In principle, I can certainly accept this claim — and further, as a Christian, I can’t argue against it. If Hebraic Thought is the system of philosophy revealed to humanity by God, then it just goes along with Scripture as God’s word. If I accept Scripture, then I must also accept the thought system behind it. All that is said on general principle. But when I get into some examples of reading the Bible using Hebraic thought as a hermeneutic lens, and also try to apply Hebraic thought to situations in modern society as the course did, for example, student loan debt, then I can see that Hebraic thought might be more powerful than such alternatives as Hellenic Thought. I look forward to learning more about the Hebraic worldview and become familiar enough with its approach to apply it myself both to Bible interpretation and to understanding my life and contemporary culture.