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Mosaic Ministries

Podcast by Matthew Salathé

English

History & religion

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About Mosaic Ministries

What does it mean that the Bible is "God's Love Letter to the World"? We'll explore this truth weekly and uncover the depth of God's love for His entire creation.

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97 episodes

episode Pinchas: The Perpetual Fire of Prayer (Num. 25-28, 1 Kings 8, Mark 11) artwork

Pinchas: The Perpetual Fire of Prayer (Num. 25-28, 1 Kings 8, Mark 11)

Message Summary As Israel stands on the edge of entering the inheritance, the portion of Pinchas reveals the heart of God’s covenant zeal. Pinchas is not moved by selfish jealousy, but by the Lord’s own burning desire for the wholeness of His people. The covenant of peace given to him is not merely the absence of conflict, but shalom (wholeness) — the restoration of God’s dwelling, God’s people, and God’s love held together in covenant faithfulness. From there, the message moves to the daily tamid offering, the continual morning and evening sacrifice that formed the regular heartbeat of the tabernacle and Temple. Before the added offerings, before the special appointed sacrifices, there was the continual fire — the ordinary, faithful pattern of God dwelling among His people, speaking to them, sanctifying them, and reminding them that He had delivered them in order to dwell with them. In Messiah Yeshua, the sacrifice has been fulfilled, but the prayer has not ceased. The house of sacrifice becomes known as a house of prayer for all nations. Instead of answering human unfaithfulness with exile, God answers with the cross, with forgiveness, and with the gift of His Spirit. The invitation is now to become a people whose lives are marked by continual communion, praying without ceasing, speaking life over one another, and carrying the same zeal the Lord has for His Bride. Takeaways * God’s jealousy is covenant zeal. It is not coveting what belongs to another, but a burning love for what rightly belongs to Him — His people, His Bride, His dwelling. * Shalom is wholeness. The covenant of peace given to Pinchas points to restored wholeness between God and His people, not simply calm circumstances. * The tamid offering was the daily heartbeat of the Temple. Morning and evening, the fire was to keep burning continually as a sign of God’s presence, holiness, and communion with Israel. * The added offerings were built upon the continual offering. The special sacrifices and appointed times were blessings added to the regular movement of God dwelling with His people. * The Temple was both a house of sacrifice and a house of prayer. Solomon’s prayer, Isaiah’s promise, Daniel’s practice, and Yeshua’s words all point to the Lord hearing from heaven when His people pray. * Yeshua fulfills the sacrifice and expands the prayer. The completed work of Messiah does not remove prayer; it fills it with access, forgiveness, Spirit, and continual communion. * Prayer is priestly service. As a royal priesthood, we are called to pray for the saints, lift one another up, forgive as we have been forgiven, and speak life with the zeal of the Lord. Living Out Love Live out your faith by showing love this week: choose someone to lift up before the Lord in prayer, not only with requests, but with thanksgiving, hope, and words of life. Ask the Lord to show you how He sees them, what He would speak over them, and how you can encourage them with His heart. This week, read Numbers 25:10–18, Numbers 28:1–8, 1 Kings 8:27–53, Isaiah 56:1–8, and Mark 11:15–26. As you read, look for the movement from sacrifice to prayer, from dwelling to communion, and from judgment to the mercy of Messiah Yeshua. Pray for someone with the same zeal of a loving father and heavenly bridegroom. Let your prayer become visible through love, encouragement, forgiveness, and support. Prayer Points * Father, give us the same zeal You have for Your people. * Teach us to understand shalom as the wholeness of Your covenant love. * Keep the fire of prayer burning in us from morning to evening. * Make us a people who pray without ceasing and do not quench Your Spirit. * Forgive us for turning prayer into an added thing rather than the pattern of our life with You. * Teach us to forgive as You have forgiven us. * Let our words speak life over others as Your words speak life over us. * Make us a house of prayer for all peoples through Messiah Yeshua. Study Questions 1. In Numbers 25, how does Pinchas’ zeal reflect the Lord’s own heart for His people? 2. Why is it important to understand shalom as wholeness rather than simply the absence of conflict? 3. What does the daily tamid offering reveal about God’s desire to dwell continually with His people? 4. How does Solomon’s prayer in 1 Kings 8 help us understand the Temple as a place where God hears, forgives, restores, and gathers? 5. When Yeshua says, “My house shall be called a house of prayer for all nations,” what is He restoring, and what is He revealing? 6. How does Messiah Yeshua’s completed sacrifice change the way we understand prayer, priesthood, and communion with God? 7. What would it look like this week to pray for someone with the same zeal, love, and forgiveness that the Lord has for them? Supporting Mosaic Ministries If this message encouraged you, prayerfully consider supporting Mosaic Ministries. Your giving helps continue the work of uncovering God’s love in the Bible and inviting others to walk in life, light, and love through Messiah Yeshua. You can give at: mercygathered.com/give

