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The Semi-Seminarian

Podcast door Pastor Jim Wilhelm

Engels

Geschiedenis & Religie

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Over The Semi-Seminarian

Welcome to The Semi-Seminarian—where we talk about the Bible like grown-ups. Maybe you were taught the Bible as a child… or by folks who never really moved past children’s church themselves. That might’ve left you with a Vacation Bible School version of scripture in a world that demands something deeper. This podcast is for the ones asking honest questions, carrying quiet wounds, and still hoping there’s more. Around here, we wrestle with the text, laugh when we can, and tell the truth even when it stings. Because the gospel is better than you were told—and you’re not alone in wanting to believe that again.

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aflevering Pentecost Was Never Just About Tongues | Shavuot, Firstfruits & What Acts 2 Actually Says artwork

Pentecost Was Never Just About Tongues | Shavuot, Firstfruits & What Acts 2 Actually Says

What is Pentecost really about? This Pentecost Sunday sermon on Acts 2:1-21 goes deeper than tongues of fire and a rushing wind — all the way down to the Jewish harvest festival of Shavuot, the meaning of firstfruits, and why the Holy Spirit fell on that specific day in that specific room with those specific people. Pentecost didn't replace Shavuot. Pentecost is Shavuot arriving at its appointed harvest. The feast of firstfruits, the giving of Torah at Sinai, and the scroll of Ruth — three layers of the same feast, all pointed in the same direction, all saying the same thing for a thousand years: the harvest was always headed past the border. When the Spirit fell and every person heard the mighty works of God in their own language — that wasn't a new program. That was the grain head breaking the surface of a field that had been growing in the dark since October. In this message: — Acts 2:1–21 preached in full — The connection between Pentecost and Shavuot (Feast of Weeks) — What firstfruits actually means and why it matters — Ruth as the Shavuot scroll and her place in Jesus's genealogy — Hagar, Tamar, Rahab, and Ruth as winter wheat — The Holy Spirit and Torah — completion, not replacement — Joel 2 and the pouring out of the Spirit on all flesh — Why every language matters and who gets left out when we forget it — The church as firstfruits — real grain, not metaphor Scriptures: Acts 2:1–21 | Joel 2:28–32 | Deuteronomy 26 | Ruth 1 | Luke 17 | Mark 7 | Matthew 8 | Genesis 16 | Genesis 38 | Joshua 2 The Semi-Seminarian — live Sunday sermons from First Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), Cushing, Oklahoma. Recorded live on an iPhone in a fellowship hall. Not slick. Not produced. Just the text, the room, and whoever showed up. If you found this at 2am and you're not sure you still believe anything — you're exactly who this is for. #Pentecost #Acts2 #Shavuot #HolySpirit #BibleStudy #PentecostSunday #Firstfruits #FeastOfWeeks #ChristianSermon #BibleExplained

Gisteren - 30 min
aflevering Ruth Explained: No Bread in Bethlehem | Ruth 1 Bible Study on Naomi, Moab & Pentecost artwork

Ruth Explained: No Bread in Bethlehem | Ruth 1 Bible Study on Naomi, Moab & Pentecost

