Friday, June 19, 2026

UNQUENCHABLE FIRE



UNQUENCHABLE FIRE 

 

In Scripture, UNQUENCHABLE FIRE, does not mean fire that last forever.

 

It refers to GOD bringing judgment that cannot and will not stop until it is complete in destroying the object of God’s wrath!!! 

 

 

 

 

1. Amos 5:6  Seek the Lord and live, or he will sweep through the tribes of Joseph like a fire; it will devour them, and Bethel will have no one to quench it.

 

**The fire in this passages speaks of judgment from God poured out upon Bethel that would not stop until completely fulfilled in destroying the objects of God’s wrath.  If it were an unquenchable fire, where is the fire today????

 

 

 

2. Jeremiah 17:27

But if you do not obey me to keep the Sabbath day holy by not carrying any load as you come through the gates of Jerusalem on the Sabbath day, then I will kindle an UNQUENCHABLE FIRE in the gates of Jerusalem that will consume her fortresses.’”

 

**The fire in this passages speaks of judgment from God poured out upon Jerusalem that would not stop until completely fulfilled in destroying the objects of God’s wrath.  If it were an unquenchable fire at the gates of Jerusalem, where is the fire today????  Hmmm?

 

 

3. Ezekiel 20:47-48 Say to the forest of the Negeb, Hear the word of the Lord: Thus says the Lord God, Behold, I will kindle a fire in you, and it shall devour every green tree in you and every dry tree. The blazing flame shall not be quenched, and all faces from south to north shall be scorched by it. 48 All flesh shall see that I the Lord have kindled it; it shall not be quenched.”

 

**The fire in this passages speak of judgment from God poured out upon Jerusalem that would not stop until completely fulfilled in destroying the objects of God’s wrath.  If it were an unquenchable fire, where is the fire today????

 

 

 

4. Matthew 3:10-12. Even now the axe is laid to the root of the trees. Every tree therefore that does not bear good fruit is cut down and thrown into the fire.

11 “I baptize you with water for repentance, but he who is coming after me is mightier than I, whose sandals I am not worthy to carry. He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and fire. 12 His winnowing fork is in his hand, and he will clear his threshing floor and gather his wheat into the barn, but the chaff he will burn with UNQUENCHABLE FIRE.”

5. Luke 3:17  His winnowing fork is in his hand to clear his threshing floor and to gather the wheat into his barn, but he will burn up the chaff with UNQUENCHABLE FIRE.”

**The fire in these passages speak of judgment from God poured out upon Jerusalem that would not stop upon them by His Roman Armies until completed in 70AD for killing the prophets and especially the sinless Son of God!

 

 

 

6. Jude 1:6-7 And the angels who did not stay within their own position of authority, but left their proper dwelling, he has kept in eternal chains under gloomy darkness until the judgment of the great day— just as Sodom and Gomorrah and the surrounding cities, which likewise indulged in sexual immorality and pursued unnatural desire,[a] serve as an example by undergoing a punishment of eternal fire.

 

**Is fire still pouring down in 2026 upon Sodom and Gomorrah?  This is where you answer, “NO,” and say, “Your definition of God’s judgment unstopped until completely fulfilled upon God’s object of wrath!”

 



WATCH:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YBfgbYOKaDk&t=20s



 THERE IS NO HELL!  

All made up by Pagan Catholicism to scare & control folks!  The SUN worshipping Catholics switched and not translated GEHENNA to pagan HELL. 

Protestants forgot to reform hell. Lol

https://tueseahkiong.blogspot.com/2014/09/hell-14-hades-9-sheol-63-grave-15.html?m=1




Number of times "Hell" appears in the text in English Bible Translations

https://tueseahkiong.blogspot.com/2018/11/number-of-times-hell-appears-in-text-in.html?m=1


Thursday, June 18, 2026

3 Important Distinctions That May Change Your Entire Understanding of Scripture

 
























1.  Salvation was for ISRAEL ONLY and NOT the entire world!!

Salvation was for the COVENANT WORLD of Israel (biblical) vs. WORLD OF ALL HUMANITY (made up nonsense).  

