Shows podcast through Hebrew Nation Online link to their most recent podcasts.
Shows By Title
- 2 Stix Ann & Stephen McLeod
- Adventures in Odyssey Focus on the Family
- Ancient Roads: Real Israel Talk Radio Avi Ben Mordechai
- Bondservant Ministries Garry Capps
- The Bride of Messiah Richard Ruhling
- Character in Context Tyler Rosenquist
- Come Out of Her My People Mark Call
- Coral Island Focus on the Family
- Daily Audio Torah Laura Densmore
- Days of Noah Bonnie Harvey, LA Marzulli
- Dr. Deb Today Deb Wiley
- Drive Time Friday Al McCarn, Jeff Gilbert, Mark Call
- Flashpoint Bonnie Harvey
- Focus on Israel Eddie Chumney
- Foundations for Life Michael Clayton
- From Stone to Flesh David Jones
- Haven’t You Heard Douglas Foster
- Healing For The Nations Lauralee, A Modern Samaritan Woman
- Healthy Talk Dr. Asa
- The Heartland Connection Zac Waller
- Hey! Let’s Midrash! The McDonalds
- His Word Heals Dawn Hagedorn
- Home School How Tos Renee Ellison
- Identifying the Messiah – Steven ben Nun
- Image Bearers Radio – Joe Aymond
- In the Spirit of Josiah – Lee Miller
- Jackson Snyder Presents Jackson Snyder
- Jay in the Way Jay Scher
- Jerusalem Next Kimberly Rogers-Brown
- Kadosh Shachah Robert Randall
- Kimberly Current Kimberly Rogers-Brown
- Kid’s Corner Focus on the Family
- Lion & Lamb Ministries Monte Judah
- Lion’s Path Cole Davis
- Live Answers from the Scriptures Jay Scher
- Living Torah Mike Clayton
- Measure the Pattern Debbie Goode, Joseph Goode, Scott Paddock
- Messianic Message Kimberly Rogers-Brown
- Monday Morning Show – Remnant Road Al McCarn, Daniel Holdings
- New2Torah
- Now is The Time Steve Berkson
- Our Hebraic Heritage Eddie Chumney
- Prayer Nation Force Carolee Coleman, Kelly Ferari Mills
- Prepping 2.0
- Rabbi’s Son Bill Bullock
- Ranger Bill Focus on the Family
- The Real Side Joe Messina
- Reconnect Barry Phillips
- Reunion Roadmap B’Ney Yosef North America
- Revealing the Truth David Brett
- Rhyme and Reason Ian Michaels
- Setting History Straight Linda Watson
- Shabbat Night Live Michael Rood
- There Has to Be More Carol Foster
- Thursday Morning Show – Wake Up Perry Gerhart, Ron Gray
- Torah and Testimony Hezikiah Hass
- Torah Class Holissa Alewine
- Torah Home Anne Elliott
- Torah Teachers Round Table Mark Call, Rob Miller
- Tuesday Morning Show – 3 Wise Guys Rollyn Betts, Aaron Huddart, Tuck Meyes
- Wisdom in Torah Rico Cortes
- Wonderful Things Bill Bullock
- Yahweh’s Restoration Fellowship Pastor Randy Follard
Shows By Host
- Aaron Huddart Tuesday Morning Show – 3 Wise Guys
- Al McCarn Monday Morning Show – Remnant Road, Drive Time Friday
- Ann & Stephen McLeod 2 Stix
- Anne Elliott Torah Home
- Avi Ben Mordechai Ancient Roads: Real Israel Talk Radio
- Barry Phillips Reconnect
- Bill Bullock, Rabbi’s Son, Wonderful Things
- B’ney Yosef North America Reunion Roadmap
- Bonnie Harvey Flashpoint, Days of Noah
- Carol Foster There Has to Be More
- Carolee Coleman Prayer Nation Force
- Cole Davis Lion’s Path
- Daniel Holdings Monday Morning Show – Remnant Road
- David Brett Revealing the Truth
- David Jones From Stone to Flesh
- Dawn Hagedorn His Word Heals
- Deb Wiley Dr. Deb Today
- Debbie Goode Measure the Pattern
- Douglas Foster Haven’t You Heard
- Dr. Asa Healthy Talk
- Eddie Chumney Focus on Israel, Our Hebraic Heritage
- Focus on the Family Adventures in Odyssey, Kid’s Corner, Coral Island, Ranger Bill
- Garry Capps Bondservant Ministries
