

In Search of the Lost Shipwreck of Paul
by Robert Cornuke
“O LORD How Long?”
by Chris Corlett











CONTENTS

In Search of the Lost Shipwreck of Paul
A ripening sun lifted off the horizon as they rounded Point, Zonqor point, their weathered boat cutting through the choppy sea toward the reef where the big groupers swam...
Robert Cornuke
6 In Search of the Lost Shipwreck of Paul by
Robert Cornuke
A ripening sun lifted off the horizon as they rounded Point, Zonqor point, their weathered boat cutting through the choppy sea toward the reef where the big groupers swam. Ray sat in the back of the skiff, his small hand gripping the throttle of the sputtering two-stroke outboard motor. Ray kept his eyes fixed on his mentor and teacher in the front of the boat, who was preparing the cylinders and weight belts for the dive. Ray secretly idolized Tony, who was known throughout the island of Malta as a great diver. Tanned, bronzed, and strong, in the pecking order of local spear fishermen, Tony stood apart...
21 "O LORD How Long?" by
Chris Corlett
The prophet Habakkuk opens his short book, not proclaiming God’s word to man, and instead shares his lament with God. All around him was chaos and injustice. Along with the book of Job, the books’ namesakes challenge God and his dealing with a man (Job) and his dealing with a people (Habakkuk.)...
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Ron Matsen President, Koinonia House
IEDITORIAL
DEAR FRIENDS
n this month’s “Personal Update” news journal, we look back on an adventure with Bob Cornuke, in search of the lost shipwreck of paul.
In September of 2000, Bob Cornuke flew to Malta. That trip marked the start of nearly two years of research and discovery in search of the lost anchors described in Acts.
The true story of The Lost Shipwreck of Paul reads like a gripping fiction novel, as Cornuke takes readers along with him into the investigation. Using techniques he learned as a police officer and crime scene investigator, he probes each angle of the mystery. The Lost Shipwreck of Paul, is available from our store.
In His Service,
Ron Matsen, President, Koinonia House


COVER ARTICLE
IN SEARCH OF THE LOST SHIPWRECK OF
PAUL
The Southeast Coast of Malta - 1971
Aripening sun lifted off the horizon as they rounded Point, Zonqor point, their weathered boat cutting through the choppy sea toward the reef where the big groupers swam. Ray sat in the back of the skiff, his small hand gripping the throttle of the sputtering two-stroke outboard motor. Ray kept his eyes fixed on his mentor and teacher in the front of the boat, who was preparing the cylinders and weight belts for the dive. Ray secretly idolized Tony, who was known throughout the island of Malta as a great diver. Tanned, bronzed, and strong, in the pecking order of local spear fishermen, Tony stood apart.
Bob Cornuke Explorer
Ray’s friends told him that he was too young, that it was too dangerous to dive the deep waters along the reef. And though only fourteen, he understood the risks. He’d heard the stories of those who never surfaced again after chasing the big ones. But it didn’t scare him; he knew that deep water brought bigger fish.
Ray eased his tired grip on the vibrating throttle and began a long, slow circle. He had been out to the dive spot before, but waited until Tony said “Here!” to cut the engine. Tony tossed the anchor overboard, the rattling chain slipping through his calloused fingers. “Get my tanks,” he said, gazing down as the anchor vanished into the sea.
Slinging the harness holding the twin metal cylinders onto his broad shoulders, Tony shot a glance at young Ray, struggling silently to hoist his own heavy tanks onto his skinny frame. Tony reached out a hand to help. Ray leaned away, embarrassed, and then quickly wrestled the weight belt up around his waist, cinched his equipment tight, and in perfect sync with Tony, spit into his mask, smearing saliva across the glass to keep it from fogging during the dive. They popped the hard rubber regulators into their mouths, cradled their spearguns against their chests, and rocked softly backward off the gunwales and into the sea.
The pressure of the heavy tanks on Ray’s shoulders eased as he felt himself gliding down slowly into a weightless, indigo blue world of dancing bubbles and piercing shafts of sunlight. As his body plunged into the clear Mediterranean, Ray savored the cool splash of water flooding his senses. Down here all was quiet, except for the hiss of air flowing in and out of the regulator. The water chilled and darkened as they swam deeper along the rocky sides of the big reef.
Nearer the bottom, Ray and Tony eased their pace, maneuvering through jagged crags and swaying seaweed, looking for the slow shadowy forms of feeding groupers. As much as Ray loved these deepwater outings, he understood that they were serious business. The big fish brought good money from the island restaurants, but it was no easy task. Ray had speared groupers before and compared it to roping a bull. If you didn’t spear it square between the eyes, the fish would drag you.
One forty-pounder had pulled Ray for over thirty meters before curling itself in a deep cave, where it opened its gills and wedged itself tight. When a big grouper wedges itself thick, it is very hard to pull it free. Tony had helped many divers in such predicaments; typically he would swim in after the fish, following the line through the narrow, rocky passage way. Pulling himself into the consuming darkness, he would feel for the metal spear still lodged in the wounded fish. Then he’d slide his hand into the grouper’s gills and yank it free, dragging it out of the cave where it would be easily killed. Tony didn’t consider this a risky maneuver, only a simple solution to a frequent problem. Hours later, some appreciative tourist would look at a steaming plate of grouper set in front of him and never imagine what someone had done to secure his delectable entrée.