The Bible was about saving THE COVENANT WORLD OF ISRAEL and it did by 70AD!  So, most knuckleheads have been taught to see the word, "world" as an opportunity for them to insert themselves into the Bible narrative like in the infamous John 3:16. LOL.  Other universal words like humanity, earth, everyone, whosoever, whoever, anyone, mankind, every man, human beings... are great ways to hijack Israel's redemptive story.  

Just try reading in context and you will see the author is using hyperbole and exaggeration!  And don't try to insert yourself into the book!!!  We are absolutely and completely outside the Bible story!!!


2. JEW vs ISRAELITE; Divided Kingdom

All 12 tribes were known as Israel or commonwealth of Israel before the kingdom divided after King Solomon's death.  Jew (2 tribes, Judah and Benjamin in the south, House of Judah) vs Israel (10 tribes in north, House of Israel; cut off from covenant and scattered in the nations for being a law breaking, uncircumcised, adulterous idol worshipping whores!).   

There's a BIG DIFFERENCE between Jew and Israelite!  Every Jew is an Israelite, but not every Israelite is a Jew.  It's like every Californian is a American but not every American is a Californian.  Jews (the word comes from Judah and are those from the house of Judah) are a subset of Israel.


3. JEW (in covenant) vs GENTILE (scattered Israelites, cut off from covenant).  

Big tension of hate between these 2 houses/ kingdoms: Judah vs Israel aka Gentile (scattered Israelite)!  Gentile does always mean pagan nation or pagan people.  Gentile is used of the northern Kingdom or House of Israel when God divorced them, cut them off from covenant and called them, "NOT MY PEOPLE!"  So, since one is not God's people, then they are just a people or nation, and that is what the word "gentile" means!

Christ said He came only for the lost sheep of the house of Israel.  But most wannabe "Christians" believe Christ LIED because you're a Filipino or Mexican or Irish "Christian."  Go figure!

Part of the Gospel was restoring the divided kingdom of Israel.  The 2 sticks would be joined to one kingdom, ruled by one King.  The gospel of the kingdom provides the house of Israel grace and peace through a New Covenant.  At the end of the Bible in Revelation, only those from the tribes of Israel get redemption aka SALVATION.  No Samoans, No Koreans or No Vikings...!!!  This was completed by 70AD at the success of "The Great Commission."  

The bible story ends and they live happily ever after....  

The end.


Not our story!





WHOSE SINS DID YESHUA DIE FOR?

https://tueseahkiong.blogspot.com/2017/08/whose-sins-did-yeshua-die-for-by-tuese.html



SCRIPTURE TEACHES YHWH IS ISRAEL'S FATHER and NOT THE WORLD’S or ALL HUMANITY  https://tueseahkiong.blogspot.com/2026/04/yhwh-god-identified-as-israels-christs.html



Christ DIED for the Elect Covenant World of ISRAEL ONLY and NOT the World of HUMANITY like Samoans, Filipinos, Irish, Mexicans....LOL https://tueseahkiong.blogspot.com/2026/04/christ-died-for-covenant-world-of.html



"JESUS" DIDN'T DIE FOR ALL HUMANITY!!!  - We've been reading the Bible WRONG BIG TIME!!!  Yep, we all got DUPED!!!    https://tueseahkiong.blogspot.com/2026/05/blog-post_11.html



Who was THE WORLD in Scripture???  https://tueseahkiong.blogspot.com/2026/06/who-is-world.html


The most misunderstood, twisted and taken out of its context verse in the Bible, JOHN 3:16 that got BILLIONS believing stuff that ain’t so!!!

https://tueseahkiong.blogspot.com/2023/06/john-316-is-most-misunderstood-twisted.html?m=1\




Paul was sent to non-Jews aka gentiles aka peoples/ nations aka scattered sheep of Israel who were called NOT MY PEOPLE by YHWH in Hosea!


There's a BIG DIFFERENCE between a Jew and an Israelite, and not understanding the back story (OT) of the bible connects to Paul's mission to fulfill the promises YHWH made to Israel in the OT!


