What's New
July 2026
The French Bible of the site is now the Chérubin translation, with section headings in the reader.
New article: “Resentment and Forgiveness”.
New article: “Judging One’s Neighbour”.
New article: “The New Temple and the River of Life” (Ezekiel).
New article: “The Restoration of Israel” (Ezekiel).
New article: “The Oracles Against the Nations” (Ezekiel).
New article: “The Symbolic Actions and the Judgment of Jerusalem”.
New article: “Ezekiel, the Prophet of the Exile”.
New article: “Anger and Meekness”.
New article: “Love”.
New article: “The Desire to Feel the Spirit”.
New article: “The Dark Night of the Soul”.
June 2026
New article: “Consolation and Desolation”.
New article: “Discerning the Movements of the Heart”.
New article: “The Fall of Nineveh”.
New article: “The God Who Judges and Who Saves”.
New article: “Nahum and the Assyrian Empire”.
New article: “Justice, the Day of the Lord, and Hope”.
New article: “The Visions and the Rejected Worship”.
New article: “The Judgment of the Nations and of Israel”.
New article: “Amos, the Shepherd Prophet”.
New article: “The Glory of the Second Temple”.
New article: “The Four Oracles”.
New article: “Haggai and the Rebuilding of the Temple”.
New article: “The Expansion of Christianity”.
New article: “All Under Sin”.
New article: “The Epistle to the Romans”.
New article: “Sinai and the covenant”.
New article: “The deliverance”.
New article: “The bondage and the call”.
New article: “The oracles against the nations”.
New article: “Sadness”.
New article: “Fear”.
New article: “The finger of God”.
New article: “The baptism of Christ”.
New article: “The Resurrection and the Glorification”.
New article: “Holy Week”.
New article: “The third year: the opposition”.
New article: “The second year: popularity”.
New article: “The first year: the inauguration”.
New article: “The preparation for the ministry”.
New article: “The prologues and the coming of Christ”.
New: the “Memorise” tool.
New article: “The Real Presence.”
New article: “The four Servant Songs”.
New article: “Trito-Isaiah”.
New article: “Deutero-Isaiah”.
New article: “Proto-Isaiah”.
New article: “Predestination”.
New article: “The Angel of the Lord”.
New article: “Wars of Extermination in the Bible”.
New article: “Slavery in the Bible”.
New article: “The Nature of God”.
New article: “The Age of the Martyrs”.
New article: “The Abode of the Dead”.
New article: “The Canon and the Deuterocanonical Books”.
New article: “The Deacon”.
New article: “The Priest”.
New article: “Sola Scriptura”.
New article: “The Angels”.
New article: “Sola Fide”.
New article: “Once Saved, Always Saved”.
New article: “Elijah at Horeb”.
New article: “Turning the Other Cheek”.
New article: “Buy a Sword”.
New article: “Let the Dead Bury Their Dead”.
New article: “Jesus before Pilate”.
New article: “Jesus and Nicodemus”.
New article: “Invincible Ignorance”.
New article: “The Prophet and His Time”.
New article: “The Eight Night Visions”.
New article: “Joshua, the Branch and the Crown”.
New article: “Fasting and Restoration”.
New article: “First Oracle: The King Who Comes”.
New article: “The Book of Obadiah”.
New article: “Second Oracle: The Pierced One”.
New article: “The Day of the Lord”.
New article: “The Plague and the Day of the Lord”.
New article: “Conversion and the Spirit Poured Out”.
New article: “The Judgment of the Nations and the Salvation of Zion”.
New article: “The Three Ways of the Interior Life”.
New article: “Freedom and Responsibility”.
New article: “The Moral Conscience”.
New article: “Doubt and the Moral Systems”.
New article: “Doing Evil for a Good”.
New article: “Adoration and Praise”.
New article: “Why God Asks for Adoration”.
New article: “Faith and Science”.
New article: “The Theory of Evolution”.
New article: “The Woes of Isaiah”.
New article: “The Dwelling, the Priesthood and the Sacrifices”.
New article: “The Forty Years in the Desert”.
New article: "The Discourses of Moses".
New article: "The Death of Moses".
Sign in
or