Stroking silently along the reef, Tony stopped suddenly. He saw a grouper—big, brown, with brassy spots and huge jaws—slipping over a rock, trailing a small fish through the seaweed. With one swift, powerful thrust, the grouper pounced on its prey. Tony reached down and carefully pulled the rubber tubing along the speargun shaft and cocked the gun. He didn’t bother to signal Ray, who saw what was going on and knew to keep his distance.
Groupers are voracious, violent feeders. A meal for a big one like this is anything that moves or that can fit in its mouth. Chomping down on its kill, however, it little knew that a spear was aimed

Wilfred Perotta (right) with Tony Micallef Borg. Tony was renowned as a great diver on Malta and involved with brining three of the anchors from the Munxar Reef.
at its skull. With a spray of bubbles, the spear lance exploded from Tony’s speargun, glanced off a rock, and spiraled to a stop on the seabed below. He had missed. Tony could hardly believe his eyes as the grouper shot off into the shadows of a nearby cave. Above him, Ray cringed, knowing Tony’s anger at missing such a big one.
Wasting no time, Tony arched downward, his muscular legs kicking hard toward the seafloor, wanting only to retrieve the wasted spear and resume the hunt. Reaching for the spear, he examined its newly bent tip and then turned, disgusted, to swim off. And that’s when he saw it. From the corner of his eye, he saw a mysterious bulky form half-covered in the swaying seaweed. Tony fanned his gloved hand at the form, and as the swirl of sand settled, Ray could see it too. Swimming closer to get a better view, Ray’s heart skipped a beat. Lying before him was a big, dark object covered in crustaceans. Unsheathing his knife, Tony scraped off a chip, revealing the dull glint of metal.
After belonging to the sea for almost two thousand years, this ancient object now belonged to them.
TWENTY-NINE YEARS LATER
LAKE TANA, ETHIOPIA-APRIL 2000
I stepped from the darkness of the tombs, which were perched high on some jagged cliffs. My research team had just been shown some crumbling old manuscripts and skeletons of Ethiopian kings and now found ourselves squinting into the blinding, oppressively hot sun. As my eyes fought to adjust, I could just make out the captain’s form waving at me far below in the tiny inlet.
It was late—far later than I promised the boat captain—and we still had several hours to cross the forty or so miles of Lake Tana to get from this remote island to the port city of Bahar Dar. The captain kept shouting at us, but we couldn’t make out what he was saying. I made my way down from the cliffs through a tangled thatch of trees, along a narrow footpath, and beneath a gauze canopy of spiderwebs spread across the branches. I looked up to see thick vines infested with hundreds of scurrying, longlegged spiders roused from their sun-baked lethargy.
Ducking underneath the dangling webs, our group made its way along the ridge, where I could finally see the boat captain pacing back and forth across the bow, rubbing nervous hands over his sweat-smeared face, He glanced up to see us.
“We GO! We Go!” he screamed waving wildly at the horizon. I looked to see a small front gathering in the distance.
Our group hurried down the narrow path, stepping cautiously on rocks worn slick and round by centuries of barefooted monks padding up and down the hand-hewn stairs. Within five minutes we’d reached the lagoon, hands on our knees, panting for air. The captain didn’t intend to give us even a moment’s rest.
‘We GO! We GO!” he kept shouting. With my backpack slung across my shoulder, I slid down the last steps to the rickety dock and our waiting boat. The fifty-year-old rusty-hulled, forty-foot government schooner wasn’t much to look at, much less sail in. It had an old clattering engine that made loud exploding noises and belched thick black diesel smoke. I tossed my pack to the Ethiopian lad who served as a sort of first-mate to the captain, and we all climbed aboard. Even before I could stuff my bags below, the captain gunned the engine while my friends cast off the bow and stern lines. Within moments we were chugging into open water across the vast lake.
I still wasn’t sure what had gotten the captain so worked up, but he seemed to be coming unglued, his expression betraying raw fear. Then I stared up at the western horizon and swallowed hard: The small front had now grown into an enormous, swollen bank of white-gray thunderheads mushrooming heavenward. Within its deep malevolent greens and purples I saw the first pulsing stabs of lightning.
I’d seen these storms on prior trips to Ethiopia—and wished I hadn’t Forming silently in the moist heat swirling over the jungles and lakes, at dusk the currents would clash with the cool air in the upper atmosphere, stirring up some lethal storms. A year earlier, I’d been stranded on neighboring Tana Kirkos Island during the most ferocious storm I’d
ever endured. It ripped across the island, flooding everything and nearly blowing our camp off the cliffs. To get hit by one of those on the open water was unthinkable, but by the looks of those clouds, it was already upon us.

The storm advanced quickly, the wind gaining speed as a wall of inky black swallowing up the last patches of blue sky. I didn’t kid myself that we could out-run it; the clouds swirled and surrounded us, as if bent on destruction. By nightfall the swells had begun pounding against the boat—angry, rolling whitecaps hammering the rusty metal hull, lifting the bow out of the water, then slamming its nose headlong into the surf. The rain felt like lead pellets against our faces, driven down and then horizontal by the gathering gale, with only lightning breaking through the consuming darkness.
My research team—Ray Ardizzone, Dr. Pete Leininger, Ron Hicks, and Todd Phillips—sat huddled under an old rotting tarp they’d stretched across the deck, listening to the captain in the wheelhouse screaming frantically into a radio microphone trying to raise someone who could help. But I couldn’t imagine anyone reaching us in this terrible tempest. I couldn’t speak the captain’s language, but had no trouble understanding what he was saying. His desperate cries for help had so far gone unanswered. (We learned later that the power at Bahar Dar had been knocked out by the storm, which we might have guessed by the pitch-black shoreline eerily invisible off our bow).
