What biblical passage does the speaker use to frame concerns about who 'the Jews' are?
The sermon begins with Revelation 2:9 (John's letter to Smyrna), highlighting the phrase 'those who say they are Jews, and are not; the synagogue of Satan' to discuss contested Jewish identity in the first century.
How does the speaker describe the role of Jews in early Christian persecution?
He asserts that Jewish authorities were the chief persecutors of the early church and references Acts and Paul's comments (1 Thessalonians 2:14–16) to support that claim.
What historical claim is made about the ancestry of most modern Jews?
The sermon cites Benjamin Freedman, Shlomo Sand, and genetic research (Eran Elhaik) to argue that many modern Jews descend from the Khazar kingdom rather than a continuous biblical Israelite bloodline.
What is said about the biblical promise of land to Israel?
The speaker contends the promise was historically fulfilled under Solomon but is conditional—'forever' depends on faithfulness and obedience to God, so land rights aren't unconditional.
How does the sermon characterize the Talmud's treatment of Jesus and Christians?
It claims the Talmud contains negative references to Jesus (illegitimacy, sorcery) and teachings that discourage association with Christians and, at times, permit hostile attitudes toward them.
According to the speaker, who are now 'the people of God'?
Drawing on 1 Peter 2 and Galatians 3, he argues Christians (those in Christ by faith and baptism) are the true heirs of Abraham's promise, making the church the people of God.