
The Bible Breakdown: Daily Bible Reading
Brandon Cannon·1000 episodes
Text “rlcBible” to 94000 to get the newest chapters, updates, links, and resources. Welcome to "The Bible Breakdown," where we break down God’s Word so we can know God better. I'm your host, Brandon Cannon, and I'm here to guide you through the pages of the Bible, one day at a time.Each day, we'll read through a section of the Bible and explore key themes, motifs, and teachings. Whether you're new to the Bible or a seasoned veteran, I guarantee you'll find something insightful or inspiring. My hope is to encourage you to dive deeper and deeper. So grab your Bib...
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The Bible Breakdown gives you a short, daily way to move through Scripture without feeling lost. Brandon Cannon reads and explains one chapter at a time, then brings it back to ordinary Christian life with clear takeaways, prayer, and encouragement. It is a good fit for listeners who want a steady Bible-reading habit, especially if they prefer practical teaching over academic deep dives.
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A sea splits, an empire collapses, and the very first thing God’s people do is sing. Exodus 15 gives us the Song of Moses, a raw, vivid praise anthem that names the miracle in detail so nobody forgets who saved them. We lean into why that matters for real life: gratitude is not a mood, it’s a spiritual practice that trains your memory, steadies your nerves, and strengthens your faith for whatever comes next. We also linger on Miriam’s reprise, tambourine and all, because worship is meant to be shared. When we stop and celebrate together, we don’t just relive the past, we build confidence for the future. If you’ve been running from one problem to the next, this chapter challenges a common habit: focusing so hard on the next mountain that we never look back and say, “God, thank you for getting me over the last one.” Then the story turns fast from victory to need: three days without water, and the only water they find is bitter at Marah. We talk about complaining, crying out, and God’s surprising provision, plus the promise that frames the moment: the Lord is the one who heals. There’s also a provocative idea to sit with: sometimes what looks like a setback could be a strange kind of mercy, the kind that clears out old cravings and prepares you for freedom. Before you go, we give you simple homework: write down one specific way God has come through for you, like a short testimony you can reread when you’re under pressure. Subscribe for the daily Bible Breakdown, share this with a friend who needs a praise break, and leave a review so more people can find the show.We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Support the showContact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. Al
You can do everything right and still feel cornered. That’s the pressure cooker of Exodus 14: Israel is out of Egypt, but not out of danger. Pharaoh changes his mind, the chariots close in, and the people panic because God’s route looks like a dead end. We slow the story down and read it like real life, where fear talks loud, options feel thin, and you start wondering if obedience was a mistake.We trace the turning points that make this chapter unforgettable: Moses telling the people to stand firm and stay calm, God telling Moses to stop crying out and get moving, the pillar of cloud and fire shifting to protect Israel, and the sea opening into a road no one could have planned. We also talk through the Red Sea vs Reed Sea debate and why the size of the water doesn’t shrink the size of the miracle. Dry ground, perfect timing, and God’s protection still tell the same story: the Lord fights for His people.Then we bring it home. If you’re trying to raise your kids with faith, stay faithful in your marriage, keep integrity at work, or refuse the shortcuts that everyone else takes, you may feel stuck between a rock and a hard place. This chapter gives language for that moment: God doesn’t do dead ends. Wherever He guides, He provides, and sometimes the greatest act of faith is simple faithfulness today.Subscribe for the daily Bible Breakdown, share this with someone who feels trapped, and leave a five-star review so more people can find it. What’s the “sea” you need God to part right now?We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Support the showContact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
The fastest route is not always the safest route, and Exodus 13 proves it in a way that feels uncomfortably personal. We talk about why detours make us angry, how easy it is to assume we know better, and what happens when God’s guidance clashes with our timeline. I even share a story about ignoring my GPS and paying the price, then connect that instinct to the way we sometimes respond to God. From there, we dig into Exodus 13 and the practices God gives Israel right after freedom: dedicating the firstborn and keeping the Feast of Unleavened Bread. We unpack why these commands matter, how they train gratitude, and why the whole point is remembrance. When kids ask, “What does this mean?” God builds a faith that can answer with a story, not just a slogan. If you care about Bible study, Christian discipleship, and building spiritual habits that last, this chapter is packed with practical wisdom. Then we get to the heart of “Holy Detours”: God refuses to lead Israel through Philistine territory even though it’s the shortest path, because he knows they aren’t ready for battle. Instead, he guides them through the wilderness toward the Red Sea, and he does it with a pillar of cloud by day and a pillar of fire by night. If your life feels rerouted, delayed, or turned upside down, this conversation offers a steady truth: God can lead you the long way and still be good. Subscribe, share this with a friend who needs hope, and leave a five-star review if the podcast helps you trust God more.We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
One chapter. One night. One sign on a doorpost that changes everything. Exodus 12 brings us to the first Passover, where God tells His people to choose a spotless lamb, apply its blood, eat the meal in full, and stay ready to move. It’s intense, specific, and unforgettable because it’s the moment freedom finally breaks through after generations of slavery.\n\nWe walk through the meaning behind each instruction: why the lamb must be without defect, why the blood becomes a marker of belonging, why unleavened bread speaks to urgency, and why bitter herbs keep the memory of bondage honest. We also zoom out to the bigger Exodus storyline, where the plagues aren’t just disasters, they’re a direct showdown with the false gods of Egypt and with Pharaoh’s supposed power. Passover is the turning point where God proves He is greater, and He makes a way for His people to be covered.\n\nThen we connect the dots to Jesus. Passover isn’t only history; it’s a foreshadowing of the gospel, a preview of the Lamb of God and the promise that judgment can pass over a life marked by faith. If you’re walking through a hard season, this message lands close: sometimes all you can do is trust God through the night and believe morning is coming.\n\nSubscribe, share this with a friend who needs hope, and leave a review so more people can find the podcast. What part of Passover feels most meaningful to you right now?We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