- Gus Bergstrom Tuesday Morning Show – 3 Wise Guys
- Hezikiah Hass Torah and Testimony
- Holissa Alewine Torah Class
- Ian Michaels Rhyme and Reason
- Jackson Snyder Jackson Snyder Presents
- Jay Scher Jay in the Way, Live Answers from the Scriptures
- Jeff Gilbert Drive Time Friday
- Joe Aymond – Image Bearers Radio
- Joseph Goode Measure the Pattern
- Kelly Ferari Mills Prayer Nation Force
- Kimberly Rogers-Brown Jerusalem Next, Messianic Message, Kimberly Current
- LA Marzulli Days of Noah
- Laura Densmore Daily Audio Torah
- Lauralee, A Modern Samaritan Woman Healing For The Nations
- Lee Miller In the Spirit of Josiah
- Linda Watson Setting History Straight
- Mark Call Drive Time Friday, Come Out of Her My People, Torah Teachers Round Table
- The McDonalds Hey! Let’s Midrash!
- Michael Clayton Foundations for Life, Living Torah
- Michael Rood Shabbat Night Live
- Monte Judah Lion & Lamb Ministries
- Perry Gerhart Thursday Morning Show – Wake Up
- Pastor Randy Follard Yahweh’s Restoration Fellowship
- Renee Ellison Home School How Tos
- Richard Ruhling The Bride of Messiah
- Rick Gustin Tuesday Morning Show – 3 Wise Guys
- Rico Cortes Wisdom in Torah
- Rob Miller Torah Teachers Round Table
- Robert Randall Kadosh Shachah
- Rollyn Betts Tuesday Morning Show – 3 Wise Guys
- Ron Gray Thursday Morning Show – Wake Up
- Scott Paddock Measure the Pattern
- Steve Berkson Now is the Time
- Steven ben Nun Identifying the Messiah
- Tuck Meyes Tuesday Morning Show – 3 Wise Guys
- Tyler Rosenquist Character in Context
- Zac Waller The Heartland Connection
Now Is The Time with Rabbi Steve Berkson | Are You Covenanted? Part 32
What kind of relationship do you think you have with our Creator? Do you believe you are “in covenant” with the Almighty? What are the two things needed to have the correct relationship with YHVH? What determines whether or not you have a relationship with Him?...
Dr Hollisa Alewine – A Better Torah Starter (with guest Timothy Herron)
A Better Torah Starter
Yitro
The Torah Portion Study Habit
This week’s Torah portion is Yitro, or Jethro, named after Moses’ father-in-law who had some very practical ideas for the fledgling nation. It should make us grin to see Moses fall into a very common trap, thinking he had to do everything on his own instead of assembling and teaching a team to help him carry the load.
Why do leaders do this?
Often it’s from a fear that he or she protects the sheep from harmful influences, others who might lead or teach the people astray. It’s a heightened sense of responsibility when the leader feels there is no one else qualified. Very understandable, but needs improvement.
Sometimes it is ego-centric. The leader likes being the leader and having everyone consult him/her on every issue. He/she likes the feeling of power that comes with being in charge. Needs heart improvement. The Father’s sheep are not there to boost our self-esteem.
There are probably lots of other reasons, but I suspect the best of Moses, which is what we should do. Suspect the best intentions. In spite of his good intentions, Moses was wearing himself out as well as those who need help and guidance! In fact, the sages say, Yitro is pointing out that it’s disrespectful to the people to make them stand in line all day. Don’t you feel disrespected when you have to sit in the waiting room for an appointment for hours? Your time is valuable, too!
