Bible Series
Unique collection of curated Biblical series ranging from video and audio resources unto guided studies from Old Testament stories to the Life of Jesus and the Book of Revelation.
Anatomy of a Stubborn Nation
A chronological series within Deuteronomy 9 linking Taberah, Massah, and Kibroth-hattaavah into a single diagnostic map of the human heart. This series highlights the pattern of the 'Stiff-Necked' persona—a resistance to divine leading that remains unchanged even by miraculous sustenance or fearful displays of power.
The Mo’adim (Appointed Seasons)
This comprehensive list identifies the Mo’adim (Appointed Times) as non-negotiable spiritual appointments, transforming the biological year into a theological journey that repeatedly emphasizes the redemption of the firstborn and the abundance of the harvest.
The Ascent to Glory Series
A study path tracing Moses’ deepening access to God—from the distant fire on the bush to the communal law, culminating in the agonizing plea of Chapter 33 to see the unveiled Kavod of the Creator.
The Conflict of the Kings
The complete chronological sequence of the first major military incursion in Genesis, culminating in the spiritual encounter between the hero Abram and the divine priest Melchizedek.
The Three Realms of Blessing
This chapter introduces a trifold classification of divine blessing: atmospheric (rain/heaven), geological/aquifer (the deep that lies under), and biological (breasts/womb). This categorical scan of creation provides the Hebrew framework for complete holistic prosperity.
The Celestial Promise
God moves the covenant from an auditory promise to a visual experience, commanding Abram to count the stars as a prototype for his descendants. This event marks the shift from biological limitation to supernatural potential, serving as a cosmic scoreboard for faith.
The Sinai Covenant Series
This series tracks the structural relationship between God and Israel initiated in Exodus 19. It encompasses the preamble, the terms of obedience (Decalogue), the social case laws (Book of the Covenant), and the blood ratification ceremony that established Israel as a theocratic nation.
The Fourth Cycle of Deliverance
Part of the recurring theological structure of the Book of Judges, the Deborah-Barak saga illustrates the cycle of sin (doing evil), suffering (Jabin's 20-year oppression), supplication (Israel cries out), and salvation (Deborah's rise).
The Cycle of Seven
A study of how the number seven governs biblical chronology—from the Sabbath day to the Sabbath year, to the seven cycles of seven years leading to the Jubilee—revealing God's rhythmic signature on time and history.
The Eleven-Day Trek from Horeb
The distance between Mount Horeb and Kadesh-barnea was physically only an eleven-day walk; Deuteronomy highlights this fact to underscore the irony and weight of the forty-year delay caused by spiritual unbelief.
The Cycle of Forty Days
Beginning with the Great Flood, the period of forty days and nights emerges as the Bible's primary duration for complete judgment, transformation, or testing. It defines the intensity of the flood and recurs in the ministries of Moses, Elijah, and Jesus Christ.
Furniture of the Divine Presence
This series traces the actual construction of the four pivotal furniture pieces inside the Tabernacle tent. Each item represents a different aspect of Christ and the believer's walk: The Ark (Judgment/Mercy), the Table (Fellowship), the Lampstand (Illumination), and the Altar of Incense (Intercession).
Genealogy of Esau
The definitive genealogical record of Esau, known as Edom, documenting his wives, children, and the vast expansion of his descendants across the region of Mount Seir. This chapter establishes the geopolitical foundation of the Edomites, serving as a structural parallel to the genealogy of Jacob while highlighting the rapid rise of Edomite power and kingship prior to Israel's monarchy.
The Generations of Perez
The final verses of Ruth provide a ten-generation genealogy from Perez to David. This specific list (Toledot) serves as a legal document legitimizing David’s throne despite the complex origins of his ancestors (Perez’s birth, Rahab the Canaanite, and Ruth the Moabitess), emphasizing grace within the chosen line.
Havvoth-jair (Villages of Jair)
The thirty cities possessed by the thirty sons of the judge Jair, located in the land of Gilead. This designation echoes an earlier conquest but serves in Judges 10 as a marker of the judge’s extensive regional control and patriarchal legacy.
Israel's Tripartite Distinction
At the close of the Deuteronomic statutes, three specific qualities are bestowed upon Israel by God as their vocational goal: Praise, Fame (Name), and Honor. These descriptors define the 'Segullah' (Special Treasure) status—not as a privilege for pride, but as a public witness to the surrounding nations of God's character. Israel is meant to be a showcase of divine beauty, manifesting holiness as a distinct and honored people above all nations on the earth.
Joshua's Farewell Address
As Joshua approaches the end of his life, he convenes the leaders of Israel to deliver a final charge, emphasizing that their continued possession of the Promised Land is strictly contingent upon their absolute loyalty to the Mosaic Covenant and the rejection of pagan deities.