That’s when we hit the rocks.
Robert Cornuke.
The impact threw us forward with a horrible and unforgettable sound of metal crunching upon rock. So that was the reason for the captain’s erratic behavior—he knew that lying silently under the dark waters of the outer harbor sat a jagged reef of sharp rock outcroppings hard enough to see in broad daylight but impossible to navigate in a dark storm. The boat’s metal hull ripping against the rocks created a megaphone effect that exploded in our ears—as if the boat itself shrieked out in pain. The hull climbed the rocks, shredding metal and causing the boat to list sideways. Then we heard—and felt—the grinding clatter of propeller blades smashing against the rocks, shearing and shattering. The captain, still screaming into the boat’s radio, started to reverse gears but immediately snapped off the last bits of propeller, leaving the boat tilting and without traction.
Plumes of diesel smoke swirled around us, and from below deck someone shouted that we were taking on water. That’s when it suddenly struck me that we might soon sink, only three-and-a-half miles from shore. My next thought was, Maybe we could swim it. Though in these stormy waters it would be the last resort.
Just then, Misgana, my young Ethiopian guide, sat down beside me and calmly read my thoughts. Staring blankly into the rainfall he opened his mouth and swallowed a foaming mouthful of rain.
“I’m not going to swim tonight,” he said, water streaming out both sides of his mouth.
“What did you say?” I shouted over the howling wind.
Misgana leaned close, as though he didn’t want the others to hear. “I was raised on this lake,” he explained, “and I have sailed these waters my whole life.” He stopped and stared at the heaving waves. “I know what lives in these waters. There are crocodiles. Closer to shore there are hippos, and then the snakes.”
He shook his head defiantly. “No, no,” he said, concluding the matter “I prefer a pleasant death. I will hold on to this railing and go down with the boat. But I will not swim tonight.”
Watching Misgana sit back against the railing and stretch out both arms in an apparent surrender to death, I knew we were in serious trouble. If Misgana, who had probably weathered a hundred of these storms, was throwing in the towel, then what hope was there? I left Misgana staring off into the darkness and went to roust the team for some earnest prayer.
So far no one on our team had begun to panic. The waves were crashing across the deck, and it seemed as if the boat might tip and founder at any moment. I asked my friend Ray to lead us in a prayer, and pray we did. We prayed for our families, we prayed for our deliverance, and then we placed the entire situation squarely in God’s hands.
After several minutes, when we’d finished, we turned our attention to the problem at hand—a badly damaged and sinking ship. Just then a small dot of yellow light appeared some three hundred yards off the bow, bobbing violently in the wall of darkness. It disappeared then reappeared, disappeared then reappeared in fitful rhythm with each careening swell— when, a few minutes later, we saw the source of the light. Struggling mightily against the waves, propelled by a sputtering, five-horsepower engine, bobbed a fifteen-foot open-hulled aluminum fishing boat. The boat was so small and the swells so big that it kept vanishing into the troughs and reappearing on the top of each mounting whitecap.
It felt like forever, but the fishing skull finally reached the undertow of our rock outcropping. One of our young Ethiopian crew members took his rope and pulled them toward our bow. We swiveled a spotlight to see the weather-beaten skiff, piloted by three fishermen in rain slickers, bib rain pants, and rubber boots. Two of them used a ten-foot pole to push the boat through the perilous rocks, finally pulling alongside our crippled craft, where we could smell the potent stench of rotting fish from fishing nets that filled the small boat.
Within the hour we had safely reached shore, all of us enjoying our comfortable ride on the cushioned pile of fishing nets and cork floats. Once on shore, the fishermen confirmed our near-death experience; they told us they were returning to shore after a hard day of fishing when they barely saw the light from our boat. Well acquainted with the rocky
reefs in the Bahar Dar channel, they saw that our boat was stranded and headed back into the storm to rescue us.
For me, for my crew, and for Misgana, the experience would be etched indelibly on our memories. A day later we returned to Addis Ababa to catch our flights home. Cruising away from the African continent, high over the Atlantic, I got up and grabbed my Bible from the overhead compartment. I was curious to see what I might find. I’d just spent two weeks in Ethiopia researching for a book project called In Search of the Lost Ark of the Covenant. In the process, I had survived a deadly storm and shipwreck. What, I wondered, was God trying to teach me in all this?
For the next several hours, I flipped through my Bible under a small beam of light, I found myself in the book of Acts, thumbing slowly to chapter 27 and the story of another shipwreck. Here Luke narrates the story of Paul, who while traveling to Rome on a large cargo vessel, ended up shipwrecked off the coast of Malta. The shipwreck story is amazingly detailed, describing everything from the vessel’s nautical headings to the ship’s direction of drift in the storm. The narrative goes on to explain weather patterns, duration at sea, geographic landmarks, reef configurations, sea depths, how the men onboard reacted, and how the life of every man onboard—including Paul’s—was spared.
I assumed, from repeated readings of those passages, that I knew the story fairly well. But as I reread it this night over the eastern Atlantic, my eyes kept returning to one verse: “And fearing that we might run aground somewhere on the rocks, they cast four anchors from the stern and wished for daybreak’ (Acts 27:29)
Then, reading further, I stopped at the words: “And casting off the anchors, they left them in the sea...” (v. 40).