And how many times did Moses have to repeat himself each day? What if everyone who had a similar question could be addressed in a particular court? Local judges could take on the responsibility of teaching the most common laws and applications so that it became common knowledge, like what happens when four cars approach a four-way stop at the same time. Not that they were driving cars in the wilderness. I’m sure it was donkeys or ATVs.
Yitro’s practical advice sparks Moses into training and setting up judges to help him carry the load so that he can become the Supreme Court to hear cases that the primary leaders and appeals courts couldn’t handle. This was a better way. Our medical system implements this model to train physicians. In a teaching hospital, you might first see a med student who does an initial exam and workup, then there will be an ascending level of expertise called in to treat the patient and train those learning: interns, residents, attendings.
Yitro’s name comes from yoter in Hebrew: more. Yoter tov is better, more good. More good better. Yitro reminds us that sometimes there is a more good better way of doing things, and that way is more respectful of people’s time, need, and their own responsibilities. Since the Israelites were newcomers to the Torah, they needed an appropriate level of instruction to get started.
This is a stop sign. It is red with white letters and has eight sides.
The letters spell STOP.
It means to come to a complete stop.
Look in all directions.
If more then one of you approach the stop sign at the same time, then let the donkey on the right go first.
Isn’t that easier and more good better than thousands of donkeys galloping around the wilderness trying to figure out which Hebrew word means “Stop”?
On this week’s Shabbat livestream, I’ve invited Timothy Herron to join us and teach a sample lesson from his Seedtime and Harvest workbook series designed for newcomers to the Torah. Like Yitro, Tim said, “There’s a better way to introduce folks to the weekly Torah portions.” Many people begin to study Torah haphazardly, or maybe they never start because they’re discouraged by all those Hebrew words we’re using and how comfortable we seem with feasts and commandments they’ve never studied. New language, new laws…no wonder it’s intimidating!
Tim’s workbooks ease in the beginner to Torah with smaller bites of information and an introduction to the structure of the Torah portions. The point is to help the learner establish a study habit instead of a reading habit. Anyone can read through the Bible in a year. Not everyone remembers or understands what he or she read at the end of that year. This Seedtime and Harvest “Torah Tuesday” series introduces good study habits and new words in a manner that the beginner can acquire without feeling overwhelmed:
Five volumes – one for each book of the Torah based on the 54 traditional Torah Portions.
Each volume contains:
Torah Portion name in Hebrew and English
Hebrew Mini which introduces the reader to Hebrew letters.
Nutshell is seven highlights of each portion.
Seven Readings from each portion with selected commentary
Suggestions for further study
Simple Thoughts by the author
If you’ve been looking for a good starter program for friends, family, or your Bible study, it is worth checking out this preview lesson on our Shabbat YouTube livestream. And if you’re looking for the accompanying videos to the study, they have now begun airing on Hebraic Roots Network. More will be added soon.
Road to Calvary: Christ and Christ Crucified!
Audio reading: Exodus 25:17-30, Matthew 27:15-31, Psalm 33:12-22, Prov 9:1-6 Audio reading: Exodus 25:31-26:14, Matthew 27:32-66, Psalm 34:1-10, Prov 9:7-8 Sometimes we have to go back to basics. We have to go back to our essential core truth: We are ALL sinners, the...
Mark Call – Parsha “Mishpatim” teaching from Shabbat Shalom Mesa
This week's Torah portion is perhaps one of the most appropriately-named in the Torah; parsha Mishpatim (Exodus chapters 21 through 24) contains a major helping of the 'mishpatim' or ordinances/judgments, even 'rules,' in the Book. The Erev Shabbat reading outlines...
Flashpoint
Is the world "outta time"? Does Poland's Notice-to-All-Air-Missions, concerning Feb. 5-May 5, indicate WWIII within this time frame? What's happening in Poland that could be so sensitive? Has the "petro dollar" been exterminated? What's happening at the Gaza/Egypt...
