The Semi-Seminarian

Rahab Explained: The Spy Report That Was Actually a Sermon | Joshua 2 Bible Study

25 min · 14. maj 2026
episode Rahab Explained: The Spy Report That Was Actually a Sermon | Joshua 2 Bible Study cover

Description

What if the spies didn’t bring back military intelligence from Jericho, but a sermon? This Joshua 2 Bible study looks at Rahab and the spies, the scarlet cord, the walls of Jericho, and the confession of faith that changed Israel’s report. Most Bible studies on Rahab in the Bible focus on the red cord in the window. That image matters. But before Rahab ties the scarlet cord, she gives one of the clearest confessions of faith in the entire book of Joshua: “The LORD your God, he is God in heaven above, and on earth beneath.” The whole city of Jericho heard the same reports: the Red Sea, the defeat of Sihon and Og, and Israel’s God on the move. The whole city locked its gates and trusted its walls. Rahab opened her window and trusted the God she had only heard about. 📖 TIMESTAMPS 0:00 Introduction 2:00 Setting the Scene: Life Inside the Wall 6:30 Who Is Rahab in the Bible? 10:00 Scripture Reading: Joshua 2:1–24 15:00 Rahab’s Confession of Faith 20:00 The Scarlet Cord: What It Means 25:00 The Spies’ Report: Why It Echoes Rahab 30:00 Rahab in the Genealogy of Jesus 35:00 What Rahab Teaches Us About Faith Before Proof 40:00 Closing Benediction 📌 WHAT THIS STUDY COVERS — Rahab and the spies in Joshua 2 — The meaning of the scarlet cord in the Old Testament — Why Rahab’s confession matters before the walls of Jericho fall — How the spies’ report echoes Rahab’s own words — Why Rahab is in the genealogy of Jesus in Matthew 1 — What Rahab teaches about faith, outsiders, and grace — How God works through overlooked people and scandalous witnesses When the spies return to Joshua, they don’t report wall height, troop strength, or gate schedules. They repeat Rahab’s confession with the pronouns changed. She says, “The LORD has given you the land.” They say, “The LORD has delivered into our hands all the land.” They went into Jericho as spies. They came out as her congregation. This teaching connects Rahab to the women named in Matthew’s genealogy of Jesus: Tamar, Rahab, Ruth, and Bathsheba. Scripture keeps showing the same pattern: God’s covenant moves through unexpected people, foreign households, complicated stories, and witnesses respectable religion might overlook. Rahab believed before the walls fell. She tied the cord while Jericho still looked permanent. She opened the window before anyone gave her permission. That is faith with dust on its hands. Scripture: Joshua 2:1–24 Topic: Rahab and the Spies / Joshua 2 Explained Series: Women in the Bible / Women in the Genealogy of Jesus If something here helped you see Scripture differently, throw a like in the offering plate. Subscribe so you’ll know when we gather again. Be blessed. #Rahab #Joshua2 #BibleStudy #WomenInTheBible #OldTestament

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the The Semi-Seminarian community!

Get Started

1 month for 9 kr.

Then 99 kr. / month · Cancel anytime.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

All episodes

270 episodes

episode You Ate With Them?! | Acts 11 Bible Study on Peter, Cornelius & Gentile Inclusion artwork

You Ate With Them?! | Acts 11 Bible Study on Peter, Cornelius & Gentile Inclusion

What happens when the Holy Spirit moves faster than the church? This Acts 11 Bible study examines Peter’s return to Jerusalem after the conversion of Cornelius and the outpouring of the Holy Spirit on the Gentiles. The Jerusalem church has already heard the news—but their first accusation is not about Peter preaching the gospel, baptizing Gentiles, or witnessing a new Pentecost. Their charge is simple: “You went in to uncircumcised men and ate with them.” Acts 11:1–18 reveals one of the most important turning points in early church history. Peter explains the vision of the unclean animals, his visit to Cornelius, the baptism of the Holy Spirit, and the moment he realized that resisting Gentile inclusion would mean standing in God’s way. This Bible sermon explores: • Peter and Cornelius in Acts 10–11 • The Jerusalem church and Gentile inclusion • The meaning of “You ate with them” • Christian table fellowship in the early church • The Holy Spirit falling on the Gentiles • Peter’s vision of clean and unclean animals • Baptism, repentance, salvation, and grace • Why Peter brought six witnesses to Jerusalem • The repeated Greek words kōlyō and diakrinō • How religious traditions can become barriers to God • Why grace cannot be reduced to a spiritual background check • How the church moved from suspicion to worship • The biblical meaning of “Who was I to stand in God’s way?” Peter does not defend Cornelius by arguing that he was an unusually respectable Gentile. He does not plead the case of the “good outsider.” Instead, Peter testifies that God gave the Gentiles the same gift of the Holy Spirit given to Jewish believers at Pentecost. Cornelius was baptized into Christ. Peter was put on trial for the table. This Acts 11 sermon challenges Christians, churches, pastors, and Bible study groups to ask whether our boundaries reflect the will of God—or whether we are calling resistance faithfulness. The church cannot control the Holy Spirit, place grace on trial, or require people to become like us before God is allowed to welcome them. Peter entered Jerusalem as the accused. His testimony quietly placed Jerusalem on trial. The question still confronts the church today: Who are we to stand in God’s way? Watch this Bible study for a deeper understanding of Acts 11, Peter’s defense before the Jerusalem church, Cornelius and the Gentiles, the work of the Holy Spirit, Christian inclusion, baptism, table fellowship, church unity, and the unstoppable expansion of the gospel. Cornelius was the test case. Antioch is the flood. #Acts11 #BibleStudy #BookOfActs #PeterAndCornelius #HolySpirit #GentileInclusion #EarlyChurch #ChristianSermon #BibleSermon #NewTestament #Christianity #BiblicalTeaching

