and You gave them to Me, and they have kept Your word.”

V. 7, “Now they know that everything that You have given Me is from You.” Jesus revealed the Father to them. They have believed. They have followed Him even though they are far from perfect people. We know, for example, that Peter during a crisis of faith will deny Jesus three times in Caiaphas’s courtyard. None of these people are perfect, but they have dedicated their lives to following Jesus, except for Judas, of course, and they know that everything is ultimately from the Father.

Jesus continues, starting in v. 8, “For I have given them the words that You gave Me, and they’ve received them and have come to know in truth that I came from You, and they have believed that You sent Me. I am praying for them. I am not praying for the world, but for those whom You have given Me, for they are Yours.” This doesn’t mean that Jesus didn’t care for the rest of the world, but only that in this specific prayer, in this specific moment, He is uttering words for His disciples.

V. 10, “All Mine are Yours and Yours are Mine and I am glorified in them.” Jesus will pray for the unity of His followers soon, but here He gets to the basis for their unity in describing the unity that He has with His Father. Jesus is inextricably linked with the glory of the Father, yet while He walked around on earth, He didn’t receive the divine glory that was rightly His, and that’s the fault of mankind. That’s our fault, not His. But He’s looking forward to that glory which He will share again. While He was on earth, He revealed the truth from the Father to His disciples, and His disciples did receive it. They belong to Him as much as they belong to God the Father.

Next, Jesus says in v. 11, “I am no longer in the world, but they are in the world and I am coming to You now.” In a couple of days He’ll no longer be in the world, so He’s anticipating what’s coming next. He basically says, “I’m as good as out of it now because of what’s going to happen in the next couple days.” But the disciples are still in the world. They still have a mission and a life here for years or perhaps even decades following the departure of Jesus, and so in several of the chapters leading up to this chapter, He is getting them ready for the very hard life and ministry that they’re going to face. They will be rejected by the world at every turn, but they will be stalwart and loyal to the mission that they’ve been given by God, and they will testify to the Messiah, Jesus Christ, for the rest of their lives. I believe this to be Christ’s main concern here in these chapters and in this High Priestly Prayer.

“They are in the world,” v. 11, “and I’m coming to You, Holy Father, keep them in Your name, which You have given Me that they may be one even as We are one.” Notice Jesus’ request here, what He wants for them and, by extension, what He wants for us as well, meaning all believers in the church. But, of course, specifically for what He wants for the eleven disciples, that “they may be one even as”—look at the comparison here—“even as We are,” the Father and the Son. He wants for the disciples the perfect unity of the Father and Son, an unbreakable unity. He desires that Peter, James, John and all of the disciples be so united and so one that it would produce success and effectiveness in their ministry as they testify to the glory of God in the years to come. Can you imagine having a unity with believers that’s of the same type that Jesus has with the Father? That would be transforming. It would transform all our relationships!

– Adam Keim

My Favorite Places in Israel: #6, Tower of David

“[Sabinus] did himself get up to the highest tower of the fortress Phasael, which had been built in honor of Phasael, King Herod’s brother, and called so, when the Parthians had brought him to his death” (Josephus, The Wars of the Jews, 9.2).

Today’s entry of my favorite places in Israel is the Tower of David, which, funny enough, has nothing to do with David. Perched on the western side of Jerusalem’s old city, the remains there actually belong to Herod’s palace. Stout stone towers mark the site, and it is unmistakable as you walk anywhere near it.

Byzantine Christians began calling the structure “David’s Tower” in the 5th century AD when they mistook it for the legendary king’s own palace. But this portion of the city was not yet settled in David’s day. Instead it is where Herod dwelt in the New Testament era and where Jesus was examined separately by both Pilate and Herod during his trial.

The remains of the most notable tower on the northeast corner of the ruins are from Herod’s original construction. That tower he named Phasael in honor of his brother. Today the grounds house the Tower of David Museum – a stop which is well worth your time (as well as your entrance fee)!

The museum is a walk-through tour of different eras in Jerusalem’s history. Not only are you walking through Herod’s old palace itself, but you are learning about Jerusalem’s life in chronological order. There is even an augmented reality virtual tour available so you can “see” Jerusalem as it was at Herod’s palace through time. On several nights the museum is part of a fascinating light and sound show. Learn more and plan your visit at https://www.tod.org.il/en.

You can scale to the top of a rebuilt tower that rests on the base of Phasael, and from there you can take in a wonderful panoramic view of Jerusalem’s entire old city. Nearby, be sure to drop in on my favorite coffee shop in Israel – the Christ Church Coffee Shop. How I long to return there to enjoy a latte or Turkish Coffee and to sit at one of the streetside tables, watching Israelis and pilgrims alike meandering through the enchanting city!

– Adam Keim

Answer to the Trivia

C. 20,000

THE PAINTING

Week Thirty-Six, 2025

If you confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved; for with the heart one believes and is justified, and with the mouth one confesses and is saved (Romans 10:9-10).

Each United States president has an official portrait. Some were reluctant to take the time to sit for theirs. Such was Theodore Roosevelt. The portrait painter, John Sargent, kept following him to pin him down to a time and place. Finally caught on a staircase, Roosevelt, known for his restlessness, was reportedly frustrated with the process. Sargent is said to have responded by implying that Roosevelt didn’t understand what was involved in posing for a portrait. Roosevelt, then on a staircase landing, swung around, placed a hand on the newel post, and retorted, “Don’t I!” and reportedly said “do it here and now.” Thus, his is the only presidential portrait painted on a stairway.

When I read this in a book I was recently reading, it led me to a spiritual application. Christian teaching emphasizes the urgency of accepting Jesus as Lord and Savior. The Bible states, “Behold, now is the accepted time; behold, now is the day of salvation” (2 Corinthians 6:2). This verse highlights the importance of making this decision without delay, as life is uncertain and tomorrow is not guaranteed.

The renowned wrestler, Hulk Hogan recently gave his heart to the Lord and was baptized. Shortly thereafter, he suddenly and unexpectedly fell over dead. You never know when your number will be called.

Have you ever gone to a doctor who diagnoses you with a certain need and says it has to be taken care of now and cannot wait because you can’t risk what may happen tomorrow. The same with your salvation. Jesus is open for business 24-7, but so is the devil. So, make sure you get with the former before you deal with the latter.

I am dealing in my profession with a man who came home for lunch and was instantly killed on the way back to work. You never know what change in your life may happen even in the next hour.

Humanity is understood to be inherently sinful and separated from God due to sin, and salvation offers reconciliation and eternal life. It is time to confess and be saved.

Be like Roosevelt and don’t wait. Do it now! Repent and be saved!

Sometimes True Stories

DON’T DO ANYTHING. JUST REST.

Don’t fall into the trap of believing that doing nothing… means doing nothing for yourself. We’ve been conditioned to believe that not being productive is somehow a failure. That if it doesn’t have a visible outcome, it doesn’t count. That rest is wasted time.

We’ve become so used to being busy — to checking off boxes, to tracking our progress, to measuring worth in output — that we’ve forgotten something essential: Rest is productive.

It’s the moment your body heals. Your mind exhales. Your soul whispers. Reading a magazine. Taking a long shower. Sitting in the garden with a warm cup of coffee. None of it is a waste.