6 Jul 2026 - 55 min
episode Chukat-Balak: Life Has Come - The Kiss From Heaven (Num. 19-21, John 3, 11, 12) artwork

Chukat-Balak: Life Has Come - The Kiss From Heaven (Num. 19-21, John 3, 11, 12)

Message Summary This week’s Torah portion opens with Chukat, the statute of the red heifer. This command can seem mysterious because the ashes prepared for purification from death also make those involved in the preparation temporarily unclean. Yet the heart of the message is not confusion but love. The red heifer is presented as a “kiss from heaven,” a revelation of the Father’s care: before we ever came into contact with death, God had already made provision for cleansing. From there, the message moves into Numbers 21, where Israel complains against the very provision God had been giving them. The manna from heaven is treated as loathsome, and the serpent’s wound exposes the old garden temptation: to look at what God has given and say it is not enough. Yet even there, mercy is raised up. The bronze serpent becomes a sign that healing does not come from the earthly object itself, but directly from the heavenly Father. Messiah Yeshua takes this image into John 3, revealing that He Himself would be lifted up so that all who believe in Him may have life. The message ends with a call to live in the victory already accomplished. Yeshua is not only the resurrection on the last day; He is the resurrection and the life now. Like the tribes who received their inheritance east of the Jordan, those who have tasted the promise are called to help others enter into theirs. The Spirit and the Bride say, “Come.” We are invited to drink from the water of life, to sing over the well God has given, and to point others beyond earthly signs to the heavenly truth of life in Messiah Yeshua. Takeaways * God’s provision for cleansing was not an afterthought. The Lamb was prepared from the foundation of the world, and the red heifer gives us a picture of cleansing prepared before the need even arises or ever presents itself. * The mystery of the red heifer reveals the selfless love of God: The One who cleanses us from death enters into contact with it for our sake. * Complaining often begins when we make light of what God has already given. Israel had water and manna, yet they called the provision insufficient. * The bronze serpent was never meant to become the focus. It pointed beyond itself to the heavenly Father who heals, and ultimately to Messiah Yeshua lifted up for the life of the world. * In Messiah Yeshua, resurrection is not only a future hope. Life has come. Victory has been established, and believers are called to live from that truth now. * Those who have entered into their inheritance are not called to settle into isolation, but to help their brothers and sisters enter into the fullness God has promised. Living Out Love Live out your faith by showing love to those who have not yet entered into the fullness of what God has promised. Ask the Lord to make you aware of the people around you who are still focused only on earthly signs, disappointments, delays, complaints, or grief. Instead of arguing with them from your own strength, point them to Messiah Yeshua, the One lifted up, the One who cleanses from death, and the One who gives the water of life without cost. This week, read John 3, John 11, and Revelation 22 slowly. Let the Lord remind you that life has come now. Then reach out to someone who needs encouragement and speak heavenly life over them: “Come and drink. The victory of God is for you too.” Prayer Points * Thank the Father for preparing cleansing and life before we ever knew our need. * Ask the Lord to cleanse our hearts from making light of His provision. * Pray for eyes to see beyond earthly signs to the heavenly reality behind them. * Ask The LORD to strengthen our confidence that He is the resurrection and the life now. * Pray for courage and tenderness to help others enter into the fullness of the promise. Study Questions 1. In Numbers 19, how does the red heifer reveal God’s provision for cleansing before the need arises? 2. Why is it significant that the preparation for cleansing from death makes those involved temporarily unclean? 3. In Numbers 21, what does Israel’s complaint about the manna reveal about the danger of making light of God’s provision? 4. How does John 3 help us understand the bronze serpent as a sign that points beyond itself to Messiah Yeshua? 5. What does it look like today to have received an inheritance from the Lord and still help others enter into theirs?