Journeys of the Israelites
The exhaustive list in Numbers 33 serves as the official divine logbook of Israel's movements from Rameses to the Jordan, documenting forty years of wandering. This record preserves the memory of God's faithfulness in specific locations, some of which are not recorded anywhere else in the Torah, emphasizing the meticulous nature of the pilgrimage and the preparation of a nation for inheritance.
The Lists of Kashrut
A definitive categorical mapping of the land animals, birds, aquatic life, and insects designated by God as prohibited, serving as the blueprint for Jewish culinary culture for millennia.
The Pre-Monarchical Kings of Edom
The list of eight kings who reigned in Edom before any king reigned over the children of Israel marks a major transition from tribal dukedoms to a unified monarchy. These kings—starting with Bela son of Beor and ending with Hadar—represent a system of non-dynastic elective or military succession based in various cities across the region, showcasing Edom as a pre-eminent regional power during Israel's era of sojourn and wilderness wandering.
The Joseph Saga
The Joseph Narrative is a self-contained masterpiece of biblical literature spanning Genesis 37-50. It details the providential protection of the nascent nation of Israel through a single individual's suffering and success. Key themes include the 'hated-beloved son,' the sovereignty of God over human evil ('You meant it for evil, God meant it for good'), and the theological transition from personal family history to national exodus preparation.
The Moses Saga (Chronology)
A study series tracing the movement of Moses from the palaces of Egypt to the deserts of Midian, the heights of Sinai, and the border of the Promised Land.
The Shemitic Seed (Genesis 11)
Genesis 11 tracks the narrow line of the 'seed' through the descendants of Shem. As life spans shrink from centuries to decades, the genealogy serves as a countdown from the wreckage of Babel to the focused individual who would receive the new blessing for the whole world: Abraham.
The Proliferation of Lambs
In the course of one month, Numbers 29 mandates the slaughter of over 100 yearling lambs. This constant repetition highlights the exhaustive need for a perfect substitute and prepares the biblical narrative for the eventual once-for-all Lamb of God.
The Moab Plains Legislation
Numbers 36:13 marks the completion of a specific subset of biblical law given while Israel was encamped on the Plains of Moab near the Jordan. This corpus acts as a legal bridge between the original Sinai legislation and the second giving of the law in Deuteronomy, focusing on the practicalities of settling the Promised Land.
The Parable of the Trees
Regarded as the first recorded parable in the Bible, this story contrasts useful plants (Olive, Fig, Vine) that refuse power for service, against the worthless bramble that demands sovereignty while threatening fire, serving as a stinging critique of illegitimate kingship.
Visions of the Patriarchs
A study series tracking the moments when God broke through the ordinary lives of the patriarchs—specifically the contrast between Jacob's dream at Bethel (Ladder) and his physical encounter at Peniel (Wrestling).
Fruitfulness in Goshen
This series traces the demographic miracle of the Israelites while living in a foreign land. While the Egyptians were losing ownership and autonomy, the house of Israel is noted for growing exceedingly. It is the first record of 'Fruitfulness in Goshen,' illustrating how God's covenant operates independently of surrounding economic catastrophes.
The House of Noah
Genesis 6:18 introduces the collective unit of Noah, his wife, sons, and daughters-in-law as a distinct spiritual group. This establishes the pattern of the 'Remnant,' where the head of the house's relationship with God results in the invitation for the entire family to enter the sanctuary of safety.
The Restoration of Heritage
A recurring spiritual theme derived from Isaac restoring his father Abraham’s wells, symbolizing the duty of subsequent generations to maintain and revitalize spiritual inheritances and foundational truths.
Out of the Eater Came Meat
The paradoxical riddle: 'Out of the eater came meat, and out of the strong came sweetness.' It remains a centerpiece of biblical wisdom literature, illustrating how God can bring nourishment and victory out of death and strength.
The Path of Separation
This series tracks the repeated thematic motif of 'separation' in Abraham's journey: leaving his country (Gen 12), separating from Lot (Gen 13), and finally separating from Ishmael (Gen 21). This thematic arc demonstrates that the walk of faith often requires painful 'carvings away' of biological or familiar safety nets so that the promise of God may stand alone. The separation of Ishmael represents the final internal household clearing required to establish the messianic line of Isaac.
The Journey of the Seven Remaining Tribes
Beginning in Joshua 18, this narrative arc tracks the distribution of inheritance to the seven tribes who had not yet received their portions. This process completes the realization of the Abrahamic covenant through the transition of nomadic warriors into settled landholders.
The Creation Narrative
A foundational narrative sequence detailing the phased transition of the cosmos from a watery chaos into a perfectly balanced habitat for divine-human interaction, structuring both the physical world and the theological calendar.