Because time spent resting… is time well spent. We’re not machines. We’re not meant to hustle 24/7.

We are human beings. And sometimes, we just need to be.

– 0 –

Seven secrets of life:

Make peace with your past so it won’t disturb your present.

What other people think of you is none of your business.

Time heals almost everything. Give it time.

No one is in charge of your happiness, except you.

Don’t compare your life to others and don’t judge them, you have no idea what their journey is all about.

Stop thinking too much. It’s alright not to know the answers.

Smile. You don’t own all the problems in the world.

– 0 –

The “woke” word police are at it again; you can’t call someone lazy anymore. We now have to refer to them as “temporarily idle.” We can play games with words, but being lazy has its ramifications. When we continually delay things that should be done, we are lazy. In today’s world, too many people want to blame their failings on parents, employers, circumstances, or anything else that absolves them of responsibility.

The truth is we can do something about our circumstances, but we have to take responsibility and act. This proverb tells us that procrastination, playing when we should be working, will lead to poverty. A lazy mind can become the devil’s workshop, but focus, diligence, and hard work will beat laziness every time. Tony Ferguson

Quotes You Can Use

What has God put in my keeping that He will someday require an accounting for? Dan Shock

Wisdom always makes men fortunate: for by wisdom no man could ever err. Plato

Happiness comes when we test our skills towards some meaningful purpose. John Stossel

A blind person asked St. Anthony, “can there be anything worse than losing your eyesight?” St Anthony replied yes, “losing your vision!” When we fail to trust the Lord, we lose our vision of eternity.

So, whoever knows the right thing to do and fails to do it, for him, it is sin. Tony Ferguson

Reconnect with Jesus, the friend who died for us what no other could or would. A friend like no other. Old Lazy Dog, Marty Stubblefiled

Today, with our enemy the devil waiting to devour and destroy, we need to prepare our minds and hearts for action. We need to put on the full armor of God. We need to choose now how we will think, act and react. Tony Ferguson

Jesus sums up this portion of Scripture with a single word: Watch! Dan Shock

Never go out of your way to demean and mock others. Jim Daley

Integrity without knowledge is weak and useless, and knowledge without integrity is dangerous and dreadful. Samuel Johnson

Jesus’ death on the cross is the pivotal event in God’s plan for redemption. “For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God, and all are justified freely by His grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus.” Through His sacrifice, Jesus pays the penalty for sin, offering salvation to all who believe.

__________________

Your feedback is welcome and if you want to contribute your ideas and thoughts, address all items and comments to [email protected]. © Thoughts on Life Copyright 2025

Our New Community Seminar Series

Scheduled for Fall, 2025

“The Greatest Biblical Archaeological Discoveries of All Time”

August 23, 2025

Topic: “The Greatest Biblical Archaeological Discoveries of All Time”—our weekly multimedia presentation will cover such finds as the Dead Sea Scrolls, Hezekiah’s Tunnel, the Pilate Stone and more.

Teacher: Dr. Daniel McCabe, MACE, ThM, DMin—Executive Director of Shalom Y’all Ministries, former Instructor at the College of Biblical Studies and Pastor of Cullman Bible Church

Location: Golden Corral at 1720 Cherokee Ave SW in Cullman, Alabama

Time: Mondays, 6:00-7:15 pm, starting September 22, eight weeks

Cost: Free—you can attend the seminar without purchasing a buffet or you can choose to enjoy a meal before, during or after the seminar. All ages are welcome to attend.

To Launch: We need a minimum of 10 people to sign up for the seminar before we can launch, so please let us know of your interest by clicking on the attached link.

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Jesus by the Lake: Part 9

Questions and Faith Lessons from Luke 7:11-17

I. Questions:

Why did Jesus travel to Nain in the first place?

If only to raise the man, then why? Might he have known the woman and her son? Is it a random act of kindness or might there be some greater significance?

What might the young man have said after being raised (“he began to speak,” v. 15)?

What does it mean that Jesus “presented him to his mother”?

Since the miracle took place in Galilee, why does it first mention that the news spread to Judea?

II. Faith Lessons:

#1: Jesus cares about you when you grieve.

#2: God graciously intervenes in our lives on many occasions without even being asked. Jesus traveled to Nain without any evidence that he had been requested to come.

#3: If Jesus can raise the body of a dead man, then he can certainly raise the soul of all men “who were dead in trespasses and sins” (Eph. 2:1; John 5:21).

#4: When we see God at work around us, let us never hesitate to worship him and tell others. Like the people here (v. 16). Like the shepherds at Jesus’ birth (Luke 2:9, 20).

–Daniel McCabe

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Check this out! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wt7GBTksUYY

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Trivia

(Find the answer below)
According to the book, Genius and Anxiety: How Jews Changed the World, what was the first modern Hebrew word created by Eliezer Ben-Yehuda, the Father of Modern Hebrew?

A. Apple

B. Bathroom

C. Coffee

D. Dictionary

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Life in the Land: A Jellyfish Invasion

Crawfish season in Louisiana runs ideally from March through May, and duck season in Alabama runs from late November through January. That’s some good eating, y’all, and sandwiched between the mudbugs and water fowl is jellyfish season along the Mediterranean coast of Israel. I can’t say that I’ve ever tried jellyfish gumbo or jellyfish stew, but the word on the street is that nomad jellyfish taste like chicken. Seriously, I’ve heard that they don’t have much taste at all, but still I think I’ll pass.

Millions of jellyfish assemble off Israel’s coastline from Ashkelon to Haifa each year from late June until the beginning of August, so before you get into the water on your next visit to one of Israel’s beautiful beaches, look for the purple flags that warn of increased sightings of jellyfish. Thankfully, nomad jellyfish only tend to swarm in water temperatures of 85 degrees and above, so most don’t stick around through the Fall.

The medium-sized, translucent-white, nomad jellyfish have long thin tentacles, and their venom can produce swelling and even second-degree burns. Their sting is commonly likened to an electric shock or the prick of a nettle.

Nomad jellyfish have migrated to Israel from the Indian Ocean through the Suez Canal, and they create significant problems each year for the electric power stations and desalination plants that line the coast of Israel, so their migration patterns are watched closely by both surfers and engineers. Fortunately you can check the online jellyfish map before planning your next beach trip to Tel Aviv. Click on the link below.

–Daniel McCabe

The Apostolic Fathers–Ignatius of Antioch, part 1

The Apostolic Fathers are those men taught or discipled by one or more of the twelve disciples of Jesus. In this short four-part series we’ll meet four of the Fathers—Ignatius, Polycarp, Clement and Papias.

First, Ignatius, who pastored in Antioch, arguably the second most important early church next to Jerusalem. You’ll remember that it was at Antioch where followers of Jesus were “first called Christians” (Acts 11:26). The site of the biblical city of Antioch is located in modern Turkey, due north of Lebanon and only about twelve miles from the Syrian border as the crow flies.

Said to be a close friend of the Apostle John and appointed as bishop of the church in Antioch by the apostles, Ignatius had a stellar reputation in his day, serving his congregation faithfully for forty years or more, beginning around 70 A.D. Some have even suggested that Ignatius was one of the children who Jesus took up in his arms and blessed as recorded in the Gospels.