29 Jun 2026 - 46 min
episode Korah: The Gift That Bears the Burden (Num. 16-18, Exo. 18, Gal. 6 ) artwork

Korah: The Gift That Bears the Burden (Num. 16-18, Exo. 18, Gal. 6 )

Message Summary God does not draw His people near so they can possess a position for themselves, but so they can become a gift for others. In Korah’s rebellion, the priesthood is treated as something to seize, something that could exalt a person above the congregation. But the Lord reveals that nearness to Him is not about self-glory. It is about intercession, service, and standing in the place where life is preserved. Aaron’s priesthood is confirmed not merely by authority, but by life. The dead staff buds, blossoms, and bears almonds, becoming a picture of awakened purpose. The Bride is not awakened simply to be stirred from sleep, but to become watchful, active, fruitful, and present in the place where God has called her. True awakening carries the heart of intercession. In Messiah Yeshua, we see the fullness of the One who bears up sin, death, and every burden we could never carry alone. Yet by His Spirit, He invites His people to share in His heart for one another. We are not called to compare ourselves, strive for another’s gift, or grow weary alone. We are called to bear one another’s burdens, restore with gentleness, and fulfill the law of Messiah. Takeaways * God’s gifts are not given for self-exaltation, but for service, worship, and intercession. * Korah saw priesthood as a position to possess, but God revealed priesthood as a calling to stand between the living and the dead. * The korban, is rooted in nearness. God brings us near so that we may become a gift in His hands in service to others. * Jethro’s counsel to Moses shows that the weight of God’s work was never meant to be carried alone. God distributes His Spirit and invites His people to bear the burden together. * Aaron’s rod budding with almonds points to awakened life. Revival is not merely waking up; it is becoming watchful, fruitful, and active in God’s purpose. * Galatians 6 calls the spiritual person to restore gently, bear another’s burden, and continue doing good without growing weary. Study Questions 1. Where do you see the difference between desiring nearness to God and trying to possess a role or gift for yourself? 2. How does Aaron standing between the dead and the living help us understand the heart of intercession? 3. What burdens has God never intended you to carry alone? 4. In what ways does the budding almond rod speak to the difference between simply being awake and being watchful? 5. How does Galatians 6 help us live out the priestly calling of restoring one another with gentleness? Living Out Love Live out your faith by showing love in a real and practical way this week. Ask the Lord to make you aware of someone who is carrying a burden, someone who may need restoration, encouragement, prayer, or a gentle word of life. Read Galatians 6:1–10 and ask the Holy Spirit to show you what it means to bear one another’s burdens without comparison, striving, or weariness. Then take one step of love: reach out, pray, serve, encourage, or stand with someone who needs to be reminded that life is stronger than death in Messiah Yeshua. Prayer Points * Pray that we would rightly see the gifts God has given, not as possessions, but as sacred invitations to serve. * Pray for the Bride to awaken with watchfulness, fruitfulness, and intercession. * Pray for hearts free from comparison, jealousy, and self-exaltation. * Pray for strength to bear one another’s burdens in the Spirit of Messiah. * Pray that Mosaic Ministries would be a community where life is preserved, burdens are shared, and people are restored with gentleness. Supporting Mosaic Ministries Mosaic Ministries exists to uncover God’s love in the Bible and to help people live out that love in Messiah Yeshua. If this message has encouraged you, strengthened your faith, or helped you draw nearer to the Lord, prayerfully consider supporting the ministry. Your giving helps make these teachings, gatherings, outreach, and weekly messages possible. You can support Mosaic Ministries by visiting: mercygathered.com/give