Calming Harp Episode #159
In Psalm 4, David is professing his perfect trust in the plans and purposes of God, no matter what the world is planning to do. Today, as we are inundated by troubling news around the world, we must renew our efforts to focus totally on our Heavenly Father's plans for...
Drive Time Friday
Is this the week that the once-free nation finally realizes the Emperor fuhrer has no clothes? And no brain? David Justice and Mark Call discuss the revelations, and the remedy.
Mark Call – Daily News Update Friday
News, commentary, and an extended look back at the week where, just maybe, a once-free nation can no longer deny that a senile puppet in adult pampers was never a real 'president' anyway, ending Saturday, 10 February, 2024.
Mark Call – Daily News Update Wednesday
News and commentary for Wednesday, 7 February, 2024.
Mark Call – Daily News Update Tuesday
News, commentary, and even some news about the news, for Tuesday, 6 February, 2024.
Mark Call – Daily News Update Monday
News and commentary for Monday, 5 February, 2024. When 'they' think you can't fight back, they will RUB your FACE in it!
Dr Hollisa Alewine – Footsteps of Messiah Part 97 (The Day of the LORD – Understanding the Chosen)
For believers in Yeshua who observe the Shabbat, we are reminded frequently…make that every week…that most of the world has not chosen to honor the Seventh Day as His chosen day. For many, they’ve simply not been taught about it. For others, they’ve been taught incorrectly. For others, they know, and they don’t choose to honor it. It’s a matter of choice. Our choices reflect both what we
1) understand
and/or
2) prefer
In the internet age, we are harassed multiple times per day to “rate” a product or a service. With a greedy disregard for the value of a purchaser’s time, the vendor expects to take a minute, five minutes, or even longer, for the purchaser to fill out surveys and questionnaires on preferences in order to help the seller adjust products and selling techniques to make more money.
Shouldn’t they be paying us?
I don’t work for free in my secular job, only in ministry. You probably don’t either. There is rarely an offer of more than a trinket of thanks in return for our valuable time, but sometimes we give it to them because we are flattered that someone would want to know what we think or we have an opportunity to vent even though a real human being is not likely to see or care what we write. In that sense, the business takes our money, takes uncompensated time, and then largely ignores the specific concern and buries it in a mass of number data. What a deal!
The process depends upon what we choose. Why did we choose that product? That company? That day? That salesperson?
Now here’s the question: Because we chose that particular product from that particular company on that particular day from that particular salesperson, does it mean we HATED every other choice?
Of course not. We simply did our shopping and research (hopefully), and we preferred one over the others. Choice. We found the right thing for us personally. Unfortunately, many approach Shabbat and the Word with a similar mindset. They see it as a personal choice of what best suits them rather than a process of learning what their Creator has chosen and mirroring His choices.
Esau is a great example of one who knew what to do, yet chose differently. This is why Esau, Edom, “The Red One” represents the untamed appetites of the soul: appetite, emotion, desire, and intellect. It is a tremendous life force designed by the Creator, yet in its design, the spirit of a man was chosen to rule over it. It doesn’t mean Elohim hates the soul in an emotional sense: quite the contrary! He loves us so much that He sent His Son to save our rowdy souls. The spirit of a man comes from above, from Elohim Himself. He wants that Spirit (Ruach HaKodesh) to rule over the soul. He CHOSE that modality.
• The oracle of the word of the LORD to Israel through Malachi. “I have loved you,” says the LORD. But you say, “How have You loved us?” “Was not Esau Jacob’s brother?” declares the LORD. “Yet I have loved Jacob; but I have hated Esau, and I have made his mountains a desolation and appointed his inheritance for the jackals of the wilderness.” (Mal 1:1-3)
It can be confusing when reading Scripture to understand being “chosen.” In context, it can simply mean preferring one over the other, not hating the one who was not chosen. Because we associate hate with an extreme emotion, we lose the grasp that what is chosen is loved in the sense of preference and precedence in certain matters, and what is hated is what is ranked beneath it in certain mattters.
