The Covenant Reclaimed exists because the hardest questions in Scripture have been receiving the softest answers for too long. Questions about marriage. About divorce. About what the biblical text actually calls adultery, and who bears responsibility for it. About the covenant structure God established and what it requires of every party inside it.

This platform does not exist to condemn. It exists to be accurate. The distinction matters — but so does the accuracy.

Content Pillars

The six areas of focus that form the architecture of this platform

01

Marriage & Covenant

What the biblical text actually says about the covenant bond that marriage creates — its structure, its requirements, its permanence, and why the church stopped talking about it in these terms.

Read Articles →
02

Divorce & Remarriage

The words of Jesus of Nazareth on divorce and remarriage, examined without the softening of tradition, the escape routes of creative exegesis, or the comfort of pastoral accommodation.

Read Articles →
03

Adultery & Sexual Ethics

How the biblical definition of adultery differs from what the modern church teaches, who is implicated by it, and what the text says about both parties in a second marriage.

Read Articles →
04

Biblical Law & Interpretation

Reading the text as it was written — in its ancient context, with its original vocabulary, without filtering it through Christian tradition that arose centuries after the New Testament era.

Read Articles →
05

Relational Order

The created order of headship, covering, and covenant responsibility — what Scripture says about the structure of authority between God, man, and woman, and why that structure carries covenantal weight.

See Teachings →
06

Hard Conversations

The direct, unfiltered analysis on topics the church avoids — repentance from adultery, the covenantal status of those in second marriages, and what the text demands when the comfortable answer is not the accurate one.

See Teachings →

How the Platform Is Structured

Books

The long-form published work. Each book represents sustained research and argument on a specific body of Scripture. These are the primary deliverables of the platform.

Browse Books

Articles

Long-form essays and analysis pieces. Each one addresses a specific text, question, or cultural phenomenon from the standpoint of what the biblical text actually says.

Browse Articles

Teaching Lectures

Structured, word-for-word teaching scripts on the major theological topics covered by this platform. Each one is designed to be taught or read as a complete unit.

Browse Teachings

Facebook — Hard Conversations

Shorter pieces, reader questions, responses to cultural developments, and periodic direct engagement with the most common objections to this platform's conclusions.

Visit the Page

Patreon

The platform is funded by readers who find the work worth supporting. Patreon supporters receive early access to new content, manuscript previews, and direct engagement.

Support on Patreon

Email List

New articles, teaching releases, and book announcements. No marketing. No frequency pressure. Delivered when there is something worth reading.

Subscribe

The Working Method

Every conclusion on this platform is expected to meet the same standard: it must come from the biblical text, read in its ancient context, with its original vocabulary. It cannot come from what the tradition prefers the text to say. It cannot come from what the commentator found comfortable to conclude. It must come from what is written.

This does not mean the conclusions are certain in every case. It means they are honest in every case. There is a difference between a conclusion reached by careful exegesis and a conclusion reached by working backward from a preferred outcome. This platform is committed to the former.

Filtering biblical text through modern Christian tradition that arose centuries after the New Testament era cannot honestly be considered when interpreting the passages in context.

Biblical theology, by definition, comes from the biblical text — not from Christian history, or the writings of Christians about the Bible. We must be committed to the biblical text, read as rooted in its own ancient context, not a later text written for our theology.

Stay Connected

Subscribe to The Covenant Reclaimed

New articles, teaching releases, and book announcements. Delivered when there is something worth reading.