About This Project
A Covenantal Continuity Study
This project explores a historical and theological question:
If Jesus had not appeared, would we understand Jewish identity in the same way we do today?
It does not argue for replacement theology.
It does not seek to correct Judaism.
It does not dismiss Christian doctrine.
Instead, it asks whether the event of Jesus may be reconsidered within the internal logic of Israel’s covenantal narrative.
Core Convictions
- The covenant with Israel is irrevocable.
- The Torah is not incomplete.
- Israel’s endurance through history is neither accidental nor fragile.
- The universal horizon often associated with Christianity may already be present within the Hebrew Scriptures.
This project proposes that Jesus can be examined not as an external rupture, but as a historical inflection point within an already existing covenantal trajectory.
Why This Matters
Jewish, Christian, and Islamic traditions share an Abrahamic origin. Yet their historical developments are often framed in terms of division and replacement.
This study invites a different lens:
- Continuity rather than conquest
- Inflection rather than abolition
- Revelation rather than metaphysical fragmentation
It offers no final verdict. It offers a question — and a framework for thinking.
Intended Audience
This work is written for:
- Jewish readers willing to revisit internal covenantal trajectories
- Christian readers seeking confidence without triumphalism
- Scholars interested in covenantal continuity models
- General readers exploring Abrahamic identity
A Final Note
This is not an apologetics project. It is not a polemic. It is an attempt to think carefully — about covenant, history, and the visibility of revelation.
The conversation remains open.
Contact (Coming Soon)
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Comments (Coming Soon)