In our culture, we rarely use “hate” if the feeling of loathing and disgust is not attached to it. Herein lies the problem. The human experience is only a parable of reality, which is found in our Creator. Our experience of emotion, desire, and intellect only mirrors His, but His is perfect. When we see love and hate only as strong emotions, then we can miss the nuances of Scripture where He is teaching us the importance of good choices based on His preferences instead of ours. He’s not offering us a survey to find out which of the commandments we prefer or even if we prefer to do them at all. He’s observing us.
The times in Scripture when people felt rejected, they also felt unloved, so they acted in reprehensible ways. Kain killed Abel. Joseph’s brothers sold him into slavery. King Saul tried to kill David, and so on. Their story is our story. The problem is that when Adonai expresses a preference for those who do His will instead of their own, we miss the issue, just like Kain. Kain knew what to do in order to have his sacrifice respected. That’s all he had to do. Choose and do what Elohim preferred. Here is another example of the choosing-lesson:
“He also rejected the tent of Joseph, and did not choose the tribe of Ephraim, but chose the tribe of Judah, Mount Zion which He loved.” (Ps 78:67-68)
Joseph/Ephraim were not rejected as people, only their territory as the resting place of Adonai’s glory. Instead, the Judah/Benjamin territory was already chosen as The Place of the Temple Mount for the peoples to come worship. The Father loved Mount Zion, which means He loved His People…all His People who would go up there to worship. It would be a House of Prayer for ALL nations to worship. He loved the world. It is hard to accept “God so loved the world” if we trip over “He rejected Joseph and did not choose Ephraim.”
In context, the choice indicates the great plan of salvation and the geography of how it will be accomplished, not a qualitative assessment of everyone descended from Joseph. We do tend to get stuck when we’re not chosen for something, and if we can’t step back and decide
1) is it a “Kain Question,” of whether I need to modify my own behavior and choices to do better?
or
2) does it really have nothing to do with me and my choices, only how a greater plan is being executed? Divine plans and design.
The world really does struggle with words like Zion, Zionism, Zionist. Why?
• Because I love Zion, I will not keep still. Because my heart yearns for Jerusalem, I cannot remain silent. I will not stop praying for her until her righteousness shines like the dawn, and her salvation blazes like a burning torch. (Is 62:1)
• Then the angel said to me, “Shout this message for all to hear: ‘This is what the LORD of Heaven’s Armies says: My love for Jerusalem and Mount Zion is passionate and strong.’” (Zec 1:14)’
• “This is what the LORD of Heaven’s Armies says: ‘My love for Mount Zion is passionate and strong; I am consumed with passion for Jerusalem!’” (Zec 8:2)
Zion and Jerusalem are the Covenant People walking in righteousness, assembling at “The Place.” The Father has passionate love for them, for they are instrumental to His ultimate plan.
Zionists are people who obey their Creator and choose what He chooses.
Righteous nations and people accept this pattern. Like Joseph and Ephraim’s territory, their rejection was not being left unloved and scorned, the way human beings hate, but to highlight the way of His choice so they could find that path of obedience to salvation in Yeshua, who will rule and reign from Jerusalem. The Father loves and chooses those who love and choose what He loves and chooses. It is His way of guiding the people of the earth to Him because He loves them all.
Jeroboam set up golden calves in Beth-El of Ephraim and in Dan because he didn’t agree with Adonai’s choice of geography or tribes and priests in the design. Because he did not love what his Creator loved or choose what He chose, he’d do anything to divert the chosen people from the chosen place so that they would lose their identity as those who loved and chose Zion (Tzion). “For out of Tzion shall the Torah go forth, and the Word of the LORD from Jerusalem.” (Is 2:3)
Those who reject Tzion and Tzionists try to dominate or control The Place and People, thinking it will destroy the terms of the Covenant, the Word, the Torah. Tzionism is to choose the Father’s plan. Since Judah has leadership, the nations believe controlling or exterminating Jews is the first step toward ruling the whole earth. After that, re-directing the obedience of the nations is next. Esau has always coveted his father’s love, yet did not love the Father enough to obey His plan. “Jacob” obeys, in which case the Father “loves” Jacob and “hates” Esau. In the earth-story, Isaac emotionally loved Esau in spite of his disobedience. In Biblical language, love and hate can be a matter of preference, not necessarily an emotion of hatred.