Accused late in life of being a Christian during one of the many seasons in the history of the Roman Empire when Christians were often targeted for persecution, he was arrested and taken in chains under guard of ten soldiers from his church in Antioch through Asia Minor and on to Rome. During that trip he wrote seven letters, six to various churches and one to a young pastor in Smyrna named Polycarp. Upon hearing the news that Ignatius was being transported to Rome, the Christians there planned to use their connections, some perhaps of the “household of Caesar” (Phil. 4:22), but Ignatius reportedly rejected any attempt at intervention, saying, “I am the wheat kernel of God. Let me be ground by the teeth of wild beasts that I may become the pure bread of God.” As he faced the lions in the Roman Coliseum, witnesses recalled his final words, “I am made happy by these wild beasts.”

–Daniel McCabe

The High Priestly Prayer of John 17, part 1

John 13-17 is a long discourse that Jesus had with His disciples in the Upper Room. Movies about the Gospels often portray this section of Scripture as taking place in the Garden of Gethsemane or on the way to the garden, and it’s possible that Jesus talked with the disciples as He walked, but when Jesus lifts His eyes to heaven in 17:1, we tend to picture the outdoors, but really this just means that He lifted His eyes upward towards heaven. So I think He’s actually uttering these words inside the Upper Room. I’ve been to the location of the original house. Longstanding tradition states that it was the home of Mark’s mother and that she was a wealthy woman in the first community of believers. That’s why, for example, one of the two competing sites, the Syrian Orthodox Church in the Armenian Quarter of the Old City of Jerusalem, calls their Upper Room location, the Church of Saint Mark.

It’s interesting to conjecture where all this happened. Of course, it doesn’t ultimately matter where it happened. It doesn’t matter where Jesus physically spoke these words. What really matters is what He said and what His words mean for us. Also, we need to remember whom He’s speaking to in chapters 13-17. He’s speaking to the eleven disciples. As believers it’s tempting to look at every word of this passage and say, “Oh, this applies to me directly.” Well, not necessarily! Now I don’t mean to imply that many of the things that Jesus says can’t apply to us, but we just have to remember that He’s speaking specifically to His disciples. He’s preparing them for the difficult lifelong ministry that awaits them, and He needs to prepare them for this ministry since He won’t be there physically with them.

Now we get to chapter 17 which I want to walk through very carefully. Often in our studies I select chapters of Scripture that have many hard things to understand, and I try to unpack them for you, but chapters 13-17 don’t contain a lot of deep, complex mysteries even though the teaching of Jesus here is profound and very meaningful. Even though it’s simple, it’s so beautiful! It’s a very meaningful and impactful chapter that is good for all of us to walk through together.

–Adam Keim

Answer to the Trivia

D. Dictionary (The Hebrew word for dictionary is milon.)

Take the History Quiz

August 16, 2025

A Quiz on the History Between the Old and New Testaments

1. Approximately how many years transpired between the end of the Old Testament (Malachi) and the beginning of the New Testament (Matthew)?

2. What nation ruled the land of Israel at the end of the Old Testament period?

3. What man conquered the Persians in 333 B.C.?

4. What empire ruled the land of Israel from 333-167 B.C.?

5. During this period the predominant language of the Jews in the land of Israel changed from what language to what language?

6. Following the sudden death of this empire’s leader in 323 B.C., the empire was divided between four of his generals who founded four dynasties with what dynasty controlling Egypt and what dynasty controlling Syria?

7. During this time the land of Israel was sometimes controlled by the one dynasty and sometimes controlled by the other until an ultimately successful 26-year struggle for Jewish independence began in 167 B.C. and was led by what family?

8. Descendants of this family began to rule as Jewish priest-kings over the land of Israel from 141-63 B.C. and are commonly known by what dynastic name?

9. In 63 B.C. what Roman general conquered the land of Israel, ending Jewish sovereignty?

10. In 31 B.C. Caesar Augustus defeated General Mark Antony, transforming the Roman Republic into the more autocratic Roman Empire, and then Augustus installed what family of Idumean descent to govern much of the land of Israel?

(Answers to the quiz found below)

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Jesus spoiled every funeral that He went to.” (Dwight L. Moody)

Jesus is the life-giving antagonist of death.” (Alexander Maclaren)

With this deed, Jesus made good on a claim given in Jerusalem not long before.” (William Schlegel)

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Trivia

Which one of these does not belong?

A. The Dead Sea

B. The Salt Sea

C. The Sea of Galilee

D. The Sea of the Arabah

(Answer to the trivia question is below)

Book Review:

The Holy Land, by Jerome Murphy O’Conner

Yes, it’s dated, given its original release in 1980, but to be fair, like new cars driven off the lot, every guidebook is dated the day after it’s published, for the field of archaeology changes constantly. However, if you enjoy archaeology (and I’m on a quest to convince everyone that archaeology is less like eating your vegetables and more like the surprising taste of pineapple on pizza), then the latest edition of this book, its fifth, still deserves a place on your shelf.

Two features that I find particularly helpful are the author’s historical outline of the Holy Land (though admittedly I squirm at his dating of the “Stone Age”) and his section on the “Walls and Gates” of Jerusalem, but the heart of the book is broken into two sections, “Part 1: The City of Jerusalem” and “Part 2: A-Z Guide to the Land,” which together cover approximately 250 sites.

The author, an Irish Dominican priest, taught New Testament at the École Biblique in Jerusalem from 1967 until his death in 2013 at the age of 78. Having lived in Jerusalem for almost fifty years, his knowledge of the Holy Land is considered elite.

My original copy of the book is now so battered from use that I recently purchased a second copy. Admittedly a Jerusalem fanatic, I credit this 550-page book with first igniting my now decades-long fascination with both the Temple Mount and the Church of the Holy Sepulcher.

–Daniel McCabe

Scripture Study: King Hezekiah, part 3

Isaiah 37:30 records God’s words of hope to Hezekiah when he faced the terrifying threat of an Assyria army, “And this shall be the sign for you”—this sign is for Israel. “This year you shall eat what grows of itself, and the second year, what springs from that. Then in the third year, sow and reap and plant vineyards and eat their fruit, and the surviving remnant of the house of Judah shall again take root downward and bear fruit upward.”

This really is an amazing prophecy because Assyria had taken over the whole land. They now ruled the roost. They owned everything. The Israelites cannot go out and plant vineyards and eat their fruit because the Assyrians are there, and nobody can dislodge them because they’re too powerful. But God promised that the Israelites would farm their own land and that they were gonna be just fine.

V. 32, “For out of Jerusalem shall go a remnant and out of Mount Zion a band of survivors. The zeal of the LORD of hosts will do this. Therefore, thus says the LORD concerning the king of Assyria, ‘He shall not come into this city or shoot an arrow there, or come before it with a shield or cast up a siege mount against it. By the way that he came, by the same he shall return, and he shall not come into the city,’ declares the LORD. ‘For I will defend the city to save it for My own sake and for the sake of My servant David.’” Essentially he says that the Assyrian king is going back the way he came. He won’t be able to conquer Jerusalem and then simply move on as he had done with previous cities.

Then we read something astonishing in v. 36. It’s literally said in passing without providing further details, “And the angel of the LORD went out and struck down one hundred and eight-five thousand in the camp of the Assyrians, and when people arose early in the morning, behold, there were all dead bodies.”