The bondage and the call

The beginning of the epic of Moses, from Exodus 1 to 6: Israel enslaved and the child saved from the waters, the flight to Midian, the burning bush… see more

The deliverance

The departure from Egypt, from Exodus 7 to 15: the sign of the serpent, the ten plagues and the judgment of Egypt’s gods, the Passover and the blood… see more

Sinai and the covenant

From the crossing of the sea to Sinai: the waters of Marah, the manna as figure of the Eucharist, the water of the rock and the battle against Amalek… see more

The Dwelling, the Priesthood and the Sacrifices

Exodus 25 to 40 and Leviticus: God comes to dwell in the midst of his people. The Dwelling and the ark where his glory rests, the priesthood of Aaron… see more

The Forty Years in the Desert

The book of Numbers: Israel leaves Sinai for the promised land, but the journey becomes forty years of wandering. The murmurs and the quails, the… see more

The Discourses of Moses

On the plains of Moab, at the threshold of the promised land, Moses addresses his final discourses to the new generation. He recalls the road… see more

The Death of Moses

The last days of Moses, at the threshold of the promised land. He entrusts the people to Joshua and lays down the Law, speaks a song that God wills as… see more

Proto-Isaiah

The first part of the book of Isaiah, chapters 1 to 39: the oracles of the prophet at Jerusalem, the trial of Judah, the sign of Immanuel and the king… see more

Deutero-Isaiah

The second part of the book of Isaiah, chapters 40 to 55, the book of consolation: addressed to the exiles of Babylon, it reveals the one creator and… see more

Trito-Isaiah

The third part of the book of Isaiah, chapters 56 to 66: addressed to the people returned from exile, it calls to justice and true worship, opens… see more

The four Servant Songs

The four songs of Deutero-Isaiah where the Servant of the Lord appears: the chosen one who brings justice to the nations, the light of the nations… see more

The oracles against the nations

The great block of Isaiah 13 to 23, where the judgment of God passes the powers of the world in review: the God of all the earth, the fall of… see more

The Woes of Isaiah

Chapters 28 to 33 of Isaiah, a series of “Woe!” over Judah and Jerusalem. Each cry denounces a false security in which the people place their trust… see more

The Plague and the Day of the Lord

The book of Joel opens on an invasion of locusts that ravages the whole land, and makes of it the sign of a greater threat. From the prophet who… see more

Conversion and the Spirit Poured Out

The heart of the book of Joel: to the call to rend one’s heart answers the pity of God, who restores the harvests and makes up even the devoured… see more

The Judgment of the Nations and the Salvation of Zion

The last chapter of Joel: God gathers the nations in the valley of Jehoshaphat to judge them for scattering his people and trafficking his own. From… see more

Amos, the Shepherd Prophet

The setting of the book of Amos: the first of the writing prophets, a shepherd of Tekoa in Judah, sent around 760 before Jesus Christ to the northern… see more

The Judgment of the Nations and of Israel

Amos’s indictment. The oracles against the neighboring nations (Damascus, Gaza, Tyre, Edom, Ammon, Moab), then against Judah, tighten the accusation… see more

The Visions and the Rejected Worship

The five visions by which God shows the coming judgment, with the clash between Amos and the priest Amasias at Bethel. The worship of Israel rejected… see more

Justice, the Day of the Lord, and Hope

The great themes of the book of Amos and its epilogue. The call to conversion, the day of the Lord turned to darkness for the guilty, Israel’s… see more

Nahum and the Assyrian Empire

The book of Nahum, a poem devoted to the fall of Nineveh, capital of the Assyrian Empire. The prophet Nahum, whose name means consolation. Assyria… see more