There’s a BIG Difference Between a JEW and an ISRAELITE; "JEW" vs. "ISRAELITE”. Do YOU know the difference!? https://tueseahkiong.blogspot.com/2021/09/difference-between-jew-and-israelite.html?m=1



Hebrew - Israelite - Jew https://tueseahkiong.blogspot.com/2025/08/ur-abraham-refers-to-ancient.html?m=1












Who THE HECK were THE GENTILES that Paul turned to and spoke to in Synagogues???  https://tueseahkiong.blogspot.com/2026/05/who-heck-were-gentiles-that-paul-was.html



HOW PRIMITIVE ISRAELITE CHRISTIANITY WAS REPLACED WITH GENTILE CHRISTIANITY https://tueseahkiong.blogspot.com/2026/05/how-primitive-israelite-christianity.html



The topic of gentiles (peoples, nations) is always used by wannabes to squeeze or insert themselves into the Bible Narrative!  Most wannabes don't know the back story that the House of Israel got cut off from covenant and became, "NOT GOD'S PEOPLE/ NATION"  for playing the whore. Thus, they got scattered in the pagan nations, but YHWH was merciful in promising to bring them back into covenant in the latter days (30-70AD).  They would be CALLED GOD'S PEOPLE again as promised in Hosea and fulfilled in Romans.  The Deliverer, Christ, came from Zion in 70AD and took JACOB's (ISRAEL's) sin away.  The text ain't talking about Samoans, Mexicans, Irish, Filipinos... gentiles getting their sins taken away, but scattered Israel gentiles getting forgiven of their sin via the Gospel!      


1. ISRAEL was called, "NOT MY PEOPLE" by YHWH in Hosea.

2. NOT MY PEOPLE was attributed to THE GENTILES by Paul (Rom 9). 

3. ISRAEL was THE GENTILES (SCATTERED ISRAELITES) that Paul was speaking of.


ROM 9:24-26

even us, whom he also called, not only from the Jews but also from the Gentiles? 25 As he says in Hosea:

“I will call them ‘my people’ who are not my people; and I will call her ‘my loved one’ who is not my loved one,”

26 and, “In the very place where it was said to them, “You are not my people,’ there they will be called ‘children of the living God.’”


 “NOT MY PEOPLE” is used 5x in Scripture and all refer to ISRAEL  https://tueseahkiong.blogspot.com/2018/06/the-phrase-not-my-people-is-used-5x-in.html


Israel prophesied to be scattered in the gentile pagan nations in The Latter Days (30-70AD) worshipping idols like gentiles!

https://tueseahkiong.blogspot.com/2023/07/israel-scattered-in-gentile-pagan.html?m=1


How scattered ISRAEL became GENTILES (this confusing word just means NATIONs or PEOPLEs)

https://tueseahkiong.blogspot.com/2023/06/how-israel-became-gentiles-this.html?m=1


Biblical Jews and Gentiles were not who you were indoctrinated to believe they were Here’s why! https://tueseahkiong.blogspot.com/2021/12/biblical-jews-and-gentiles-were-not-who.html?m=1