Pharaoh has been bargaining like he’s the one in control, but Exodus 11 says God has one final move that ends the negotiation for good. We call this chapter the “final boss showdown” because it’s the moment Yahweh goes straight at the highest powers Egypt trusts: Pharaoh’s claim to divine authority and the belief that any god can stand over life and death. The result is a hard passage, a necessary turning point, and the doorway into the Passover story that follows.We also zoom out and connect the dots across the plagues of Egypt. These signs aren’t random punishments; they’re a dismantling of a false system where gods, rulers, and fear keep people trapped. Exodus 11 shows how quickly the “untouchable” can collapse when God acts, and why the Egyptians’ sudden favor toward Israel sets up a real, costly freedom. If you’ve ever wondered why the Old Testament can feel so intense, this chapter gives you language for what’s happening and why it matters.Then we slow down on one small line that changes the tone: Moses leaves Pharaoh “burning with anger.” He’s not celebrating the pain. He’s carrying the weight of it. That detail opens a conversation about the justice of God, why we ask “Where is God?” during evil, and why we sometimes recoil when justice finally arrives. We land on a simple but challenging prayer: when we don’t understand, we still choose to trust the God who is good, sovereign, and faithful.If this helped you see Exodus 11 more clearly, subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave a five-star review so more people can find the daily Bible breakdown.We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
A swarm that strips a nation bare. A darkness so thick you can feel it. Exodus 10 doesn’t just escalate the plagues of Egypt, it exposes the brittle foundations of power, pride, and false security. We follow the story beat by beat as Moses returns to Pharaoh yet again, and we watch the same pattern repeat: warnings, bargaining, partial offers, and a hardened heart that keeps dragging everyone else into the fallout. We dig into the locust plague and why it lands like a direct strike against Egypt’s spiritual confidence, especially the belief that their gods control life, harvest, and stability. Then we sit with the most unnerving sign in the chapter: three days of oppressive darkness that shuts down normal life, while Goshen remains lit. That contrast becomes more than a historical detail, it becomes a picture of what God is doing in Israel and what it means to be a visible witness when the world feels like it’s getting darker. Along the way, we talk about Pharaoh’s attempt to negotiate worship, why Moses refuses to leave anything behind, and how God’s deliverance aims to be remembered and retold across generations. If you’ve ever wondered whether your faithful, imperfect life is making any difference, this chapter offers a surprising encouragement: your light may be brighter than you realize. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review, what part of Exodus 10 hits you the hardest?We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
Pharaoh has seen enough to change, yet he still won’t let go and the cost keeps rising. We open Exodus 9 and watch a showdown unfold that’s bigger than politics, bigger than weather, and bigger than one stubborn leader. The plagues land like precision strikes, not random chaos, and each one exposes how fragile Egypt’s “gods” really are when the living God steps in. We break down the death of livestock and why that hits Egypt’s economy at the core, then move to the plague of boils where even the magicians crumble. From there the chapter escalates into thunder, lightning, and a hailstorm so destructive it leaves the land in ruins yet spares Goshen. Along the way we talk about the spiritual meaning behind these signs, the repeated warnings God gives, and Pharaoh’s pattern of temporary remorse followed by hardened resistance the moment relief arrives. The takeaway turns personal: God doesn’t only rescue, He keeps freeing. If you’re facing an addiction, a coping habit, or a long held idol that feels too big to challenge, Exodus 9 asks a hard question: will you trust God to be stronger than the thing that’s been ruling you? Subscribe for daily Bible breakdowns, share this with a friend who needs hope, and leave a review to help more people find the show.We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
Frogs in the ovens. Gnats in the dust. Flies in the palace. Exodus 8 doesn’t read like a polite religious story, it reads like a full-on confrontation where God proves who actually rules Egypt. We walk through the chapter step by step and show how each plague functions as a direct challenge to Egyptian polytheism, exposing the weakness of false gods and the limits of Pharaoh’s power. If you’ve ever wondered why the plagues feel so targeted, this breakdown brings the purpose into focus: God is not just punishing, He is revealing truth and dismantling idols. We talk through the frog plague and the detail that says everything about counterfeit power: Pharaoh’s magicians can make more frogs, but they can’t make them leave. Then we move to gnats, where the magicians finally hit a wall and admit, “This is the finger of God.” Finally, we cover the swarms of flies and the moment that shifts the story from public judgment to personal comfort, when God protects Goshen and makes a clear distinction between His people and Egypt. That separation is a powerful Bible study key for anyone searching for God’s presence in chaos. The conversation turns practical and pastoral as we connect Exodus 8 to real life suffering, prayer, and trust. Sometimes God delivers us out of a season, and sometimes He carries us through it, but either way He stays with us. If you need hope that God is still near on hard days, this one is for you. Subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review, then tell us: do you need deliverance out or deliverance through right now?We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
Blood in the water isn’t just a dramatic image, it’s the opening move in a spiritual war. Exodus 7 drops us into the moment Moses and Aaron stand before Pharaoh with a simple command from Yahweh: let God’s people go. Pharaoh has a throne, an army, and a reputation. Moses has a staff, a calling, and a God who refuses to share glory with Egypt’s idols. We dig into why the plagues of Egypt aren’t random acts of chaos. Each sign is a deliberate confrontation of the false gods Egypt trusted for life, safety, and power, starting with the Nile. When the river turns to blood, the episode shows what it means for God to strike at the very thing a culture treats as untouchable. And when Pharaoh’s magicians imitate the miracle, we talk honestly about counterfeit power, hardened hearts, and why “looking spiritual” is not the same as being true. The takeaway lands close to home: God has many enemies, but He has no rivals. That doesn’t mean the enemy is harmless, it means we don’t have to live in fear. We close with a prayer for discernment, courage, and a serious approach to sin, trusting that Jesus is stronger than anything pushing back against our freedom. Subscribe, share this with a friend walking through Exodus, and leave a five-star review so more people can find the show. What part of Exodus 7 challenges you most right now?We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
Obedience is supposed to make things better, right? Moses walks into Pharaoh’s court with God’s words and walks out with Israel’s chains pulled tighter. Exodus 6 starts in that gut-punch space where you did what God asked, and the results look like failure. We talk honestly about what to do when faith feels costly, progress stalls, and discouragement gets so heavy you can barely listen to hope. Then God speaks, not with a pep talk, but with His name. “I am Yahweh.” We sit with the weight of that moment and the cascade of promises that follow: I will free you, rescue you, redeem you, claim you, and bring you home. This is covenant language, deliverance language, redemption language and it’s the backbone of the Exodus story and a lifeline for anyone craving Christian encouragement, Bible teaching, and a clearer picture of God’s character when life is harsh. We also get personal about Moses’ reflex to turn the mission inward: “I’m not good enough. I can’t do this.” If you’ve ever argued with God using your anxiety, insecurity, anger, or lack of confidence, you’ll recognize yourself here. The big takeaway is simple and freeing: God doesn’t call you because you’re enough. He calls you because He is, and He knows exactly what He’s doing with an imperfect person in His hands. If this helped you, subscribe, share it with a friend who feels stuck, and leave a five-star review so more people can find the Bible Breakdown Podcast. What’s one area where you need to stop making it about you and trust what God wants to do through you?We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
