When the Magi finally arrived at the house in Bethlehem, they did not find a palace, a throne, or a crown. Instead, they found a young mother and her child. And in that moment, they saw something far greater than all the wisdom of the nations — they saw the love of God revealed in flesh. In Japanese, the kanji for love, 好, is made of two simple parts: 女 (“woman”) and 子 (“child”). At first glance, it looks like a picture of ordinary affection. But what if the earliest shapers of this characte...
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When the Magi finally arrived at the house in Bethlehem, they did not find a palace, a throne, or a crown. Instead, they found a young mother and her child. And in that moment, they saw something far greater than all the wisdom of the nations — they saw the love of God revealed in flesh. In Japanese, the kanji for love, 好, is made of two simple parts: 女 (“woman”) and 子 (“child”). At first glance, it looks like a picture of ordinary affection. But what if the earliest shapers of this characte...
When the Magi finally arrived at the house in Bethlehem, they did not find a palace, a throne, or a crown. Instead, they found a young mother and her child. And in that moment, they saw something far greater than all the wisdom of the nations — they saw the love of God revealed in flesh. In Japanese, the kanji for love, 好, is made of two simple parts: 女 (“woman”) and 子 (“child”). At first glance, it looks like a picture of ordinary affection. But what if the earliest shapers of this characte...
After seeing the star in the east, visiting the Christ child and then returning to their home country, thirty years later, the Magi returned to Jerusalem expecting to see Jesus on the throne. Instead, they arrived to discover He's been crucified… and whispers of something impossible — His resurrection. In this episode of Gospel Kanji, we follow the Magi into the crowded streets of Pentecost, where they hear the gospel in their own language for the very first time. That moment of astonishment...
In this episode of Gospel Kanji, we lay the groundwork for a journey that spans centuries, continents, and two profound transformations. We're diving deep into the ancient characters of Kanji to explore a hypothesis: what if the Magi who visited the Christ child in Bethlehem didn’t just make one journey, but two? We start by reviewing the clues hidden within the Kanji characters for wisdom, book, and the very word "Kanji" itself—each one containing echoes of biblical prophecy. But there's mo...
When the Magi finally arrived at the house in Bethlehem, they did not find a palace, a throne, or a crown. Instead, they found a young mother and her child. And in that moment, they saw something far greater than all the wisdom of the nations — they saw the love of God revealed in flesh. In Japanese, the kanji for love, 好, is made of two simple parts: 女 (“woman”) and 子 (“child”). At first glance, it looks like a picture of ordinary affection. But what if the earliest shapers of this characte...