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Episode 109: Every Day

10 min · 16 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Episode 109: Every Day

Descripción

Carbon monoxide has no color, no odor, no taste — and the cruelest part is that the organ it compromises is the one that would detect the danger. Survivors almost always survive because someone else noticed. The writer of Hebrews describes a spiritual poison that works the same way: the deceitfulness of sin (apatē), which numbs the heart it's hardening. The root diagnosis is specific — not an evil, immoral heart, but an evil, unbelieving heart (apistias). Unbelief is the soil in which every other failure grows. And the antidote is not individual willpower. It's parakaleite — come alongside one another, exhort one another — every single day, as long as the window called "today" remains open. The writer distributes responsibility across the whole community because you cannot detect this poison on your own. The brother sitting next to you may be the only reason you realize you've stopped breathing clearly. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit start2finish.substack.com [https://start2finish.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

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111 episodios

episode Episode 111: The Rest That Remains artwork

Episode 111: The Rest That Remains

In 1945, Japanese soldier Hiroo Onoda was stationed on a Philippine island with orders to fight. The war ended. He didn't know. For 29 years he conducted raids in the jungle, refusing to believe the leaflets telling him the war was over. The writer of Hebrews describes a rest that has been available since the foundation of the world — and traces it past Canaan, past Joshua, past Sinai, all the way back to Genesis 2:2, when God completed his work and stopped. The Greek sabbatismos — a word found nowhere else in the New Testament — names something the existing vocabulary couldn't capture: rest patterned on God's own cessation after finished creation. If Joshua had given the ultimate rest, Psalm 95 wouldn't still be offering it centuries later. The land was a shadow. The destination is deeper. And the key verse pulls everything together: "Whoever has entered God's rest has also rested from his works as God did from his." The promise still stands. Today. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit start2finish.substack.com [https://start2finish.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

28 de may de 202610 min
episode Episode 110: The Ones Who Left Egypt artwork

Episode 110: The Ones Who Left Egypt

Most deaths on Everest don't happen on the way up. They happen on the descent — after the summit, when exhaustion and disorientation do their worst. The writer of Hebrews asks three questions that work like a cross-examination, each one tightening the noose. Who rebelled? The rescued — all those who left Egypt led by Moses. With whom was God provoked for forty years? Those whose kōla — bodies, corpses, limbs — fell in the wilderness. To whom did he swear they would not enter his rest? The apeithēsasin — the unpersuadable, those presented with every reason to trust and still refusing. The progression mirrors the generation's decline: hearing led to rebellion, rebellion led to death, death confirmed the forfeiture. And the devastating scope: not a faction, not the worst ten percent, but nearly all of them. Out of everyone over twenty who crossed the sea, only Joshua and Caleb entered the land. Privilege is not a vaccine against unbelief. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit start2finish.substack.com [https://start2finish.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

27 de may de 20269 min
episode Episode 109: Every Day artwork

Episode 109: Every Day

Carbon monoxide has no color, no odor, no taste — and the cruelest part is that the organ it compromises is the one that would detect the danger. Survivors almost always survive because someone else noticed. The writer of Hebrews describes a spiritual poison that works the same way: the deceitfulness of sin (apatē), which numbs the heart it's hardening. The root diagnosis is specific — not an evil, immoral heart, but an evil, unbelieving heart (apistias). Unbelief is the soil in which every other failure grows. And the antidote is not individual willpower. It's parakaleite — come alongside one another, exhort one another — every single day, as long as the window called "today" remains open. The writer distributes responsibility across the whole community because you cannot detect this poison on your own. The brother sitting next to you may be the only reason you realize you've stopped breathing clearly. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit start2finish.substack.com [https://start2finish.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

16 de may de 202610 min
episode Episode 108: Today artwork

Episode 108: Today

Fresh concrete is remarkably forgiving — you can shape it, smooth it, redirect it entirely. But there's a window. Once the chemical reaction advances past a certain point, what was endlessly pliable becomes permanently rigid. And the hardening doesn't announce itself. The writer of Hebrews quotes Psalm 95 as a living voice — "as the Holy Spirit says," present tense — and the first word is sēmeron: today. The psalm reaches back to Meribah and Massah, where Israel found no water and asked the question that defined their rebellion: "Is the LORD among us or not?" They had seen the plagues, walked through the sea, eaten manna with the dew. The question wasn't intellectual. It was volitional. And the passage draws a devastating distinction: seeing God's works is not the same as knowing God's ways. The hardening happened in the gap between the two — each refusal to trust setting the concrete one degree further — until God swore under oath: they shall not enter my rest. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit start2finish.substack.com [https://start2finish.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

15 de may de 202610 min
episode Episode 107: The Son Over the House artwork

Episode 107: The Son Over the House

In 1927, Lindbergh landed in Paris after the first solo transatlantic flight — extraordinary courage, but no one confused the pilot with the engineers who built the Spirit of St. Louis. The writer of Hebrews sets the Son alongside Moses and shows the difference is not degree but kind. Moses was faithful in God's house; Jesus is faithful over it. The preposition is everything. In means within, as a servant. Over means authority, as a son. The Greek katanoēsate demands sustained attention — not a glance but a reorientation of focus. Jesus is called both apostle (sent from God to humanity) and high priest (standing before God on humanity's behalf) — the only figure in Scripture holding both titles. Moses was a therapōn — an honored attendant, not a slave — whose ministry testified to things to be spoken later. The Son is the something later. And the house? The house is you — if you hold fast. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit start2finish.substack.com [https://start2finish.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

13 de may de 202610 min