The first “Let my people go” doesn’t open prison doors, it tightens the chains. Exodus 5 starts with courage and ends with exhaustion: Moses and Aaron speak to Pharaoh, Pharaoh scoffs at Yahweh, and the backlash hits the workers immediately. Straw is taken away, brick quotas stay the same, and the pressure turns Israel’s frustration toward the very leaders trying to help. We slow down and read the story like real life, because it often feels the same. Sometimes you obey God and the problem doesn’t shrink, it grows. Sometimes you step out in faith and the resistance gets louder. Moses even prays the thought many of us are afraid to say: “Why did you send me?” and “You have done nothing to rescue them.” That raw moment opens a bigger conversation about suffering, spiritual opposition, and what it means to trust God when the timeline makes no sense. Along the way, we talk about endurance, integrity, and why God may be doing far more than we can see in the moment. We also point forward to God’s promise of rescue and freedom, the heartbeat of the Exodus story and a source of daily hope for anyone walking through waiting, grief, illness, or burnout. If you’ve been asking, “God, where are you?” you’re not alone, and you’re not forgotten. Subscribe, share this with a friend who needs strength today, and leave a review with the line that hit you hardest.We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
Moses is one of the most relatable people in the Bible because he does what many of us do when God calls: he argues, delays, and lists every reason he’s not the right person. As we walk through Exodus 4, we trace Moses’ shift from “I can’t do this” to the quiet courage of “but I’m gonna go,” and we see how God responds to insecurity with real support, not empty hype. If you’re wrestling with calling, fear, or obedience, this chapter puts language to your inner dialogue and points you toward your next faithful step.We unpack the signs God gives Moses to answer doubt: the staff that becomes a snake, the hand that is healed, and the warning of the Nile. We also slow down on Moses’ anxiety about public speaking and God’s direct reminder that the Creator of the mouth can empower the messenger. Then we tackle one of the strangest and most debated moments in the Exodus story: God confronting Moses on the road and Zipporah stepping in with an urgent covenant act. It’s confusing on the surface, but it highlights a theme that keeps showing up in Scripture: covenant obedience and integrity matter, especially for spiritual leaders.Finally, we bring it home with the practical takeaway. Simple obedience is simple but not simplistic, and you don’t have to see the end of the journey to take the next step. If this helped you, subscribe for daily Bible breakdowns, share it with a friend who feels unready, and leave a review so more people can learn to engage God’s Word with us.We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
A bush burns but never burns up and suddenly Exodus 3 stops feeling like ancient history and starts feeling like a mirror. I’m walking through Moses’ turning point on Mount Sinai, where an exhausted fugitive hears his name called, is told to step barefoot onto holy ground, and learns that God has been watching the suffering of his people the whole time. If you’ve ever asked “Who am I to do this?” you’re going to recognize yourself in Moses fast. We dig into the core promise that drives the entire Exodus story: God doesn’t hand Moses a motivational speech, he gives him his presence. “I will be with you” is the answer to fear, calling, and impossible assignments. Then we slow down for the moment that still shapes Jewish and Christian faith today, when God reveals his covenant name. We talk about “I AM WHO I AM,” the meaning of Yahweh, why many English Bibles use LORD in all caps, and how reverence for God’s name shows up in tradition and translation. Finally, we unpack the meaning of “a land flowing with milk and honey” as a picture of a sustainable life and a thriving ecosystem, not just a religious slogan. We close with a simple practice to carry all day: let every deep breath remind you that God is near and you never walk alone. Subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave a review, then tell us what line from Exodus 3 you needed most today.We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
A baby in a basket should be the end of a story, not the beginning of deliverance. But Exodus 2 keeps flipping the script: what looks like loss becomes protection, what feels like surrender becomes provision, and what seems like a detour becomes training for destiny. We open with Moses’ mother making the hardest choice she can make and then watching God do something only God can do, placing Moses into Pharaoh’s household while still caring for him through his own family.Then we follow Moses into adulthood, where calling and impatience collide. Raised with access to Egypt’s power, he sees injustice and tries to fix it fast, on his terms, with deadly results. That one moment turns into exile and decades in Midian, reminding us that good motives don’t replace God’s timing. If you’ve ever tried to force a door open because you were sure you were “supposed to,” this part of the story will hit close to home.We also zoom out to the bigger Exodus story: Israel’s groaning under slavery, God hearing their cries, and God remembering His covenant. That covenant faithfulness is the backbone of real hope. We end with a practical question you can carry all day: is there something you’re holding so tightly that it’s time to trust the Lord instead of trying to control the outcome?If this helped you, subscribe to the Bible Breakdown Podcast, share it with a friend who needs encouragement, and leave a five-star review so more people can find this daily Bible study.We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
A new Pharaoh rises, forgets Joseph, and turns fear into policy and the result is slavery, oppression, and a shocking command aimed at wiping out a generation. We slow down in Exodus chapter 1 to see what’s really happening beneath the surface and why this ancient story still reads like a mirror for modern life. When power feels threatened, it often tries to control the vulnerable, rewrite the past, and call injustice “security.” Exodus refuses to sanitize any of it, and that honesty is part of what makes it hope-filled. We also zoom out to why Exodus is a cornerstone for Bible study and Christian faith. We talk about Moses and the setting of the book, then connect the dots to the themes that shape the rest of Scripture: God’s redemption and deliverance, covenant relationship, holiness, and God’s presence with his people. Along the way we preview why the plagues are more than spectacle, how Passover becomes the foundation for understanding Jesus as the Lamb of God, and why the tabernacle points to God dwelling with his people, all the way to Revelation. Most of all, Exodus 1 raises a personal question: what do you do when you’re living with consequences you didn’t cause? If you’ve carried the weight of someone else’s choices, loss, betrayal, sickness, or a situation that feels unfair, this chapter meets you there. We end with prayer and a simple promise rooted in Exodus: God sees you, and God frees his people. Subscribe, share this with a friend who needs hope, and leave a review so more people can find the show.We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
