God's World, God's Way

How Gideon Drained the Swamp, Judges 8:13–21

24 min · 30. touko 2026
jakson How Gideon Drained the Swamp, Judges 8:13–21 kansikuva

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Gideon returns at sunrise — the sun in his strength, the embodiment of Deborah's blessing. He grabs a literate teenager, takes down the names of all 77 elders of Succoth, and metes out targeted, proportional, covenantal justice with thorns and briars. The tower of Penuel comes down. He stands face-to-face with the men who killed his brothers, asks his son to strike — and the boy freezes. A study in biblical justice, fatherhood, and the manhood that has to be forged, not inherited.

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jakson The Blessing Plot - The Real Deceiver Unmasked kansikuva

The Blessing Plot - The Real Deceiver Unmasked

In this episode of God’s World, God’s Way, Nathan Conkey takes listeners deep into Genesis 27—the dark, complex story of Isaac’s attempted blessing of Esau. Though most Bibles label the chapter “Jacob’s Deception,” the episode exposes a far more troubling reality: Isaac, the patriarch of promise, was himself plotting rebellion against God. Driven by appetite and favoritism, Isaac schemed in secret to bless the son God had rejected, revealing a man whose body and soul had grown blind—physically, morally, and spiritually. His obsession with “delicious food” becomes a symbol of his deeper corruption: a man whose god had become his belly, and whose actions threatened to derail the covenant line of Christ itself. Against this backdrop, the episode re-examines Jacob and Rebekah’s so-called “deception.” Far from a selfish act of trickery, their intervention emerges as a desperate, faith-driven attempt to prevent Isaac’s blasphemous defiance of God’s revealed will. Drawing on parallels with Sarah, the Hebrew midwives, Rahab, and Zipporah, Nathan argues that faith sometimes demands decisive—and even deceptive—action to preserve God’s covenant purposes. The story is not a moral tale of good versus bad, but a sobering revelation of divine sovereignty working through human weakness, where Rebekah’s courage and Jacob’s obedience avert disaster and ensure that God’s promise, “the elder shall serve the younger,” stands unbroken.

4. loka 202524 min
jakson Did Jacob Steal Esau's Birthright - Or Was He Framed? kansikuva

Did Jacob Steal Esau's Birthright - Or Was He Framed?

This episode challenges the common assumption that Jacob was a thief who stole Esau’s birthright. Nathan Conkey argues instead that scripture shows Jacob as an upright man, an ish tam (undefiled, perfect, upright), while Esau is revealed as profane, careless, and contemptuous of holy things. By exploring the Hebrew text, the prophetic promises given before the twins were born, and Jacob’s conduct in preparing stew and securing a lawful oath, Nathan demonstrates that Jacob acted justly and in accordance with God’s will. The transaction between the brothers was a simple, binding exchange: Esau willingly sold his birthright for bread and stew, showing that he despised what was sacred. The episode further warns against taking Esau’s false accusation at face value, as much of the church has done for centuries. By echoing Esau’s claim that Jacob “took” his birthright, Christians have borne false witness against the man whom God loved. Esau’s contempt for his inheritance, his profane swearing, his marriages to Hittite women, and his violent intentions all reveal him as the seed of the serpent, while Jacob stands in the line of the promised seed. Nathan urges believers to meditate carefully on God’s Word, like the Bereans, rather than relying on tradition or superficial readings. The conclusion is clear: Jacob did not steal; Esau despised—and God’s judgment between them remains decisive.

24. syys 202524 min