Definition
The Yeshuan Model is a structured framework for understanding faith after the end of material religion. It is organized around four appeals: Logos, Ethos, Pathos, and Kairos.
Context
The model assumes that the central prophetic claims of the New Testament were fulfilled in the first century and that the biblical age of law, mediation, and institutional authority has ended. From that premise, it asks how faith functions when salvation is complete and religious authority no longer carries divine mandate.
Logos provides the biblical justification. Ethos provides tools for personal fortification. Pathos critiques religious authority. Kairos addresses application in the present age.
Implications
The model offers coherence. It prevents isolated theological claims from drifting into abstraction or activism. Each pillar supports the others. Together they form a closed system that explains justification, disposition, critique, and application.
The model is descriptive rather than prescriptive. It does not create new law. It clarifies orientation.
Common Misunderstanding
The Yeshuan Model is sometimes viewed as a new doctrinal system competing with other theologies. It is not presented as binding doctrine. It is a research-based framework open to evaluation and refinement.
