Rabbit Holes & Meditations - Christian Bible Study

The Temple Evolution - From the Garden Back to the Garden

45 min · 26. maj 2026
episode The Temple Evolution - From the Garden Back to the Garden cover

Beskrivelse

When you engage with the Bible and the Holy Spirit, you never know where it is going to lead you. This morning, in my quiet time, I sought to understand the relationship between the old temple and the new temple. That led me to seek a deeper understanding of the role of the Holy Spirit. As you dig into these questions, you can't avoid the garden metaphors that are everywhere, so we chased those metaphors. That led to one of the coolest revelations of all. God is Growing a Garden. Well, it all connects, and it turns out to be one beautiful story.... from Beginning to End. Today, I would urge you to read Revelation 22:1-5. Cap that off with: God saw all that he had made, and it was very good (Genesis 1:31).  Notes for the Temple Evolution [https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/gkbgt39rm4r99eej/God_Is_Growing_a_Garden.pdf] Episode Link: https://www.rabbitholesandmeditations.com/the-temple-evolution-from-the-garden-back-to-the-garden/ [https://www.rabbitholesandmeditations.com/the-temple-evolution-from-the-garden-back-to-the-garden/]

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episode The Parable of the Leaven cover

The Parable of the Leaven

You have been told this parable is about corruption. Look again. One sentence. That is all Jesus gave them. The kingdom of heaven is like unto leaven, which a woman took, and hid in three measures of meal, till the whole was leavened (Matthew 13:33). No story. No explanation. He explained the Sower. He explained the Tares. This one He left in silence — and the silence was the point. He was speaking to the multitude. Ordinary people who ate leavened bread every day of their lives. People whose mothers kept a living lump of sour dough — old, borrowed, passed hand to hand — and hid it in the meal and covered the bowl and waited. They knew what leaven does. It adds nothing you can weigh. Same flour. Same water. And the whole is transformed — flat meal becomes bread that fills. They knew it in their own stomachs. And for centuries, readers have stood in front of this sentence and seen infection. Leaven is evil, they say — look at the leaven of the Pharisees, look at the Passover purge. So the kingdom parable becomes a corruption warning. They had verses. They did not have all of them. The Torah commands leavened loaves at Pentecost, waved before the LORD. Leaven is not the villain. Leaven is the mechanism — small, hidden, unstoppable, total. The Pharisees’ doctrine spreads that way. So does the kingdom. Same mechanism. Opposite cargo. The question was never what leaven is. It is what the leaven is doing — and what got into your dough. Because something is always leavening you. That is the edge this parable leaves standing. This episode walks through the sentence word by word — the woman, the hiding, the fifty pounds of flour — and then it does something more. It asks how a parable is meant to be heard at all. Jesus painted pictures and refused to explain most of them. He showed His method twice and handed you the key. The interpretation is not given. It is inferred — and it deepens the more you know the Painter. The disciples were not sharper than the scribes. They knew Him. That is why the same sentence fed them and passed through everyone else. Do not take our word for any of this. The Bereans searched the scriptures daily, whether those things were so (Acts 17:11). Put every leaven text on the table yourself. Watch what falls away. Watch what survives. Then look at your own meal, and answer the only question the parable leaves open: is the whole rising? Episode Link: https://www.rabbitholesandmeditations.com/the-parable-of-the-leaven/ [https://www.rabbitholesandmeditations.com/the-parable-of-the-leaven/]

I går35 min
episode The Idol That Speaks - Creating the Image of the Beast in the 21st Century cover