Ruth Explained: No Bread in Bethlehem is a Ruth 1 Bible study about Naomi, Ruth, Moab, Bethlehem, famine, and the surprising way God brings provision through the outsider. Most Bible studies on Ruth begin with the beautiful words, “Where you go, I will go.” And they are beautiful. But Ruth 1 begins somewhere else: with a famine in Bethlehem, the House of Bread. Why does the House of Bread have no bread? In this episode of Little Women, we look at Ruth not as a simple romance story, but as a deeply theological story about famine, exile, Naomi’s grief, Ruth’s loyalty, Moab, belonging, and the covenant line that leads to David and ultimately to Jesus. Naomi leaves Bethlehem empty. Ruth returns with her. Orpah walks away. And on that road between Moab and Bethlehem, the Bible asks a question most of us miss: what happens when the people of God have to leave the place of provision to find the very person God will use to restore it? This Ruth Bible study connects Ruth 1 with Genesis 38, Rahab, Tamar, Matthew 1, Deuteronomy 23, Deuteronomy 26, Shavuot, and Pentecost. Ruth is not a side character in redemption. Ruth the Moabite becomes part of the line of David. The foreigner is not a footnote. The foreigner is part of the promise. In this episode, we explore: • Why Bethlehem being called the “House of Bread” matters • Why the famine in Ruth 1 is more than background information • Why Naomi’s grief matters theologically • Why Ruth’s loyalty is bigger than a wedding verse • What Moab represents in the Old Testament • How Ruth connects to Tamar, Rahab, Boaz, David, and Jesus • Why Ruth is traditionally read during Shavuot • How Ruth prepares us for Pentecost and Acts 2 • Why the outsider keeps showing up at the center of God’s story This is Week 4 of the Little Women Bible study series, following Hagar, Tamar, and Rahab. Each week traces the women Scripture places in the story of redemption, especially the women too often treated as background, scandal, or exception. But Scripture does not treat them as disposable. Hagar names God in the wilderness. Tamar forces Judah to tell the truth. Rahab gives Israel a sermon from inside Jericho. Ruth becomes bread for the House of Bread. And when we arrive at Pentecost, we discover the Spirit was not starting something small and making it wide. God had been writing the outsider into the feast all along. If this Bible study helped you see Ruth, Naomi, Bethlehem, Moab, Shavuot, Pentecost, or the genealogy of Jesus in a new way, throw that old like in the offering plate. And if you want to keep walking with us through Scripture, story, grace, and the gospel for weary people, tithe your subscribe so you’ll know when we’re meeting again. Be blessed. #Ruth #RuthBibleStudy #Ruth1 #Naomi #BibleStudy #OldTestament #Pentecost #Shavuot #WomenOfTheBible #ChristianTeaching #GenealogyOfJesus #TheSemiSeminarian

21 mei 2026 - 27 min
aflevering "Just Say the Word" — Matthew 8 and the Centurion Who Stunned Jesus artwork

"Just Say the Word" — Matthew 8 and the Centurion Who Stunned Jesus

What if the greatest faith Jesus praised in Matthew 8 did not come from the disciples, the synagogue, or the covenant insiders, but from a Roman centurion standing in occupied Galilee? Welcome to The Semi-Seminarian — Pastor Jim Wilhelm walking slowly through Scripture for those listening alone in the dark. In this Sunday sermon on Matthew 8:5–13, we look closely at Jesus and the Roman centurion, the servant healed from a distance, and the astonishing words that made Jesus marvel: "Just say the word." If this sermon finds you, tithe that subscribe so the bell rings again next Sunday. ⏱️ CHAPTERS 00:00 Setting the Scene [XX:XX] Poetic Mount [XX:XX] Scripture Reading — Matthew 8:5–13 [XX:XX] Poetic Dismount [XX:XX] Engage — The Centurion's Approach [XX:XX] Expose — Insiders, Outsiders, and the Word [XX:XX] Explain — "Just Say the Word" and the Authority of Logos [XX:XX] Exhort — East and West at the Table [XX:XX] Benediction Most sermons on the centurion focus on humility: "Lord, I'm not worthy for you to come under my roof." And that matters. But what if the centurion is doing more than bowing low? What if he is being precise? What if this Roman officer understands something about authority, the Word, and the kingdom of God that the insiders standing closest to Jesus have not yet seen? This Bible study and sermon explores: - Matthew 8:5–13 explained in context - Why Jesus marveled at the centurion's faith - The meaning of "Just say the word" - The Greek idea of logos and the authority of Jesus' word - Why the servant was healed from a distance - How a Roman outsider recognized divine authority - What Jesus meant when he said many would come from east and west - Why proximity to religion is not the same thing as faith - How the kingdom table is wider than the people sitting at it realized The centurion does not ask Jesus to come prove anything. He does not demand a sign. He does not need Jesus under his roof. He recognizes authority when he sees it. As a man under authority, he knows that a real word carries. An order can move across distance. A command can arrive without the speaker walking it there. And then he looks at Jesus and says, in essence: your Word carries farther than my empire ever could. That is why this story is bigger than a healing miracle. This is not just about a sick servant in Capernaum. This is about the reach of the Word of God. It is about outsiders seeing what insiders miss. It is about Jesus announcing that many will come from the east and the west and sit down with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob in the kingdom of heaven. The warning is not that outsiders are coming in. The warning is that insiders can sit so close to the promise that they mistake nearness for faith. If you have ever wondered what Matthew 8 means, why Jesus praised the centurion, or what this passage teaches about faith, authority, grace, and the kingdom of God, this sermon walks the road slowly. The Word travels. It does not need our permission to arrive. Just say the word. 📖 Scripture: Matthew 8:5–13 🎙️ Sermon Title: Just Say the Word ⛪ Series: Sunday Three — One Week to Pentecost 🐓 The Semi-Seminarian with Pastor Jim Wilhelm 📍 First Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), Cushing, Oklahoma If this sermon helped you hear Matthew 8 in a new way, throw that old like in the offering plate. Not as money. Not as marketing. Just as a witness that you were here and the Word found you. And if you want to keep joining us for Bible study and Sunday sermons, tithe that subscribe so you'll know when we're gathering again. Be blessed. #Matthew8 #BibleStudy #SundaySermon