Paul is in prison, but his biggest request isn’t comfort or an early release. He asks for something far harder: a clear voice for Christ when the door opens. Colossians 4 ends with prayer, workplace integrity, and a blueprint for everyday Christian witness and it’s a needed reset if you’ve been stuck, tired, or quietly losing heart.I walk through Paul’s call to devote ourselves to prayer with an alert mind and a thankful heart, then we sit with his challenge to live wisely among those who don’t believe. That means making the most of opportunities, keeping our words gracious, and aiming for clarity instead of trying to sound impressive. We also touch the practical side of faith, including how leaders and employees both live under God’s authority and why that should shape how we treat people at work.Then the chapter gets personal. Paul lists names, friendships, and church connections, showing how ministry is rarely solo and how God uses ordinary people to strengthen the church. He even points to the early practice of sharing letters between churches, a reminder of how Scripture was carefully preserved. Finally, Paul pauses for one direct line to Archippus: “Be sure to carry out the ministry the Lord gave you.” If pain, church hurt, or a hard season has made you want to quit serving, that sentence is for you.Subscribe for daily Bible study, share this with someone who needs courage today, and leave a five-star review so more people can find the Bible Breakdown Podcast.We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
You can believe the right things about Jesus and still keep Him boxed into a few safe corners of your life. Today we sit in Colossians 3 and let Paul press on the real issue: Jesus does not want to be part of our lives. He wants to be Lord over all of it, because every area submitted to Christ is an area where we can finally live free.We read the chapter slowly and talk through what it means to “set your sights on the realities of heaven” while still living in a loud, complicated world. Paul names the sins we tend to excuse, then shows why the gospel is not legalism and it is not cheap grace. Grace saves us from sin, not so we can keep it, and conviction becomes a gift that keeps us close to God instead of numb and drifting.Then Colossians 3 turns practical with everyday Christian living: mercy, patience, forgiveness, love, peace, gratitude, worship, and words that represent Jesus well. We also touch marriage, parenting, and work, including the warning to fathers not to discourage their children and the call to work sincerely as if we are serving Christ. If you have been compartmentalizing faith, this is a gentle but direct reset toward real spiritual growth and sanctification.Subscribe for daily Bible study, share this with a friend who needs encouragement, and leave a review so more people can find the show. What is one area of your life you are ready to surrender to Jesus today?We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
Freedom can feel like a finish line you never reach, especially when faith turns into a quiet checklist of rules you hope will finally make you acceptable. Colossians 2 cuts through that pressure with a sharper message: Jesus is not a stepping stone to God, he is God revealed, and life with him starts from being made complete, not from trying to become worthy. We walk through Paul’s warning to a church being pulled off course by false teachers, and we slow down on the line that changes everything: in Christ are hidden treasures of wisdom and knowledge, and the fullness of God lives in him. We also talk about why “high-sounding” spiritual talk can still be empty, and how legalism sneaks in through condemnation over food, holy days, self-denial, or spiritual experiences. Paul’s point isn’t that holiness doesn’t matter; it’s that rules cannot heal desire. Behavior control may look wise, but it can’t conquer the heart. That’s why the gospel anchors us in the cross where our record of charges is canceled, and it reframes baptism as a powerful symbol of dying and rising with Christ. The most practical takeaway is what we call the secret to freedom: we don’t obey so God will love us, we obey because God loves us. That shift changes how we face addiction, pornography, gossip, substance abuse, and every shame cycle that tries to define us. If you’re ready to stop fighting for acceptance and start walking in freedom one day at a time, listen now, then subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find the message.We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
Someone told you Jesus was “a great teacher” and nothing more. Colossians 1 doesn’t just disagree, it lays down one of the strongest, clearest claims about Jesus in the entire New Testament.I’m Pastor Brandon, and we’re starting a new book with the kind of Bible breakdown that helps you actually see what’s happening in the text. We talk about the background of Colossians, how Epaphras connects the church in Colossae to Paul, and why this small house church ends up receiving a massive message from a prison cell. When voices start spreading confusion about who Jesus is, Paul responds with a focused theme you can’t miss: Jesus is Lord of all.Then we read Colossians chapter 1 and slow down on the lines worth highlighting. We look at Paul’s prayer for spiritual wisdom, endurance, and a life that bears good fruit, and we sit with the stunning claims of Christ’s supremacy: Jesus is the visible image of the invisible God, He existed before all things, everything was created through Him and for Him, and He holds all creation together. We also connect that to the heart of the gospel, reconciliation through Christ’s blood on the cross, and the call to keep believing without drifting.We end with a decision point that gets personal fast: if Jesus says what He says, who is He to you, and what will you do about it? Subscribe for the rest of Colossians, share this with a friend who has big questions about Jesus, and leave a five-star review so more people can find the show.We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
The book of Genesis ends with a funeral, a family reckoning, and one of the most grounding lines in all of Scripture. We walk through Genesis 50 as Joseph honors Jacob’s final request, returns to Egypt, and then faces the moment his brothers dread most: “Dad is gone, now Joseph will get even.” That fear makes sense if you assume power always turns into punishment. But Joseph shows a different way.We talk about what it means when Joseph says, “Am I God that can punish you?” and why his response is not weak, naïve, or forgetful. It’s faith with clear eyes. The heartbeat of the chapter is Genesis 50:20: “You intended to harm me, but God intended it for good.” We explore how God’s providence can be stronger than betrayal, injustice, false accusations, prison seasons, and the ache of being forgotten. If you’ve ever asked “God, why?” Joseph’s story meets you there, then invites you to zoom out.From there, we bring it home with practical Christian encouragement: what would it look like to stop giving the enemy the glory for the ugliest thing that happened to you and instead hand it to God for redemption? We share examples of people who turned deep regret and long addiction into compassion, ministry, and real help for others, without pretending the pain wasn’t real.If Genesis 50 is speaking to your story, listen, share it with a friend who needs hope, and then subscribe and leave a five-star review so more people can find the Bible Breakdown Podcast. What part of your past are you asking God to reframe today?We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
A father’s final words can heal, warn, or haunt and Genesis 49 proves they can also shape history. We’re walking through Jacob’s last blessing over his sons, and it’s as honest as it is prophetic: some sons are praised, some are confronted, and every sentence lands with a ripple effect that flows into the twelve tribes of Israel for generations to come. If you’ve ever wondered how family patterns form, why words carry weight, or how the book of Genesis sets up the rest of the Bible, this chapter is a turning point. We also zoom out to remember why Genesis mattered so much to its first listeners, a newly freed people coming out of centuries in Egyptian culture and many gods. Genesis anchors them to the truth that God is the Creator and the covenant-keeper, building His plan through Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and now Jacob’s children. Along the way, we highlight Judah’s blessing and why it stands out as a major Bible prophecy thread pointing toward kings, David, and ultimately Jesus, the King of kings. Then we bring it home with a practical challenge: instead of tossing off quick encouragement, what would it look like to pray, choose one person, and write them a real blessing with a specific prayer? If you want a simple next step for Christian encouragement, discipleship, and speaking life into your family and friends, press play and do it with us. Subscribe, share this with someone who needs hope, and leave a review, then tell us who you’re going to encourage today.We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
