Study in the Chapel
Genesis 2 drops a surprising set of details about Eden: one river, four branches, and names that should sound like coordinates. Then we hit the wall. We can point to the Euphrates, we can reasonably connect Hiddekel with the Tigris, but Pishon and Gihon do not land cleanly on any modern map. Instead of rushing past it, we sit with the discomfort and ask the real question behind the geography: why would God place information in Scripture that many believers and even famous scholars cannot fully resolve? We talk candidly about the difference between knowing and believing, and why God may be training us to trust Him when our tools run out. We also explore a practical explanation that keeps the Bible from being dismissed too quickly: the earth’s surface is not frozen in time. If Eden’s description comes from a world before Noah’s flood, a catastrophic global judgment could have altered river systems, landmarks, and even names beyond recognition. We connect that to everyday examples of rivers changing course and to the experience of returning to a familiar place after a disaster and realizing you’ve lost your bearings. Then we zoom out to Biblical archaeology and the pattern of evidence arriving “on time” for the people who need it. From the Tel Dan Stele and the “house of David” to discoveries tied to Hezekiah’s tunnel and the Pool of Siloam, history keeps reminding us that unanswered questions are not the same thing as errors. If you’ve ever struggled with a hard passage, this is a steadying conversation about humility, diligence, and Proverbs 2 style seeking. If this strengthened your trust in God’s Word, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find these studies.
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