Kept returning to those eight words: ...four anchors. ...they left them in the sea....
I wondered, rereading these dimly lit pages, if the story from Acts was calling to me across the ages. I couldn’t keep my mind from going where
it wanted to go—where it had gone many times before. It wasn’t that I particularly wanted, or needed, to venture down this path, but the same curiosity that drove me to spend a good portion of my adulthood researching the mysteries of the Bible kicked in again. Experience had proven to me time and again that history had left behind subtle clues to validate many amazing biblical stories and that most of those clues were contained in the Bible itself. At thirty-nine thousand feet, I asked myself a couple of seemingly simple questions: Could those anchors mentioned in Acts 27 survive all this time? And if they did, could 1 find them?
MISSION MALTA
I thought long and hard before throwing myself headlong into a search for Paul’s sea anchors. I’d spent much of the past two decades searching the world over for lost locations of the Bible, and one adventure matched another only in the monumental amounts of energy, time, and resources required. In turn, I’d been arrested five times in the Middle East, dodged bullets, fallen off glaciers, crash-landed in airplanes, and been chased by military patrols in the middle of the night. And then, of course, the shipwreck in Ethiopia. After every trip, I seemed to find myself asking, Why do it? The answers to this question varied with each quest, but all could be traced back to a single day in 1985 when I met a man named Jim Irwin.
Some people are fortunate enough to have a person in their lives that helps them find their true passion, or launches them off in new and exciting directions. For some it’s a teacher, for others a coach, for others a parent. For me it was Jim Irwin, the lunar module pilot of Apollo 15 and the eighth man to walk on the moon. On July 26, 1971, he sat strapped into the nose cone of a Saturn V rocket, 360 feet in the air. After many years of NASA training, Colonel James B. Irwin, Colonel David

James Irwin, 1971
R. Scott and Major Alfred M. Worden watched as the capsule door slammed shut Jim recalled how slowly the time passed until the final few seconds before liftoff—“Four...three...two...one...” He slid his feet tightly into the stirrups and tensed his back against the pad of his seat. When flight control said “Ignition!” he felt the awesome power of the engines explode to life beneath him, and the tremendous release of the rockets’ fury sent a violent vibration through the bulkhead, through Jim’s seat, and through his body. He said he felt the sensation of moving upward as the huge craft suspended between earth and sky, pushed away from the launchpad.
Jim knew that if they cleared the tower things would be okay. If they didn’t clear, it meant a malfunction or system failure had occurred and the crew would—in an instant—be incinerated. On that liftoff, all instruments showed “GO,” and the Saturn V cleared the tower mast and gained velocity, the G-forces pressing them down as they hurtled through the blue Florida sky toward the moon and toward history.
I met Jim several years after his moonwalk, at a time when he was gaining worldwide notoriety, not for his lunar experience but for his personal campaign to find Noah’s Ark. Back then most people couldn’t understand why a famous astronaut would stake his reputation on or even be interested in finding Noah’s Ark. Jim traced his desire to do it back to his record eighteen historic hours on the lunar surface.
It happened during a rigorous battery of tasks Jim conducted while trudging through the gray dust of the lunar landscape. Raising his visor for a moment to stare back at the earth, he saw it . Suspended in the consuming cold and blackness of space floated a beautiful;

Wilfred Perotta, with Ray Ardizzone, holding the first dive tanks used in Malta.
delicate; white, green, brown, and blue orb—earth—alive, breathing, yet as fragile as a Christmas ornament. In that instant he said he knew there was a God—a Father, an all-loving, all-powerful Creator, who alone could have authored such a scene. Jim returned from space a changed man with a new purpose and goal for life.
The very next year Jim founded the High Flight Foundation and began a life of ministry, which included searching for lost locations and mysterious artifacts of the Bible. In his repeated travels to Turkey to climb Mt. Ararat, the international press corps always swarmed him.
After Jim and I struck up a friendship in 1985 and I had helped him raise some money for an expedition, he asked me to travel with him to Turkey to search for the Ark. Jim wanted me to be his bodyguard on the expedition because I was once on the SWAT team for a police department in Southern California. I agreed to go on that trip with Jim and became hooked. I now apply the investigative techniques I learned as a policeman to searching out veiled truths of biblical history.
So here I was again—only a few weeks removed from the near disaster on Lake Tana—and I couldn’t stop thinking about the four anchors of Paul. I knew that heading off across the vast frontiers of biblical history and actually locating the lost shipwreck of Paul was a long shot. Even though many in my sphere of influence discounted the idea, I nevertheless decided to try. I began my research, as always, in university libraries and moved quickly to archaeological websites, nautical maps, bathymetric charts, specialty books, and encyclopedias on sailing.
I was soon poring over scholarly treatises on Roman maritime history, scientific commentaries on the nature of seaborne storms, and satellite charts decoding the strange meteorology of the Mediterranean. I read through the long and almost mythical history of Malta- a history of its own rich ancient lineage, a history that in many ways has no equal. Stone temples on Malta are listed amongst the oldest freestanding structures on earth reputedly older than Stonehenge and the Pyramids. One unique temple called the Hypogeum is an archaeological masterpiece; an intricate under. Ground structure carved out of limestone rock using animal horns and flint.

