Stone Choir

Stone Choir

Two Lutheran (LCMS) men bring a theological lens to the world, and relate the state of the world back to theology. Topics are timely, challenging, and fearless. We’ll probably make you nervous, sometimes make you angry, but never leave you bored. We are the stones who cry out.

  1. The Septuagint — New Testament, Part 2

    09/10/2025

    The Septuagint — New Testament, Part 2

    This episode is our closing argument for the Septuagint (LXX) and its proper place as the Word of God — the Scripture of the Early Church, the Apostles, and Christ Himself. Once you have finished this episode, you will need to decide for yourself if you believe the argument as presented or if you intend to double down on the ‘Hebrew’ the rabbis smuggled into the churches. The question is one of fidelity to God and to His Word, and it is a question that will split the churches, that will sift the wheat from the chaff. “But I and my household will serve the Lord, because He is holy.” Show Notes Romans 2:24 → Isaiah 52:5 Romans 3:4 → Psalm 51:4 (LXX Psalm 50:6) Romans 9:25b → Hosea 2:23 Romans 9:27 → Isaiah 10:22 Romans 9:27-28 → Isaiah 10:22-23 Romans 9:29 → Isaiah 1:9 Romans 9:33; 10:11 → Isaiah 28:16 Romans 10:18 → Psalm 19:4 (LXX Ps 18:5. . Romans 11:10 → Psalm 69:23 (LXX Ps 68:24. … Romans 11:26b → Isaiah 59:20 Romans 11:27 → Isaiah 27:9 (with Isa 59:21) Romans 11:34 → Isaiah 40:13 Romans 12:19 → Deuteronomy 32:35 Romans 14:11 → Isaiah 45:23 Romans 15:12 → Isaiah 11:10 1 Corinthians 2:16 → Isaiah 40:13 … 1 Corinthians 14:21 → Isaiah 28:11-12 1 Corinthians 15:54 → Isaiah 25:8 1 Corinthians 15:55 → Hosea 13:14 1 Corinthians 1:31 and 2 Corinthians 10:17 - Jeremiah 9:24 2 Corinthians 4:13 → Psalm 116:10 (LXX 115:1) Galatians 3:10 → Deuteronomy 27:26 Galatians 3:13 → Deuteronomy 21:23 Ephesians 4:26 → Psalm 4:4 (LXX 4:5) Ephesians 5:31 → Genesis 2:24 Philippians 1:19 → Job 13:16 Philippians 2:10-11 → Isaiah 45:23 2 Thessalonians 1:9 → Isaiah 2:10, 19, 21 2 Timothy 2:19a → Numbers 16:5 … Hebrews 1:6 → Deuteronomy 32:43 (LXX expanded line) Hebrews 1:10-12 → Psalm 102:25-27 (LXX 101:26-28) Hebrews 3:7-11 → Psalm 95:7-11 (LXX 94:7-11. … Hebrews 8:8-12 → Jeremiah 31:31-34 (LXX 38:31-34) Hebrews 10:5-7 → Psalm 40:6-8 (LXX 39:7-9) Hebrews 10:37-38 → Habakkuk 2:3-4 Hebrews 11:21 → Genesis 47:31 … Hebrews 12:5-6 → Proverbs 3:11-12 James 4:6 → Proverbs 3:34 1 Peter 2:6 → Isaiah 28:16 1 Peter 2:9 → Exodus 19:6 (phrase) 1 Peter 2:22 → Isaiah 53:9 1 Peter 4:18 → Proverbs 11:31 1 Peter 5:5 → Proverbs 3:34 (as in James 4:6) Revelation 2:27, 12:5, 19:15 - Psalm 2:9 See Also Further Reading Parental Warnings None.

