The Christ Centred Cosmic Civilisation

Episode 149 - Why The Bible Describes Many Heavenly Species

35 min · 2. juli 2026
episode Episode 149 - Why The Bible Describes Many Heavenly Species cover

Beskrivelse

Heaven gets strange the moment we try to file it neatly. We start with a deceptively simple question: are all heavenly beings one species we casually call “angels”, or does Scripture describe a genuinely diverse ecology of celestial creatures? As we read the Bible’s own vocabulary, the differences become hard to ignore. Angels often appear human enough to be mistaken for men, while cherubim, seraphim, and ophanim carry imagery that feels more like Ezekiel’s overwhelming field notes than a single tidy category. From there we trace how church history wrestles with this, and why some traditions end up flattening the whole spiritual realm. Neoplatonic dualism offers a comforting two-box universe, spiritual versus material, but it can also drain the detail out of Christian cosmology. When everything gets compressed into “God and creation”, agency collapses, ranks and roles fade, and the rich biblical tapestry of delegated powers starts to look like mere symbolism. We talk about what that does to theology, to interpretation, and to the confidence that reality might be bigger than our preferred definitions. Then we turn to dragons and classification. John of Damascus offers a case study in what happens when there is no room for an in-between category: dragons must become animals, regardless of reports of intelligence. We contrast that with Albert the Great and a more open posture shaped by witness, tradition, and the strange edges of medieval natural philosophy. Subscribe, share, and leave a review, then tell us: where have we made the cosmos smaller than the Bible makes it? The theme music is "Wager with Angels" by Nathan Moore

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episode Episode 149 - Why The Bible Describes Many Heavenly Species cover

Episode 149 - Why The Bible Describes Many Heavenly Species

Heaven gets strange the moment we try to file it neatly. We start with a deceptively simple question: are all heavenly beings one species we casually call “angels”, or does Scripture describe a genuinely diverse ecology of celestial creatures? As we read the Bible’s own vocabulary, the differences become hard to ignore. Angels often appear human enough to be mistaken for men, while cherubim, seraphim, and ophanim carry imagery that feels more like Ezekiel’s overwhelming field notes than a single tidy category. From there we trace how church history wrestles with this, and why some traditions end up flattening the whole spiritual realm. Neoplatonic dualism offers a comforting two-box universe, spiritual versus material, but it can also drain the detail out of Christian cosmology. When everything gets compressed into “God and creation”, agency collapses, ranks and roles fade, and the rich biblical tapestry of delegated powers starts to look like mere symbolism. We talk about what that does to theology, to interpretation, and to the confidence that reality might be bigger than our preferred definitions. Then we turn to dragons and classification. John of Damascus offers a case study in what happens when there is no room for an in-between category: dragons must become animals, regardless of reports of intelligence. We contrast that with Albert the Great and a more open posture shaped by witness, tradition, and the strange edges of medieval natural philosophy. Subscribe, share, and leave a review, then tell us: where have we made the cosmos smaller than the Bible makes it? The theme music is "Wager with Angels" by Nathan Moore

2. juli 202635 min
episode Episode 148 - Creatures Of The Curtain cover

Episode 148 - Creatures Of The Curtain

Dragons are one of those topics people either laugh off or obsess over, but we take them seriously as a theological and historical problem: why do dragon accounts appear on nearly every continent with such similar descriptions, and why does the Bible itself insist on dragon language from Genesis to Revelation? We begin a new series on the boundary between fey and non-fey creatures and argue that modern categories often shrink reality until the sources stop making sense. We use the tabernacle as a “map” of creation: the highest heaven, the broader heavens and earth, and the curtain that marks a boundary. That curtain becomes our key image for liminal beings, the creatures that do not sit neatly in either the purely heavenly or the straightforwardly earthly. From there we move to dragons as a classic test case, exploring why fossil theories do not fully explain the overlap in global dragon traditions and why a Christian cosmic worldview has room for stranger inhabitants than modern materialism allows. Then we go further: dragon rulers. Drawing on global church history, wider-canon texts received by many Christians, and Ethiopian imperial memory, we discuss a famous Ethiopian dragon ruler said to have governed for centuries, bringing prosperity while demanding worship and sacrifice. The story pushes a blunt question: would you accept wealth and stability if the price is your soul? We end by contrasting dragon tyranny with the kingship of Jesus, where the Father gives his only Son rather than demanding yours. If this stretches your imagination, listen closely, share it with a friend, and leave a review. What do you think dragons reveal about power, worship and the shape of reality? The theme music is "Wager with Angels" by Nathan Moore