16. juli 202623 min
episode Acts 10 Explained: Peter, Cornelius, and the Day the Church Opened Its Doors to the World artwork

Acts 10 Explained: Peter, Cornelius, and the Day the Church Opened Its Doors to the World

Acts 10 is one of the most important turning points in the Book of Acts. Peter enters the house of Cornelius, the Holy Spirit falls on Gentiles, and the early church is forced to recognize that God’s grace has already crossed every boundary they thought still mattered. In this Acts 10 Bible study, we examine Peter’s vision, Cornelius the Roman centurion, the meaning of clean and unclean, the conversion of Cornelius, the baptism of the Gentiles, and the moment Peter declares that God shows no partiality. This passage is often reduced to a lesson about food laws, but Peter explains the vision himself: “God has shown me that I shouldn’t call any man unholy or unclean.” The animals are the image. People are the point. Peter believes he is bringing God into a Gentile house. Instead, he discovers that God is already there. The prayers have already risen. The angel has already spoken. The household has already gathered. The Spirit has already moved. Acts 10 reveals a central truth of the gospel: the church does not control the Holy Spirit. The church is called to recognize where the Holy Spirit is already at work. This sermon explores: • Peter’s vision of the sheet in Acts 10 • Cornelius and the first Gentile household • The meaning of “clean” and “unclean” • Why God told Peter, “Rise, kill, and eat” • Peter’s declaration that God shows no favoritism • The Holy Spirit falling before Peter finishes preaching • Gentile baptism and inclusion in the early church • The connection between Acts 8 and Acts 10 • Why Peter stayed and ate with Cornelius • What Acts 10 means for the church today Cornelius obeys immediately. Peter resists three times. That reversal matters. The outsider is ready to receive. The apostle is still learning how wide grace has become. Peter says, “Not so, Lord,” but those words cannot live together for long. Either Jesus is Lord, or Peter gets to keep the boundaries exactly where he prefers them. Acts 10 forces the question every church must eventually answer: will we follow the Spirit through the open door, or stand in the doorway defending a boundary God has already crossed? This chapter is not only about the conversion of Cornelius. It is also about the conversion of Peter’s imagination. Cornelius is converted to Christ. Peter is converted to what Christ means. The Holy Spirit interrupts the sermon before Peter can finish. God does not wait for the conclusion, the invitation, the committee meeting, or the institutional approval. The Spirit falls on the Gentiles, and Peter asks the only question left: “Can anyone forbid these people from being baptized with water?” Acts keeps asking the same question: Who is going to stop God? This Bible teaching is for anyone studying Acts, Peter and Cornelius, the early church, the Holy Spirit, Gentile inclusion, Christian baptism, biblical theology, New Testament interpretation, church history, or the mission of God. God is already at work beyond the places we know, among the people we overlook, and inside the rooms we have not yet entered. The question is not whether God is there. The question is whether the church is willing to walk through the door. Scripture: Acts 10:1–48 #Acts10 #BookOfActs #BibleStudy #PeterAndCornelius #HolySpirit #NewTestament #ChristianSermon #BibleTeaching #EarlyChurch #Cornelius #ApostlePeter #Gentiles #BiblicalTheology #ScriptureStudy #Christianity

12. juli 202629 min
episode She Opened Her Eyes!! | Acts 9:31–43 Bible Study on Tabitha, Peter, Healing & the Church Breathing Again artwork

She Opened Her Eyes!! | Acts 9:31–43 Bible Study on Tabitha, Peter, Healing & the Church Breathing Again

