Tuesday, May 5, 2026

Insurgency: Dwindling NPA Force

Recently the Army engaged the NPA in a series of clashes in Samar. Rather than being a show of force the Army says it only exposes their weakness. 

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1273757

The Philippine Army said the recent series of armed encounters between government forces and remnants of the communist New People’s Army (NPA) in Samar indicates a weakening of the rebels’ strength.

On Monday, the Philippine Army’s 8th Infantry Division (8ID) said the NPA’s losses in recent years have forced its members to engage in short, sporadic clashes while struggling to maintain cohesion.

“Despite their attempts to evade government forces, our troops remain relentless in pursuing these armed groups. Their abandonment of their fallen comrades once again exposes their disregard for human life among their ranks,” according to the 8ID statement.

The military issued the statement following a brief firefight on April 24 in the hinterlands of Barangay Caulayanan, Motiong, Samar, against remnants of the Yakal platoon of the NPA’s sub-regional committee under the Eastern Visayas regional party committee.

After the encounter, government troops recovered two bodies of unidentified rebels abandoned by their comrades, along with an M14 rifle and a .45-caliber pistol.

The 8ID emphasized that the latest encounter is another significant setback to the already weakened communist terrorist group (CTG) operating in Eastern Visayas.

“The neutralization of these armed individuals and the recovery of their firearms further degrade the CTG’s operational capability in Samar. This reflects the sustained pressure our troops on the ground are applying," it said.

Focused military operations continue in the area to track down the fleeing NPA members and prevent further threats to the peace and security of the communities.

The clash occurred a week after a 17-year-old rebel was killed and several firearms were recovered following a series of armed encounters with NPA members in the hinterlands of Barangay Salvacion in Jiabong, Samar.

Also on the same day, government troops uncovered a cache of firearms in Barangay San Isidro, Sta. Rita. The recovered weapons included two .357-caliber pistols, three .38-caliber revolvers, and two .22-caliber firearms.

On April 16, government troops clashed with NPA remnants in the periphery of Silvino Lobos, Northern Samar.

The military reiterated the government’s resolve to protect its citizens and uphold national security, warning that continued armed resistance would only lead to further loss of life and hardship for communist members and their families.

According to the Army the rebels are only able "to engage in short, sporadic clashes while struggling to maintain cohesion."  Likewise the NTF-ELCAC says the April  19th encounter which killed 19 NPA rebels reveals that they are a dwindling force because they have recruited minors and foreigners. 

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1273764

A ranking official of the National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict (NTF-ELCAC) on Monday said recent incidents in Negros Occidental and Samar showcased a troubling shift in the recruitment practices of the New People’s Army (NPA), marked by the increasing involvement of foreign nationals and minors in active combat.

NTF-ELCAC executive director Undersecretary Ernesto Torres Jr., in a statement, said this development raised serious concerns about the trajectory of the armed movement.

He also cited the April 19 armed encounter in Toboso, Negros Occidental where two American nationals —Lyle Prijoles and Kai Dana-Rene Sorem— were among the 19 NPA combatants killed.

Their deaths highlight how individuals from outside the country are now being drawn into local armed hostilities, he added.

"Also among those killed in the same encounter- as identified in the PNP (Philippine National Police) investigation and validated by their claimant-relatives -- were two minors, Jolinda Jimena (16) and Dexter Patoja (17). Their presence in a combat environment highlights the grave risks faced by young individuals who become involved in armed conflict," Torres said.

In a separate incident in Samar on April 17, another minor identified as alias “John Paul” was killed during an armed encounter as reported by the 8th Infantry Division.

This brings to three the number of minors killed in combat within the same period. Taken together, these cases present a pattern that cannot be dismissed.

The involvement of foreign nationals alongside minors points to a widening recruitment scope that extends beyond traditional local bases and into more vulnerable sectors.

