Echoes Of Revelation

The Two Names of God Part Six

55 min · 30. März 2026
Episode The Two Names of God Part Six Cover

Beschreibung

This episode delves into the theological significance of God's names in the Torah, especially Yahweh and Elohim. It highlights how the Torah invites readers to notice these names and reflect on their meanings. While God is understood as a singular, unified Being in monotheism, human perception often splits this unity—seeing God as either just or compassionate. The Torah typically uses one name at a time: Elohim conveys power and judgment, while Yahweh expresses mercy and relational closeness. The rarity of both names appearing together underscores the tension in how humans conceptualize divine unity. LINKS Echoes of Revelation | Lubbock TX | Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/people/Echoes-of-Revelation/61582409057033/#]

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17 Folgen

Episode Transparent Before Heaven: The Soul of Moses" Humility Cover

Transparent Before Heaven: The Soul of Moses" Humility

The Torah insists that Moses was “very humble, more than any man who was on the face of the earth”. Moses the same man who intervened against Egyptian taskmasters, who confronted Pharaoh, who pleaded with God to spare the people after the Golden Calf. How do we make sense of that? How can the fiercest moral force in the Torah also be its humblest? To unravel that paradox, we’re going to look closely at a story that seems, at first glance, to test Moses’ humility: the moment when Miriam and Aaron speak against him, questioning whether his prophetic role is truly unique. It’s in this very scene that the Torah inserts its famous aside about Moses’ humility and then, just a few verses later, God Himself declares that Moses’ prophetic clarity is unlike anyone else’s: “With him I speak mouth to mouth… clearly, and not in riddles”. A deeper listening of this episode may reveal that these two ideas Moses’ humility and Moses’ prophetic greatness aren’t opposites at all. They may actually be inseparable. Two sides of the same inner posture. And understanding that posture might just open a window into the true greatness of Moses and into a richer, more powerful understanding of what humility really is. LINKS Echoes of Revelation | Lubbock TX | Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/people/Echoes-of-Revelation/61582409057033/#]

15. Juni 202630 min
Episode Moses, Eden, and the Mission of the Spies Cover

Moses, Eden, and the Mission of the Spies

In Deuteronomy, Moses revisits the story of the spies but this time, he slows the camera down. He reminds Israel that he sent twelve men ahead with a simple, pointed question: “And what of the land is it good, or is it bad?” Now, even without stepping foot in Canaan, you already know the answer. The Promised Land is good. God Himself called it good. He chose it, blessed it, and tied His covenant to it. So why would Moses ask a question with such an obvious answer? Was he testing them? Setting a trap? Or is something else happening here? When you read the story through Moses’ retelling when you pay attention to how the spies respond, and how the people absorb their words you start to see the contours of a deeper drama. Beneath the surface of the narrative, another story is unfolding. A story with echoes of an older failure. A story laced with subtle danger. A story that reframes this entire episode in a way most readers never notice. And once you see it, you can’t unsee it.  LINKS Echoes of Revelation | Lubbock TX | Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/people/Echoes-of-Revelation/61582409057033/#]

15. Mai 202640 min
Episode Why Leviticus Matters More Than You Think Cover

Why Leviticus Matters More Than You Think

Leviticus sits in one of the strangest and most complex corners of Scripture a place that, despite its difficulty, carries something sacred, intentional, and God‑breathed. Instead of a storyline, it offers a meticulously structured set of 613 commands that shape Israel’s life in God’s presence. This sudden shift can feel jarring. After the sweeping narratives of Genesis and Exodus the patriarchs, the descent into Egypt, the drama of slavery and liberation, the fire and thunder of Sinai Leviticus arrives like a full stop. The movement halts. The story goes quiet. In its place stand laws: ritual, purity, sacrificial, priestly. Many readers disengage here, waiting for the narrative to resume in Numbers. But the difficulty of Leviticus may actually be an invitation. By stepping back and looking at the two narratives that frame it the cloud of God settling over the Tabernacle at the end of Exodus and the cloud lifting to lead Israel forward in Numbers a new story emerges. Leviticus becomes the sacred space between those movements, the moment where God pauses the journey to teach His people how to live close to Him. Seen this way, Leviticus is not a break in the story but the heart of it: a call to slow down, listen differently, and discover how closeness with God is cultivated. LINKS Echoes of Revelation | Lubbock TX | Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/people/Echoes-of-Revelation/61582409057033/#]

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