Acts 9 does not end where most people think it does. After Saul’s dramatic conversion on the Damascus Road, after Ananias lays hands on him, after Barnabas vouches for him in Jerusalem, the church sends Saul home to Tarsus — and then Luke turns the camera away from the famous convert. Acts 9:31–43 takes us to Lydda and Joppa, where Peter is not building a platform, launching a movement, or chasing a headline. Peter is making house calls. He finds Aeneas, a paralyzed man who has been bedridden for eight years, and says, “Aeneas, Jesus Christ heals you. Get up and make your bed.” Then Peter is called to Joppa, where a beloved disciple named Tabitha, also called Dorcas, has died. The widows gather in grief, holding the garments she made for them, and Peter kneels beside the body and says, “Tabitha, get up.” She opens her eyes. This Wednesday Night Bible Study from First Christian Church in Cushing, Oklahoma walks through Acts 9:31–43 as a story of healing, resurrection, pastoral care, and restoration after trauma. Saul had gone house to house dragging believers away. Now Peter goes house to house giving people back. The Holy Spirit does not simply grow the church. The Spirit restores the church. The threat has been removed, but the trauma has not — so the Spirit begins making house calls. In this episode, Pastor Jim Wilhelm explores the healing of Aeneas, the raising of Tabitha/Dorcas, Peter’s pastoral ministry, the widows of Joppa, and the quiet power of the early church after persecution. This is not just a miracle story. It is the gospel of getting people back. Acts 9 begins with Jesus stopping Saul on the road. Acts 9 ends with Jesus giving breath back to a frightened church, strength back to a paralyzed man, and a beloved disciple back to the widows who still needed her. If you are studying the Book of Acts, the early church, Peter’s ministry, Tabitha and Dorcas, biblical healing, resurrection, discipleship, pastoral care, or the work of the Holy Spirit, this Acts 9 Bible study is for you. The kingdom does not only arrive in blinding light on the Damascus Road. Sometimes it arrives beside a sickbed. Sometimes it arrives in a sewing room. Sometimes it arrives in a room full of widows holding garments through their tears. Sometimes it arrives when someone who thought the story was over opens her eyes. 📖 Scripture: Acts 9:31–43 ⛪ First Christian Church — Cushing, Oklahoma 🎙️ The Semi-Seminarian Podcast 🔥 Theology Thru The Static Key themes in this Acts 9 Bible study: Acts 9 explained, Acts 9:31–43 sermon, Tabitha in the Bible, Dorcas in Acts, Peter raises Tabitha, Peter heals Aeneas, Aeneas Acts 9, Tabitha Dorcas resurrection, early church healing, Holy Spirit comfort, church after persecution, Saul sent to Tarsus, Barnabas and Saul, Damascus Road aftermath, Peter’s ministry, widows in the early church, women disciples in the Bible, mathētria female disciple, biblical restoration, Christian healing, resurrection in Acts, pastoral care, Bible study on Acts, Wednesday night Bible study, First Christian Church Cushing, Pastor Jim Wilhelm, The Semi-Seminarian. #Acts9 #Tabitha #Dorcas #Peter #BibleStudy #BookOfActs #HolySpirit #EarlyChurch #ChristianSermon #Healing #Resurrection #PastorJimWilhelm #TheSemiSeminarian #FirstChristianChurch #CushingOklahoma

9. juli 202623 min
episode Basket Case! Saul Escapes Damascus in a Basket | Acts 9 Sermon on Paul, Grace & the Early Church artwork

Basket Case! Saul Escapes Damascus in a Basket | Acts 9 Sermon on Paul, Grace & the Early Church