Wednesday, June 17, 2026

ADAM & ISRAEL: THE SAME COVENANT STORY by Michael Bradley






The identity of Adam has long been one of the most debated subjects in biblical interpretation. Traditional Christianity typically treats Adam as the first biological human being from whom the entire human race descended. However, when the biblical text is examined carefully within its covenantal, audience-relevant, and Israel-centered context, a very different picture emerges. Adam functions less as a universal scientific ancestor of all mankind and more as a covenantal archetype representing Israel and its relationship to God within sacred space.
This understanding is not without scholarly precedent. Old Testament scholar John H. Walton argues that Adam should be understood archetypically, writing that "Adam is an archetype" (The Lost World of Adam and Eve). Walton's conclusion is not identical to the argument presented here, but it illustrates that Adam's significance extends beyond merely serving as the biological ancestor of humanity.
The first thing that must be recognized is that the Bible was not written as a modern scientific explanation of universal human origins. The Scriptures are overwhelmingly concerned with Israel, Israel's covenant, Israel's land, Israel's priesthood, Israel's sin, and Israel's restoration. The narrative focus from Genesis onward quickly narrows to Abraham and his descendants. This raises an important question: if Adam were truly the central ancestor of all humanity in the modern universal sense, why does Scripture spend almost no time developing a theology of universal humanity outside Israel's covenant story?
The Genesis account itself contains numerous indications that Adam should be understood covenantally and archetypically rather than merely biologically. Adam is placed into sacred ground, commissioned to guard and keep it, given commandments, and threatened with death upon disobedience. These are priestly and covenantal themes later associated directly with Israel. The language used of Adam parallels Israel's later covenant experience in remarkable ways.
Adam is formed from the dust of the ground and placed into Eden, a sanctuary-like environment filled with symbolic imagery later echoed in the tabernacle and temple. Rivers flow outward from Eden just as blessing and covenant life later flow outward from Zion in prophetic imagery. Adam is given dominion and priestly responsibility much like Israel was later called to function as a kingdom of priests among the nations.
Many biblical scholars have recognized the temple-like nature of Eden. G. K. Beale writes, "The Garden of Eden was the first temple" (The Temple and the Church's Mission). Likewise, T. Desmond Alexander argues that Eden should be understood as the original sanctuary where God dwelt with humanity (From Eden to the New Jerusalem). Eden is therefore more than a garden. It is sacred space where God and man dwell together, anticipating later sanctuary and temple imagery throughout Scripture.
Adam's role within that sacred space also carries priestly significance. Genesis 2:15 states that Adam was placed in the garden "to work it and keep it." Scholars such as Gordon Wenham, G. K. Beale, and T. Desmond Alexander have noted that the Hebrew terms translated "work" and "keep" later appear together in descriptions of Levitical service in the tabernacle. Alexander writes that "Adam's role in Eden appears to be similar to that of the priests who later served in Israel's sanctuary" (From Eden to the New Jerusalem). Adam therefore appears not merely as a gardener, but as the guardian of sacred space and the first covenant priest.
The similarities between Adam and Israel become even more striking when one compares Genesis with the prophets. Israel is repeatedly described using Edenic imagery. In Ezekiel, Israel's sanctuary language echoes Eden. In Hosea, Israel is explicitly said to have "transgressed the covenant like Adam" (Hos. 6:7 NASB), suggesting Adam himself was understood covenantally. Isaiah portrays Israel as a vineyard planted by God that failed under covenant responsibility in the same way Adam failed in the garden.
Many scholars have also recognized these Adam-Israel parallels. N. T. Wright argues that Israel's story repeatedly recapitulates Adam's story (The Climax of the Covenant). Likewise, J. Richard Middleton sees Israel as embodying humanity's original vocation before God (A New Heaven and a New Earth). While these scholars do not necessarily draw the same conclusions advanced here, their observations reinforce the fact that the biblical writers intentionally present Adam and Israel in strikingly similar terms.
Even Paul's treatment of Adam strongly suggests a covenantal framework rather than a modern biological anthropology. Paul consistently ties sin, transgression, condemnation, and death to law. He says, "through the Law comes the knowledge of sin" (Rom. 3:20), "where there is no law, there is no transgression" (Rom. 4:15), and "sin is not imputed where there is no law" (Rom. 5:13).
Those statements are extremely important because they show Paul discussing covenantal accountability rather than generic biological mortality. The "death" associated with Adam is therefore best understood as covenantal alienation, exile, and separation from God's covenant life rather than the origin of physical death for all organisms on earth.
This interpretation also resolves major tensions within the text itself. Animals died before humans sinned. Plants were eaten before Adam's fall. The creation account never explicitly says biological death itself began at Adam's transgression. Instead, Adam is expelled from sacred space, cut off from access to the tree of life, and removed eastward from God's presence—imagery later repeated in Israel's exile from the land.
