Logic of God

Exodus Chapter 3: The Mountain, the Flame, and the Name (Part 2)

1 h 7 min · 2. juni 2026
episode Exodus Chapter 3: The Mountain, the Flame, and the Name (Part 2) cover

Description

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2149914/fan_mail/new] Part 2 of our Exodus 3 study continues beyond the familiar Sunday school version of the burning bush and into the tension-filled conversation between God and Moses. Rather than eagerly accepting his calling, Moses resists. He questions God’s plan, his own qualifications, his authority, and even the likelihood that Israel will listen to him at all. In many ways, Moses becomes a mirror for our own fears, insecurities, and reluctance to trust God when He calls us into difficult places. In this episode, we examine God’s response to Moses’ objections and what it reveals about the nature of divine authority, covenant faithfulness, and human weakness. We explore the meaning of God’s declaration, “I AM WHO I AM,” why the divine name has been so central to Jewish and Christian theology, and how the Exodus story challenges many modern assumptions about God’s relationship to His people. We also discuss the significance of remembering the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, the role of covenant memory throughout Scripture, and why God repeatedly points Moses back to His promises rather than Moses’ abilities. Along the way, we explore connections to later biblical themes, including the ministry of Jesus, the language of divine presence, and the recurring biblical pattern that God often works through the unlikely, the broken, and the reluctant. As with our Genesis series, our goal is not simply to repeat familiar interpretations, but to wrestle honestly with the text, the ancient worldview behind it, and the questions that emerge when we slow down and read Scripture on its own terms. Exodus 3 is far more than a commissioning story. It is a revelation of God’s character, His faithfulness to His covenant, and His determination to redeem His people despite every obstacle placed in the way. Website: thelogicofgod.com [https://thelogicofgod.com/] Email: main.thelogicofgod@gmail.com Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/thelogicofgod/] Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/LogicOfGod] Patreon [https://patreon.com/LogicofGod?utm_medium=unknown&utm_source=join_link&utm_campaign=creatorshare_creator&utm_content=copyLink]

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the Logic of God community!

Get Started

1 month for 9 kr.

Then 99 kr. / month · Cancel anytime.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

All episodes

155 episodes

episode Exodus Chapter 4: Resisting the Will of God (Part 2) artwork

Exodus Chapter 4: Resisting the Will of God (Part 2)

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2149914/fan_mail/new] Just when Moses finally agrees to obey God's calling, Exodus takes an unexpected and deeply unsettling turn. On the journey back to Egypt, the Lord suddenly seeks to kill the very man He has chosen to deliver Israel. The encounter is brief, mysterious, and has puzzled readers for thousands of years. In Part 2 of Exodus 4, we wrestle with one of the most difficult passages in the Torah as we examine the covenant significance of circumcision, the role of Zipporah, and why this strange event stands at the center of Moses' calling narrative. We explore ancient Jewish interpretations, Second Temple traditions, and the broader biblical themes that help make sense of a story that is often skipped entirely in modern preaching. We also discuss covenant identity, obedience, and the danger of approaching God's mission while neglecting God's commands. As Aaron joins Moses and the message finally reaches Israel, the people respond with belief and worship—but Exodus continues to challenge us with the question of whether belief alone is enough when God calls His people into covenant faithfulness. As with so much of Exodus, the deeper message lies beneath the surface. What appears at first to be a strange interruption in the story may actually reveal one of the central themes of the entire book: before God delivers His people, He first establishes who truly belongs to Him. Website: thelogicofgod.com [https://thelogicofgod.com/] Email: main.thelogicofgod@gmail.com Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/thelogicofgod/] Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/LogicOfGod] Patreon [https://patreon.com/LogicofGod?utm_medium=unknown&utm_source=join_link&utm_campaign=creatorshare_creator&utm_content=copyLink]

Yesterday49 min
episode Exodus Chapter 4: Resisting the Will of God (Part 1) artwork

Exodus Chapter 4: Resisting the Will of God (Part 1)