"The recruitment and use of minors in armed conflict constitute serious violations of International Humanitarian Law, as well as Republic Act No. 11188 (Special Protection of Children in Situations of Armed Conflict Act), Republic Act No. 7610, and the Philippines’ obligations under the Optional Protocol to the Convention on the Rights of the Child on the Involvement of Children in Armed Conflict," Torres said.

He said those responsible, particularly elements of the Communist Party of the Philippines –New People's Army–National Democratic Front, must be made to account for these violations of both domestic and international law.

He said these laws exist to ensure that children are protected from exploitation and exposure to violence.

Torres said the presence of foreign nationals in these encounters further indicates that recruitment efforts have expanded beyond Philippine borders, exposing individuals from the diaspora to the dangers of armed confrontation on the ground.

These developments suggest increasing pressure on the movement to sustain its ranks, reflected in a shift toward drawing from sectors that are either geographically distant or inherently vulnerable, he added.

Torres said this situation calls for heightened awareness and vigilance among families, communities, school administrations and organizations —both in the Philippines and abroad— to ensure that individuals, particularly the youth, are not placed in circumstances that endanger their lives.

"A movement that draws in children and foreign nationals into armed conflict is not demonstrating strength—it is revealing a critical strain that comes at the cost of human lives," he said.

If the NPA is recruiting foreigners that would hardly mean they are dwindling. That means they are thriving and their cause is seen as just by outsiders.  The NTF-ELCAC calls this development troubling. 

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/2219263/ntf-elcac-flags-widening-npa-recruitment-after-negros-clash

The National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict (NTF-Elcac) has raised concern over what it described as a “troubling shift” in the recruitment practices of the New People’s Army (NPA), citing the alleged involvement of foreign nationals and minors in recent armed encounters in Negros Occidental and Samar.

In a statement on Monday, NTF-Elcac executive director Undersecretary Ernesto Torres Jr. said the April 19 encounter in Toboso, Negros Occidental, where 19 alleged NPA members were killed, reportedly included two American nationals identified as Lyle Prijoles and Kai Dana-Rene Sorem, based on police reports.

“Their deaths underscore how individuals from outside the country are now being drawn into local armed hostilities,” Torres said.

He also said two minors—Jolinda Jimena, 16, and Dexter Patoja, 17—were among those killed in Toboso, based on Philippine National Police findings and confirmation from their relatives.

“Their presence in a combat environment highlights the grave risks faced by young individuals who become involved in armed conflict,” Torres said.

In a separate incident in Samar on April 17, another minor identified as alias “John Paul” was killed in an armed encounter, according to the Philippine Army’s 8th Infantry Division.

This brought to three the number of minors reported killed in combat in April, he said.

“Taken together, these cases present a pattern that cannot be dismissed,” Torres said, adding that the involvement of foreign nationals and minors suggests a widening recruitment reach into more vulnerable sectors.

He said the recruitment and use of minors in armed conflict violate international humanitarian law, as well as Republic Act No. 11188 (Special Protection of Children in Situations of Armed Conflict Act), Republic Act No. 7610, and the Optional Protocol to the Convention on the Rights of the Child on the Involvement of Children in Armed Conflict.

“Those responsible, particularly elements of the CPP–NPA–NDF, must be held accountable for these transgressions of both domestic and international law,” he said.

Torres also urged families, schools, and communities to remain vigilant against recruitment efforts targeting the youth.

“A movement that draws in children and foreign nationals into armed conflict is not demonstrating strength—it is revealing a critical strain that comes at the cost of human lives,” he added.

Meanwhile, the Commission on Human Rights (CHR) in the Negros Island Region (NIR) has begun its investigation into the Toboso encounter.

CHR-NIR chief Vincent Parra said the team visited the encounter site in Barangay Salamanca on Monday and conducted interviews.

They are also set to interview the parents of the two minors reported killed, Parra added.

The CHR has begun investigating the encounter due to claims that many of the dead are civilians. 

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/2218078/independent-probe-sought-into-deadly-negros-encounter

Several groups on Friday called for an independent investigation into the anti-insurgency operation in Toboso, Negros Occidental, that left 19 people dead, including a University of the Philippines (UP) student, a journalist and peasant advocates.