The God Who Judges and Who Saves

The first chapter of Nahum, which draws the portrait of the God who comes to judge Nineveh. His manifestation in power, his patience that grants time… see more

The Fall of Nineveh

Chapters 2 and 3 of Nahum, the fall of Nineveh. The assault on the city and the opened river gates, the taking and the plunder, the deserted lions’… see more

Haggai and the Rebuilding of the Temple

The setting of the book of Haggai: the prophet sent in 520 before Jesus Christ to move the people returned from exile to rebuild the Temple of… see more

The Four Oracles

Haggai’s four messages, delivered from the sixth to the ninth month of the year 520 before Jesus Christ: the reproach to a people leaving the Temple… see more

The Glory of the Second Temple

The second Temple, more modest than Solomon’s, nonetheless received the promise of a greater glory. This promise pointed to a presence: the coming of… see more

The Prophet and His Time

The Book of Zechariah at the threshold of its time: a prophet raised up in 520 before Jesus Christ to relaunch the rebuilding of the Temple. From the… see more

The Eight Night Visions

The eight visions Zechariah receives in a single night, from the edges of the world to the heart of Jerusalem and within the hearts: the horseman… see more

Joshua, the Branch and the Crown

The summit of the first part of Zechariah: the announcement of the Branch to Joshua the high priest, the stone with seven eyes, the symbolic crowning… see more

Fasting and Restoration

The end of the first part of Zechariah: a question about the fasts of mourning, and God’s answer that first sets the heart right. From true fasting… see more

First Oracle: The King Who Comes

The first of the two great oracles of the second part of Zechariah, chapters 9 to 11: the oracle against the nations, the humble king who enters on a… see more

Second Oracle: The Pierced One

The second of the two great oracles of Zechariah, chapters 12 and 13: Jerusalem besieged and delivered, become a stone no one lifts without being… see more

The Day of the Lord

The last chapter of Zechariah and the great Day of the Lord, when God comes in person to judge and to reign. The final battle for Jerusalem and the… see more

Jesus and Nicodemus

A teacher of the Law comes by night to question Christ, who reveals to him that one must be born again, of water and the Spirit, to see the kingdom of… see more

Jesus before Pilate

Before the Roman governor who can sentence him to death, Christ reveals himself as king of a kingdom not of this world and witness to the truth, while… see more

Abraham Saw My Day

In a long dispute at the Temple over descent from Abraham, Christ declares that Abraham saw his day beforehand and rejoiced, and that he himself is… see more

Let the Dead Bury Their Dead

A saying of Christ that seems to forbid a son to bury his father. What it teaches: the call of God comes before everything, and the most sacred duty yields to it.

Buy a Sword

At the Last Supper, Christ tells the Apostles to buy a sword. This sword announces the time of trial, and that very night Christ forbids Peter to use it.

Turning the Other Cheek, the Cloak and the Mile

By this word of the Sermon on the Mount, Christ calls to renounce personal vengeance and to overcome evil with good.

The baptism of Christ

The baptism of Jesus at the Jordan is his consecration as priest. John, a priest after Aaron, washes him in the water, and the Spirit descends upon… see more

The finger of God

Under the trap set for him by the scribes and Pharisees, Jesus reveals himself. By writing with his finger on the ground, he shows himself the author… see more

The prologues and the coming of Christ

The four Gospels open the coming of Christ through four doors: the eternal Word in John, the royal line in Matthew, the ascent back to Adam in Luke… see more

The preparation for the ministry

Before the public life, John appears in the wilderness to prepare the way: he preaches conversion, baptises in the Jordan and points to Jesus as the… see more

The first year: the inauguration

The public life opens in Jerusalem: the cleansing of the Temple, the night conversation with Nicodemus on birth of water and Spirit, the serpent… see more

The second year: popularity

The second year unfolds in Galilee: rejected at Nazareth, Jesus settles at Capernaum, calls his disciples and teaches with authority. He heals and… see more