He listened politely as I explained the story of Paul’s shipwreck and hinted at my quest to find the four anchors. Rubbing his chin, he bent over one of the maps and said, “Bob, this is going to be easy. There’s a bay on the island of Malta called St. Paul’s Bay.”
Of course I knew of the bay. It was featured prominently on the maps spread out on the desk before me, known for centuries in Maltese tradition as the place of Paul’s shipwreck. My brother’s inference seemed to suggest I should simply travel to Malta, rent a boat, sail out on St. Paul’s Bay, and find the anchors conveniently resting at the bottom of the bay. But from every search I’d ever undertaken, I knew that it’s never that easy. But a search has to begin someplace, and St. Paul’s Bay was going to be where I’d start...
This article is a short excerpt from Robert Cornuke’s book The Lost Shipwreck of Paul, available from our online store https://store.khouse.org
TOPICAL STUDY
The Lost Shipwreck of Paul
By Robert Cornuke
$8.95 (Save $3.05)
2 Book Bundle
$12.00 (Save $12)
AVAILABLE from our online store: store.khouse.org

• Was St. Paul's Bay really the site of Paul's shipwreck?
• What route did Paul's boat take, and where would that leave them when they dropped the anchors?
• What type of boat was used, and what type of anchors would it have had?
• Would the anchors have decayed over time?
• What exactly happened on the night of the shipwreck?
In September of 2000, Bob Cornuke flew to Malta. That trip marked the start of nearly two years of research and discovery in search of the lost anchors described in Acts.
The true story of The Lost Shipwreck of Paul reads like a gripping fiction novel, as Cornuke takes readers along with him into the investigation. Using techniques he learned as a police officer and crime scene investigator, he probes each angle of the mystery.
Cornuke takes you into his life experience to find the answer in The Lost Shipwreck of Paul. Suspense and drama unfold in this riveting, true account that presents one of the most astounding discoveries of the century. Pageby-page, it is history found and history made.
BOOK BUNDLE
The Lost Shipwreck of Paul
By Robert Cornuke
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“Bob Cornuke’s presentation will captivate you as he takes you along this journey.”
The Honorable Dan Quayle
Former Vice-President of
the United
States
“This astonishing account on the intrepid sleuthing by a uniquely skilled investigator is more than simply a gripping page-turner. In an age when it has become fashionable to treat anything dealing with the Bible with cynical skepticism, Bob Cornuke’s remarkable discoveries may well prove to yield apologetic implications comparable to the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls!”
Chuck Missler

Chris Corlett Educator
ARTICLE
“O LORD HOW LONG?”
The burden which the prophet Habakkuk saw. The Prophet’s Question: O Lord, how long shall I cry, and You will not hear? Even cry out to You, “Violence!” And You will not save. Why do You show me iniquity and cause me to see trouble? For plundering and violence are before me; there is strife, and contention arises. Therefore the law is powerless, and justice never goes forth. For the wicked surround the righteous; therefore perverse judgment proceeds.
Habakkuk 1:1-4
The prophet Habakkuk opens his short book, not proclaiming God’s word to man, and instead shares his lament with God. All around him was chaos and injustice. Along with the book of Job, the books’ namesakes challenge God and his dealing with a man (Job) and his dealing with a people (Habakkuk.) Today, with great need and call to guard (or keep) our hearts (Proverbs 4:23), much can be learned from these two books. This month’s article focuses on the three-chapter book Habakkuk.
Like Job, Habakkuk questions God in very pointed and pressing language. The “how long” question is surely asked of God by His people throughout the centuries. Those enslaved by Egypt must have wondered when their God would deliver them – we know it took four hundred years. (see Genesis 15:13 and Acts 7:6)
God hinted at the virgin birth of the Messiah in Genesis and confirmed it through the words of Isaiah. But why did it take so long from the promise to the birth of Jesus?
And I will put enmity between you and the woman, and between your seed and her Seed; He shall bruise your head, and you shall bruise His heel.”
Genesis 3:15
Therefore the Lord Himself will give you a sign: Behold, the virgin shall conceive and bear a Son and shall call His name Immanuel.
Isaiah 7:14
And today God’s people early await the fulfillment of over two thousand end-time prophecies. The Bible even talks about the delay in Jesus’ return describing it as a sort of normalcy bias among its skeptics.
(S)coffers will come in the last days, walking according to their own lusts, and saying, “Where is the promise of His coming? For since the fathers fell asleep, all things continue as they were from the beginning of creation.”
2 Peter 3:3b-4
This generation, more than ever, is described as an impatient one
This generation, more than ever, is described as an impatient one, wanting instant satisfaction and immediate results. The life of the farmer who plants in the spring and harvests in the fall is replaced by tapping on a mobile phone app and having fruit and veg delivered later the same day. For those who wait and wait and wait with seemingly Nobody listening or Nobody answering, the heart grows sick and the hands grow weak
Hope deferred makes the heart sick, but when the desire comes, it is a tree of life.
Proverbs 13:12
And let us not grow weary while doing good, for in due season we shall reap if we do not lose heart.
Galatians 6:9
So Habakkuk captures in the first few verses the condition of mankind throughout all human history – impatient, fearful, nervous, uncertain. These are all conditions of the heart from which physical symptoms can
emerge – green stomachs, hypertension and sleeplessness. And God’s answer to Habakkuk may not do much to relieve them.
