Atlas University Podcast

RSR - Bereshit: The Dawn of Elohim’s Ordered World

57 min · 18 jun 2026
aflevering RSR - Bereshit: The Dawn of Elohim’s Ordered World artwork

Beschrijving

This excerpt from the RSR translation present a narrative of origins, beginning with the Elohim creating the heavens, the earth, and humanity as His living image. The text tracks the fracture of this order through human rebellion in the Garden of Eden, followed by the subsequent rise of violence and the Great Flood that judged the world. Through the line of Noach, a new covenant is established, eventually narrowing to Avraham, who is called to leave his home and follow a promise of land, seed, and blessing. The chronicles detail the lives of the patriarchs—Avraham, Yitzchaq, and Ya‘aqov—as they navigate famine, strife, and divine encounters in the land of Kena‘an. Throughout these generations, the narrative emphasizes the sovereignty of Yahweh as He establishes an everlasting covenantthrough chosen families despite their personal failings and deceptions. The overarching theme is the movement from cosmic creation to the formation of a distinct peopledestined to bless all nations of the ground.

Reacties

0

Wees de eerste die een reactie plaatst

Meld je nu aan en word lid van de Atlas University Podcast community!

Probeer gratis

Probeer 14 dagen gratis

€ 9,99 / maand na proefperiode. · Elk moment opzegbaar.

  • Podcasts die je alleen op Podimo hoort
  • 20 uur luisterboeken / maand
  • Gratis podcasts

Alle afleveringen

300 afleveringen

aflevering Was Hitler actually the Norse Old-God Odin? artwork

Was Hitler actually the Norse Old-God Odin?

This text argues that Adolf Hitler was the mortal incarnation of the ancient god Wotan, who returned to Earth under the judicial sentence of Psalm 82. The author posits that the Third Reich functioned as a modern "Asgardic machine," utilizing 20th-century technology and bureaucracy to manifest Wotan’s traditional offices of frenzy, oath-bound loyalty, and sacrificial death. Central to this thesis is the belief that Nazi antisemitism was a metaphysical rebellion against the historical witness of Yahweh, culminating in the Holocaust as a theological "anti-temple." The text emphasizes that historical evidence and biblical scripture converge to show that Wotan’s return was not a victory, but a path to providential humiliation and death. Ultimately, the work serves as a theological indictment, stripping the regime of its perceived glamour to reveal a judged power that failed the biblical test of protecting the weak.

4 jul 202631 min
aflevering The Sacred Wound: Tammuz and the Anatomy of Religious Corruption artwork

The Sacred Wound: Tammuz and the Anatomy of Religious Corruption

This book examines the biblical and historical significance of Tammuz, the ancient Mesopotamian deity whose cultic presence at the Jerusalem temple is condemned in Ezekiel 8. The author argues that Tammuz represents a "dead-god" pattern of religious corruption where idolatrous grief replaces covenantal obedience and resurrection hope. By focusing on the sacred corpse, the grieving mother, and the recurring wound, this religious system captures the affections and imagination of worshipers through the beauty of sorrow. The text warns that this "Tammuz grammar" persists throughout history, potentially infiltrating later traditions when they center devotion on images of death rather than the living presence of the divine. Ultimately, the sources describe a progressive anatomy of apostasy, moving from tolerated images to emotional captivity, which threatens to displace true worship with a counterfeit system of lament.

2 jul 202643 min
aflevering The Genesis War-Map: Rooting Out the Old Gods artwork

The Genesis War-Map: Rooting Out the Old Gods

This book explores Genesis not as a simplistic collection of children's stories, but as a sophisticated theological war-map designed to debunk the claims of ancient pagan deities. By establishing Yahweh as the sole creator of every natural domain—including the sun, the sea, and human fertility—the narrative strips rival "old gods" of their perceived authority and originality. This framework reinterprets the creation account as a legal and cosmic lawsuit, asserting that everything the nations worshiped was actually a created servant under divine command. Man is presented as the unique, living image of God, a status that exposes idolatry as a degrading counterfeit of human vocation. Ultimately, the sources describe Eden as the first sacred sanctuary where the ongoing biblical conflict between divine order and rebellious autonomy began.

1 jul 202635 min
aflevering The Resurrection War: Yahweh’s Judgment of the Rebel Gods artwork

The Resurrection War: Yahweh’s Judgment of the Rebel Gods

This book explores the biblical narrative of a cosmic war between Yahweh and rebellious divine beings who were originally appointed to govern the nations after the Tower of Babel. According to the author, Psalm 82 serves as a legal courtroom where these corrupt "gods" are sentenced to lose their heavenly status and die like mortals. This divine judgment is executed throughout history as these powers are "dragged into history," manifesting through oppressive empires, idolatrous systems, and manufactured religious images. The sources argue that the resurrection of Jesus is the decisive turning point in this conflict, breaking the authority of death and beginning the public transfer of dominion back to humanity. Ultimately, the text defines the true ekklesia as a revolutionary assembly commissioned to witness against these falling powers and their modern institutional counterparts.

30 jun 202625 min
aflevering The Manna Principle: Provision Without Bondage artwork

The Manna Principle: Provision Without Bondage

This text explores the Manna Principle as a foundational biblical theology for a free economy that stands in direct opposition to the exploitative systems of empire. It contrasts the "Economy of Yahweh," defined by sufficiency, rest, and trust, with the "House of Slavery" in Egypt, where provision was weaponized to achieve totalitarian control over bodies and labor. By examining the narrative of Exodus, the author argues that bread is never merely biological; rather, it reveals the true nature of a kingdom based on whether it fosters gratitude or dependency. The three core lessons of the manna—having enough, refusing to hoard, and observing the Sabbath—serve as a "design law" meant to deprogram the slave mentality and prevent the concentration of power. Ultimately, the text challenges modern institutions in medicine, education, and finance to adopt these principles to ensure that provision strengthens human freedom instead of manufacturing new forms of bondage.

30 jun 202638 min