In Acts 9:19–31, Saul has been healed, baptized, and filled with the Holy Spirit — but now the church has to decide whether it believes Jesus. This episode of The Semi-Seminarian Podcast, “Basket Case! Saul Escapes Damascus in a Basket,” follows Saul after the Damascus Road conversion. The light has flashed. The scales have fallen. Ananias has called him brother. Saul is preaching Jesus as the Son of God. But the man who came to Damascus with warrants now has to leave Damascus through a window in a basket. Saul entered Damascus with power, authority, and letters from the high priest. He leaves Damascus lowered through the city wall by unnamed disciples holding ropes in the dark. The hunter becomes the hunted. The persecutor becomes the preacher. The man who once dragged Christians away is now being rescued by Christians. But Acts 9 does not let the story stay easy. When Saul comes to Jerusalem, the disciples are afraid of him. They do not believe he is really a disciple. And honestly, who can blame them? They remember Stephen. They remember the stones. They remember the coats. They remember the warrants. They remember what Saul did before Jesus stopped him on the road. This Acts 9 sermon asks the hard question at the center of Christian faith, church life, grace, repentance, and discipleship: Jesus has healed Saul — but will the church believe Him? This Bible study explores Saul’s conversion, the early church’s fear, the role of Barnabas, and the difference between grace and trust. Grace can be immediate. Trust may take time. A healthy church knows the difference. Barnabas does not erase Saul’s past. He does not shame the disciples for being afraid. He does not demand cheap reconciliation. Barnabas bears witness. He builds a porch. He stands between Saul and the apostles long enough for testimony, caution, mercy, and wisdom to share the same space. This episode is for anyone wrestling with forgiveness, church hurt, spiritual transformation, repentance, Christian community, and what it means to believe that Jesus can truly change a life. Acts 9 is not only about Saul becoming Paul. It is also about the church learning how to see what grace has done. In this episode: * Saul preaches Jesus in Damascus * Saul escapes through the wall in a basket * The early church struggles to trust Saul * Barnabas becomes the bridge of testimony * Grace and discernment are held together * Acts 9 shows us how the church learns to welcome without pretending the past did not happen The Semi-Seminarian Podcast is theology through the static: Bible teaching, Red Dirt theology, scripture, storytelling, sermon craft, Christian discipleship, and gospel hope for the weary, the backsliders, and the ones who thought God forgot their address. If this Acts 9 Bible study helps you see Saul, Paul, Barnabas, the Damascus Road, grace, forgiveness, or the early church in a new way, like the video, subscribe to The Semi-Seminarian Podcast, and share it with somebody who needs to hear that Jesus still stops people on the road — and still teaches the church how to open the door. Scripture: Acts 9:19–31 Episode Title: Basket Case! Theme: Saul is healed, will the church believe him? #Acts9 #SaulToPaul #DamascusRoad #PaulTheApostle #Barnabas #BibleStudy #Sermon #ChristianPodcast #TheSemiSeminarian #Grace #Forgiveness #EarlyChurch #Discipleship #NewTestament #BookOfActs #ChristianTeaching #RedDirtTheology #TheologyThroughTheStatic

5. juli 202626 min
episode Boy, You’re Late: Jesus Stops Saul on the Damascus Road | Acts 9 Bible Study artwork

Boy, You’re Late: Jesus Stops Saul on the Damascus Road | Acts 9 Bible Study

In Acts 9:1–19, Saul of Tarsus is on the road to Damascus, carrying letters from the high priest and breathing threats against the followers of Jesus. But Saul is not early. Saul is not in charge. Saul is late. By the time Saul gets to Damascus, the Holy Spirit has already outrun him. The gospel has already crossed into Samaria. Philip has already baptized the Ethiopian eunuch. The circle has already widened. Saul thinks he is going to Damascus to stop the church, but Jesus meets him in the road and stops Saul. This episode of The Semi-Seminarian Podcast is a deep Bible study and sermon on Acts 9, the Damascus Road, Saul’s conversion, Paul’s calling, and the terrifying mercy of Jesus Christ. But this is not just a simple “bad man becomes good man” story. Saul was not an atheist. Saul was not ignorant of Scripture. Saul was deeply religious, trained under Gamaliel, zealous for the God of Israel, and absolutely certain he was right. And he was wrong enough to kill for it. Acts 9 shows us that the risen Jesus does not merely rescue people who are lost. Sometimes Jesus stops people who are certain. Sometimes grace interrupts religious violence. Sometimes mercy knocks a man into the dust before it raises him into his calling. On the Damascus Road, Jesus asks Saul, “Saul, Saul, why do you persecute me?” Not “my followers.” Not “my church.” Me. Every hand Saul laid on the people of Jesus, Jesus felt. Every door Saul threatened to open, Christ was standing on the other side. But the story does not end on the road. It moves to a house on Straight Street, where Ananias is told to go lay hands on the very man who came to arrest people like him. Before Saul preaches a sermon, writes Romans, plants churches, or bears any visible fruit, Ananias calls him “Brother Saul.” That is not cheap grace. That is resurrection faith with trembling hands. In this Acts 9 Bible study, we look at Saul’s encounter with Jesus, the meaning of the Damascus Road, the role of Ananias, the early Christian movement called “the Way,” and what it means that the Spirit keeps moving beyond our permission structures. This is a sermon for anyone who has ever been too certain, too scared, too late, or too wounded to believe grace could still be moving. The gospel was already ahead of Saul. And it may already be ahead of us, too. Welcome to The Semi-Seminarian Podcast — theology through the static, Bible study for the weary, the backslider, the church kid, the skeptic, and the ones who thought God forgot their address. Today’s Scripture: Acts 9:1–19 Topic: Saul on the Damascus Road, Jesus stops Saul, Paul’s conversion, Ananias and Saul, Acts Bible study, early church, grace, repentance, resurrection, Holy Spirit, the Way, Christian sermon, biblical theology #Acts9 #DamascusRoad #SaulToPaul #PaulConversion #BibleStudy #ChristianPodcast #Jesus #HolySpirit #ActsBibleStudy #Sermon #TheSemiSeminarian #Grace #Ananias #EarlyChurch #ChristianTeaching #NewTestament #Discipleship #TheWay #ScriptureStudy #RedDirtTheology

28. juni 202625 min