25. juni 202634 min
episode Episode 147 - What If Atonement Means God Finds Peace Too cover

Episode 147 - What If Atonement Means God Finds Peace Too

The cross is often explained as something done for us, or as a victory over evil powers, and both themes are truly biblical. But we push deeper and ask the unsettling question the sacrificial system keeps asking: what if the death of Jesus is aimed first at God? We close our atonement series by returning to the multifaceted meaning of the crucifixion and insisting that the centre is God reconciling the world to himself, a work within the Trinity that makes real peace with God possible. From the burnt offering we explore why the Old Testament dares to speak of a “soothing aroma” to the Lord, and why atonement is tied to death, blood and fire. That imagery is not theatre. It is Scripture’s way of naming divine indignation at unchallenged evil, a wrath that the prophets describe as building towards a day of vengeance and visitation when everything is exposed. Atonement matters because it answers how God can be righteous, opposed to evil, and yet still forgive. Then we focus on Passover, reading Exodus closely and noticing what the ritual is actually for. The blood on the door is not for human eyes, and not to ward off demons, but for the Lord to see so that judgement passes over. When Jesus frames his own death in Passover terms, the cross takes on a bracing clarity: God himself is the one we cannot outrun, and only the blood of the true Passover Lamb can cover us when nothing else can. If this helped you, subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave us a review, what line or idea will you be thinking about this week? The theme music is "Wager with Angels" by Nathan Moore

18. juni 202635 min
episode Episode 146 - Atonement As Cosmic Justice And Healing cover

Episode 146 - Atonement As Cosmic Justice And Healing

Evil feels abstract until it lands on our doorstep. We start by naming a harder truth: Scripture treats sin as a corrupting power that defiles not only individuals but the shared world we inhabit. If that is right, then atonement cannot be reduced to a change in human feelings or a shift in moral opinion. It has to be an act that confronts evil, condemns it, and cleanses what it has damaged, so that forgiveness becomes genuine closure rather than denial.  From there we follow Paul’s dilemma in Romans: how can God be righteous while declaring sinners righteous and then making us righteous? We explore why divine rescue cannot come in a way that implies evil triumphs or simply “gets away with it”. The Bible’s vision is bigger than private spirituality. It is about the victory of good over evil being written into the very logic of the heavens and the earth.  Numbers 35 becomes a key doorway. Bloodshed pollutes the land, and the text insists that atonement for murder cannot be bought with money. Then we trace the city of refuge and the startling detail that release is tied to the death of the high priest, hinting at a representative, priestly pattern. Leviticus adds the sobering image of the land rejecting corruption, and we connect that to the long biblical hope of a world that becomes the home of righteousness.  Finally, we turn to Jesus: the divine-human one who runs towards death, breaks the devil’s grip rooted in the fear of death, and bears not only guilt and shame but judgement itself. If you have ever wondered why the cross matters for justice, reconciliation, and cosmic renewal, this conversation is for you. Subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review with the question you are still carrying. The theme music is "Wager with Angels" by Nathan Moore

11. juni 202627 min
episode Episode 145 - God’s Anger Is Rational And Holy cover

Episode 145 - God’s Anger Is Rational And Holy

The Bible does not describe God as indifferent. It describes Him as alive, personal, and fiercely committed to goodness, truth, and justice and that commitment has a shadow side we often avoid: wrath. We explore why Scripture reaches for words like heat, burning, and fire when it speaks about God’s anger, and why that is not an unstable temper but a settled, rational opposition to evil.  We walk through texts that many modern Christians rarely hear preached, from Proverbs’ list of what the Lord hates to the prophets’ scorching images of judgement, and the Psalms’ warning to “kiss the Son” before rebellion collapses into ruin. Along the way, we confront an awkward question: have we become so comfortable with sin, both out there and in here, that we no longer recognise what holiness looks like? We also push back on an Enlightenment-flavoured faith that prefers a vague, harmless benevolence and treats judgement, fear of God, and damnation as embarrassing leftovers.  Then we turn to the New Testament where wrath is “revealed”, even “stored up”, and where Hebrews calls God a consuming fire. Revelation’s phrase “the wrath of the Lamb” forces the issue: Jesus is not only gentle, He is also the cosmic Lord who sustains the universe and will finally deal with evil. That brings us to the closing tension that shapes everything: if God must destroy evil, how can the sinner be saved? That is where the necessity of atonement, forgiveness, and reconciliation becomes unavoidable.  If this stretched you, challenged you, or clarified something you have struggled to name, subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave a review. What do you think we lose when we stop fearing God? The theme music is "Wager with Angels" by Nathan Moore

4. juni 202635 min