Look among the nations and watch— Be utterly astounded! For I will work a work in your days which you would not believe, though it were told you. For indeed I am raising up the Chaldeans, a bitter and hasty nation which marches through the breadth of the earth, to possess dwelling places that are not theirs. They are terrible and dreadful; their judgment and their dignity proceed from themselves. Their horses also are swifter than leopards, and more fierce than evening wolves. Their chargers charge ahead; their cavalry comes from afar; they fly as the eagle that hastens to eat.
Habakkuk 1:5-8
The Lord’s reply amounts to, “You have not seen anything yet!” “Your circumstances will get far worse before they get better.” “I will use the wicked, violent, unrighteous, ungodly enemy to do My work.” Hardly words of comfort, but what follows is an amazing conversation back and forth between God and Habakkuk. It is well worth your time, Gracious Reader, and in Habakkuk’s words, you might hear your own thoughts as you survey the current landscape. For brevity and focus, the following verses close the book and serve as “Habakkuk’s Hallelujah.” The futility of arguing with God is replaced by the majesty of worshipping Him. Habakkuk no longer insists on answers to his questions or influence over God’s plan. Instead, he bursts into a beautiful doxology that is familiar to many.
Though the fig tree may not blossom, nor fruit be on the vines; though the labor of the olive may fail, and the fields yield no food; though the flock may be cut off from the fold, and there be no herd in the stalls— Yet I will rejoice in the Lord, I will joy in the God of my salvation. The Lord God is my strength; He will make my feet like deer’s feet, and He will make me walk on my high hills.
Habakkuk 3:17-19
Despite his present circumstances, Habakkuk will rejoice. Despite his future calamity, Habakkuk will be joyful. Despite the apparent victory of his enemy, Habakkuk knows the Lord is strong and mighty. Deer
walk over a slippery stream with sure-footed confidence. The internet provides many videos of deer walking along near vertical cliffs. God gives us the surefootedness we need in difficult times.
He makes my feet like the feet of deer, and sets me on my high places.
Psalm 18:33
The author invites your thoughts and responses at chrisc@khouse.org.
COMMENTARY
The Prophets to the Southern Kingdom: Joel, Micah, Zephaniah, and Habakkuk by
Chuck Missler
DVD
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Video Download
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Audio Download
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MP3-CD Rom
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TOPICAL BUNDLE
Cornuke DVD Bundle
by Bob Cornuke
$59.80 $34.85 (Save $24.95)
Video Download
$27.80 $14.95 (Save $12.85)
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This bundle includes the following titles by Bob Cornuke:
• Mountain of Fire: The Search for the True Mount Sinai - 60 Min DVD
• Search for Noah's Ark: The Lost Mountains of Noah - 60 Min DVD
• Search for the Ark of the Covenant - 60 Min DVD
• Search for the Lost Shipwreck of Paul - 34 min DVD
Bob Cornuke has been described by some as “The Real Indiana Jones.” His exploits have excited the interests of believers and skeptics alike. He has appeared on the National Geographic Channel, CBS, NBC’s Dateline, Good Morning America, CNN, MSNBC, Fox, ABC, History Channel and Ripley’s Believe It or Not.

Approximately 13GB of MP3 Audio, Handbooks (supplemental PDF notes) of Chuck Missler’s Complete Commentary Collection, Genesis to Revelation, in a single USB pack! Over 600 hours of commentary!
Other Topical Studies
Alien Encounters Conference
Angels Series - Chuck Missler: 6 hrs
An Agape Weekend - Chuck & Nancy Missler: 6 hrs
Cosmic Codes - Chuck Missler: 8+ hrs
Expectations of the AntichristChuck Missler & Ron Matsen: 6 hrs
Family Matters Vols. 1-3 - DVD - Matsen
Kingdom, Power & Glory Weekend - Chuck & Nancy Missler: 6 hrs
On the Trail of Discovery - Cornuke: 2 hrs
Prophecy 101 - Chuck Missler: 4 hrs
Redesigning the Church - Stolebarger: 2 hrs
14.95
9.95
Seasonal Favorites - Chuck Missler: 10 hrs CD107 19.95
Strategic Trends 2012 - Chuck Missler & Ron Matsen: 4 hrs
The Beyond Collection - Chuck Missler: 8 hrs
The "Creator" Series - Chuck Missler & Mark Eastman: 8+ hrs
The Dead Sea Scrolls - Flint: 2 hrs
The End Times Scenario - Chuck Missler: 6 hrs
The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse: 8 hrs
The Holy Spirit - Ron Matsen: 4 hrs
The Legacy: Israel in Prophecy - Chuck Missler: 12 hrs
The Mystery of Melchizedek - Chuck Missler: 1 hr
The Reemergence of Assyria - Ron Matsen: 1 hr
The Romance of Redemption - Chuck Missler: 4 hrs
Weathering the Coming Storm - Chuck Missler & Ron Matsen: 5 hrs