The most dangerous lie about faith is that the best part is the big moment and then the story fades to black. Genesis 47 refuses to do that. After Jacob and Joseph finally reunite, the camera stays rolling, and we get the “next day” details that most of us actually live: paperwork, provision, leadership decisions, family relocation, and the slow march of time.We walk through how Joseph brings his brothers to Pharaoh, why their identity as shepherds matters, and how Goshen becomes a strategic place of protection and growth for Israel. Then the chapter turns intense as the famine tightens its grip. Joseph’s grain program shifts from money to livestock to land, and the result is a massive consolidation of power under Pharaoh along with a lasting 20 percent harvest policy. It’s a rich Bible breakdown for anyone who wants to think clearly about Genesis 47, Joseph’s leadership, crisis management, stewardship, and the moral complexity that shows up when survival is on the line.Finally, we bring it home: new believers often expect the Christian life to feel like one long spiritual climax, but discipleship is a daily walk with Christ that matures over years. If you’ve been asking “now what?” or you’ve gotten tired of the day by day, this conversation is meant to steady you and remind you that God is faithful in ordinary time too.Subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave a review to help more people find the Bible Breakdown Podcast. What part of the “next day” life do you need God to meet you in right now?We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
A father believes his son is gone forever, then suddenly he is standing face to face with him again. Genesis 46 gives us one of the most tender scenes in Scripture: Jacob arriving in Egypt and Joseph wrapping his arms around him, weeping for a long time. We talk through why this reunion lands so deeply, especially for anyone who has carried grief, regret, or years of unanswered questions about family. We also slow down to notice the quieter moments that carry the weight of faith. Jacob stops at Beersheba to worship, and God speaks to him in a vision with a direct word for anxious hearts: do not be afraid to go down to Egypt. That promise includes God’s presence, God’s purpose, and God’s long-range plan to form Israel into a great nation. If you’re looking for Bible teaching that connects Genesis, God’s promises, and real-life fear, this chapter is packed with guidance for Christian living. Then we work through the genealogy and the count of Jacob’s descendants, why the “seventy” matters, and how Joseph wisely prepares his family to speak with Pharaoh and settle in Goshen. We also wrestle with a hard truth: not every story gets a fairy-tale ending in this life, but God is still faithful, and He will make all things new. Subscribe for daily Bible breakdowns, share this with someone who needs hope, and leave a review to help more people find the podcast.We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
The moment Joseph says, “I am Joseph,” everything changes. Genesis 45 isn’t just a dramatic reunion story. It’s a masterclass in forgiveness, God’s providence, and what it looks like to lead with a healed heart instead of a wounded ego. We walk through the big reveal scene where Joseph sends everyone out, breaks down in tears, and tells the brothers who betrayed him to come closer. Instead of payback, he offers perspective: what they meant for harm, God used to preserve lives during famine. If you’ve ever struggled with resentment, family conflict, or the question of why God allowed something painful, this chapter gives you language for faith that doesn’t ignore the hurt but refuses to be ruled by it. Then we follow the practical provision that flows from redemption. Joseph lays out the famine timeline, invites his family to settle in Goshen, and Pharaoh backs the plan with resources, wagons, and the best of the land. Jacob’s stunned disbelief turns into revived hope when he sees the evidence and decides he must go. It’s a reminder that restoration is both spiritual and concrete, and God often rebuilds what was broken through steps you can actually take. We also connect Joseph’s story to Christian leadership today: the higher you climb, the lower you go in serving. Opportunity brings responsibility, and any “success” God gives us is meant to bless others. Subscribe for daily Bible study, share this with a friend who needs hope, and leave a review to help more people find the Bible Breakdown Podcast.We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
A silver cup goes missing, the youngest brother takes the blame, and the family’s old wounds rip open again. Genesis 44 isn’t just a dramatic plot twist in the Joseph story, it’s a hard test that reveals whether Joseph’s brothers have actually changed since the day they sold him into slavery. We walk through the setup step by step: Joseph sends his brothers home with grain, secretly returns their money, and then plants his personal cup in Benjamin’s sack. When the accusation lands, everything is on the line. The brothers are forced to face the fear Jacob has carried for years, and Joseph is forced to face a question many of us feel in our own stories: did the people who hurt me ever become different, or did time just move on? The heart of the chapter is Judah. He steps forward, tells the truth about their father’s fragile grief, and offers himself as a substitute so Benjamin can go free. That one decision becomes a picture of growth, repentance that turns into action, and courage that chooses what’s right over what’s easy. We close with a practical challenge and a prayer: God, use what I’m going through today to make me better for tomorrow, so I choose well when the cycle comes back around. If this helped you, subscribe for the next chapter, share it with a friend walking through family pain or hard choices, and leave a five-star review so more people can find the Bible Breakdown Podcast.We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
The people who hurt you don’t just disappear, do they? Sometimes they show back up at the worst possible moment, and you have to decide what kind of person you’re going to be next. Genesis 43 drops us right into that tension as Joseph stands face-to-face with the brothers who sold him into slavery, while a famine in Canaan forces Jacob’s family to depend on Egypt for food.We walk through the turning points of the chapter: Judah stepping up to personally guarantee Benjamin’s safety, Jacob sending gifts and double money, and the brothers bracing for punishment because guilt has a way of making mercy feel suspicious. Then the story flips. Simeon is released, a feast is prepared, and Joseph quietly fulfills the dream from his youth as his brothers bow before him. The moment that cracks him open is simple and devastating: Benjamin is there, and Jacob is still alive. Joseph slips away to weep, then returns with self-control and surprising generosity, even giving Benjamin five times the portion.We also slow down for the heart-level application. Forgiveness is not pretending it was okay, not excusing sin, and not instantly rebuilding closeness. Forgiveness is refusing to let what they did to you determine your future and letting God handle what you can’t carry. If you’re working through betrayal, family conflict, or long-held bitterness, this Bible study on Genesis 43 offers a clear next step toward reconciliation and spiritual freedom.Subscribe for the next chapter, share this with a friend who needs hope, and leave a review so more people can find the Bible Breakdown Podcast. What does forgiveness look like in your real life right now?We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