17 mei 2026 - 28 min
aflevering Rahab Explained: The Spy Report That Was Actually a Sermon | Joshua 2 Bible Study artwork

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

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

14 mei 2026 - 25 min
aflevering Crumbs for the Dogs: The Syrophoenician Woman, Jesus, and the Table That Wouldn’t Run Out | Mark 7 artwork

Crumbs for the Dogs: The Syrophoenician Woman, Jesus, and the Table That Wouldn’t Run Out | Mark 7

What if the Syrophoenician woman did not argue Jesus into mercy? What if she did not outsmart Him, outlast Him, or pass some hidden test? What if she simply recognized something from the floor that everyone at the table had missed? In Mark 7:24–30, Jesus enters the region of Tyre and tries to remain hidden, but Mark tells us, “He couldn’t be hidden.” A Greek, Syrophoenician woman comes to Him begging for her daughter, who is afflicted by an unclean spirit. Jesus answers with one of the hardest sayings in the Gospels: “Let the children be filled first, for it isn’t appropriate to take the children’s bread and throw it to the dogs.” And she answers: “Yes, Lord. Yet even the dogs under the table eat the children’s crumbs.” This sermon, “Crumbs for the Dogs,” explores why Jesus says, “For this saying, go your way. The demon has gone out of your daughter.” Not for her persistence. Not because she won an argument. Not because she earned her way to the table. But because she spoke a true word about who God is and what kind of table God sets. She heard first and did not hear never. She recognized abundance from the floor. And that matters two weeks before Pentecost. Because Pentecost is not God abandoning Israel’s table. Pentecost is Israel’s table overflowing into the nations. Before the fire falls in Acts 2, before every nation hears the mighty works of God in its own tongue, a foreign woman in Tyre already speaks a true word about the feast. The table does not run out. The bread is still being broken. And grace has always been falling from the edges. 📖 Scripture: Mark 7:24–30 🔥 Series: Two Weeks to Pentecost 🎙️ The Semi-Seminarian Podcast ⛪ A small country church sermon for the weary, the overlooked, and anyone who has ever wondered whether there was room for them at the table. If this sermon helped you hear something in the text you had never noticed before, throw that old like in the offering plate. No pressure. Just presence. And if you want to keep walking with us on Wednesdays and Sundays, tithe your subscribe so you’ll know when we’re meeting again. Be blessed. Keywords: Syrophoenician woman sermon, Mark 7 sermon, crumbs for the dogs, Jesus and the Syrophoenician woman, Canaanite woman sermon, Pentecost sermon series, Gospel of Mark Bible study, Mark 7 24-30 explained, children’s bread and dogs, Jesus and Gentiles, table fellowship in the Bible, crumbs under the table, faith of the Syrophoenician woman, Christian sermon on grace, outsiders in the Bible, Pentecost and the nations, grace before transformation, The Semi-Seminarian Podcast

10 mei 2026 - 27 min
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