Courses

  • The first day of Fall quarter is September 8th.

  • Current registration is for FALL quarter. All courses will require registration each quarter if you desire to stay in the class. Stand alone courses are one quarter only and will say so in the description.

  • Our school year is divided into three quarters; Fall (September 8-December 1), Winter ( December 29- March 9) and Spring (March 23-June 15).

  • Most courses are held on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday evenings. Exact days and times will be determined as the course fills up. We try to accommodate as many people as we can when scheduling course time frames.

  • Each quarter is approximately 11 weeks of instruction.

  • All language classes are intended to be year long courses (3 quarters) unless otherwise stated.

  • All other classes are stand alone courses that last for one quarter or the time frame specified in the course description.

  • Please contact Rob Vanhoff with any questions you have regarding class sign up. Rob@telostorah.com

Part 1 of a 3-Part course. There are no prerequisites. We will start with the Hebrew alphabet, vowels, and move on to vocabulary and translation of increasingly complex phrases and sentences, both Hebrew to English and English into Hebrew.

Part 1 of a 3-Part course. There are no prerequisites for this class. We will start with the Greek alphabet, accents, and move on to vocabulary and translation of increasingly complex phrases and sentences, primarily Greek into English.

This class seeks to cultivate a close, attentive, and careful reading of Scripture in Greek from a Yeshua-centered and sacred canonical (66-Book) hermeneutic. Prioritization is given to all relevant aspects of Greek language, ancient cultural context, scribal transmission, and interpretation histories.

This class seeks to cultivate a close, attentive, and careful reading of Scripture in Hebrew from a Yeshua-centered and sacred canonical (66-Book) hermeneutic. Prioritization is given to all relevant aspects of Hebrew language, ancient cultural context, scribal transmission, and interpretation histories.

This course takes an intensive look at how key biblical terms became symbols of sectarian disputation and division in the Second Temple era and beyond. A good grasp of this phenomenon heightens appreciation, not only for the biblical canon itself but for the vital importance of cultivating a thought-life properly grounded in and constrained by inspired Scripture.

Included in our readings and discussions will be extra-biblical stories about Abraham, angels, the Torah, Jerusalem, and the Messiah. ( This course is one quarter only.)

Part 1 of a 3 - Part course in ancient Aramaic, and presumes a basic competency in Biblical Hebrew. Live classes meet weekly to cover vocabulary, grammar, and translation practice. New knowledge and skill is linked to and compared with Hebrew grammar as well as ancient Semitic languages more broadly.

Psalm 82 ~ Its World and Words

Coming Soon !

Join Rob in this deep dive into a special –and controversial– Psalm of Asaph!