The moment you think life is finally stable, the past walks back into the room. That’s the gut punch of Genesis 42, where Joseph is thriving as Egypt’s governor and then comes face to face with the very brothers who sold him into slavery. They don’t recognize him, but he recognizes every detail and suddenly power, pain, and memory collide.We read the chapter together and sit in the tension: Joseph speaks harshly, accuses them of spying, and locks them up before demanding they bring Benjamin back. The brothers start to crack under guilt, admitting they’re being repaid for what they did to Joseph, and Joseph quietly weeps as he listens through an interpreter. Back home, Jacob refuses to risk Benjamin, still grieving Joseph and clinging to the last connection he feels he has left. It’s family conflict under pressure, and it feels painfully human.Then we land the takeaway that makes this more than an ancient story. Family is hard, and there are moments when you have to face your past and choose what it will make of you. Your past can inform your future without defining it. When old wounds reopen, will you become bitter, or will you become better? If you’re working through forgiveness, trauma, or a complicated family story, this Bible study on Genesis 42 will meet you where you are. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a five-star review so more people can break down the Bible with us.We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
A man wakes up in a prison with no control over his future and goes to sleep in a palace with the weight of a nation on his shoulders. That is Genesis 41, and it’s one of the clearest pictures in Scripture of how fast God can change circumstances after a long stretch of waiting.We sit with Pastor Brandon as we track Joseph’s journey from being forgotten for two full years to standing before Pharaoh at the exact right moment. Pharaoh’s dreams about seven fat cows, seven thin cows, and withered grain leave Egypt’s experts speechless, but Joseph points away from himself and toward God: the interpretation is not “his gift,” it’s God’s message. Then Joseph does something bold. He not only explains the dream, he lays out a practical leadership plan for the coming seven years of abundance and seven years of famine. This is Bible teaching that connects faith with wisdom, preparation, and courage under pressure.Along the way, we pull out the personal takeaway: don’t doubt in the dark what God spoke in the light, and don’t forget God when life gets comfortable. Whether you feel stuck in a hard season or you’re enjoying blessing right now, Joseph’s story is a grounded reminder that God is trustworthy and his timing is never random. If you’re looking for a Genesis 41 Bible study, a Christian devotional on trusting God, or encouragement for waiting seasons, this conversation meets you right where you are.Subscribe for daily Bible breakdowns, share this with a friend who needs hope, and leave a five-star review so more people can find the show.We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
Somebody helped you, and you remembered forever. Somebody else helped you, and you forgot by Friday. Genesis 40 puts that tension right on the page, and we feel it through Joseph’s story in Pharaoh’s prison. We follow the moment two powerful men, the chief cupbearer and chief baker, land in the same cell block as Joseph and bring two unsettling dreams with them. Joseph doesn’t chase weird signs or act mystical. He serves, he listens, and he makes it clear that interpretation belongs to God, not ego. We talk about what those dreams mean, why one man is restored and the other is judged, and how God’s providence can be working even when Joseph’s life still looks stuck. We also slow down at the sharpest line in the chapter: the cupbearer forgets Joseph. That single detail opens up a real conversation about disappointment, church hurt, friendships that fade, and the way “it wasn’t personal” can still cut deep. Most people aren’t evil, they’re busy, and that reality helps us name the pain without turning bitter. The big takeaway is simple and steady: people may forget you, but God will not. If you’re in a waiting season, feeling overlooked, or tired of doing the right thing with no return, this chapter offers grounded hope and a practical shift, lower expectations of people and raise expectations of God. Subscribe, share this with a friend who feels forgotten, and leave a review letting us know where you’re seeing God stay faithful when life feels delayed.We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
The hardest spiritual test is not temptation in public, it’s pressure in private when doing the right thing costs you. Today we open Genesis 39 and sit with Joseph in the most frustrating kind of moment: he honors God, refuses compromise, and still gets punished for it. If you’ve ever wondered why integrity doesn’t always pay off quickly, this conversation is for you. We follow Joseph’s rise in Potiphar’s house, where trust is earned through consistent character and excellent work. Then the story sharpens as Potiphar’s wife escalates temptation day after day, and Joseph draws a clear line: this would be wicked and a sin against God. That single sentence reframes integrity, sexual purity, and leadership ethics as worship, not reputation management. We also slow down at the false accusation, talking about why evidence matters and why we have to be careful with any claim that can destroy a life. Finally, we watch God meet Joseph in prison. The circumstances are unfair, but the presence of God is steady, and Joseph chooses to grow where he’s planted. The takeaway is both honest and hopeful: not everyone will appreciate your desire to honor God, but God is with you in every fire, and He can use even unwanted seasons to move you toward His purpose. If this helped you, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a five-star review so more people can find the Bible Breakdown Podcast.We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
Genesis 38 is one of those Bible chapters people skip because it’s uncomfortable, complicated, and honestly a little shocking. We don’t skip it. We read the story of Judah and Tamar straight through, then slow down to unpack what’s actually happening beneath the scandal and why this chapter is placed right in the middle of the Joseph storyline. If you’ve ever wondered how to make sense of difficult Old Testament narratives, this conversation gives you a clear path through the details without sanding off the rough edges. We talk about the leveret law and the ancient reality behind it: in a world with no social safety net, family responsibility was survival. A widow without protection could become destitute, so the expectation to provide an heir wasn’t just a ritual, it was mercy. We also face the hard moments in the text, including Onan’s refusal, Judah’s broken promises, Tamar’s desperate strategy, and the hypocrisy that explodes when Judah rushes to judge her. The turning point comes when Judah is forced to recognize his own failure and admits the truth, a moment that sets up a bigger transformation later in Genesis. Then we bring it home with a practical Christian message that hits daily life: responsibility isn’t automatically a burden, it can be a sign of blessing. The trash, the bills, the overtime, the caregiving, the commitments you didn’t ask for can also be proof that God has given you people to love and opportunities to steward. If you’re studying the Bible, growing in faith, or just trying to rethink your attitude toward duty, this chapter has more wisdom than you’d expect. Subscribe, leave a review, and share this with a friend then tell us, what responsibility do you need to see differently today?We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale Ho
