The Semi-Seminarian

Rahab Explained: The Spy Report That Was Actually a Sermon | Joshua 2 Bible Study

25 min · 14 mei 2026
aflevering Rahab Explained: The Spy Report That Was Actually a Sermon | Joshua 2 Bible Study artwork

Beschrijving

What if the spies didn’t bring back military intelligence from Jericho, but a sermon? This Joshua 2 Bible study looks at Rahab and the spies, the scarlet cord, the walls of Jericho, and the confession of faith that changed Israel’s report. Most Bible studies on Rahab in the Bible focus on the red cord in the window. That image matters. But before Rahab ties the scarlet cord, she gives one of the clearest confessions of faith in the entire book of Joshua: “The LORD your God, he is God in heaven above, and on earth beneath.” The whole city of Jericho heard the same reports: the Red Sea, the defeat of Sihon and Og, and Israel’s God on the move. The whole city locked its gates and trusted its walls. Rahab opened her window and trusted the God she had only heard about. 📖 TIMESTAMPS 0:00 Introduction 2:00 Setting the Scene: Life Inside the Wall 6:30 Who Is Rahab in the Bible? 10:00 Scripture Reading: Joshua 2:1–24 15:00 Rahab’s Confession of Faith 20:00 The Scarlet Cord: What It Means 25:00 The Spies’ Report: Why It Echoes Rahab 30:00 Rahab in the Genealogy of Jesus 35:00 What Rahab Teaches Us About Faith Before Proof 40:00 Closing Benediction 📌 WHAT THIS STUDY COVERS — Rahab and the spies in Joshua 2 — The meaning of the scarlet cord in the Old Testament — Why Rahab’s confession matters before the walls of Jericho fall — How the spies’ report echoes Rahab’s own words — Why Rahab is in the genealogy of Jesus in Matthew 1 — What Rahab teaches about faith, outsiders, and grace — How God works through overlooked people and scandalous witnesses When the spies return to Joshua, they don’t report wall height, troop strength, or gate schedules. They repeat Rahab’s confession with the pronouns changed. She says, “The LORD has given you the land.” They say, “The LORD has delivered into our hands all the land.” They went into Jericho as spies. They came out as her congregation. This teaching connects Rahab to the women named in Matthew’s genealogy of Jesus: Tamar, Rahab, Ruth, and Bathsheba. Scripture keeps showing the same pattern: God’s covenant moves through unexpected people, foreign households, complicated stories, and witnesses respectable religion might overlook. Rahab believed before the walls fell. She tied the cord while Jericho still looked permanent. She opened the window before anyone gave her permission. That is faith with dust on its hands. Scripture: Joshua 2:1–24 Topic: Rahab and the Spies / Joshua 2 Explained Series: Women in the Bible / Women in the Genealogy of Jesus If something here helped you see Scripture differently, throw a like in the offering plate. Subscribe so you’ll know when we gather again. Be blessed. #Rahab #Joshua2 #BibleStudy #WomenInTheBible #OldTestament

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aflevering Acts 5 Explained: Peter’s Shadow, Healing, and Mercy in the Street artwork

Acts 5 Explained: Peter’s Shadow, Healing, and Mercy in the Street

What really happened when people laid the sick in the streets so Peter’s shadow might fall on them? In Acts 5:12–16, Luke gives us one of the strangest and most powerful scenes in the New Testament. The early church is gathered in Solomon’s Portico after the terrifying story of Ananias and Sapphira. Great fear has come upon the whole church. The performance has been exposed. The captions have died. And then, immediately, mercy starts spilling into the street. This Bible study explores Acts 5 and the healing power associated with Peter’s shadow — but not as a superhero story, a magic trick, or a faith-healer origin scene. Luke never says Peter’s shadow healed anyone. He says the people carried the sick into the streets and laid them on cots and mats so that Peter’s shadow might fall across them. That detail matters. This episode asks a deeper question: not “What power was in Peter’s shadow?” but “What made those people willing to be seen?” In a world built on honor and shame, being carried into the public street on a mat was costly. It meant your need, weakness, sickness, torment, and desperation were visible to everybody. And yet Acts 5 shows us people whose desperation finally outran their shame. This is a Bible study about healing, honesty, public mercy, and the courage to stop pretending you are standing when your soul is still lying flat on the ground. We’ll look at: Acts 5:12–16 explained in context Peter’s shadow and healing in the early church Why Luke places this story after Ananias and Sapphira Solomon’s Portico and the public witness of the apostles Honor, shame, sickness, and public vulnerability in the ancient world Why the subject of the story may not be Peter, but the people on the mats How Peter’s denial by the charcoal fire connects to his restored witness Why mercy leaves the building and meets people in the street If you’ve ever felt like you had to perform wellness, manage your image, hide your weakness, or honor God’s mercy from a safe distance, this episode is for you. Mercy has left the building. It is not checking credentials. The question is whether we are willing to be in the street when it walks by. Welcome to The Semi-Seminarian Podcast — Theology Thru The Static. #Acts5 #PetersShadow #BibleStudy #ActsExplained #NewTestament #EarlyChurch #ChristianPodcast #TheologyPodcast #HealingInTheBible #SemiSeminarian #BookOfActs #AnaniasAndSapphira #SolomonsPortico #Mercy #Grace #Faith #WednesdayNightBibleStudy

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aflevering Why Did Ananias and Sapphira Die? Acts 5 Explained | The Choice Is Yours artwork