The Seven Weepings of Joseph
Joseph's life is marked by specific moments of weeping that culminate in Genesis 45 with a sound 'heard by the house of Pharaoh.' This series follows the transition from private pain to public reconciliation. It provides a blueprint for healthy emotional release within the spiritual life, demonstrating that spiritual maturity and deep-seated authority do not necessitate emotional suppression, but rather require that emotions be channeled toward reconciliation and worship.
The Ten Plagues Series
This overarching series explores each plague as a systematic dismantling of Egypt's socio-religious infrastructure, proving YHWH's authority over nature, the Nile, the skies, and the throne itself.
Evolution of the Abrahamic Covenant
Tracing the relationship between God and Abraham from the initial call (Gen 12) through the vision of the pieces (Gen 15) to the final physical sealing via circumcision (Gen 17).
The Line of Cain
The genealogy of Cain from Enoch to Lamech chronicles the rise of technological, urban, and artistic advancement decoupled from spiritual fellowship with God. It serves as a narrative template for civilizations built on self-reliance and autonomous progress.
The Egyptian Ordeals
A series of carefully orchestrated tests by Joseph designed to move his brothers from guilt and internal division toward a unified, repentant family capable of carrying the covenantal blessing.
The Egyptian Bondage Prophecy
God provides the first systematic timeline for the nation of Israel, predicting the descent into Egypt, their slavery, and the eventual judgment of the oppressing nation. This prophecy serves as the foundational narrative structure for the entire book of Exodus.
The God of Your Fathers
This three-fold identification—the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob—first appears in Exodus 3:6. It functions as a covenantal signature, linking Moses' current calling to the historical promises made centuries earlier, asserting that God is not a new deity, but the ancestral keeper of the Promise.
Ancient Domestic Governance
A study path exploring the socio-spiritual structure of the Hebrew family as defined in the wilderness, using Numbers 30's laws of communication and authority as a cornerstone for understanding patriarchal dynamics.
The Journey of Lot
The choice in Genesis 13 initiates the narrative arc of Lot. It begins with 'looking toward,' moves to 'pitching tents toward,' then 'dwelling in,' and finally 'sitting in the gate' of Sodom—representing a progressive entwinement with worldly systems that eventually leads to personal loss.
The Messianic Line: Shem to Abraham
A narrative thread tracking the preservation of the chosen seed from Shem through the darkening post-Babel world, culminating in the birth of Abram through whom all families are blessed.
The Priestly Blessing
Commonly known as the Aaronic Blessing, these verses provide the liturgical script used by priests to invoke God's protection, grace, and peace upon Israel, serving as one of the oldest and most profound oral traditions in the Bible.
The Ritual of Firstfruits
This mandated ceremony in Deuteronomy 26 constitutes the first formalized liturgical script for Israelite worshipers upon entering the Promised Land. It requires the presentation of the first portion of the harvest as a legal and spiritual acknowledgment that the land and its bounty are direct fulfillments of God's ancestral promises, effectively institutionalizing gratitude through ritual action.
The Hexameron
Commonly known as the Hexameron, this is the structured progression of God's work. Each day functions as a step in transforming chaos into a cosmic temple for the Divine to dwell within and for man to occupy.
The Sevenfold Obedience of Moses
A study of the repetitive structure in the second half of Exodus 40 where seven distinct sections conclude with 'as the Lord commanded,' mirroring the seven days of Creation in Genesis.
The Twelve Stones of the Breastpiece
The sequence of four rows of three stones (Sardius, Topaz, Carbuncle, Emerald, Sapphire, Diamond, Jacinth, Agate, Amethyst, Beryl, Onyx, and Jasper) represents the earliest structured categorization of mineralogy used for spiritual identity in the Bible, mirroring the foundations of the later New Jerusalem.
The Twelve Tribes (Prophetic Identities)
While the physical birth of the twelve sons occurred previously, Genesis 49 represents the first significant appearance of the sons as corporate entities or 'Tribes.' Jacob’s discourse shifts from biological fatherhood to a geopolitical and spiritual forecasting that defines the history of Western civilization and biblical theology.
The Visitation of God
This prophetic concept, first uttered by the dying Joseph, establishes the assurance of God’s active intervention (Pakad) in human history to fulfill covenants and deliver His people from foreign lands back to their inheritance.
Three Annual Pilgrimage Festivals (Shalosh Regalim)
The definitive centralization of Passover, Weeks, and Booths as 'Pilgrimage Feasts' required every male to appear at the central sanctuary. This structure served to prevent regional idolatry, solidify national identity, and ensure that the collective heart of the nation remained anchored in the history and holiness of God.
The Desert Proving Series
This series tracks the strategic stations in the wilderness where God purposefully subjected Israel to hunger and thirst to reveal the content of their hearts. As seen in Exodus 16:4, these events were explicitly described as tests ( *nasah* ) to determine if the nation would obey the Word of God or rely on their carnal impulses.