Think about that! 185,000 people just pop up dead. You wake up as a Jerusalemite one morning and the Assyrian army has been destroyed. I wish we had more details. What was that like? What happened? How did that happen? What was the aftermath of that? How long did it take for the Israelites to carry off all the bodies? This would have required a major effort, taking weeks, months and perhaps even years, yet we don’t read anything about it. Of course, this is not the focus of the passage. Instead, the main point is that the Lord intervened and saved His people against impossible odds.

V. 37, “Then Sennacherib, king of Assyria, departed and returned home and lived at Nineveh.” Sennacherib’s Prism is an archaeological artifact, discovered in 1830 in the ruins of Nineveh. It’s a six-sided prism with cuneiform writing all around it, and it records Sennacherib’s many exploits, including his boast that he shut up Hezekiah like a caged bird in his royal city. That’s quite the boast!

But notice that Sennacherib could not claim to have destroyed Jerusalem or captured Hezekiah, the two primary goals of that military campaign. On the prism Sennacherib does brag about taking Lachish, a significantly fortified city in Judah and one with strategic importance. But his boasting about Lachish was merely a public relations spin, given his failure to take Jerusalem. Even so Sennacherib’s words confirm the historical account in Isaiah 36-37 of God’s intervention to protect Jerusalem.

V. 38 adds, “And as [Sennacherib] was worshipping in the house of Nisroch, his god, Adrammelech and Sharezer, his sons, struck him down with the sword. And after they escaped into the land of Ararat, Esarhaddon, his son, reigned in his place.” This happened in 681 B.C. about twenty years after Sennacherib’s return from Jerusalem, and it fulfilled the prophecy of 37:7, “I will cause him to fall by the sword in his own land.” God said he’d be struck down, and though it took about twenty years, it still happened. This serves to remind us that although we may want things done quickly in our timing, God has his own timing to work all things together for good. What an amazing deliverance that God gave Hezekiah and his people that day! What a faithful man that he would turn to the Lord against all odds. He prayed, he trusted, and God delivered.

–Adam Keim

From the Archives: Shrine of the Book

August 23, 2022

It’s pretty much what its name suggests. It’s a shine or wing of the Israel Museum in Jerusalem that displays ancient Hebrew manuscripts of the greatest Book ever written, the Bible. In 1947 a Bedouin shepherd hunting his stray goat threw a rock inside the opening of a cave near the Dead Sea and the world has been abuzz ever since. Inside the cave the young shepherd found scroll jars filled with ancient manuscripts, many from the Old Testament, that date between the third century B.C. and the first century A.D.

The Shrine of the Book is dedicated to the preservation and display of these manuscripts found between 1947 and 1956 in eleven different caves. The hallway leading into the collection resembles a cave. The “cave” leads to a large exhibition room, which next creates the illusion that you have been miniaturized and transported inside one of the ancient scroll jars. A walkway around the circumference of the room is filled with display cases for the manuscripts, which are rotated every few months. In the center of the room, designed like a Torah scroll, is a facsimile of what the curator calls “The Mona Lisa” of the Dead Sea Scrolls, the “Great Isaiah Scroll,” a complete copy of the Book of Isaiah, discovered in Cave 1. The architecture is spectacular, but perhaps the greatest takeaway from the exhibit is how God has preserved his Word throughout the centuries.

–Daniel McCabe

Answer to the Trivia

C. The Sea of Galilee

The Dead Sea, the Salt Sea and the Sea of the Arabah are three different names for the same body of water (pictured below).

Answers to the Bible Quiz

1. Four hundred years

2. Persia, reigning until 333 B.C.

3. Alexander the Great

4. The Grecian Empire

5. Hebrew to Greek

6. The Ptolemies in Egypt and the Seleucids in Syria

7. The Maccabees

8. The Hasmoneans

9. Pompey the Great

10. The Herods

–Daniel McCabe

THE TRAILBLAZER

Week Thirty-Three, 2025

Prepare the way for the Lord in the wilderness; make a straight highway for our God in the desert(Isaiah 40:3).

With an interest in learning how the West was won, I have always had an interest in the westward expansion. Recently, we started in Idaho and traveled along the Snake and Columbia until we could dip our toes into the Pacific Ocean. We followed the path of explorers Lewis and Clark who found a way along the rivers to the great ocean in the West.

Lewis and Clark traveled across America, blazing trails, making maps and keeping diaries of what they saw. These two men made it possible for others to follow their trail and travel from one side of America to the other.

Madame Curie was another type of explorer. She discovered a way to look at our bones by taking X-ray pictures of our bodies. Because of her exploration, doctors now have a way to see the exact location of a broken bone and decide upon the best way to fix it.

Alexander Fleming is the man who first saw a certain type of blue mold growing that could kill bad germs. He explored the possibilities of making a medication called penicillin that would treat infections. Years ago, it saved my life as a little boy.

The Hebrew word for “trailblazer” is “סולל” (Solel), which translates to “pathfinder” or “trailblazer”. It refers to someone who opens up new paths or leads the way for others.

The prophet Isaiah prophesied to prepare the way for the Lord. John the Baptist prepared the way for Jesus by baptizing people and proclaiming the coming Messiah. He urged people to “make straight” the path for the Lord, highlighting his role as a trailblazer.

Paul, the apostle, is seen as a trailblazer in spreading the gospel to new regions and cultures. His travels and writings established the early church and laid the foundation for Christian faith.

In more contemporary times, after the winter snow has obliterated all the cross-country ski trails, trailblazers forge new ones for others to follow. The bottom line is this: Throughout history, trailblazers have set the trails for others to follow, and the world is better because of their blazing efforts.

Frank Laubach, who I met months before his death, was a Christian missionary who developed the “Each One Teach One” program. It was simple. If someone taught someone to read, they in turn taught another, and along with the Gospel, several mission people learned how to read and received the Gospel as well.

Now, apply that to the present. What if everyone who received the Gospel led someone else to a saving relation with Christ? What a wonderful world we would have.

Are you willing to be a trailblazer for Jesus?

Sometimes True Stories

Francis Scott Key, while a prisoner on a British ship during the War of 1812 praised the character of the “the land of the free and the home of the brave.” But, his final verse, seldom heard today also acknowledged the creator of that character, saying:

Blessed with victory and peace may the heaven-rescued land praise the power that has made and preserved us as a nation. Then conquer we must when our cause it is just, and this be our motto: In God Is Our Trust.

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Americans have always understood the generous blessings showered upon their republic as imposing special responsibilities rather than conferring special privileges. The intimate involvement of the Almighty in establishing and sustaining the United States confronted America with an obligation to conduct herself more nobbily than other nations, not an authorization to behave more selfishly or recklessly. Michael Medved

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Murphy’s Law of Lockers – If there are only 2 people in a locker room, they will have adjacent lockers.

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Therefore take up the whole armor of God, that you may be able to withstand in the evil day, and having done all, to stand firm. Ephesians 6:13

We all tend to do a lot of physical things to make us strong and fit, but are we strong and fit with God?

