When the title Masch'yah traveled over the Greek bridge to become Xristos, four distinct traditions reached out to inherit the ancient trunk of Covenantal Yahwism. This essay tracks how two of those lines grew into world religions by dropping the hard economic weights of debt release and Jubilee, while the heir that kept the trunk's constitutional substance whole was quietly written out of the will.
A consolidated portrait of Paul through Ebionite eyes: the Fish of the Great Sea, formed in philosophical Tarsus and trained in Gamaliel's academy, adjudicated a false prophet on four constitutional grounds by the community that knew him best. The verdict stands, and yet the handful of true sentences in his letters belongs to the Covenant tradition whose vocabulary they were written in, and reclaiming them is not generosity toward Paul but repatriation.
A supply-chain logistician turned mendicant scholar introduces the Archive of the Ebyonim: the wager that the Covenant was never a religion but a constitution for a society that refused to extract, and a map of the books, translations, and stories built to recover it.