Yeshua’s Followers: The First Bohemians

Yeshua’s followers lived like early bohemians—sharing bread, wine, and vision on the margins of empire. Their gatherings echoed through centuries of counterculture, from desert feasts to Paris cafés, wherever laughter, song, and shared simplicity dissolved hierarchy and made freedom a living, human act.

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Yeshua, Jesus, & the Lost Formula of Christianity

The names Yeshua and Jesus mark a divide between a rebel teacher and a god of empire. From Judea’s dusty roads to Rome’s marble halls, the story shifted through language, politics, and faith — reshaped by translation, by power, and by silence — until revolution became religion.

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Two Kingdoms: Yeshua’s Revolution and Christianity’s Empire

Yeshua’s vision of the “kingdom of God” wasn’t another throne but a revolt of compassion. His followers met as equals until empire reclaimed the cross and crowned the rebel as king. The question still echoes: which vision do we serve — the crowned or the compassionate?

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Jesus the Oily One: The Real Meaning of Christos

“Christ” wasn’t a last name—it meant oily, anointed, set apart. From ancient Egyptian burial rites to a woman’s jar of perfume in Bethany, this essay explores how a simple act of anointing shaped one of history’s most misunderstood titles.

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