    2h 13m
  2. The Septuagint — New Testament, Part 1

    09/02/2025

    The Septuagint — New Testament, Part 1

    In this episode and the next, we cover the places where the New Testament cites the Old Testament and there is a difference between the Septuagint (LXX) and the rabbinic text. In this first (of two) episodes, we cover citations from Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, and Acts; in the next episode, we will cover Romans through Revelation. By the sheer weight of the evidence, it will become undeniable that the New Testament authors were reading and citing the Septuagint — not some supposed ‘Hebrew’ edition (that, in fact, no longer existed at the time of the composition of the New Testament). The Septuagint was the Bible of the Apostles; it was the Bible of the early Church; it was the Bible that God miraculously preserved — as He promised He would; and it should be our Bible today. Show Notes Verses Vorlage over LXX Matthew 2:15 → Hosea 11:1 Matthew 8:17 → Isaiah 53:4 Matthew 26:31 → Zechariah 13:7 (also Mark 14:27) Matthew 27:9-10 → Zechariah 11:12-13 (with elements from Jeremiah 19; 32) Mark 1:2 → Malachi 3:1 (also Luke 7:27) John 19:37 quoting Zechariah 12:10 Romans 11:35 quoting Job 41:11 (MT 41:3) LXX over MT Matthew 1:23 → Isaiah 7:14 Matthew 3:3 → Isaiah 40:3 Matthew 3:17 (Mark, Luke) → (Genesis 22:2, 12, 16) Matthew 17:5 (Mark, Luke) Matthew 4:15-16 → Isaiah 9:1-2 (MT versification 8:23-9:1) Matthew 11:10 → Malachi 3:1 (also Mark 1:2, Luke 7:27) Matthew 12:18-21 → Isaiah 42:1-4 Matthew 13:14-15 → Isaiah 6:9-10 Matthew 15:8-9 → Isaiah 29:13 Matthew 19:5-6 → Genesis 2:24 Matthew 21:16 → Psalm 8:2 (LXX 8:3) Matthew 24:29 → Isaiah 13:10, 34:4 Luke 2:23 → Exodus 13:2 Luke 3:4-6 → Isaiah 40:3-5 Luke 4:18-19 → Isaiah 61:1-2 (with Isa 58:6) John 12:38 → Isaiah 53:1 Acts 2:26 → Psalm 16:9 (LXX 15) Acts 7:14 → Genesis 46:27; Exodus 1:5 Acts 7:42-43 → Amos 5:25-27 Acts 8:32-33 → Isaiah 53:7-8 Acts 13:41 → Habakkuk 1:5 Acts 15:16-18 → Amos 9:11-12 (and the closing clause of v. 18) See Also Further Reading Parental Warnings None.

    1h 47m
  3. The Septuagint — Wisdom Literature

    07/02/2025

    The Septuagint — Wisdom Literature

    As between the Septuagint (LXX) and the rabbinic text (MT), there are significant differences in the books that comprise the wisdom literature (i.e., Job, Psalms, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, Song of Solomon). These differences range from changes in diction through distortions and corruptions to outright additions and deletions (one should think of the warning in the Book of Revelation). Out treatment here is not (and is not intended to be) comprehensive — there are centuries of work ahead of the Church; rather, we intend to drive home the point that the only Christian reaction is to abandon and anathematize the ‘Hebrew’ passed to us by the rabbis in favor of the Greek passed to us by Christ, the Apostles, and our faithful forebears — and, most importantly of all, preserved by God, as He promised. Christ, the Apostles, and the early Church all unanimously held that the Septuagint is, indeed, the very Word of God. In this fifth episode in the (now) nine-episode LXX series, we examine differences between the LXX and the MT in the wisdom books (largely focusing on Proverbs). This is the second of three episodes dealing specifically with the Old Testament differences between the LXX and the MT. This is, of course, not our closing argument, for we will be making that in the two episodes that deal with the New Testament and how it treats the Old Testament. Show Notes X thread on differences in Proverbs See Also Full Interview with Will Spencer [This will probably trigger as a download in your browser, and it is ~750MB.] Further Reading Parental Warnings None.

    2h 6m
  4. The Septuagint — European History

    05/07/2025

    The Septuagint — European History

    The story of how Hebrew was smuggled into the Western Church is long and complicated; it spans centuries and involves hundreds of men. In this episode, we have narrowed down the story to a handful of key figures who played pivotal roles. At many points in this timeline, Christian men could have stood up and defended the inspired Greek of the Septuagint, but essentially none did so. At any point in this timeline, Christian men could have stood up and repudiated the wicked use of the Hebrew, but only two did so — both former (converted) Jews. Satan does not have the limitation of a lifespan of but eighty or so years, and he does not sleep or grow tired; the story of Hebrew is the story of Satan’s long-term plan to undermine and collapse the Western Church, and, with her, Christendom. In this second-half of the historical portion of the Septuagint series, we cover the history of the Western Church (from, roughly, Jerome to the Reformation) with regard to how Hebrew came to be used as the basis for the Old Testament. Notably, this history of the Septuagint is almost devoid of any actual use of the Septuagint by the men whose lives and actions make up the narrative, because we, like the Israelites of the Old Testament, left the Word of God sitting in a basement, abandoned and largely forgotten — and, worse, we accepted a corrupted counterfeit from rabbis and made it the basis of our translations. Mercifully and according to His promises, God preserved the Greek for us, and so we can undo the foolishness of centuries past — a topic we will take up in the last episode in this series. Show Notes See Also Further Reading “Johannes Reuchlin (1455–1522): A Unique Philosemitic Public Intellectual” “Johannes Reuchlin: A Voice of Humanism and Esoteric Wisdom” [This site is full of things we categorically recommend against — it is linked for the sole purpose of this one article on Reuchlin.] Parental Warnings At the end of the episode, Luther is quoted and the quote includes the words “whore” and “slut”.

    3h 18m
4.6
out of 5
596 Ratings

About

Two Lutheran (LCMS) men bring a theological lens to the world, and relate the state of the world back to theology. Topics are timely, challenging, and fearless. We’ll probably make you nervous, sometimes make you angry, but never leave you bored. We are the stones who cry out.

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