Study in the Chapel
Two named trees sit in the middle of Eden, and the Bible gives us almost nothing about what they physically are, how they work, or why they bear such loaded names. That’s not a mistake. It’s an invitation to read Genesis 2 the way it’s written: carefully, in context, and with enough humility to accept that sometimes Scripture stays quiet. We pick up in Genesis 2:9 and talk about God’s design for the Garden of Eden, especially the simple phrase that the trees are “pleasant to the sight and good for food.” That one line becomes a guiding lens for Christian living: God’s gifts are beautiful, and they are useful, and we sin when we chase pleasure while refusing the purpose attached to it. From there we explore why the Tree of Life and the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil remain so mysterious, and why the serpent’s later “expert” claims should make us more alert about who we trust and why. Then we move into Genesis 2:10–14 and the famous geography of Eden: the rivers Pishon, Gihon, Hiddekel (often linked to the Tigris), and the Euphrates, plus references to gold, bdellium, and onyx. We talk Biblical geography, what scholars can and can’t reconstruct, and why elusive facts should not threaten Biblical faith. Some details may stay “through a glass darkly,” but that does not change what God has said. If you want a grounded Genesis Bible study that takes Scripture seriously without pretending we can solve every mystery, listen now, subscribe, and share this with a friend.
57 episodios
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