In this sense, Adam functions as a prototype of Israel. Both are formed by God. Both are placed in sacred land. Both receive covenant commands. Both violate covenant. Both experience exile. Both await restoration.
The parallels are too extensive to ignore.
Additionally, the Hebrew word adam itself often simply means "man" or "humanity" collectively. It can function corporately rather than merely as a personal proper name. This further supports the possibility that Adam represents humanity in a covenantal or representative sense rather than serving merely as an isolated historical individual from whom all genetics derive.
Some scholars and interpreters have even argued that Genesis 1–11 bears signs of theological composition designed to provide Israel with archetypal origins and covenantal symbolism rather than modern historical reportage. Within that framework, Adam serves as the covenantal prototype of Israel—a symbolic covenant man whose story prefigures Israel's national story.
This also explains why New Testament writers consistently focus redemption on Israel's covenant crisis rather than on rescuing all humanity from inherited biological guilt. Jesus says He was sent to "the lost sheep of the house of Israel" (Matt. 15:24). Paul says his ministry concerned "the hope of Israel" (Acts 28:20). The New Covenant was made with "the house of Israel and the house of Judah," not with all mankind universally.
Thus, Adam's significance is best understood covenantally. Adam was not primarily written to explain genetics, anthropology, or universal biological death. Adam was the covenant man, the archetypal priest, the representative of sacred order, and the prototype of Israel itself. His exile from Eden foreshadowed Israel's exile from the land. His loss of access to life foreshadowed Israel's covenant death. And his restoration themes ultimately pointed toward the covenant transition fulfilled in the first century with the end of the Old Covenant age.
How Did Jesus and Paul Use Adam Within Their Covenantal and Theological Framework?
Modern readers often assume that if Jesus or Paul referenced Adam, they therefore endorsed a modern literalist understanding of Adam as the first biological human from whom all mankind descended. But that assumption imports modern categories into ancient Jewish covenantal discourse.
Jesus Himself says very little directly about Adam. The primary references associated with Adam in the Gospels occur in discussions about marriage and covenant order, particularly in Matthew 19 and Mark 10 where Jesus cites Genesis: "He who created them from the beginning made them male and female."
But notice what Jesus is doing there. He is not teaching anthropology, genetics, or universal human origins. He is appealing to covenantal creation order within Israel's Scriptures to address a legal question about divorce under Torah. His argument functions rhetorically and covenantally, not scientifically. Jewish teachers regularly appealed to scriptural archetypes without intending to settle modern historical or biological questions.
Paul uses Adam much more extensively, especially in Romans 5 and 1 Corinthians 15. Yet Paul's usage strongly suggests that he viewed Adam primarily as a covenantal representative figure rather than merely the biological ancestor of all humanity.
In Romans 5, Paul repeatedly ties Adam to law, transgression, condemnation, and covenantal death. But Paul also insists that "through the Law comes knowledge of sin" (Rom. 3:20), "where there is no law, there is no transgression" (Rom. 4:15), and "sin is not imputed where there is no law" (Rom. 5:13).
Those statements are crucial because they define the framework Paul is operating within. Paul's concern is covenantal accountability under divine law, not the spread of biological mortality to every organism on earth.
This means Adam functions for Paul as the covenantal head of a world defined by law and transgression. Adam introduces exile, condemnation, and covenant death into the covenant world Paul is discussing. Paul is not writing a modern doctrine of universal inherited guilt detached from Israel's covenant story.
Even in 1 Corinthians 15, Paul's Adam-Christ contrast is covenantal and corporate. "In Adam" and "in Christ" are not merely biological categories but covenantal identities. Paul's audience already lived physically before coming "into Christ," which shows he is discussing covenantal standing rather than mere biological existence.
Adam therefore functions as a covenantal archetype, a representative man, a prototype of Israel, and the head of an old covenant order that ultimately gave way to the new.
This interpretation fits the larger biblical pattern remarkably well. Adam is placed in sacred land, given commandments, fails covenantally, and is exiled eastward from sacred space. Israel later experiences the exact same covenant pattern nationally.
Many scholars have recognized these parallels between Adam and Israel. Adam resembles a priestly figure in sacred space much like Israel later functioned within temple-centered covenant life.
So did Jesus and Paul believe Adam was "real"? Likely yes—but ancient Jewish concepts of "real" were often far more archetypal, representative, and covenantal than modern post-Enlightenment literalism assumes. The better question is: what role did Adam serve in their theological framework?
For Paul especially, Adam was not primarily the first biological human explaining universal genetics. Adam was the covenant man whose failure prefigured Israel's covenant failure, exile, and need for restoration.