Let’s extend this principle to the Lord’s Day, Shabbat:
• “If because of the sabbath, you turn your foot from doing your own pleasure on My holy day, and call the sabbath a delight, the holy day of the LORD honorable, and honor it, desisting from your own ways, from seeking your own pleasure, and speaking your own word…”
In the English text, “your own word” is a bit of a stretch from the simple Hebrew word davar. Take a look at the concise definition of davar:
?????? (H1696)
speech, word, speaking, thing
speech
saying, utterance
word, words
business, occupation, acts, matter, case, something, manner (by extension)
The translators are reading more into the simple word davar. They see “your OWN word” rather than word. The reason for this might be due to the many ways davar is translated in its many contexts:
The KJV translates Strong’s H1697 in the following manner: word (807x), thing (231x), matter (63x), acts (51x), chronicles (38x), saying (25x), commandment (20x), miscellaneous (204x).
What sticks out is the number of miscellaneous words davar is used for: 204!
A davar is a word. A davar is a thing. In Hebrew, the word is the thing.
In context, the translators see a contrast between Shabbat behavior, thinking, emotions, and yes, choices versus Days 1-6. It is not that Adonai rejects Days 1-6 to destroy them. Each of those days is full of goodness and good choices. He’s not un-creating Days 1-6. He is, however, choosing and designating Day 7 like he chose and designated a people and place called Tzion. We must choose to let His choosing prevail, and help advance even, the purpose of that choosing by also choosing to honor and enjoy it differently than the other six days of the week.
In fact, all the things we’ve prepared in the first six days of the week become part of Day Seven. If we didn’t prepare it on one of those other six days, then we don’t have it on Shabbat. It’s not a love-unloved, hated-not hated proposition in the sense of emotion, but of design. The soul was chosen for its purpose; the spirit was chosen for its purpose; the body was chosen for its purpose. They work together under the discipline of the spirit to live, not to chop off soul and body. We’d call that being dead!
Esau’s territory will be made a desolation as a discipline for not accepting the choices and design of Elohim. The soul will finally see the death and devastation in the body, formed from earth, that is caused when it does not choose to follow the Creator’s will and design. Likewise, all the 7s in the Book of Revelation hint to the devastation the world must experience in order to acknowledge His choices, starting with the first principle, Shabbat, the Seventh Day.
Understanding the many uses of the word davar, now it makes sense in context. “Your own words” are business words, occupation words, preparation words, the things you talk about and do on weekdays. We can reject those conversations and things in order to choose the words and things of Shabbat.
• The Gemara cites what we learned with regard to the following passage: “If you keep your feet from breaking, from pursuing your affairs on My holy day, and you call Shabbat a delight…, the Lord’s holy day honorable, and you honor it by not going your own way, from attending to your affairs and speaking idle words.” Mishneh Torah, Shabbat 113a:14
Idle words are reik, or empty, worthless. A word that would be valuable if spoken Sunday-Friday is worthless and empty on Shabbat. Words that would be valuable, honorable and delightful on a different day are not on Shabbat. By choosing the Shabbat and its instructions for ceasing from creative work, we exercise a choice to be chosen and loved.
We choose to rest in our salvation in Yeshua, knowing we cannot add or subtract anything from what was already finished on Day Six. All we can do is walk in and honor the Davar that was established “from the foundation of the world.” It is not ours to re-draw the boundaries either of Creation or the Word. It is ours to hear and do. To honor and respect. To delight in and rejoice in.
When we choose and love HIS Day, we have lots of personal choices WITHIN the boundary of Shabbat. What to eat, what to wear, who to have over for a meal, what Torah discussion we can have that is not idle, empty, controversial, or likely to kindle a fire. The Father’s love is strong, passionate, and eternal toward us. Chosen.










