I have sent my next book to the printers… The book is called The Atonement of God, and is now available for pre-order at Amazon.
And I am SO excited, because I believe this is my best book yet.
If you have been following my blog for a while, you know that I have been struggling with the violence of God in the Bible. About 5 years ago, I thought I had a solution to this problem, and started writing a book to present it. I wrote 200,000 words before giving up.
But in the process, I developed a different solution. I am not quite ready to publish a book on THAT solution, but this book which is now available for pre-order from Amazon contains a large part of the solution. This book forms the foundation for that future book.
If you sort of read between the lines of the book, my solution to the problem of the violence of God in the Bible is in this book, but it is not really stated explicitly.
Instead, this book really just presents Jesus as the solution to it all, and shows how a proper understanding of the crucifixion of Jesus helps sort out a lot of other areas of theology as well.
The book ships on March 21, so order your copy today!







This is not about the sanctity of God’s Word, but about the sanctity of God’s people … namely, ALL people.
We Christians owe the world an apology. 


Furthermore, people say that God had to pour out His wrath against sin upon somebody (either us or Jesus) in order to satisfy his justice. Yet then we say that God did this out of His mercy.
When the Pentateuch is understood in its entirety, it appears that the message of the Pentateuch is that God was never angry at people and never wanted sacrifices and offerings, but wanted instead a people for Himself who lived by faith in God and with justice and mercy before a watching world. See 

Have you ever listened to some of the songs Christians sing around Easter? We seem to be infatuated with the blood of Jesus.
These songs have images of a bloody river and a fountain filled with blood drawn from Emmanuel’s veins. Yikes! Some Christian songs sound more like a gruesome and gory scene from a Freddy Krueger movie than from something having to do with Jesus Christ.
They report the details of what happened and what was said, but they report almost nothing about the gruesome nature of crucifixion or the pain that Jesus must have endured.