21 Jun 2026 - 44 min
episode Sh'Lach: Reaping a Promised Harvest (Num. 13-15, Joshua 2, Eph. 2) artwork

Sh'Lach: Reaping a Promised Harvest (Num. 13-15, Joshua 2, Eph. 2)

Message Summary The Lord has not called His people merely to survive in the wilderness. He has sent them to thrive in the fullness of His promises. Yet how often do we stand at the edge of what He has spoken, seeing clearly the goodness of His provision, while allowing fear, opposition, or the appearance of strength in the world to persuade us to remain where we are? The Lord remains faithful. His promises do not fail. The question placed before us is whether we will trust Him enough to enter into what He has prepared. The wilderness generation looked at the people in the land and forgot the God who had brought them there. Caleb and Joshua looked at the same land but remembered the faithfulness of the One who had spoken. The Lord was not inviting His people into uncertainty. He was inviting them into a promise already secured by His faithfulness. Even when judgment came, His word remained unchanged: “When you enter the land...” His desire was still to bring His people into abundance, joy, and blessing. The Lord's promises are never meant to end with us. Beyond every promise is a harvest. Beyond every act of faithfulness are others awaiting His goodness. Rahab stands as a reminder that when God's people walk in faith, redemption reaches further than they can imagine. The invitation remains before us today: trust the Lord, enter the promise, and allow His faithfulness to become a blessing for those who are still waiting to be gathered in. Takeaways * God’s promises remain secure even when circumstances appear overwhelming. * Faith sees the Lord’s faithfulness before it sees the obstacles. * The Lord desires more than forgiveness; He desires that His people walk in the fullness of His blessing. * Delayed faithfulness affects more than ourselves and can impact those awaiting God's redemption. * The heart of God has always been to gather people from every nation into His household through Messiah Yeshua. * Every wall that keeps others from drawing near to the Lord stands contrary to His desire to gather and redeem. Study Questions 1. What was the difference between what Caleb and Joshua saw and what the other spies saw? 2. How can fear cause us to focus on obstacles rather than the promises of God? 3. Why do you think the Lord immediately spoke of entering the land and its abundance after Israel's failure to trust Him? 4. What does Rahab’s account teach us about the reach of God’s mercy and redemption? 5. Are there areas in your life where God may be calling you to trust His promises more fully? Living Out Love Live out your faith by identifying one promise, calling, or area of growth that the Lord has placed before you. Rather than focusing on the obstacles, spend time this week thanking Him for His faithfulness and asking for the courage to move forward in trust. As you do, look for an opportunity to encourage someone else who may be struggling to believe that God’s promises are still for them. Read Numbers 13–15, Joshua 2, and Ephesians 2:11–22 this week, asking the Lord to reveal where He is inviting you to move from fear into faith and from wilderness wandering into promise. Prayer Points * Pray for a heart that trusts God's promises above visible circumstances. * Pray for courage to move forward when the Lord calls you to act in faith. * Pray for eyes to recognize the abundance and blessing God desires to bring into your life. * Pray that walls preventing others from approaching the Lord would be removed. * Pray that God would use your life to draw others into the hope and salvation found in Messiah Yeshua. Supporting Mosaic Ministries If these teachings have encouraged your walk with the Lord and helped you uncover His love throughout the Scriptures, please consider partnering with Mosaic Ministries through prayer, sharing these messages with others, and financial support. Your partnership helps make these teachings available to those who are seeking to grow in their understanding of God's Word and His love revealed through Messiah Yeshua. To support Mosaic Ministries, visit: https://mercygathered.com/give/ [https://mercygathered.com/give/]

