Covenant Judaism
Religious education and advocacy • Scripture-first • Evidence-forward

Covenant Judaism

Covenant Judaism stands as the original covenantal reality of Israel — not a reform, not a reaction, and not a modern reconstruction. It is the lived expression of Jewish covenant life as it existed before later institutional systems imposed artificial boundaries, classifications, and demographic hierarchies that obscured its continuity.

Jesus and the apostles were Jews living fully within Israel’s covenantal obedience. They did not found a religion detached from Israel. They embodied covenant faithfulness within it. The earliest Jesus movement was a Jewish covenant movement rooted in Torah, prophecy, and messianic expectation. It did not begin as a rupture from Israel, but as its fulfillment within history.

The later separation between synagogue and church did not represent a divine revocation of covenant legitimacy. It reflected historical expansion, political pressures, institutional consolidation, and the reorganization of authority as the message moved beyond its Jewish nucleus into the Gentile world.

Covenant Judaism was never defeated, refuted, or annulled. It was displaced from institutional dominance as structures of governance and religious administration evolved. Its covenant legitimacy remained intact. What diminished was not its authority before God, but its administrative visibility within emerging power frameworks.

Covenant Judaism therefore asserts continuity — not novelty; inheritance — not innovation; fulfillment — not abandonment.

A covenant-first framework for understanding faith, identity, conscience, and the moral limits of political power—grounded in Scripture, tested against history, and written to confront false doctrines that fuel modern conflict.


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Use these pages in sequence, or jump directly to the topic of your interest.

The Covenants of God

The foundation: covenant history and why the New Covenant is the covenant we live under today.

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Proclamation of Covenant Judaism

The formal statement: authority, identity, conscience, and jurisdictional boundaries.

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Declaration of Covenant Zionism

A covenant doctrine distinct from political British Zionism and its repackaged Christian Zionism counterpart.

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Submission to the Prime Minister of Israel

A formal submission establishing Covenant Judaism and asserting its Jewish covenantal ancestry.

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Declaration to the United Nations

A covenant position memorandum on inclusion, conscience, and pluralism.

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Understanding Antisemitism

Jesus Christ and the Twelve Apostles were Jews. The crucifixion was the execution of Israel’s Jewish Messiah under imperial power — a covenantal tragedy that stands at the center of antisemitism’s distortion of history.

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ANTI SEMITISM

The foundational book behind the Covenant Judaism framework — Western Law, Sacred Power, and the Rise of a False Doctrine.

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The framework in three claims

Covenant Architecture

God’s covenants define identity, inheritance, and accountability. Covenant identity cannot be replaced by politics.

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Political Power Under Judgment

Scripture holds political authority morally accountable—especially when sacred language is used to legitimize power.

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Antisemitism Must Be Defined Correctly

Precision matters: separating hatred from conscience-based disagreement prevents definitional coercion.

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Read the Proclamation Start with the Covenants