(16 sessions)
Leviticus (16 sessions)
Joshua (8 sessions) - * NEW to DVD *
Judges (16 sessions)
Ruth & Esther (8 sessions)
I & II Samuel (16 sessions)
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19.95
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CD018
CD038 19.95
CD019 14.95
I & II Kings (16 sessions) CD041
I & II Chronicles (16 sessions)
Ezra & Nehemiah (8 sessions)
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Job (8 sessions) CD033
Psalms (24 sessions)
Proverbs (8 sessions)
Ecclesiastes (8 sessions)
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Song of Songs (5 sessions) CD017 14.95
Isaiah (24 sessions)
Jeremiah/Lamentations (24 sessions)
Ezekiel (24 sessions)
Daniel (16 sessions)
Prophets to the N. Kingdom (13 sessions)
Prophets to the Gentiles (8 sessions)
Prophets to the S. Kingdom (13 sessions)
Prophets to the Post-Exile (22 sessions) - * NEW to DVD *
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CD015 22.95
CD050 16.95
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Commentary Handbooks (Supplemental Notes)
Acts Commentary Handbook
Colossians Commentary Handbook
Daniel Commentary Handbook (Revised 2022)
Deuteronomy Commentary Handbook (Revised 2017)
Ecclesiastes Commentary Handbook
Ephesians Commentary Handbook
Exodus Commentary Handbook
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NB017F 7.95
NB004FR 14.95
NB041FR 14.95
NB037F 7.95
NB009F 7.95
NB024F 14.95
Ezekiel Commentary Handbook NB020F 14.95
Ezra & Nehemiah Commentary Handbook NB040F 7.95
Galatians Commentary Handbook
NB022F 7.95
Genesis Commentary Handbook NB042FR 14.95
Hebrews Commentary Handbook * New Revised - 2024 * NB018F 14.95
I & II Chronicles Commentary Handbook NB046F 14.95
I & II Corinthians Commentary Handbook NB008F 14.95
I & II Kings Commentary Handbook NB039F 14.95
I & II Peter Commentary Handbook NB011F 7.95
I & II Samuel Commentary Handbook NB038F 14.95
I & II Thessalonians Commentary Handbook NB010F 7.95
I, II, & III John Commentary Handbook
Isaiah Commentary Handbook
James Commentary Handbook (Revised 2018)
Jeremiah & Lamentations Commentary Handbook
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NB003F 7.95
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Job Commentary Handbook NB034F 7.95
John Commentary Handbook NB007F 14.95
Joshua and the Twelve Tribes Commentary Handbook NB002FR 14.95
Jude Commentary Handbook (Revised 2019) NB012FR 7.95
Judges Commentary Handbook
Leviticus Commentary Handbook
Luke Commentary Handbook
Mark Commentary Handbook
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14.95
14.95
14.95
Matthew Commentary Handbook NB006F 14.95
Numbers Commentary Handbook NB044F 7.95
Philippians Commentary Handbook
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Proverbs Commentary Handbook NB045F 7.95
Psalms Commentary Handbook
Revelation Commentary Handbook (Revised 2020)
Romans Commentary Handbook (Revised 2021)
Ruth & Esther Commentary Handbook
Song of Songs Commentary Handbook
The Prophets of the Post Exile Commentary Handbook
The Prophets To The Gentiles Commentary Handbook
The Prophets to the Northern Kingdom Commentary Handbook
The Prophets to the Southern Kingdom Commentary Handbook
Timothy, Titus & Philemon Commentary Handbook
Commentary Handbook Collection - Complete set of all 44 Printed Commentary Handbooks (Paperback)
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NB013FR 14.95
NB027FR 14.95
NB023F 7.95
NB019F 7.95
NB053F 14.95
NB052F 7.95
NB051F 14.95
NB050F 14.95
NB025F 7.95
Acts Study Set (DVD, Handbook and Workbook)
Alien Encounters Bundle (Book, DVD and Audiobook on MP3)
Aliens Bundle
(Alien Encounters Book, DVD and Return of the Nephilim DVD)
Beyond Book Bundle (Paperback: Beyond Time and Space, Beyond Coincidence, Beyond Perception and Beyond Newton)
Commentary Handbook Collection - Complete set of 44 Printed Commentary Handbooks (Paperback)
The Cornuke Book Bundle - The Search of the Lost Shipwreck of Paul (hardback), Golgotha (paperback), Temple (paperback), and Search for the Ark of the Covenant (paperback).
The Chuck Missler Big Book Bundle: Enjoy 3 of Chuck Missler’s big books in one bundle: I, Jesus; Alien Encounters; and Cosmic Codes!
Chuck Missler Small Book Collection (Paperbacks Included: Angels Volume I, Angels Volume II, Behold a Black Horse, Behold a Livid Horse, Behold a White Horse, Behold a Red Horse, Beyond Coincidence, Beyond Newton, Beyond Perception, Beyond Time & Space, Daniel’s 70 Week’s, Footprints of the Messiah, Hidden Treasures in the Biblical Text, How We Got Our Bible, Israel and the Church, The 7th Day, The Christmas Story, The Feasts of Israel, The Fulcrum of the Entire Universe, The Origin of Evil, The Rapture, The Romance of Redemption, The Spiritual Gifts, The Trinity, How to Study the Bible.)