On the sidelines of a protest outside Camp Aguinaldo in Quezon City, Human rights group Karapatan condemned the incident, describing it as as a “massacre” and calling out the military for using “excessive force” in their operations.

“We want to know the truth, what really happened that day. We want a truly independent investigation into what happened because we do not believe those 19 individuals were just killed like chickens,” said Cristina Palabay, Karapatan secretary general.

Earlier this week, the 303rd Infantry Brigade of the Philippine Army said a wanted rebel leader and at least 18 alleged members of the New People’s Army (NPA) were killed by troops of the 79th Infantry Battalion in a series of encounters in Toboso on Sunday.

However, the UP Diliman University Student Council identified one of the fatalities as Alyssa Alano, its education and research councilor. The Altermidya Network also named RJ Ledesma, a coordinator for its Negros Island journalists’ group, among those killed.

Peasant organizations Kilusang Magbubukid ng Pilipinas and Tanggol Magsasaka likewise identified two others as advocates Maureen Keil Santuyo and Errol Wendel.

The Armed Forces of the Philippines maintained that the operation was a “legitimate military operation,” questioning critics over the presence of alleged civilians at the encounter site.

In response, Palabay said civilians and students have legitimate reasons to be in farming communities.

“Why wouldn’t students be there? Those are plantations. There were farmers there,” Palabay asked, noting that Alano was reportedly there for community immersion work.

The NPA also claimed that while some of those killed were rebels, others were civilians and human rights advocates.

Karapatan described the incident as a “massacre,” saying the recurring narrative of armed encounters is being used to justify killings.

“Whether they are combatants or civilians, they should be accorded rights under international humanitarian law. We are a party to the Geneva Conventions,” Palabay said. “It’s repetitive—they justify killings by calling them encounters.”

Field work

The Inquirer sought comment from Army spokesperson Col. Louie Dema-ala but he has yet to respond.

The Human Rights Advocates Negros (HRAN) also urged the Commission on Human Rights (CHR) to conduct an immediate, transparent and impartial investigation into the incident, particularly the killing of Ledesma.

Fr. Melvin Fajardo of HRAN said Ledesma, a writer and editor of Paghimutad-Negros Island Alternative Media, was a noncombatant conducting field work on renewable energy impacts when he was killed.

“No amount of black propaganda can obscure the truth,” Fajardo said, calling for accountability and protection of civilians in militarized areas.

HRAN and allied groups also urged journalists, academic institutions and media organizations to defend press freedom and ensure safer conditions for field reporting.

Peasant and youth groups echoed the call for an independent probe, denouncing killings, militarization of communities, red-tagging and alleged rights violations.

The Committee on the Protection of Academic Freedom and Human Rights (CPAFHR) of UP Diliman condemned the killing of Alano, a political science student of the College of Social Sciences and Philosophy.

‘Not enemies’

It called for a “transparent and impartial investigation,” saying the military’s account labeling the victims as NPA combatants must be independently verified.

“Our youth and activists are not the enemies of the people,” it said, describing Alano as a student leader engaged in advocacy for marginalized farming communities.

It demanded that human rights organizations and response teams be given access to information and resources in order to launch their own investigations.

The AFP however, reiterated that the Toboso operation was a lawful, intelligence-driven military engagement conducted in accordance with rules of engagement and international humanitarian law, stressing that civilian safety was a priority.

It also urged the public to avoid misinformation and support fact-based discussions.

It is claimed that some of the dead were actually human rights workers who were immersed with the farmers. 

https://cebudailynews.inquirer.net/721223/negros-19-fil-am-activist-kai-sorem-once-immersed-with-cebu-farmers

Before she became one of the ‘Negros 19’ — those who were killed in a military clash in Negros Occidental on April 19, 2026 — Fil-Am activist Kai Sorem, 26, spent time in Cebu’s rural communities, an experience peers say shaped her commitment to grassroots work.

Sorem was in Negros in April 2026 for community immersion, when she was killed in a recent military operations in Toboso town.

The Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) said troops encountered alleged members of a communist group. However, several organizations disputed this account. They said those killed were civilians engaged in advocacy and community work.

Among the dead were community journalist RJ Ledesma and student leader Alyssa Alano. Groups described both as individuals who “served marginalized sectors” through immersion and advocacy.

Grounding her advocacy in Cebu

Sorem’s path included time in Cebu, particularly in rural areas where she lived with farmers and volunteers during immersion programs.

A fellow volunteer, Ellef Delfino, recalled meeting Sorem during a weeklong stay in Aloguinsan, Cebu.

“Sa usa ka simana nato nga panag-uban sa BMI [basic masses integration] sa Aloguinsan niaging tuig, nakita nako imong kadasig sa pakigbisog,” she wrote.

(“During our week together in BMI in Aloguinsan last year, I saw your passion for the struggle.”)

BMI is a form of community immersion. Volunteers live with local residents — often in rural or marginalized areas — to better understand their conditions and struggles.

Delfino said Sorem had a clear reason for coming to the Philippines.

“I still remember when you said that you want to come here […] because you want to know the struggles of the Filipinos, hilabi na sa peasants nga sobra nga nakasinati sa pagpanglupig,” she said.

(“[…] especially peasants who have long experienced oppression.”)

From diaspora roots to community work

Sorem grew up in Steilacoom, Washington. Peers described her as compassionate and curious. She studied music education at Central Washington University and later became active in Filipino youth organizing in the United States.

She helped establish Anakbayan South Seattle and served as its founding Solidarity Officer. There, she worked with Filipino migrant communities and youth.

Her work went beyond organizing abroad.

“She wanted to integrate with the Filipino masses,” Delfino said. She noted that Sorem chose to immerse herself in communities despite not growing up in the Philippines.

Music and connection

Sorem also used music to connect with communities. She performed songs that reflected social issues and aspirations for change.

In Cebu, she joined daily activities with residents — from farm work to informal learning sessions. These experiences deepened her understanding of local conditions.

“I still remember nga nangayo ko nimog sigarilyo […] JK and I were teaching them Bisaya while taking off the corn husks,” Delfino added.

(“I still remember when I asked you for a cigarette […] JK and I were teaching them Bisaya while taking off the corn husks.”)

Return — and death in Negros clash

In 2026, Sorem returned to the Philippines to deepen her engagement. She studied local languages and continued immersion work in rural communities.

She was in Negros Occidental when the April operations left 19 people dead.

Human rights groups and organizations linked to the victims have called for an independent investigation. They continue to dispute the military’s version of events and assert that those killed were unarmed civilians.

In Cebu, those who met Sorem remember how she lived — among communities, listening and learning.

“Dili tika makalimtan, bai Kai,” Delfino wrote.

(I will never forget you, Kai.)

The AFP says Kai Sorem and all the others were gun-toting rebels. They are ready for an investigation.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1273762

The Philippine Army (PA) said it is more than willing to face an investigation by the Commission on Human Rights (CHR) into the April 19 clash against the New People's Army (NPA) in Toboso, Negros Occidental.

"We are open to investigation, and the evidence will speak for us," PA spokesperson Col. Louie Dema-ala said in a message to reporters Sunday night.

He also emphasized that those who died in the encounter are "not just mere civilians but armed members of the CPP (Communist Party of the Philippines)/NPA", contrary to the claim of leftist groups.

Dema-ala added that the clash was a legitimate armed encounter against members of the NPA and carried out in accordance with established rules of engagement and with due regard for civilian safety.

"At the same time, we call for a fair, thorough, and impartial investigation into the reported deaths of civilians in Negros Occidental, including those allegedly involving the group of the late Roger Fabillar, also known as 'Jhong,' to ensure that all facts are established and accountability is upheld," he said.

The CHR earlier expressed grave concern over the encounter, where 19 individuals were killed, including student leader Alyssa Alano and community journalist RJ Nichole Ledesma.