A favored son. A loud dream. A family powder keg. Genesis 37 opens the Joseph story with a question that still hits home: what do you do when God gives you a glimpse of your future, but your present is full of tension, envy, and broken relationships? We follow Joseph at seventeen, wearing the robe that marks him as Jacob’s favorite, and we watch how that visible symbol of preference turns everyday sibling conflict into something far darker. We unpack Joseph’s dreams and why they aren’t the real problem, but how he shares them reveals immaturity and poor stewardship of a calling. There’s a line we don’t want to miss: God’s promises should never become weapons. From there, the story accelerates into betrayal, the cistern, and the shocking decision to sell Joseph to traders heading to Egypt. The chapter ends with Jacob crushed by grief and Joseph ripped away from everything familiar, alone in a foreign land. But we don’t stop at tragedy. We lean into a steady hope: chaos is not the last chapter. If it’s not good, God is not done. If you’re in a season where your home, work, or emotions feel out of control, this conversation will help you hold on and keep turning the page. Subscribe for the daily Bible breakdown, share this with a friend who needs hope, and leave a review to help more people find the show.We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
A chapter packed with hard-to-pronounce names might be the most practical Bible reading you do all week. We’re walking through Genesis 36, Esau’s family tree, and uncovering why Scripture preserves genealogies instead of trimming them out. What looks like ancient history is actually a map: Esau becomes Edom, and the names in this chapter foreshadow real nations and leaders Israel will recognize later in the Old Testament story.We also talk about the original audience hearing this after the exodus from Egyptian bondage. At Mount Sinai, Israel is learning where neighboring peoples come from and how the land around them got its clans, chiefs, and kings. That context turns “a list of names” into a lesson about identity, inheritance, and the long reach of family lines across generations.Then the episode gets personal. If every name mattered enough to be recorded, what does that say about how God sees people today? We wrestle with how easy it is to label others by their sin, their reputation, or their usefulness, and we replace that habit with something more biblical: every person is made in the image of God and deserves respect, even when they’re far from Him. You’ll leave with a clear question to carry into your day and a simple way to change how you see others and yourself.Subscribe for daily Bible breakdowns, share this with a friend who’s reading Genesis, and leave a review if the show helps you. What’s one way you can choose respect over labels today?We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
Death shows up in Genesis 35 with no warning, and it forces a question most of us would rather avoid: do we face loss with fear, denial, or a deeper kind of hope? We follow Jacob back to Bethel, the place where God first met him, and we watch renewal begin in a surprisingly practical way, by burying idols, purifying the household, and choosing worship again. From there, God reaffirms the covenant promises given to Abraham and Isaac, and Jacob steps more fully into his identity as Israel, carrying not just blessing but responsibility.Then the chapter turns tender and heavy. Deborah dies. Rachel dies in childbirth. Isaac dies at a ripe old age. We sit in the difference between an abrupt goodbye and an expected farewell, and we talk about how both can shake you. One detail hits especially hard: Rachel names her son “Ben-Oni” (son of my sorrow), but Jacob renames him “Benjamin” (son of my right hand, a place of blessing). That isn’t pretending the pain is small. It’s a picture of grief that tells the truth while still refusing to let sorrow be the final label.We also explore a Christian view of death that avoids two extremes, celebrating death in a creepy way or running from it as if speaking of it makes it real. We talk about bereavement, why grief is a gift for processing loss, and why the hope of being with Jesus changes what we fear. We even look at King David’s response to loss as a model of praying hard, grieving honestly, and trusting God when the outcome is out of our hands. Subscribe for the daily Genesis Bible study journey, share this with someone walking through grief, and leave a review with the question you most want answered about life after death.We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All ri
Genesis 34 is the kind of chapter that makes you stop and say, “How is this even in the Bible?” Dinah is violated, her attacker tries to turn it into a marriage arrangement, and the fallout spirals into deception, bloodshed, and a family crisis that leaves nobody looking clean. I read the story straight, react honestly, and then slow down to ask the question we all feel: what does justice look like when your heart is on fire?We trace the choices step by step: Shechem’s abuse of power, Hamor’s attempt to negotiate peace like it’s a business deal, and Jacob’s sons using circumcision as a trap. Simeon and Levi’s anger is understandable, but their revenge becomes a massacre, and Jacob’s response exposes another danger, treating tragedy like a threat to the “bottom line.” If you’ve ever struggled with righteous anger, family loyalty, or the urge to fight fire with fire, Genesis 34 brings it all to the surface.The real takeaway is simple and hard: two wrongs don’t make a right. When we’ve been hurt, we can slip into living as a victim or acting as a villain, and neither road leads to healing. I’ll share a practical way to pursue proper justice while protecting your integrity, and why trusting God’s ultimate justice is not the same thing as doing nothing.Subscribe, share this with a friend who’s reading Genesis, and leave a five-star review so more people can find the Bible Breakdown Podcast.We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
A reunion can feel like a courtroom when you know you’ve hurt someone. Jacob heads home with that weight on his shoulders, and Genesis 33 doesn’t let us look away from the hardest part of spiritual growth: facing the people who remember the old you. Esau shows up with 400 men, and every detail screams danger, yet the moment lands in tears, an embrace, and a shock of mercy that only God could have been arranging behind the scenes. We take you line by line through Jacob and Esau’s reconciliation and tease out what makes this story so timeless for family conflict, broken trust, and long-standing resentment. We talk about what it looks like to “go first” when you’re the one who caused the damage, why humility is more powerful than self-defense, and how practical acts of restitution can open a door without trying to control the outcome. We also name the uneasy reality that reconciliation can be real even when the relationship doesn’t snap back to what it used to be. Then we slow down on a crucial distinction for Christian living: forgiveness is freely given, while trust is earned. If you’ve ever felt stuck between wanting peace and needing wisdom, this conversation offers a grounded path forward rooted in Scripture, prayer, and a solid biblical worldview. If Genesis 33 has ever felt like your family story, you’re not alone. Subscribe for daily Bible breakdowns, share this with a friend who needs hope, and leave a review to help more people find the show.We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
Esau is coming with 400 men, Jacob is sure payback is finally here, and the best he can do is split the family, send a trail of extravagant gifts, and pray like someone who has run out of options. Genesis 32 is not a tidy faith story. It is fear, strategy, and a brutally honest cry for help, all in the same night. We trace the tension step by step and sit with Jacob’s prayer, where he admits he is not worthy and still asks God to keep His promise.Then everything gets stranger. Jacob ends up alone by the Jabbok River and a “man” wrestles with him until dawn. Jacob refuses to let go without a blessing, and he walks away limping with a new name: Israel. We talk through what that moment means, why Jacob calls the place Peniel “the face of God,” and why many Bible scholars discuss this passage as a possible Christophany, an appearance of God in human form in the Old Testament pointing toward Jesus.Most of all, we bring it home. Sometimes God does not stop the hard thing, not because He is absent, but because the hard thing finally gets us still enough to notice Him. If you are facing a tough season, we challenge you to stop asking “Why?” and start asking “Where are You, God, and what are You doing in me?” Subscribe for daily Bible study, share this with a friend who needs hope, and leave a review so more people can find the show.We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