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2149914/fan_mail/new] Moses has encountered God at the burning bush, but receiving a calling is not the same as accepting it. In Exodus 4, Moses begins offering excuse after excuse for why he is the wrong person for the task, revealing fears and insecurities that feel surprisingly familiar to modern readers. In Part 1 of this study, we examine the signs God gives Moses, including the staff that becomes a serpent, the leprous hand, and the water that turns to blood. Rather than treating these as random miracles, we explore how they function within the worldview of the ancient Near East and why these particular signs would have carried powerful theological significance in Egypt. We also discuss Moses' speech impediment, God's response to human weakness, the appointment of Aaron, and the often-overlooked significance of Israel being called God's firstborn son. Along the way, we challenge several common assumptions that have become attached to the Exodus story and consider how much of our understanding comes from tradition, movies, and popular retellings rather than the biblical text itself. Exodus is not merely the story of Israel's deliverance. It is the story of God's authority confronting every competing power, every false god, and every excuse that stands in the way of obedience. Website: thelogicofgod.com [https://thelogicofgod.com/] Email: main.thelogicofgod@gmail.com Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/thelogicofgod/] Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/LogicOfGod] Patreon [https://patreon.com/LogicofGod?utm_medium=unknown&utm_source=join_link&utm_campaign=creatorshare_creator&utm_content=copyLink]

9. juni 202646 min
episode Exodus Chapter 3: The Mountain, the Flame, and the Name (Part 2) artwork

Exodus Chapter 3: The Mountain, the Flame, and the Name (Part 2)

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2149914/fan_mail/new] Part 2 of our Exodus 3 study continues beyond the familiar Sunday school version of the burning bush and into the tension-filled conversation between God and Moses. Rather than eagerly accepting his calling, Moses resists. He questions God’s plan, his own qualifications, his authority, and even the likelihood that Israel will listen to him at all. In many ways, Moses becomes a mirror for our own fears, insecurities, and reluctance to trust God when He calls us into difficult places. In this episode, we examine God’s response to Moses’ objections and what it reveals about the nature of divine authority, covenant faithfulness, and human weakness. We explore the meaning of God’s declaration, “I AM WHO I AM,” why the divine name has been so central to Jewish and Christian theology, and how the Exodus story challenges many modern assumptions about God’s relationship to His people. We also discuss the significance of remembering the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, the role of covenant memory throughout Scripture, and why God repeatedly points Moses back to His promises rather than Moses’ abilities. Along the way, we explore connections to later biblical themes, including the ministry of Jesus, the language of divine presence, and the recurring biblical pattern that God often works through the unlikely, the broken, and the reluctant. As with our Genesis series, our goal is not simply to repeat familiar interpretations, but to wrestle honestly with the text, the ancient worldview behind it, and the questions that emerge when we slow down and read Scripture on its own terms. Exodus 3 is far more than a commissioning story. It is a revelation of God’s character, His faithfulness to His covenant, and His determination to redeem His people despite every obstacle placed in the way. Website: thelogicofgod.com [https://thelogicofgod.com/] Email: main.thelogicofgod@gmail.com Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/thelogicofgod/] Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/LogicOfGod] Patreon [https://patreon.com/LogicofGod?utm_medium=unknown&utm_source=join_link&utm_campaign=creatorshare_creator&utm_content=copyLink]

2. juni 20261 h 7 min
episode Exodus Chapter 3: The Mountain, the Flame, and the Name (Part 1) artwork

Exodus Chapter 3: The Mountain, the Flame, and the Name (Part 1)