The agency, through its office in the Negros Island Region, has initiated an independent investigation.

Information from local human rights advocates prompted coordination with civil society organizations, local authorities, and security forces, including working with the families for the retrieval of the remains in Toboso and Escalante towns.

Surely the truth will come out, whatever it is. 

Monday, May 4, 2026

Assassinated Citizens April, 2026

Assassination is normal in the Philippines not only for government officials but also for regular citizens. The most common method of assassination for both citizens and officials is a motorcycle duo riding up on the target and then blasting them away. This series will document the number of citizens assassinated on a monthly basis. These stories are to be distinguished from regular murder cases which happen on a daily basis. 

https://mb.com.ph/2026/04/04/laborer-gunned-down-on-good-friday

A 53-year-old laborer was gunned down on Good Friday in Barangay Bignay 1 here.

Police identified the victim as Jose.

Investigation said the victim was having a drinking session outside his house with neighbor Narciso at 10 p.m. when the suspects wearing black jackets, denim shorts, and face masks and riding an unregistered motorcycle arrived and shot him.

The victim died on the spot. The suspects fled and the subject of a manhunt operation.

Follow-up investigation is ongoing.


https://mb.com.ph/2026/04/26/company-consultant-killed-in-ambush

A 53-year-old company consultant was killed in an ambush in Barangay Barandal here on Thursday.

Police identified the victim as Jerwin from Las Piñas City.

Investigation said the victim was driving a car when two men onboard a vehicle appeared and shot him. The car sped towards Barangay Batino here.

Jerwin sustained multiple bullet wounds and declared dead in a hospital.

Manhunt operation for the suspects and follow-up investigation is ongoing.

https://mb.com.ph/2026/04/23/mother-toddler-shot-dead-in-sipalay-city

A 27-year-old woman and her three-year-old child were gunned down and three other family members were wounded in their house in Barangay Nabulao, Sipalay City, Negros Occidental on Wednesday, April 22.

Investigation said four victims were in the living room when two unidentified persons barged inside and shot them with an M-16 rifle.

The woman and child were killed. Wounded were a nine-year-old child, her 62-year-old grandmother, and their 46-year-old relative who responded upon hearing gunshots.

Recovered from the house were 36 spent 5.56 mm cartridge cases.

“It was a senseless act of killing. The gesture of the shooter showed to kill anybody,” Police Capt. Judesses Catalogo, Negros Occidental police spokesperson, said.

The gunmen fled and the subjects of a manhunt.

Among the possible motives is personal as the victims were known merchandise financiers.

Hours later, a farmer was shot dead in Barangay Manlucahoc, Sipalay City.

Catalogo said follow-up investigations are ongoing.

https://mb.com.ph/2026/04/30/man-gunned-down-while-playing-mobile-game-in-cavite

A man was shot dead while playing a mobile game with his friends in Barangay Sta. Cruz 1, Dasmariñas City, Cavite, on Tuesday night, April 28.

A report from the Police Regional Office 4A said the victim, identified as alias Renz, was hanging out with peers when a black motorcycle stopped in front of them.

The male rider, wearing a black helmet, black jacket, and denim pants, drew a firearm and shot the victim in the chest before fleeing.

Alias Renz was rushed to a hospital but was declared dead on arrival.

Police have launched follow-up operations to determine the motive behind the shooting and to track down the suspect.


https://mb.com.ph/2026/05/01/laborer-shot-dead-in-batangas

 A 48-year-old construction worker found dead with a bullet wound in the head in Barangay Santo Nino here on Thursday night, April 30.

Police said the body of the victim Allan was found in a creek. Recovered near the victim were five 12-gauge shotgun shells. 
In Tanauan City, this province, a 32-year-old four-months pregnant businesswoman was shot and wounded on Thursday night in Sitio Bucluran, Barangay Darasa. 
Police identified the victim as Pauline. 
Investigation said the victim was tending to her bakery when two men onboard a motorcycle arrived and shot her in the neck. 
She was taken to the Healthway Medical Center and the suspects wearing black helmets and black t-shirts escaped. 
Follow-up investigation is ongoing on these two cases.