  • Do we daily put on the Full Armor of God? (Priscilla Shirer’s Bible study on THE ARMOR OF GOD is amazing ***interjected Beverley Grant.
  • Are we daily doing the things that we need to do to strengthen our walk and fight the good fight?
  • Do we love the Lord with all our heart, soul, mind and strength… and our neighbor as ourselves?
  • Are we power lifting the Bible or are we still working the 2-lb. dumbbells?
  • Do we do the hard work on the life-changing prayer cardio machine?
  • Are we eating the lean meat and drinking the water of the Living Word?
  • Are we stretching ourselves through faith-driven service and following in faith?
  • Are we running the race and in the fight… or are we driving by the parking lot amazed at the number of cars in the lot?

Are we God Strong?

It’s time to consult the Great Physician… and get started. Marty Stubblefield

Quotes You Can Use

In the morning when you awake, ask God to get into your head before the devil does.

An umbrella cannot stop the rain, but it allows us to stand in the rain. Faith in God may not remove our trials but it gives us strength to overcome them.

Electrician to apprentice: Remember to connect male to female wires. Apprentice: Why assign gender roles to electrical connections? Why not let the circuits decide their own identities?

Old keys in life do not unlock new doors.

God didn’t remove the Red Sea; He parted it. He won’t always remove your situation, but He will make a way through it.

God is always on time.

Boys are boys from the beginning and girls are girls right from the start. Only girls can be mommies and only boys can grow up to be daddies. Mr. Rogers

Stay away from negative people. They have a problem for every solution.

Instead of having a church to attract people, have one that attracts God and He will draw in the people.

If you want to reach a large audience, appeal to idiots. Arthur Schopenhauer

Next time you hear about something being “government funded”, remember that the government is 100% taxpayer funded.

Stay away from people that act like a victim in a problem they created.

The time to prepare the roof is when the sun is shining. Mark Twain

Real preaching will cause people to either hate their sin or hate the preacher.

There will come a time when your tears will fall, not because of your troubles, but because God has answered your prayers.

Paul had more joy in jail than some Christians have in church.

It is far better to be alone, than to be in bad company. George Washington

Starbucks is planning on selling beer and wine. Apparently, it’s getting difficult to sell people a $12 cup of coffee.

Having more years behind you than ahead of you makes you think differently about things!

Your feedback is welcome and if you want to contribute your ideas and thoughts, address all items and comments to [email protected]. © Thoughts on Life Copyright 2025

Women at Jerusalem’s Western Wall

August 9, 2025

Here are some of the sights and sounds you might see when visiting the women’s section of the Western Wall in Jerusalem.

1. Since the area facing the wall functions as an outdoor synagogue, men and women are not permitted to mix or pray together in keeping with the Orthodox branch of Judaism, which oversees the site. Women pray to the right and men to the left at the wall.

2. There are prayer books (Sephardi, Ashkenazi and Psalms) in glass cases that the women are free to borrow before entering.

3. There are also secure metal donation boxes at the entrance. The money is used to maintain the site.

4. The women do not use Torah scrolls or wear prayer shawls at the wall, for both are forbidden in the Orthodox tradition.

5. There is a small, airconditioned prayer room with glass walls adjoining the women’s section where the women can sit and pray indoors to escape the Jerusalem heat.

6. On Mondays and Thursdays you may see women standing on chairs overlooking the adjoining men’s section in order to witness the bar mitzvahs of their sons and grandsons. They often throw candy to the thirteenyear old boys who read the Torah for the first time and thus are now subject as young men to keep all biblical laws.

7. There are some women at the wall who teach, encourage and bless the other women and may pray on your behalf for a small donation.

8. You may see someone preparing a dough offering as described in Numbers 15:1721.

9. After completing their prayers, the women then back away from the wall toward the exit. They do not want to show disrespect by turning their backs to the wall.

–Daniel McCabe

Trivia question (Answer below)

What is the largest church building in the land of Israel?

A. The Church of the Annunciation in Nazareth

B. The Church of the Ascension on the Mount of Olives

C. The Church of the Holy Sepulcher in Jerusalem

D. The Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem

Jesus by the Lake: The Deceased Son of a Grieving Mom, Luke 7:1117

I. The Passage, “A dead man was being carried out [of the city],” v. 12.

A dead man—Jesus raised two others from the dead: Jairus’ daughter (8:5253) and Lazarus (John 11:43).

An only son—thus, the woman’s only breadwinner; “only son,” the same word as “only begotten Son” in John 3:16, meaning either “only” or “unique, oneofakind.” An only son prompted intense grief (cf. Zech. 12:10, “They will mourn for Him as one mourns for his only son and grieve for Him as one grieves for a firstborn.”).

The son of a widow—not the first widow’s son the Lord had shown compassion toward (e.g. 1 Kings 17:10)

A young man—“beyond the age of puberty, but normally before marriage” (LouwNida, GreekEnglish Lexicon of the New Testament)

II. Ancient Funeral Customs

The dead were buried the same day.

The dead were buried outside the city though exceptions were made for kings.

Often accompanied by the tearing of clothes, sackcloth and a public display of mourning (cf. 2 Sam. 3:31), sometimes utilizing professional mourners and musicians

Here a procession, including pall bearers and a large crowd, growing even larger with Jesus, his disciples and the large crowd accompanying him (vs. 1112)

Note the “open coffin” (v. 14)—“a stretcher or plank used for carrying a corpse to a place of burial” (LouwNida), so clearly not an infant, which would have been carried.

III. The Babylonian Talmud

“If a person sees the funeral procession, and fails to join the procession, he is guilty of mocking the poor* and is deserving of excommunication. He should accompany the dead at least a distance of four [cubits].** Even when one is exempt from accompanying the dead…, he, nevertheless, must rise before the procession. He does not rise in deference to the dead, but to those attending to the dead, for they are engaged in performing a mitzvah.”***

Rabbi Solomon Ganzfried, Code of Jewish Law, Chapter 198: The Removal of the Deceased: the Funeral and Burial Services.

*Babylonian Talmud, Tractate Berakoth, Folio 18a.

**any closer and he is defiled

***a commandment

Note that to have come within four cubits (six feet) of the stretcher, Jesus would become defiled.

–Daniel McCabe

Life in the Land: “Rabbi Ben Ezra”

The well respected English poet, Robert Browning, learned Hebrew, studied the Old Testament and always exhibited strong support for the Jewish people until his death in 1889 at the age of 77.

One of his greatest poems, Rabbi Ben Ezra, explores the themes of aging and the purpose of life, and Browning creatively presents them as the soliloquy of a long ago Jewish sage and philosopher named Rabbi Ben Ezra, who is probably to be identified with Abraham Ibn Ezra (10891164).

The poem’s thirtytwo stanzas can’t all be printed here, but I’ve reproduced four of them and added some minor commentary.

The opening stanza:

Grow old along with me!

The best is yet to be,

The last of life, for which the first was made:

Our times are in His hand

Who saith ‘A whole I planned,

Youth shows but half; trust God: see all, nor be afraid!’”

Rabbi Ben Ezra expresses optimism about growing older. It is not something to fear, but rather to embrace.

The seventh stanza:

For thence,—a paradox

Which comforts while it mocks,—

Shall life succeed in that it seems to fail:

What I aspired to be,

And was not, comforts me:

A brute I might have been, but would not sink i’ the scale.”

