Michael Cory

The Journey Behind Voice of Judah

I came to faith in my mid-twenties and, like many believers, I approached Scripture primarily through the lens of the New Testament. The Old Testament felt meaningful, but largely historical — important, yet not fully integrated into a coherent narrative framework.

Over time, I began to sense that something was missing. Scripture felt powerful, but fragmented. I understood individual books and passages, but I struggled to see how the entire biblical story fit together.

That tension deepened when I encountered teaching that challenged my assumptions — particularly around Israel, covenant, and the ongoing nature of God’s redemptive purposes. For the first time, I began asking if my framework for understanding Scripture was incomplete.

One Sunday, after praying for clarity, a Messianic rabbi visited my church and taught on Romans 11 and the relationship between Israel and the Church. His teaching forced me to reconsider my long-held assumptions and confront the idea that biblical prophecy was not merely historical — but active and unfolding today within God’s larger covenant plan.

That moment did not give me all the answers. But it set me on a path.

Over the next two decades, I devoted myself to studying Scripture through its covenantal structure — tracing the continuity from Genesis to Revelation, wrestling with the theological relationship between Israel and the Church, and seeking to understand how eschatology fit within the larger redemptive narrative.

My professional training as a doctor shaped how I approached this work. I was trained to think structurally, analyze systems, and trace causes to their roots. I began applying that same disciplined, analytical framework to Scripture — asking not only what individual passages meant, but how they cohered within the whole Bible.

I did not discover something new; I began to see more clearly what had always been there.

What gradually emerged was a deep conviction that the Bible’s unified covenant narrative brings clarity to the relationship between Israel and the Church — and places eschatology within its proper redemptive context.

Voice of Judah was born out of that conviction.

Today, my work focuses on helping pastors and Christian leaders recover the unified covenant story of Scripture so they can teach with greater coherence, historical awareness, and theological depth — and shepherd their people with clarity and steadiness in a rapidly changing world.

If you would like to explore this framework further or engage in thoughtful conversation, I welcome dialogue.

Email: info@yeshuasreturn.com

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