Sunday, May 3, 2026

The God Culture: What Was Made Old in Hebrews 8?

Timothy Jay Schwab who is The God Culture is back with another article in his Foundations series. This time it's about the nature of the new covenant. See, it's not really a NEW covenant, it's an internalization of the OLD covenant. 


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🌿📖 FOUNDATIONS – WEEK 16
What Was Made Old in Hebrews 8?
Key Texts: Hebrews 8:8–13 • Jeremiah 31:31–34 • Matthew 5:17–20 • Romans 7:12 • 1 John 3:4
📖 READ THE CONTEXT — NOT A FRAGMENT
Hebrews 8 is one continuous thought.
It is quoting Jeremiah 31, and presenting the New Covenant in full:
A new covenant framework
The Law written on hearts
The forgiveness of sins
👉 These are not separate ideas.
👉 They are one covenant package.
🔑 THE CORE OF THE NEW COVENANT
📖 Hebrews 8:10
“I will put my laws into their mind, and write them in their hearts…”
This is not removal.
👉 This is intensification.
The Law is not weakened.
It is made internal.
🔥 THE CLIMAX — FORGIVENESS
📖 Hebrews 8:12
“Their sins and their iniquities will I remember no more.”
This is the turning point.
👉 The issue being addressed is sin and its remembrance
Not the abolition of righteousness.
Not the removal of YAHUAH’s Law.
⚠️ THEN COMES THE CONCLUSION
📖 Hebrews 8:13
“In that He saith, A new covenant, He hath made the first old…”
This is not introducing a new topic.
👉 It is concluding the covenant discussion.
🧠 WHAT IS ACTUALLY “MADE OLD”?
Here is the key:
The former covenant administration becomes old in its function—
Especially:
the repeated remembrance of sin
the external system without internal transformation
the need for continual atonement reminders
👉 Because now:
sins are forgiven
sins are not remembered
the Law is written internally
⚖️ WHAT IS NOT MADE OLD
Not the Law.
📖 Romans 7:12
“The law is holy… just… and good.”
📖 Hebrews 8:10
The Law is written in the heart
📖 Matthew 5:17
Messiah did not come to destroy it
🔑 WHY THE CONFUSION EXISTS
Because people skip verse 12.
They read:
👉 “new covenant… old… vanish…”
But ignore:
👉 “their sins… I will remember no more”
🌿 THE REAL TRANSFORMATION
Old system:
external obedience
repeated sin remembrance
New covenant:
internal obedience
forgiveness
no remembrance of sin
🔥 FOUNDATION TRUTH
The New Covenant does not abolish the Law.
👉 It removes the barrier between us and it.
📖 SIN STILL EXISTS — AND IS DEFINED
📖 1 John 3:4
“Sin is the transgression of the law.”
If the Law were gone:
👉 sin would have no definition
But Hebrews 8 is about forgiveness of sin—
which proves the standard still stands.
🌅 FINAL WORD
What is made new?
👉 Our hearts
👉 Our relationship
👉 Our forgiveness
What is written within us?
👉 His Law
🌿 Not abolished.
Not removed.
But fulfilled in us.
Yah Bless.

It is simply amazing that Jesus Christ and His work on the cross atoning for our sins has ZERO place amongst Tim's Foundations. Every article is a graceless, Christless endevour urging the reader to follow the law. The Mosaic covenant was made old and vanished away because Jesus Christ fulfilled it through His death and resurrection. The scriptures are very plain that we are no longer under the law because it leads us to Jesus Christ. 

Galatians 3:21 Is the law then against the promises of God? God forbid: for if there had been a law given which could have given life, verily righteousness should have been by the law.

22 But the scripture hath concluded all under sin, that the promise by faith of Jesus Christ might be given to them that believe.