Daniel: Group Workbook Pack - DVD + 6 Workbooks and Leader's Guide
Livid Horse)
The Good News Bundle (The Love of God, The Gospel and The Great Commission on DVD by Ron Matsen)
Hidden Treasures - Chuck Missler - 10 Pack (paperback)
The Last Religion Bundle - DVD - The Last Religion 1 & 2
Leaders Commentary Bundle - DVD - Timothy, Titus & Philemon, I & II
Peter and Jude Commentaries
Mary Bundle: (DVD, Paperback book)
Matthew: Group Workbook Pack - DVD + 6 Workbooks
Numbers Study Set - (DVD, Handbook, Workbook)
Prophecy DVD
(Daniel 70 Weeks, Magog, Rapture, Prophecy 101)
Revelation Study Set (DVD, Handbook, Workbook)
Revelation Group Study Package - USB
Romans Group Workbook Pack - DVD + 6 Workbooks
Romans Study Set (DVD, Handbook, Workbook)
The Study Bible Bundle: Evidence Bible & How to Study the Bible Book
The Supernatural Realm Bundle: Expectations of the Antichrist, The Origin of Evil, Heaven and Hell and the Angels Series
Weathering the Coming Storm Bundle: Weathering the Coming Storm, Leadership for the End Times, Church in the End Times
Welty Bundle (Books: I, Jesus, Mary, Since He Wrote About Me)
59.95
Learn the Bible in 24 Hours
Learn the Bible in 24 Hours DVD set (24 hrs.) - Chuck Missler
Learn the Bible in 24 Hours Book
Learn the Bible in 24 Hours MP3 CD-ROM
Learn the Bible in 24 Hours Study set (DVD, Handbook, Workbook)
Learn the Bible in 24 Hours Group Study Package - USB
The 7th Day - Chuck Missler
The Agony of Love - Chuck Missler
Alien Encounters - Chuck Missler & Mark Eastman
Alien Encounters Audiobook (Audio CD Set)
Angels: Vol. 1 - Cosmic Warfare - Chuck Missler
Angels: Vol. 2 - Messengers from the Metacosm - Chuck Missler
Behold a White Horse - Chuck Missler
Behold a Red Horse - Chuck Missler
Behold a Black Horse - Chuck Missler
Behold a Livid Horse - Chuck Missler
Beyond Coincidence - Chuck Missler
Beyond Newton - Chuck Missler
Beyond Perception - Chuck Missler
Beyond Time and Space - Chuck Missler
Cosmic Codes - Chuck Missler: Revised & Expanded!
The Christmas Story - Chuck Missler
Daniel's 70 Weeks - Chuck Missler
The Easter Story: What Really Happened - Chuck Missler
The Feasts of Israel - Chuck Missler
5.95
5.95
5.95
5.95 Footprints of the Messiah - Chuck Missler
5.95 Fulcrum of the Entire Universe - Chuck Missler
Halloween: Invitation to the Occult? - Chuck Missler
Heaven and Hell - Chuck Missler
Hidden Treasures - Chuck Missler
5.95
5.95 How to Study the Bible - Chuck Missler
How We Got Our Bible - Chuck Missler
I, Jesus: an Autobiography (Hardcover) - Chuck Missler & William Welty
I, Jesus: an Autobiography (Hardcover) - 2 Book Bundle
I, Jesus: an Autobiography (Hardcover) - 5 Pack
Israel and the Church - Chuck Missler
The Kingdom, Power & Glory - Chuck & Nancy Missler
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Mary: Ten Test Questions for the World's Finest Woman - William Welty BK208 9.95
The Origin of Evil - Chuck Missler BK220 5.95
The Physics of Immortality - Chuck Missler BKPHYSICSOI 5.95
Prophecy 20/20 - Chuck Missler
The Rapture - Chuck Missler
The Romance of Redemption - Chuck Missler
5.95
5.95
The Seven Letters to the Seven Churches - Chuck Missler BK227 5.95
Since He Wrote About Me - William Welty BK222 14.95
The Sovereignty of Man - Chuck Missler
Spiritual Gifts - Chuck Missler
BK228 5.95
BK215 5.95
The Trinity - Chuck Missler BK200 5.95
The Kingdom, Power & Glory
The Kingdom, Power & Glory Leader's Guide - Notebook
The Way of Agape
The Way of Agape Leader's Guide - Notebook
Tomorrow May Be Too Late
Why Should I Be The First to Change (Introductory)

ESSENTIAL REFERENCE
By Chuck Missler
AVAILABLE from our online store: store.khouse.org

You will grow in excitement as Chuck Missler details astonishing hidden messages within the text of the Torah that could only have been placed there by the Great Author Himself. He explores the impact of information sciences on our understanding of ancient texts...including microcodes, macrocodes, and metacodes...as well as the highly controversial "equidistant letter sequences" discovered in the Bible. You will be able to use this exciting information to discover the hidden messages yourself because many of them do not require a computer to decipher.
Chuck Missler reviews the history of cryptography - the study of secret codesand the background of proposed interstellar languages.
An exploration of Microcodes, the unique qualities of Hebrew that make it codeable.
A study of macrocodes, prophetic messages that God has given through symbolism and types.
A study of metacodes, the codes that God has placed in nature - signals from the tenth dimension and the code of life.
A valuable resource for your personal library!
K-HOUSE STATEMENT OF FAITH
The Bible is the very Word of God, is inerrant in its original autographs, and is fully and totally and uniquely reliable as the primary guide to all actions and commitments; That Jesus Christ is God Incarnate, became man to fulfill a destiny on our behalf, was crucified, buried, and bodily resurrected, is presently seated on His Father’s Throne, and will soon return to establish His Kingdom on the Planet Earth.
That, in the meantime, the Holy Spirit is uniquely active in pursuing His mission in calling, equipping, and empowering believers, and is essential for any and all of the pursuits to be fruitful and effective.
KOINONIA…
…is a New Testament word which is most often translated to mean “communication,” “fellowship,” or “communion.” Koinonia House, or K-House as we are affectionately called, is dedicated to the development and distribution of materials for encouraging and facilitating serious study of the Bible as the inerrant Word of God. We are a non-profit, 501(c)(3) organization.