Christogenea Website Images

A Christogenea commentary On the Gospel of John has recently been completed. Many passages simply do not say what the modern churches think they mean! Don't miss this important and ground-breaking work proving that Christian Identity is indeed fully supported by Scripture.

A Commentary on Genesis is now being presented. Here we endeavor to explain the very first book of the Christian Bible from a perspective which reconciles both the Old and New Testaments with archaeology and ancient history, through eyes which have been opened by the Gospel of Christ.

A Commentary on the Epistles of Paul has been completed at Christogenea.org. This lengthy and in-depth series reveals the true Paul as an apostle of God, a prophet in his own right, and the first teacher of what we call Christian Identity.

Don't miss our recently-completed series of commentaries on the Minor Prophets of the Bible, which has also been used as a vehicle to prove the historicity of the Bible as well as the Provenance of God.

Visit Clifton Emahiser's Watchman's Teaching Ministries at Christogenea.org for his many foundational Christian Identity studies.

Christogenea Books: Christian Truths in Black and White!
Visit our store at Christogenea.com.

We have recently had several inquiries from readers who could not see the images on our website. Perhaps two months ago, endeavoring to increase the speed of our website, we switched to a newer image format for many of our images. That alone improved page load speed by nearly 2 seconds which is a lot in the world of the internet.

Decreasing the amount of time it takes our pages to load, we also hope to rank higher in search results, as well as lessen our total bandwidth usage, an excess of which may increase our hosting costs.

The new image format is really already a couple of years old, and is called WebP. These images have a .webp file extension. They are usually at least half the size of equivalent .jpg and .png images.

But because the format was developed by Google, Apple was reluctant to support it. Now they have relented, and Apple has stated that it will support WebP images beginning with Safari version 14.0, which is just starting to become available. Firefox, Chrome, Brave and Opera already support the new format.

William Finck