14 Jun 2026 - 55 min
episode Baha'alotcha: A Well Lit Menorah (Num. 8, 11, Mark 9:38-44, 1 Thess. 12-24) artwork

Baha'alotcha: A Well Lit Menorah (Num. 8, 11, Mark 9:38-44, 1 Thess. 12-24)

Message Summary The Lord begins this portion with the lighting of the menorah, reminding us that a lampstand fulfills its purpose only when it is lit. The beauty and purpose of the lampstand was its flame. In the same way, the Lord has not called His people merely to exist in His presence, but to be filled with His Spirit and shine His light. He walks among His lampstands, tending the flame, trimming the wick, and calling His people into the purpose for which they were created. As Israel journeyed through the wilderness, the fire of the Lord revealed what was hidden within the camp. The people's complaints exposed hearts that had begun to long for what could never satisfy. Rather than receiving the manna that came from heaven, they began "desiring desire" itself—hungering after the hunger, craving what was empty, and looking back toward Egypt. The Lord's refining fire was not meant for destruction, but for revelation, exposing what needed to be released so His people could walk in freedom and life. The answer to the struggle was not less of the Spirit, but more. The Lord took of the Spirit resting upon Moses and placed it upon the seventy elders, increasing the light among His people. Moses longed for the day when all God's people would receive His Spirit and speak forth His words. The invitation remains the same today: do not quench the flame. Desire the Lord above all else. Seek not merely the gifts of God, nor simply deliverance from death, but God Himself. For it is in Him that true life, complete satisfaction, and the fullness of His purpose are found. Takeaways * A lampstand fulfills its purpose only when it is lit; God's people are called to shine with His Spirit. * The Lord's refining fire reveals what is hidden so that transformation can take place. * "Desiring desire" leads only to emptiness, while seeking the Lord leads to life. * The Spirit is given not merely for personal blessing, but to increase God's light among His people. * Prophetic ministry calls God's people toward repentance, restoration, and deeper relationship with Him. * The Lord desires a people who seek Him above His gifts and provision. Reflection & Study Questions 1. Where do you see the Lord tending the flame of His Spirit in your life right now? 2. Are there areas where you have been "desiring desire" rather than seeking the Lord Himself? 3. What might the Lord be revealing through His refining work that you have been tempted to resist or quench? 4. How does the gift of the Spirit help God's people become light to those around them? Living Out Love Live out your faith this week by encouraging someone who may be pursuing desires that never satisfy and craving emptiness. Share with them a testimony of God's faithfulness and remind them that the Lord is still tending the flame within His people. Spend time reading Numbers 11 and Revelation 1–2. Ask the Lord to reveal any areas where you have been pursuing what cannot satisfy, and invite Him to rekindle a deeper desire for His presence. Look for opportunities to be a light to someone around you through a word of encouragement, prayer, or practical act of kindness. Prayer Points Thank the Lord for calling His people to be His lampstands and for faithfully tending the flame of His Spirit within them. Give thanks for His provision, His patience, and His continual work of transformation. Ask the Lord for discernment to recognize His voice, wisdom to follow His leading, and courage to embrace the refining work He is accomplishing in your life. Pray that the Lord would expose every empty pursuit that competes for your heart and deepen your desire for Him above all else. Ask Him to fill you afresh with His Spirit, strengthen His flame within you, and make your life a testimony of His light, life, and love. Supporting Mosaic Ministries If this message has encouraged you in your walk with the Lord, consider supporting Mosaic Ministries as we continue uncovering God's love in the Bible and sharing His Word through our teachings, podcast, and outreach. Your prayers, sharing of these messages, and financial support help extend the reach of this ministry and encourage others to grow in their relationship with the Lord. To learn more or support Mosaic Ministries, visit: https://mercygathered.com/give/https://mercygathered.com/give/ [https://mercygathered.com/give/]

7 Jun 2026 - 1 h 2 min
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