It can be quite comforting when you realize that though you may not reach some of your goals in life (perhaps even concluding with frustration that you have failed) that this failure may in fact lead to unexpected success in another endeavor. Learn to rise above one’s natural “brute” instinct to grow despondent and instead look for a greater purpose—God’s purpose.

The final two stanzas:

But I need, now as then,

Thee, God, who mouldest men;

And since, not even while the whirl was worst,

Did I,—to the wheel of life

With shapes and colours rife,

Bound dizzily,—mistake my end, to slake Thy thirst:

So, take and use Thy work:

Amend what flaws may lurk,

What strain o’ the stuff, what warpings past the aim!

My times be in Thy hand!

Perfect the cup as planned!

Let age approve of youth, and death complete the same!”

Don’t forget that God uses the “whirl” of life to mold you, so “thirst” for what still remains of his plan for you. Don’t dwell on the pressures of today. Instead, rely on the Lord through them all, even while young, and let God bring you through the trials (your “cup”) to a perfect end.

I’m thankful for the older men in my life who have passed their wisdom down to me, and it’s my hope that I have aged wisely. It’s my hope that you will age wisely as well.

–Daniel McCabe

Scripture Study: King Hezekiah, part 2

Isaiah 36 sets the stage for chapter 37 wherein Hezekiah’s men report back to him all that the Rabshakeh had said, and here we discover King Hezekiah’s greatness, for as soon as he heard their report, he tore his clothes, covered himself with sackcloth and went into the house of the Lord.

It’s true that Hezekiah didn’t really have anywhere else to go, but at the same time the temple is probably the first place he should have gone.

He’s been trying to convince the people to turn to the Lord, and here he models for them the importance of taking refuge in the Lord when you are troubled.

He then sends his messengers to the prophet Isaiah to appeal for help from God, and in 37:5 we read God’s response to the king, “When the servants of King Hezekiah came to Isaiah, Isaiah said to them, ‘Say to your master, “Thus says the LORD, ‘Do not be afraid because of the words that you have heard with which the young men of the King of Assyria have reviled me. Behold, I will put a spirit in him [i.e., in Sennacherib, the king of Assyria] so that he shall hear a rumor and return to his own land, and I will make him fall by the sword in his own land.’”’”

God guarantees Hezekiah, “Don’t worry! I’ll take care of this!”

V. 8, “So the Rabshakeh returned and found the king of Assyria fighting against Libnah, for he had heard that the king had left Lachish.” So, the Rabshakeh returns to the king of Assyria who is now attacking Libnah just a few miles north of Lachish.

V. 9, “Now the king heard concerning Tirhakah, king of Cush, ‘He has set out to fight against you.’” There’s a rumor that Tirhakah plans to attack the king of Assyria.

“And when he had heard it, he sent his messengers to Hezekiah, saying”—now he’s going to taunt Hezekiah again, saying basically, “Don’t go anywhere, I’m going to get you.”

V. 10, “Thus shall you speak to Hezekiah, king of Judah, ‘Do not let your God, in whom you trust, deceive you by promising that Jerusalem will not be given into the hand of the king of Assyria. Behold, you’ve heard what the kings of Assyria have done to all lands, devoting them to destruction, and shall you be delivered? Have the gods of the nations delivered them, the nations that my fathers destroyed?’”

Then he recites a long list of places that Assyria had already taken in past victories of his father and of his father before him. Samaria, the capital city of Israel, had also been recently taken, so really Jerusalem is all that is left.

Now I don’t blame Sennacherib for having all the confidence in the world. After all, he doesn’t trust in the one true God, and he doesn’t think that Yahweh will deliver His people because none of the other supposed gods had delivered their people.

In any event we read in v. 14 that Hezekiah receives this letter from the hands of the messengers, reads it, and goes up to the house of the Lord where he spreads it out before Him.

V. 15, “And Hezekiah prayed, saying, ‘O LORD of hosts, God of Israel, enthroned above the cherubim. You are the God, You alone, of all the kingdoms of the earth.

You have made heaven and earth. Incline Your ear, O LORD, and hear. Open Your eyes, O LORD, and see and hear all the words of Sennacherib, which he has sent to mock the living God. Truly, O LORD, the kings of Assyria have laid waste all the nations in their lands and have cast all their gods into the fire.’”

I love this part of Hezekiah’s prayer because he realizes what these other supposed gods are. He adds in v. 19, “For they were not gods, but the work of men’s hands—wood and stone.” They’re just idols. “Therefore they were destroyed. So now, O LORD our God, save us from his hand that all the kingdoms of the earth may know that You alone are the LORD.”

If you continue reading 37:2129, then you’ll discover additional prophesies, written in poetic form, including God’s direct address to Sennacherib in v. 29, which reads, “I’m going to turn you back the way you came.”

–Adam Keim

Greatest NT Discoveries: #9, The Pool of Siloam

“Then [Jesus] anointed the man’s eyes with the mud and said to him, ‘Go, wash in the pool of Siloam’ (which means Sent). So he went and washed and came back seeing,” (John 9:6b7).

The Pool of Siloam sits on the southern end of the City of David in the southeastern part of the city of Jerusalem. The stepped remains of one side of the pool were discovered in 2004 after being unearthed by construction workers doing repairs on a drainage system. In the picture you can see how the pool stretches further to the right, still covered by dirt.

Today Hezekiah’s tunnel flows into a narrow stone courtyard, built during the reign of the Byzantine empress Eudocia in the 5th century A.D. and which was long thought to be the Pool of Siloam until the more recent discovery. The nearby stepped remains mark clearly the actual location.

Jesus sent the blind man that he healed to wash his eyes in the pool. Siloam was likely a large mikveh that worshipers used on their way up to the temple. The Roman road that led from the pool to the temple has also been found–you can take it all the way up to the Temple Mount! If you do, be confident that you are walking the very route that our Lord took during His triumphal entry.

Would you be among the many that waved palm branches and shouted, “Hosanna! Blessed is He who comes in the name of the Lord, even the king of Israel!”? (John 12:13).

–Adam Keim

Answer to the Trivia

A. The Church of the Annunciation in Nazareth

THE ROLE MODEL

Week Thirty-Two, 2025

Remember your leaders, those who spoke to you the word of God. Consider the outcome of their way of life and imitate their faith (Hebrews 13:7).

All of us have had role models we look up to and try to learn from. Some are well-known individuals, while others are people nobody has heard of. They may be family or friends, or perhaps people you have never met. My greatest role model is my wife.

We have read about Old Testament examples who walked in God’s presence. Now, think across your own life. Who has modeled walking with God for you? What are the practices or habits of that person who sustained an intimate relationship with the Lord?

Recently, I went to breakfast with an individual whom I greatly admire just to tell him how much I appreciated him and how his example helps me in my walk through life, both spiritually and otherwise.

But then, turn the tables and ask, ‘How do your walk and your life become an example to others, so that you may influence them in their walk through life?’ Proverbs 13:20 emphasizes the importance of choosing your friends wisely. It states, ‘Whoever walks with the wise becomes wise, but the companion of fools will suffer harm.’ Essentially, the verse suggests that the people you surround yourself with greatly influence your own character and wisdom. Paul said, “Imitate me, just as I also imitate Christ” (1 Cor. 11:1).