The third year: the opposition

The third year sees the opposition harden. Withdrawn into pagan land, Jesus receives the faith of a foreign woman, then, at Caesarea, Peter confesses… see more

Holy Week

The last week of Christ, from the royal entry into Jerusalem to the tomb. The first days in the Temple: the cursed fig tree, the cleansing, the… see more

The Resurrection and the Glorification

The forty days of the risen Christ, from the empty tomb to the Ascension. On Easter morning: the open tomb, the appearance to Mary Magdalene, then to… see more

The Canon and the Deuterocanonical Books

The canon is the list of the inspired books. The Catholic Bible numbers seven more than the Protestant one, the deuterocanonicals, kept since the… see more

Slavery in the Bible

The Bible knows slavery and regulates it in its laws. The Law of Moses softens and bounds servitude, punishes man-stealing with death, and keeps the… see more

Wars of Extermination in the Bible

The Bible commands that certain peoples be devoted to the anathema: the extermination of the nations of Canaan, then of Amalek. These orders strike… see more

The Sacraments

The seven signs instituted by Christ, by which he communicates his grace: efficacious signs that produce what they represent, they draw their power… see more

Anger and Meekness

Anger is first a passion, neither good nor bad, that zeal can sanctify and vice can corrupt. To understand where the line runs, and then what remedy holds it, engages the whole of the inner life.

Fear and Trust

Fear before Scripture and its remedy: trust in God. From the broken trust of Adam to the perfect love that casts out fear, every “Do not be afraid” of… see more

Sadness and Consolation

Sadness before Scripture and its remedy: the God of all consolation. The tears of Christ who weeps and who consoles, the lament the Psalms teach to… see more

Pride and Humility

Pride and humility before Scripture: the disordered love of one’s own excellence and the truth of the creature who has received everything. From the… see more

Judging One’s Neighbour

Christ forbids condemning one’s neighbour, but not discerning good from evil: to judge the act without judging the heart, and to replace condemnation with mercy.

Resentment and Forgiveness

Resentment shuts the heart in the offence received; Christ commands forgiveness, without measure and from the heart, and gives the means to reach it even when it is hard.

Infant Baptism

Why the Church baptises newborns, who cannot yet believe: a practice from the origins, founded on the gratuity of grace, the promise made to children… see more

The Real Presence

Answers to the objections on the Eucharist: that the real presence is only a symbol, that the Mass and adoration offend the unique sacrifice of… see more

Mary, Mother of God

Answers to the objections raised against Mary: Mother of God, the Immaculate Conception, her perpetual virginity, her Assumption, and the honour given… see more

Sola Scriptura

Why the principle of ’Scripture alone’ collapses: a rule the Bible does not teach and which refutes itself, the Tradition it commands us to hold, the… see more

Once Saved, Always Saved

The doctrine of unconditional eternal security in the light of Scripture: why salvation, once received, must be kept, in perseverance to the end.

Sola Fide

The doctrine of justification by faith alone in the light of Scripture: why the faith that saves is a living faith, active through charity.

The Intercession of the Saints and Angels

The intercession of the saints and angels rests on the communion of saints. Three objections, the prohibition of consulting the dead, idolatry, and… see more

Freedom and Responsibility

What reason establishes about human freedom: the power to determine oneself, attested by the experience of deliberation; the link between freedom and… see more

The Moral Conscience

What reason establishes about conscience: the judgment by which the intelligence discerns, in the concrete act, the good to do and the evil to avoid.… see more

Doubt and the Moral Systems

How to act when one does not know whether an act is permitted or forbidden. One cannot act in doubt without first seeking to remove it; but when the… see more

Doing Evil for a Good

Why a good end never justifies an evil means. The structure of the moral act (object, end, circumstances) and the fact that a single evil element… see more

Love

What loving is, at root: to will a good. The forms of love the Greek distinguishes, the love of a thing and the love of a person, love as an act of… see more