Tanachian worldview
The Parashah Project opens a window into the way Scripture was meant to be seen: as a seamless, Spirit-breathed whole. The Jewish writers of the New Testament lived and breathed this world. Their imaginations were shaped by the Tanach (תנ״ך)—the Torah, the Prophets, and the Writings—and Yeshua Himself taught from and fulfilled its message.
To read the Bible through a Tanachian lens is to recover that same way of seeing. It reframes our understanding of doctrine, not through the filters of later traditions or centuries of anti-Judaic bias, but through the oldest and richest Judeo-Christian patterns of interpretation. Instead of fragmenting the Bible into disconnected books or testaments, a Tanachian worldview shows its unity—threaded together from Genesis to Revelation by God’s covenant purposes.
For believers today, this perspective does more than sharpen understanding. It nurtures a deeper love for the God of Israel, a stronger connection with our Jewish roots, and a clearer vision of God’s unfolding Kingdom. The ultimate goal is nothing less than what Yeshua Himself prayed for: greater unity with God and with one another, a foretaste of the restoration of all things in His reign.
To see the Bible Tanachianly is to see it whole.