A good role model is a person who shows us how to live, choose well, face suffering (in some cases), and act wisely in this complicated and difficult world. It is true that we sometimes choose role models for the wrong reasons: celebrity, beauty, athletic prowess, or financial success.

You are never too old or too young or insignificant to be someone’s role model. Don’t let anyone look down on you because you are young, but set an example for the believers in speech, in conduct, in love, in faith and in purity. – 1 Timothy 4:12

The Bible tells us how to live from Genesis to Revelation. In Genesis we learn of our beginnings and in Revelation we learn of our future. But it is up to you to determine what you do in between.

Think about who your role models are and how you can be a role model to others.

Sometimes True Stories

We learn to worship in Psalms and to live honestly in Proverbs. We learn to bear suffering in Job. Jonah teaches us not to run from God. We learn how to fall in love in Ruth and love our spouse in Song of Solomon. We learn that God is there even when we don’t see Him in Esther.

In Matthew, Mark, Luke and John we meet the greatest Person in history. We learn that He is still living and loving us in spite of ourselves. We learn to draw near to Him in James. Since we see Jesus reflected throughout the entire Bible, we learn we must ask ourselves, “What am I going to do with Jesus?”

He changes our life and guarantees our eternal future. The answer to that question will be the most important one in your life. I answered “YES” to Jesus nearly 40 years ago.

What’s your answer?

–Rich Jensen

Have you ever looked back in time and wish you had not done some of the things you did? This is called guilt, regret, sorrow, just to mention a few. The more righteous we try to become, the less regret we will have. Everyone sins, but those who admit their sins understand they need God’s help. We are all habitual sinners and only the saving grace of God will save our souls. God appreciates the people who try and walk a straight path and live a righteous life. Tony Ferguson

The chances of an open-faced jam sandwich landing face down on a floor are directly correlated to the newness and cost of the carpet or rug!!

Law of Logical Argument – Anything is possible if you don’t know what you are talking about.

Americans love their pets. More than 94 million households currently own one, according to a recent study by the American Pet Products Association, which also noted growing concerns about affordability.

The APPA projected total pet spending in the United States to exceed $157 billion by the end of this year. This includes $67.8 billion for pet food, $41.4 billion for veterinary care, $34.3 billion for supplies, and $13.5 billion for other services such as grooming and pet sitting.

Quotes You Can Use

Humility makes us gentle to others and generates respect far beyond our understanding. A humble servant is hard to find, but when they surface, they generate teamwork and accomplishments beyond their greatest expectations. Brig. General Dick Abel

My advice to you is not to inquire why or why not, but just enjoy your ice cream while it’s on your plate. Thornton Wilder

Rather than criticize God, we need to learn from Him. We need to have that same love, compassion, and readiness to forgive as God does. Dan Shock

Listen, “I have not failed. I’ve just found 10,000 ways that won’t work.” Thomas Edison

This nation will remain the land of the free only so long as it is the home of the brave. Elmer Davis

Thank God we can’t escape His presence. Dan Shock

When we have the Holy Spirit, we have all that is needed to be all that God desires us to be. A. W. Tozer

When we give our lives to Jesus and trust him as our Savior and Lord, the Spirit renews our souls and brings the life of God into us. We have joy and peace, and we have a new direction to our lives because the Spirit of God has implanted in us. Billy Graham

Instead of delivering us from the fire, God may choose to deliver us in the fire. Dan Shock

God created us for eternity, not for this finite time and fallen world. This earthly life is, therefore, our “gestation period,” that time during which we are being formed for the life to come. Then, when we “die,” we are “born” into the life for which we were always intended. Jim Denison

Never be afraid to trust an unknown future to a known God. Corrie Ten Boom

A friend with an understanding heart is worth no less than a brother. Homer

If we truly love Jesus and want Him in our lives we must use His grace to become selfless. To become selfless requires an attitude of caring about others as much or more than ourselves. Tony Ferguson

God is not satisfied with having just a part of your life. He is not willing to share you with other gods. Dan Shock

Nobody made a greater mistake than he who did nothing because he could do only a little. Edmund Burke

If you have ever seen someone with a Bible that is weathered and falling apart from many years of use, you can be pretty sure that its owner is not falling apart. Randy Alcorn

My father gave me the greatest gift anyone could give another person. He believed in me. Jim Valvano

Your feedback is welcome and if you want to contribute your ideas and thoughts, address all items and comments to [email protected].

© Thoughts on Life Copyright 2025

The City of Nain

August 2, 2025

Jesus by the Lake: The City of Nain

, “The day after … he went into a city called Nain” (Luke 7:11).

Nain, means “Pleasant.” It is 758 feet above sea level. Cullman, Alabama, where I live, is 814 feet, so Jesus walked uphill a distance of about 30 miles from Capernaum to Nain, which, without stopping, would take around 12 hours. But it would be somewhat quicker if he took a boat to the southern coast of the Sea of Galilee before walking the remainder of the way.

Nain has a front row seat to history. It’s on the eastern edge of the Valley of Jezreel:

  • 1 mile from Shunem where Elisha raised a boy from the dead (2 Kings 4:837)
  • 1 mile from the Hill of Moreh where Gideon fought the Midianites (Judges 7:1)
  • 2 miles from Endor where Saul visited a witch (1 Samuel 28:7)
  • 5 miles from Mt. Tabor where Deborah and Barak gathered their army (Judges 4:12)
  • 6 miles from Nazareth, Jesus’ hometown (Luke 2:39)
  • 10 miles from Megiddo where Deborah & Barak defeated Sisera (Judges 5:1920)

–Daniel McCabe

Trivia Quiz (Answer at the bottom of this page)

The twelve spies returned from Canaan with a large cluster of grapes which two of them carried on a pole, but what else does Numbers 13:23 say that they brought out of the land?

A. Dates and olives

B. Milk and honey

C. A partridge in a pear tree

D. Pomegranates and figs

History: Edmond Rothschild

I am thankful to so many family members and friends over the years who have helped support me and my family in the service of the Lord as a pastor and church planter. Homecooked meals and meals out. Cash, cars and cheesecake. Prayers and a helping hand.

So I can relate to the late nineteenthcentury and early twentiethcentury Jewish pioneers in their quest to carve out a life in Palestine who received financial assistance and employment opportunities from a man whom they respectfully dubbed, “The Baron Rothschild.” Some have estimated the baron’s financial support at more than fifty million dollars, equivalent to almost one billion dollars today.

Born into a noble Jewish banking family in France, Edmond Rothschild established schools, synagogues, farms, wineries and factories throughout Palestine. He backed research to develop electric generating stations and even sponsored key archaeological digs.

Buried in Paris in 1934 after decades of steady support for Jewish settlers in the Holy Land, his body and that of his wife were later transported to Israel in 1954 through the port of Haifa where they were met with sirens, a nineteengun salute and a memorial service at which David BenGurion (the first prime minister of Israel) delivered the eulogy. The Rothschilds were then buried on a nearby hill named “The Generous One’s Heights.”

From 198286 the baron’s portrait appeared on the Israeli 500shekel note, featuring a group of farmers and a beautiful cluster of grapes. A mall in Rishon LeZion bears his name as do many city streets throughout Israel, including Rothschild Boulevard in Tel Aviv. Few have been as gracious to the Jewish people as this beloved man.

