You've Heard It Said

Moses: How to Unmake a Prince

19 min · 16 de abr de 2026
Portada del episodio Moses: How to Unmake a Prince

Descripción

Moses is one of the most familiar figures in all of Scripture. That familiarity is exactly the problem. The Moses we think we know—confident, chosen, called from birth—isn't really the Moses the text gives us. The actual Moses spends the first eighty years of his life being made and unmade. Formed by the most powerful empire in the ancient world, then slowly, painstakingly unformed in the desert. In Part 7 of You've Heard It Said, we look at what Acts 7:22 actually means when it says Moses was "educated in all the wisdom of the Egyptians"—what that education did to him, why his first attempt at liberation failed, and what forty years of silence in Midian were really doing. The burning bush makes a lot more sense once you understand what God had to undo first. You've Heard It Said: where faith meets history, and the stories we thought we knew come alive.👉 https://youvehearditsaid.short.gy/spotify

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15 episodios

episode The Gates of Hell: What Jesus Was Actually Looking At in Matthew 16 artwork

The Gates of Hell: What Jesus Was Actually Looking At in Matthew 16

Jesus said it at a place everyone in the room already knew by name: the Gates of Hell. Not a metaphor. An actual location—a cave in a cliff face at Caesarea Philippi, where a spring emerged from deep underground and ancient cultures had worshipped Baal, then Pan, for centuries before the Romans arrived and built a temple to Caesar on top of all of it. This is where Jesus took his disciples, and where Peter made his confession. And once you know what was behind them when it happened, the most quoted line in Matthew sounds completely different. The episode covers the layered religious history of the site, what city gates actually meant in the ancient world—legally, civically, culturally—and why "the gates of hell will not prevail against it" is not the defensive promise most of us were taught. Gates don't attack. They hold a position. And what Jesus declares at Caesarea Philippi is that the church is the thing doing the moving. You've Heard It Said: where faith meets history, and the stories we thought we knew come alive. 👉 https://youvehearditsaid.short.gy/spotify [https://youvehearditsaid.short.gy/spotify]

4 de jun de 202617 min
episode Genesis 18: Abraham, Sarah, and the Three Mysterious Visitors—Why This Story Is About More Than Hospitality artwork

Genesis 18: Abraham, Sarah, and the Three Mysterious Visitors—Why This Story Is About More Than Hospitality

We read Genesis 18 as a hospitality story. Three visitors show up, Abraham feeds them, Sarah laughs behind the tent flap. But there's more going on under the surface than most of us were ever taught. When the three strangers appear, Abraham is ninety-nine years old and three days out from circumcising himself and every man in his household. He's sitting at the door of his tent because his body won't let him do much else. And then he runs to meet them—promising a little water and a morsel of bread, before serving a feast of sixty loaves and a slaughtered calf. It's the ancient Near Eastern hospitality script performed perfectly, by a man who doesn't yet know who he's serving. But the heart of this story isn't the meal. It's the question one of the visitors asks partway through—where is your wife Sarah?—and what that question, read in its cultural context, might really be asking about a ninety-year-old woman the text has just told us is past the age of bearing. While Abraham serves bread and calf, something is quietly starting again in Sarah's body. By the time she laughs behind the tent flap, the miracle is already underway. This is a story about hospitality, yes. But it's also about waiting twenty-five years for a promise that keeps not arriving, about the strange dignity of bodies that have been counted out, and about a hidden laugh that became a name. You've Heard It Said: where faith meets history, and the stories we thought we knew come alive. 👉 https://youvehearditsaid.short.gy/spotify [https://youvehearditsaid.short.gy/spotify]

21 de may de 202621 min
episode How to Outlast an Empire artwork

How to Outlast an Empire

Egypt is the Bible's most underappreciated main character. And the story doesn't end when Israel walks out of it. The Egypt we usually picture—the Egypt of Pharaoh, of plagues, of Hebrew slaves making bricks—got conquered. Repeatedly. By the time Mary and Joseph fled there with the infant Jesus, Egypt had been a refuge for Jewish people for centuries. There was a temple to YHWH at Elephantine. There was a thriving Greek-speaking Jewish community in Alexandria. And it was there, in Egypt, that Jewish scholars translated the Hebrew Bible into Greek — a translation called the Septuagint that the New Testament writers would quote, and that still shapes every English Bible in print today. In the final episode of Egypt and the Bible, we trace how Egypt went from villain to refuge to one of the cradles of early Christianity. We walk through temples that have been claimed and reclaimed by every empire that came through them, stand in front of the Rosetta Stone, visit a cave in Old Cairo where tradition says the Holy Family stayed, and meet the Egyptian bishop whose theology gets recited every time someone says the Nicene Creed. Egypt's permanence was an illusion. Israel's story endured. And God used even that. You've Heard It Said: where faith meets history, and the stories we thought we knew come alive.👉 https://youvehearditsaid.short.gy/spotify [https://youvehearditsaid.short.gy/spotify]

30 de abr de 202620 min
episode Moses: How to Unmake a Prince artwork

Moses: How to Unmake a Prince

Moses is one of the most familiar figures in all of Scripture. That familiarity is exactly the problem. The Moses we think we know—confident, chosen, called from birth—isn't really the Moses the text gives us. The actual Moses spends the first eighty years of his life being made and unmade. Formed by the most powerful empire in the ancient world, then slowly, painstakingly unformed in the desert. In Part 7 of You've Heard It Said, we look at what Acts 7:22 actually means when it says Moses was "educated in all the wisdom of the Egyptians"—what that education did to him, why his first attempt at liberation failed, and what forty years of silence in Midian were really doing. The burning bush makes a lot more sense once you understand what God had to undo first. You've Heard It Said: where faith meets history, and the stories we thought we knew come alive.👉 https://youvehearditsaid.short.gy/spotify

16 de abr de 202619 min
episode Goshen and The Politics of Forgetting artwork

Goshen and The Politics of Forgetting

Joseph spent a lifetime building trust inside the most powerful empire in the ancient world. Exodus 1 undoes it in a sentence. "There arose a new king over Egypt, who did not know Joseph." It sounds like forgetting. But political forgetting is almost never accidental—and Egypt was very, very good at it. In Part 6 of You've Heard It Said, we move into Goshen and into one of the most politically loaded chapters in all of Scripture. We look at what it actually meant for a new regime to erase a legacy, why the Hebrews went from protected guests to a perceived threat overnight, and what two midwives named Shiphrah and Puah have to do with the politics of memory. We also get into the timeline debate—the two major scholarly camps on when the Exodus happened and which pharaohs were involved — and what the archaeological evidence actually tells us. Including something I got to see firsthand at Karnak. In this episode: the Hyksos hypothesis and its limits, the Merneptah Stele, demographic anxiety in the ancient world, why the Hebrews did not build the pyramids, and what an Egyptologist told me on my recent trip that completely reframed how I read this chapter. You've Heard It Said: where faith meets history, and the stories we thought we knew come alive. 👉 https://youvehearditsaid.short.gy/spotify [https://youvehearditsaid.short.gy/spotify]

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