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Voluntarily keeping feast days or eating kosher for conscience's sake is acceptable; mandating it for others is wrong

A Pivotal Issue: Hebrew Roots part 4 00:49:13 – 00:50:13

Q&A: lularoe asks if observing feasts/clean eating condemns him

Romans 14 and 1 Corinthians address Christians voluntarily keeping certain practices out of conscience. Positionally, Christians are not under the law (all-or-nothing). But voluntarily choosing to keep some practices (feasts, kosher eating) out of personal conviction is acceptable. The problem arises when those practices are imposed on other believers as binding requirements.

Responses

Scripture Commentary article

What Winger Presently Gets Wrong: Women Leaders in the New Testament (PART B)

Response to Mike Winger's Women in Ministry Part 4 on women leaders in the New Testament (Part B)

Scripture Commentary article

Phil Johnson Monstrous Divas

Phil Johnson over at Pyromaniacs has struck up some heat on a post that he titles “The First Blast of the Trumpet Against the Monstrous Regiment of the Discernment Divas”. In this post and in his subsequent comments he makes his position plain that women are not allowed to publicly point out an erro

Scripture Commentary article

Mike Seaver And Cheryl Schatz Debate 8

Scripture Commentary article

1 Corinthians 14 — Research Notes (Cheryl Schatz)

Collection of 5 research notes examining 1 Corinthians 14:34-36, including the eta particle argument for quotation/refutation reading, the non-existent 'law' reference, segregated seating problems, and commentary from RtNT and Bender showing contradictions with Paul's affirmation of women prophesying.

Scripture Commentary article

Women In Ministry Research Notes

Collection of 22 research notes from Cheryl Schatz's Logos notebook on women in ministry, covering head coverings in 1 Corinthians 11, kephale as source, Genesis creation narratives, Ephesians 5 mutual submission, and Craig Keener's lecture notes on women's ordination.

Scripture Commentary article

κεφαλή (kephale) — Logos Clippings (Cheryl Schatz)

A curated collection of Logos Bible Software clippings compiled by Cheryl Schatz examining the Greek word κεφαλή (kephale) and Hebrew רֹאשׁ (rosh). The clippings draw from lexicons, encyclopedias, commentaries, and academic journals to argue that "source/origin" is the primary metaphorical meaning of kephale rather than "authority/leader," with implications for interpreting 1 Corinthians 11, Ephesians 5, and Colossians 1.

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