–Daniel McCabe

On Location:: The Old Yishuv Court Museum

Located on the historic site of one of the oldest courtyards in the Jewish Quarter of the Old City of Jerusalem, this museum became an immediate favorite of our September 2021 tour group. Yishuv is the Hebrew word for “settlement,” and Old Yishuv describes that community of religious Jews who resided in Palestine before the first wave of modern Jewish immigration began in 1882, and this museum captures Yishuv life in the land from the last twenty years of the nineteenth century until 1948 when Israel became a state. A majority of the Old Yishuv men spent their days studying the Torah and living off donations from Jews living in other countries whereas modern immigration brought agricultural pioneers and political Zionists who sought a homeland and national identity for the Jews.

The museum showcases a small synagogue typical of the time as well as the layout of an ordinary home, including bedrooms, a kitchen, a craft room and even outdoor implements. You’ll learn about the history of the settlers’ professions, including life as a goldsmith, shoemaker, tailor, peddler, wool breaker, knife sharpener and shoe shiner. My favorite display is a Monopolystyle game, dating to the 1940s, that allowed players to purchase settlements and cities throughout Palestine.

–Daniel McCabe

Scripture Study: King Hezekiah, part 1

Sometimes the best summary we can have of biblical characters is to see them in their most outstanding moments. Hezekiah is a good example of this, so let’s read about what happened when this king needed the Lord the most.

Hezekiah, the king of Judah, reigned long after the split between Israel in the north and Judah in the south. You can read about this good king in both 2 Kings and Isaiah, but I’ll focus on his story as recorded in Isaiah 3637, walking through selected portions of the passage to emphasize what I think is the most outstanding moment in his reign.

Following the evil reign of his farther, Hezekiah initiated great spiritual reforms in Judah. In his day the Assyrian Empire had conquered the entire northern kingdom of Israel, which God allowed in order to bring discipline to those in Israel who had turned faithlessly away from Him.

But Hezekiah is king over the southern portion of the country, specifically over the tribes of Judah and Benjamin. Isaiah 36:1 records, “In the fourteenth year of King Hezekiah, Sennacherib, King of Assyria, came up against all the fortified cities of Judah and took them. And the king of Assyria sent the Rabshakeh,” who is a high official in the Assyrian Empire, “from Lachish,” the city that Sennacherib was besieging at the time, “to King Hezekiah at Jerusalem with a great army.”

Jerusalem really is the last holdout. Sennacherib was besieging Lachish, a major city in Judah, and Jerusalem was all that remained in the kingdom.

“And the Rabshakeh stood by the conduit of the upper pool on the highway to the Washer’s Field,” which is close to the Gihon Spring, “and there came out to him Eliakim, the son of Hilkiah, who was over the household, Shebna the secretary, and Joah, the son of Asaph, the recorder.” These three men will now represent Hezekiah, the king of Judah.

“So the Rabshakeh said to them, ‘Say to Hezekiah’”—he’s calling up to them as they’re on the city wall—“‘Say to Hezekiah, “Thus says the great king, the king of Assyria, ‘On what do you rest this trust of yours? Do you think that mere words are a strategy and power for war? In whom do you now trust that you’ve rebelled against me? Behold, you are trusting in Egypt, that broken reed of a staff, which will pierce the hand of any man who leans on it. Such is Pharaoh, king of Egypt, to all who trust in him.’”’”

So the Rabshakeh is taunting Hezekiah for thinking that Egypt could conceivably come to his rescue, for Egypt too was on the hit list of the Assyrians, and by this time Egypt wasn’t as strong as it used to be.

He continues, “But if you say to me, ‘We trust in the LORD our God,’ is it not He whose high places and altars Hezekiah has removed, saying to Judah and Jerusalem, ‘You shall worship before this altar’?”

The Rabshakeh is a little confused. He knows a little bit about what’s going on in Israel, particularly that Hezekiah had made many spiritual reforms and had torn down the high places throughout the land, but the high places that Hezekiah tore down were inappropriate places of worship. All the Rabshakeh thinks is, “What? You’re tearing down places to your own God? How can you really trust in Him now?” He’s clearly confused, but he’s still attempting to taunt the king of Judah as any commander of an invading army would.

Jumping down to v. 11, Hezekiah’s representatives now reply to the Rabshakeh, “Please speak to your servants in Aramaic, for we understand it. Do not speak to us in the language of Judah within the hearing of the people who are on the wall.”

It’s interesting to me that they request him to speak in Aramaic, which was a language that the Assyrians would have well understood, but not everyone in Israel. They do this so that the people holed up in Jerusalem with them wouldn’t lose heart, so that they wouldn’t understand what the Rabshakeh is saying.

But he responded, “Has my master sent me to speak these words to your master and to you, but not to the men sitting on the wall who are doomed with you.”

He wants to taunt all the people of Israel. He wants to dishearten the common citizen. So he “stood and called out in a loud voice in the language of Judah, ‘Hear the words of the great king, the king of Assyria. Thus says the king, “Do not let Hezekiah deceive you, for he will not be able to deliver you. Do not let Hezekiah make you trust in the LORD, saying, ‘The LORD will surely deliver us. This city will not be given into the hand of the king of Assyria.’”’”

The Rabshakeh, the Assyrian, is really taunting them now and trying to convince the people to not trust in the one true God, the Lord, to whom Hezekiah has been encouraging the people to turn. In this he continues in v. 16, “Do not listen to Hezekiah, for thus says the king of Assyria, ‘Make your peace with me and come out to me. Then each one of you will eat of his own vine, and each one of his own fig tree, and each one of you will drink the water of his own cistern. I will take you to a land like your own land, a land of grain and wine, of bread and vineyards.’”

He’s trying to convince the common person in Jerusalem to abandon Hezekiah and think, “Hey, if we surrender, then maybe the king of Assyria will treat us well and we won’t have to die here.”

He continues then in his attempt to convince the people to abandon trust in the Lord, taunting them by insisting that they don’t stand a chance against the king of Assyria. In v. 21 we see that Hezekiah’s representatives “were silent and answered him not a word, for the king’s command was, ‘Do not answer him! Don’t listen to him.’”

–Adam Keim

Scripture Study: Cain’s Wife

I’ve heard it asked, “Where did Cain get his wife who’s mentioned in Genesis 4:17, “And Cain knew his wife, and she conceived and bore Enoch?” If Cain took a female family member as his wife, wouldn’t that be incest, which is wrong? Wouldn’t it also be genetically dangerous to marry a family member?

Well, let me attempt a quick answer. The Bible affirms that Adam and Eve (obviously their children and their descendants too) were actual, historical people, not literary symbols for mankind (Matthew 19:4; Luke 3:38; Jude 14). Cain then married a sister (Genesis 5:4, “Adam had [other] sons and daughters”). Cain could not have a child with Eve because she was already married. The gene pool at this point was still reasonably pure, so it would not have been genetically dangerous for Cain to marry a sister. Incest was later outlawed for our protection because of the increased genetic dangers over time (Leviticus 18:616).

Let me know if that was helpful! Have a great weekend!

–Daniel McCabe

Answer to the Trivia

D. Pomegranates and figs