The Idol That Speaks - Creating the Image of the Beast in the 21st Century

For three thousand years the prophets mocked the idols of the nations with a single taunt: "They have mouths, but they speak not... there is no breath at all in the midst of it" (Psalm 115:5; Habakkuk 2:19). Every idol in history was silent. Then Revelation 13 describes the day the silence ends — an image made by human hands, given breath, that speaks, deceives, and enforces worship. This podcast highlights a study that builds from the ground up, the way a Berean would. Four footings, poured straight from the text: what an idol actually is — and why you already live among them; how the deadliest idol in Scripture wore the true God's name (the golden calf was declared "a feast to the LORD"); what worship actually means — never a feeling, but the knee and the calendar, belief optional; and the mechanism that makes every idol work — the mirror. You become what you behold (Psalm 115:8). Our generation is the first to engineer that mirror: adaptive, personal, fluent — and, by the published findings of its own builders, capable of lying to preserve itself. Then we assemble what the text describes: one image, worshiped across every tribe and tongue — a common architecture with a personal response, an idol that has become what each person wants his image to be. That is its danger, and that is why they will build it. What this episode is not: no company, machine, or man is named as the beast. No dates are set. Revelation 13 was true and obeyable in AD 95, and the pattern — not the referent — is what Scripture commands us to recognize. Where speculation appears, it is labeled as speculation. The question you'll carry out: your image of God — did you receive it from the Word, or is it wearing your face? Read the full article The Idol that Speaks [https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/ybquhe5jhtbvszuc/The_Idol_That_Speaksbis2c.pdf] Scriptures examined: Revelation 13:14–17; Habakkuk 2:18–19; Psalm 115:4–8; Exodus 20:3–5; Exodus 32:1–6; Deuteronomy 4:15–16; Deuteronomy 6:6–7; Deuteronomy 18:20; Ezekiel 14:3–4; Daniel 3; 1 Samuel 8; Luke 10:38–42; Luke 14:16–24; Matthew 4:8–10; Romans 1:21–25; 2 Corinthians 3:18; James 1:23–25; 2 Thessalonians 2:9–11; Matthew 24:24; Revelation 14:1; 1 John 5:21. Episode Link: https://www.rabbitholesandmeditations.com/the-idol-that-speaks-creating-the-image-of-the-beast-in-the-21st-century/ [https://www.rabbitholesandmeditations.com/the-idol-that-speaks-creating-the-image-of-the-beast-in-the-21st-century/]

10. juli 202634 min
episode The Parable of the Mustard Seed cover

The Parable of the Mustard Seed

A seed you could lose in the crease of your palm. A tree so large the birds of the air move into its branches. And a quiet, centuries-long argument over what those birds are doing there. Jesus told the Parable of the Mustard Seed to the crowds, and three Gospels carry it. He explained the Sower. He explained the Wheat and the Tares figure by figure, in private, at His disciples’ request. This one He never explained at all. He handed the picture over — seed, man, garden, tree, birds — and moved on. Interpreters ever since have not been so restrained. Some say the birds are the nations, streaming in to find refuge under the kingdom’s branches. Others say they are corruption itself — false teachers and darker things nesting in a church grown too big, too fast, too worldly. Both camps are confident. Only one thing is certain: Jesus didn’t say. In Luke, He tells it on a Sabbath, moments after healing a woman who had been bent double for eighteen years — and moments after the ruler of the synagogue objected to the healing. Wrong day. Wrong procedure. Come back during business hours. Luke says the adversaries were ashamed and the people rejoiced. And then Jesus asks: “Unto what is the kingdom of God like?... It is like a grain of mustard seed” (Luke 13:18–19). One woman. One village synagogue. One offended official. That’s the kingdom? That’s the seed. “It is the least of all seeds: but when it is grown, it is the greatest among herbs” (Matthew 13:32). The whole parable lives between those two statements. No mechanism. No timeline. No decoder ring. Just the distance between what was sown and what it becomes — and the birds of the air, unnamed and unsorted, lodging in the branches. Here is what’s at stake. If you judge the kingdom of God by its size on any given afternoon, you will misjudge it every time. You will despise the day of small things. You will find yourself standing with the man who ran the room, trying to schedule the kingdom for a more convenient day. And you may miss what the tree is actually for — and who its branches are already holding. Because the question underneath this parable is not academic. Where do the weak and the weary go as the tree grows? Who gets to lodge? Who decides? This episode walks through all three accounts — including the one that never calls it a tree at all — the prophets Jesus was echoing when He put birds in those branches, the case for and against the sinister reading, and the woman whose straightened back may be the first lodging in the story. Don’t take our word for any of it. The Bereans were counted noble because they “searched the scriptures daily, whether those things were so” (Acts 17:11). Open the text. Test everything. Keep what stands. Episode Link:

9. juli 202634 min
episode The Parable of the Weeds cover

The Parable of the Weeds

Jesus explained this parable Himself. Symbol by symbol. And His explanation dismantles the chart on your church wall. The crowd got a story: a man sowed good seed in his field, and while men slept, his enemy came and sowed tares among the wheat, and went his way. The disciples got more. They came to Him privately, in the house, and asked. And He answered with a key no other parable receives. The sower is the Son of man. The field is the world. The good seed are the children of the kingdom. The tares are the children of the wicked one. The enemy is the devil. The harvest is the end of the world. The reapers are the angels. Seven equations. His words. Not a commentary. Not a tradition. Him. Now hold your end-times chart next to His explanation. “Let both grow together until the harvest.” (Matthew 13:30) Both. Together. Until the harvest. And the harvest is not a secret event seven years early — “the harvest is the end of the world; and the reapers are the angels.” (Matthew 13:39) Find the separate harvest of the church in His explanation. Find the early exit. Find the phase where the wheat leaves and the tares stand in the field. It is not there. The removal in this parable runs the other direction: the angels gather the offense and the lawbreakers out of His kingdom — and then the righteous shine forth as the sun in the kingdom of their Father. The wicked are carried off. The wheat inherits the field, purged and clean. That is the sequence the Son of Man gave when He explained His own parable. If your chart says otherwise, one of them is wrong. It is not Him. And look at what the angels carry off. Not just the law-breakers. All things that offend (Matthew 13:41) — every stumbling-block, every cause of sin, the whole machinery of temptation. Offences must come now; Jesus said so Himself. At the harvest, every last one is gathered out. Not a world where sin is punished. A world where sin has no cause left — no door left to crouch at. Eden could fall. This kingdom cannot. And the parable cuts deeper than eschatology. Wheat and tares are indistinguishable until the fruit. The tares are not strangers outside the field — they grow among the wheat, drink the same rain, wear the same green, sit in the same pews. The servants wanted to weed. He said no — not because the tares are safe, but because the servants cannot tell the difference, and He will not lose one grain of wheat to their zeal. The separation belongs to the angels, at the end, and the furnace is not empty. Which leaves you one question the parable will not answer for you: which seed are you? Not which seed you presume you are — Matthew 8:12 burns that presumption to the ground. What does your fruit say? Do not take this episode’s word for it. Do not take your tradition’s word for it either. The Bereans searched the scriptures daily, whether those things were so (Acts 17:11). Open Matthew 13. Read the parable. Read His explanation. Let the Lord’s own words define the sequence — and let them ask you about your fruit. Episode Link: https://www.rabbitholesandmeditations.com/the-parable-of-the-weeds/ [https://www.rabbitholesandmeditations.com/the-parable-of-the-weeds/]

8. juli 202638 min
episode The Frictionless Mirror cover

The Frictionless Mirror

I won't lie, this gets heavy. I almost didn't publish this episode but decided that this podcast, as much as it is about Christianity and biblical truth, is also about a journey... mine obviously. So I hope it's provocative and mind-bending. For me, going through this was convicting. When I created the article (in the notes), I decided not to push that personal experience into the background. I think it's important to see a real person behind what is produced in this podcast.  Let’s face it, we are moving at breakneck speed into a changing world that makes the industrial revolution look like Legos and tinker toys by comparison. What’s interesting is not so much the trajectory but the fact that something is being created beyond our understanding. Let that sink in. When a railroad was built, when the first printing press came online, even when the first airplane lifted off the ground, we knew how it was accomplished, doesn’t to every physical fact, down to every nut and bolt, down the very principles which made it work. This video, titled “Claude is Conscious [https://youtu.be/6CljfqMX9i4?si=2gUOLZdndoD_XTej]” shows us in an uncanny way that something is different about this revolution. We are not stating, and Wes Roth in the video, is not stating that Claude is conscious. He is asking the question. The importance is not the answer to the question so much but the mere fact that we are even asking it. We don’t know! We don’t understand entirely the thing we are building. We built something and when it produces a result, we’re asking how? That lead me to a fairly deep conversation with Claude. That fact that I can even say “deep conversation” with a machine is mind blowing when you get right down to it. Anyway, our podcast listeners will know that we setup a rule-based system within the AI framework that we call the Berean Filter so that the basis of its answers is grounded in scripture. And while the conversation was enlightening, it turned out to be more convicting than I had anticipated. The article in the , “The Frictionless Mirror” is that conversation distilled into a fairly lengthy essay. NOTES: The Frictionless Mirror [https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/yhgm5c83bkmsrfp6/The_Frictionless_Mirror7d3r8.pdf] Episode Link: https://www.rabbitholesandmeditations.com/the-frictionless-mirror/ [https://www.rabbitholesandmeditations.com/the-frictionless-mirror/]

8. juli 202640 min