Why Did Ananias and Sapphira Die? Acts 5 Explained | The Choice Is Yours

What really happened to Ananias and Sapphira in Acts 5? Was this story about money, generosity, church discipline, hypocrisy, or something deeper? In this episode of The Semi-Seminarian Podcast, Pastor Jim Wilhelm walks through Acts 4:32–5:11 and the terrifying story of Ananias and Sapphira — not as a simple “give more money” sermon, but as a hard and holy text about truth, fear, performance, and the presence of the Holy Spirit in the newborn church. The early church was living in resurrection power. They were “of one heart and soul.” No one claimed their possessions as their own. Barnabas sold a field and laid the proceeds at the apostles’ feet. Then Ananias walked into the same room with a different spirit. Peter makes the key point clear: the land was his, the money was his, and he was free to give all of it, none of it, or part of it. The sin was not that Ananias held something back. The sin was that he brought part and called it whole. This Bible study explores: Acts 5 explained in context Why Ananias and Sapphira died What Peter actually rebuked The meaning of “kept back” / nosphizō The connection between Ananias and Achan in Joshua 7 Why the Holy Spirit is not church decoration The difference between honest fear and religious performance Why partial honesty is better than polished hypocrisy What this story teaches the modern church about grace and truth This episode argues that Ananias was not punished for being afraid. He was exposed because he performed surrender instead of telling the truth. And that raises a question for every church, every preacher, every giver, every burned-out believer, and every person trying to look more whole than they really are: Can the church become a room where people are free to bring half and call it half? Because grace is free. But grace is not fake. Jesus did not rise from the dead to build a room where frightened people have to perform. He rose to make a people truthful enough to be healed. If you have ever said “I’m fine” when you were not, ever let people assume your offering was more complete than it was, ever tried to look faithful while hiding fear in the backyard — this episode is for you. This is Acts 5 for the weary, the scared, the church-burned, the honest, the half-holding, and the ones who still want to believe the Spirit can handle the truth. 📖 Scripture: Acts 4:32–5:11 🎙️ Episode Title: The Choice Is Yours 🔥 Theme: Ananias and Sapphira, truth, fear, hypocrisy, generosity, the Holy Spirit, and the early church ⛪ From: First Christian Church (DOC), Cushing, Oklahoma 📻 The Semi-Seminarian Podcast — Theology Thru The Static If this episode helped you hear Acts 5 in a new way, throw the like in the offering plate, share it with somebody who is tired of performing, and subscribe so you’ll know when we’re meeting again. Be blessed. #AnaniasAndSapphira #Acts5 #BibleStudy #ActsOfTheApostles #HolySpirit #EarlyChurch #ChristianTeaching #Sermon #TheSemiSeminarian #PastorJimWilhelm #BibleExplained #ChristianPodcast #GraceAndTruth #ChurchLife #NewTestament

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aflevering Still Knocking: Peter’s Prison Break, Rhoda’s Witness, and the Church That Almost Didn’t Open the Door | Acts 12 Bible Study artwork

Still Knocking: Peter’s Prison Break, Rhoda’s Witness, and the Church That Almost Didn’t Open the Door | Acts 12 Bible Study

In Acts 12, Peter is chained between two soldiers, guarded by sixteen men, locked behind an iron gate, and scheduled for execution by Herod. James has already been killed. The church is grieving, praying, and bracing for another funeral. Then heaven interrupts. An angel wakes Peter up, his chains fall off, the prison gates open by themselves, and Peter walks free into the Jerusalem night. But when he reaches the house where the church is praying for him, he keeps knocking outside while the believers inside refuse to believe Rhoda, the servant girl who recognizes his voice. The empire could not keep Peter in. The prayer meeting almost kept him out. This Wednesday night Bible study walks through Acts 12:1–17 with close attention to Luke’s brilliant storytelling, the genuine comedy of the scene, the grief behind the church’s disbelief, and the overlooked witness of Rhoda. This is a story about prayer, deliverance, trauma, joy, and the strange ways God answers before we are ready to believe the answer has arrived. Peter’s rescue shows us that God can break open the empire’s strongest gates. Rhoda’s witness asks whether the church can open its own door. If you have ever prayed while still expecting the worst, if you have ever dismissed good news because grief had trained you not to trust it, or if you have ever felt like the lowest-status voice in the room while still telling the truth, Acts 12 has something holy to say. The Spirit broke him out. The church locked him out. And Peter kept knocking. 📖 Scripture: Acts 12:1–17 🎙️ Episode Title: Still Knocking 🕯️ Theme: Prayer, deliverance, Rhoda, Peter’s escape from prison, and the church learning to recognize answered prayer If this Bible study helped you hear Acts 12 in a fresh way, throw a like in the offering plate. Subscribe to keep meeting with us around the table for Scripture, story, and grace through the static. Be blessed. #Acts12 #PeterPrisonBreak #Rhoda #BibleStudy #WednesdayNightBibleStudy #BookOfActs #PeterInPrison #AnsweredPrayer #PrayerMeeting #ActsBibleStudy #ChristianTeaching #BibleTeaching #NewTestament #TheSemiSeminarian #StillKnocking #RhodaWasRight #ChurchAndPrayer #PeterAndRhoda #BiblicalComedy #LukeActs

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aflevering The Greek Word That Changes Acts 4 Forever | Why Peter "Could Not" Stop (Boldness, Pentecost & ου δυναμεθα) artwork

The Greek Word That Changes Acts 4 Forever | Why Peter "Could Not" Stop (Boldness, Pentecost & ου δυναμεθα)

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aflevering He Sat at God's Door Every Day and Never Walked In | The Beautiful Gate | Acts 3:1-10 artwork

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