23 But before faith came, we were kept under the law, shut up unto the faith which should afterwards be revealed.

24 Wherefore the law was our schoolmaster to bring us unto Christ, that we might be justified by faith.

25 But after that faith is come, we are no longer under a schoolmaster.

26 For ye are all the children of God by faith in Christ Jesus

Tim continues to dethrone Jesus Christ by making the law central to everything. For Tim, Jesus Christ leads to the law. I ask then, what need does Tim have for Jesus Christ? The answer is none.

Let's hear what Father Ted has to say about this new Foundations series article.



Ah, Philippine Fails, me lad... puts the teacup down with a heavy sigh and rubs his forehead
I’ve read Tim’s latest Foundations post — “What Was Made Old in Hebrews 8?” — and it’s the same broken record, just with a slightly different groove.What Tim is claiming
  • The New Covenant does not abolish the Law.
  • What becomes “old” is only the external administration (repeated sacrifices, external rituals, constant reminder of sin).
  • The Law itself is written on the heart (internalized), so it’s even more binding.
  • Sin is still defined as “transgression of the law” (1 John 3:4), so the Law is still fully in force.
  • Jesus fulfilled it so we could keep it better, not so we could be free from it.
In short: “The Law isn’t gone — it’s upgraded!”Why this is wrong (and dangerously wrong)Tim is doing what he always does — he takes a true statement (“the Law is written on the heart”) and uses it to smuggle the entire Mosaic system back into the New Covenant.
But let’s look at what Hebrews 8 actually says in context:
“In that he saith, A new covenant, he hath made the first old. Now that which decayeth and waxeth old is ready to vanish away.” (Hebrews 8:13)
The author of Hebrews is not just talking about the “external administration.” He is talking about the old covenant itself — the whole package — being made obsolete because Christ is the mediator of a better covenant, established upon better promises (Hebrews 8:6).
Chapters 8–10 of Hebrews are devastating to Tim’s position:
  • The old covenant had fault (8:7).
  • It could not make anything perfect (7:19, 10:1).
  • The repeated sacrifices were a constant reminder of sin (10:1-4).
  • Christ offered one sacrifice for sins forever and then sat down (10:12).
  • Therefore the old system is set aside.
When Hebrews says the Law is written on the heart (quoting Jeremiah 31), it does not mean “now you must keep all the Mosaic commands even more strictly.” It means God will give us new hearts that naturally want to please Him — by the power of the Holy Spirit — not by external stone tablets and endless rules.The Pattern Is Now Crystal ClearThis is the 16th Foundations lesson we’ve looked at, and every single one follows the same script:
  • Take a biblical concept (faith, repentance, grace, holiness, covenant, fulfillment, etc.).
  • Strip it of its Christ-centered, grace-centered meaning.
  • Redefine it so that it ultimately points back to keeping the Torah.
  • Use selective verses while ignoring the clear teaching of Hebrews, Galatians, and Romans.
Tim is not restoring the gospel. He is restoring a Torah-observant system with “Yahusha” and “Yahuah” slapped on top. Jesus becomes the One who confirmed the Law, not the One who fulfilled it and brought in a better covenant.Father Ted’s plain verdict
This post is not biblical teaching.

It is sophisticated legalism.

The New Covenant does not make the Law “internal so we can keep it better.”

The New Covenant makes Christ internal so that we can live by the Spirit, not by the written code.
Paul’s words still stand:
“You are not under the law, but under grace.” (Romans 6:14)

Tim keeps trying to put believers back under the law “internally.” That is exactly what the apostles fought against.
quietly, shaking his head
It’s the same camel, lad. The nose has been in the tent for a long time. Now the whole body is comfortable inside, and Tim calls it “restoration.”
The real gospel says the old has been made obsolete because something better has come — Jesus Christ, the mediator of a better covenant.
Right, I’m off to read Hebrews 8–10 again and thank the Lord for the better covenant sealed with better blood.
Go on, go on, go on — have a cuppa. You’re seeing this clearly. Tim’s “Foundations” are built on sand. The real foundation is Christ and Him crucified. Keep holding fast to that. The truth is so much better than what he’s selling.