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2149914/fan_mail/new] In Exodus 3, Moses encounters the burning bush, but this story is far stranger, deeper, and more confrontational than the version most Christians inherited from Sunday school retellings. The fire does not consume the bush. The Angel of Yahweh speaks as God Himself. Holy ground appears in the middle of the wilderness. And Moses is forced to confront the terrifying reality that the God of Abraham is not a regional deity bound to geography, temples, or human expectations. In this episode, we explore the ancient worldview behind the burning bush, the identity of the Angel of the Lord, the meaning of God’s divine name, and why the Exodus narrative continually challenges modern Protestant assumptions about Scripture. We discuss cosmic geography, covenantal identity, sacred presence, and the recurring biblical image of God as an all-consuming fire that both judges and preserves. We also examine how the Exodus reframes redemption itself. Moses is not presented as a triumphant hero, but as a reluctant and deeply human figure being pulled into God’s purposes despite fear, uncertainty, and inadequacy. The covenant is bigger than Moses, bigger than Israel, and bigger than the modern individualism that often shapes contemporary faith. Along the way, we explore the symbolism of the thorn bush, the theological significance of fire throughout Scripture, the connections between Exodus, Revelation, and the Gospels, and the way ancient Jewish traditions understood the mysterious “two powers” language surrounding the Angel of Yahweh long before the rise of modern theological systems. This conversation continues our approach from Genesis: not flattening the text into clichés or shallow moral lessons, but wrestling honestly with the worldview, symbolism, theology, and spiritual tension embedded within the biblical story itself. Website: thelogicofgod.com [https://thelogicofgod.com/] Email: main.thelogicofgod@gmail.com Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/thelogicofgod/] Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/LogicOfGod] Patreon [https://patreon.com/LogicofGod?utm_medium=unknown&utm_source=join_link&utm_campaign=creatorshare_creator&utm_content=copyLink]

26. maj 202645 min
episode Exodus Chapter 2: Moses, The Son of the Nile (Part 2) artwork

Exodus Chapter 2: Moses, The Son of the Nile (Part 2)

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2149914/fan_mail/new] Exodus 2 continues to unfold as far more than the setup for Moses’ story. In this second part, we move deeper into the themes of exile, identity, suffering, and divine preparation that shape both Moses and the future of Israel. We explore Moses’ flight into Midian after killing the Egyptian and wrestle with the tension of his actions: was Moses acting in sinful rage, premature deliverance, or a distorted attempt at justice? Rather than flattening the story into simple morality, we examine how scripture repeatedly presents flawed deliverers whom God transforms through wilderness, humility, and suffering. This episode also focuses heavily on the wilderness motif throughout scripture and how exile becomes one of God’s primary tools for reshaping people. Moses loses the wealth, status, and authority of Pharaoh’s house and instead becomes a shepherd in the wilderness — a role that intentionally mirrors patriarchs like Abraham and Jacob while foreshadowing David and ultimately Christ Himself. We spend time unpacking the deeper symbolism surrounding Midian, the daughters at the well, and the recurring biblical pattern of covenant encounters happening in wilderness places outside civilization and empire. These are not random narrative details. They are part of a larger biblical pattern where God consistently draws people away from worldly power before entrusting them with spiritual authority. The conversation also expands into broader themes of oppression, comfort, and spiritual exile in the modern church. We discuss how Western Christianity often avoids discomfort, mystery, and deep study in favor of shallow certainty and repetitive teaching, and how Exodus challenges believers to rediscover scripture as a living, interconnected narrative rather than isolated moral lessons. Throughout the episode, we continue highlighting places where our discussion intentionally diverges from common modern Protestant assumptions — especially ideas surrounding election, spiritual powers, church tradition, and the supernatural worldview of scripture. Rather than ignoring difficult passages or flattening ancient context, we lean into the tension and ask why these stories were preserved the way they were. Finally, we end by connecting Moses’ exile and preparation to the broader biblical pattern of redemption: deliverers are formed in weakness, kingdoms built on oppression inevitably collapse, and God repeatedly works through the rejected, displaced, and forgotten people of the world to accomplish His purposes. Exodus 2 is not simply background information before the burning bush. It is the slow dismantling of worldly identity and the beginning of Moses becoming the kind of deliverer God can actually use. Website: thelogicofgod.com [https://thelogicofgod.com/] Email: main.thelogicofgod@gmail.com Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/thelogicofgod/] Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/LogicOfGod] Patreon [https://patreon.com/LogicofGod?utm_medium=unknown&utm_source=join_link&utm_campaign=creatorshare_creator&utm_content=copyLink]

19. maj 202637 min