Some Bible stories feel polished. Genesis 31 is not one of them and that’s exactly why it hits home. We’re walking through Jacob’s breaking point with Laban: suspicion rises, wages have been manipulated for years, and the only way Jacob can imagine freedom is a quiet escape that turns into a full-blown pursuit. Pastor Brandon unpacks the family dynamics, the spiritual tension, and the moment God steps in to protect Jacob when Jacob can’t protect himself.Along the way, we talk through the details that make this chapter so vivid and so human: Rachel and Leah’s honest frustration, Rachel stealing Laban’s household idols, Laban’s dramatic confrontation, and the dream where God draws a hard line and warns Laban to leave Jacob alone. We also sit with the uncomfortable truth that Jacob doesn’t do everything the right way, even while trying to obey God’s direction to return to Canaan.The big takeaway is simple and practical for real life: God will do what only He can do when we do what only we can do. If you’re navigating family conflict, setting boundaries, untangling a toxic relationship, or trying to take the next step of obedience without making a bigger mess, this Genesis 31 Bible study offers both caution and hope.Subscribe to the Bible Breakdown Podcast, share this with a friend who needs encouragement, and leave a five-star review if it helped you. What boundary do you need to set, or what next step is God putting in front of you?We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
Genesis 30 is the kind of chapter people don’t expect to find in the Bible and it is exactly the kind of chapter that can rebuild your faith when life feels complicated. I’m Pastor Brandon, and today we’re walking through a story packed with rivalry, heartbreak, and some truly wild family dynamics as Jacob, Rachel, and Leah spiral into a competition over children, love, and control. It’s messy on the page because it was messy in real life, and Scripture doesn’t sanitize it.We talk through the hard parts clearly: polygamy and surrogacy show up in the narrative, but that doesn’t mean God endorses them. One of the biggest takeaways is learning to read the Bible with the Bible, letting the full witness of Scripture shape how we understand difficult passages. Genesis 30 also includes the mandrakes scene where a night with Jacob gets traded like currency, exposing how far insecurity and resentment can push a family.Then the chapter pivots to Jacob and Laban, where the conflict moves from the home to the workplace. Jacob asks to leave, Laban tries to keep him because blessing has followed Jacob’s work, and a tense wage agreement over speckled and spotted animals turns into another round of scheming. Through it all, we land on a hope-filled truth: perfection is not a prerequisite for God’s plan. If you’re not perfect yet, you’re in great company, and God is still faithful.Subscribe for the daily Genesis breakdown, share this with a friend who needs encouragement, and leave a five-star review so more people can find the podcast.We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
A wedding night switch. Fourteen years of work. Two sisters living in the shadow of comparison. Genesis 29 isn’t a neat, inspirational story, but it is honest about what family chaos can do, and even more honest about what God can do inside it. We walk through Jacob’s arrival in Haran, his first encounter with Rachel at the well, and the moment he offers seven years of labor to marry her. Then the narrative turns sharply as Laban uses ancient customs and a brutal deception to trap Jacob, pushing Leah into a marriage where she knows she is not the favorite. We talk about why it matters to remember a key Bible study principle: Scripture may describe broken cultural practices without prescribing them for God’s people today. From there, the heart of the chapter comes into focus. When Leah is unloved, God sees her, and her sons’ names reveal the ache of wanting to be noticed and the slow shift toward praise. We connect those names to the larger Old Testament story, the twelve tribes of Israel, and the bigger theme that keeps showing up in Genesis: God doesn’t wait for perfect conditions to move. He works through messy families, confusing seasons, and unexpected turns to carry out his plan. If you’ve ever felt unseen, behind, or stuck in a situation you didn’t choose, this breakdown is for you. Subscribe to the Bible Breakdown Podcast, share it with a friend, and leave a five-star review so more people can find daily Bible teaching that meets them right where they are.We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
Jacob is running, unsure of what comes next, and carrying the weight of a messy family story when God does something shocking: He shows up. We walk through Genesis 28 and the moment Jacob falls asleep with a stone for a pillow and wakes up to a vision of a staircase between earth and heaven, with angels moving and the Lord speaking covenant promises straight into Jacob’s future.We trace how God’s blessing moves from Abraham to Isaac and now to Jacob, and why that matters for anyone thinking about spiritual legacy. If you grew up with strong faith at home, this chapter helps you protect and pass that inheritance forward. If you didn’t, it offers a different kind of hope: you can be the first generation to choose faithfulness, worship, and obedience, and the next generation will learn from what you practice. We also pause to address a common question about polygamy in the Bible, explaining the difference between what Scripture reports and what God actually commands.Then we bring it home with Bethel, the “house of God.” Jacob marks the place, makes a vow, and models what it looks like to build memorials that keep us grounded when life shifts again. We talk about the need for a weekly church family and a daily place to meet with God through prayer and Bible reading, because encounters aren’t meant to be rare. If you’re looking for Bible teaching on Genesis 28, Jacob’s ladder, Bethel, and building a legacy of faith, this chapter is packed with practical takeaways. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a five-star review, then tell us: where is your “Bethel” space right now?We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
A blessing gets stolen, a family splinters, and one tiny detail exposes the whole con: the voice doesn’t match. We’re in Genesis 27 today, breaking down the moment Jacob and Rebekah pull off what we call the “Great Blessing Heist” and how Isaac ends up trusting taste, smell, and touch over the one signal that should have stopped everything. If you’ve ever felt pulled toward a choice that seemed right in the moment but didn’t line up with God’s Word, this chapter will feel uncomfortably familiar.We walk through the full story of Jacob and Esau, from Isaac’s request for wild game to the costume-level deception with goat skins, to the heartbreaking scene when Esau realizes the blessing is gone. Then we talk about the fallout: bitterness, fear, and the kind of consequences that don’t stay neatly contained to one decision. Genesis doesn’t give us a polished hero story, it gives us an honest one, and that honesty helps our Bible study and our daily discipleship.The big takeaway is discernment. Counterfeit blessings can look convincing and even feel satisfying, but the clearest test is whether it sounds like the voice of God revealed in Scripture. When something “tastes right” yet contradicts the character of God, it’s time to slow down, hold back, and listen more closely. If this episode helps you, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review so more people can read the Bible with us.We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
Isaac’s story in Genesis 26 is comforting for a surprising reason: it’s messy. We watch him replay Abraham’s worst instinct, fear, by lying about Rebekah, and we see how quickly a half-smart plan can turn into public consequences. But we also see something steadier than Isaac’s emotions: God’s covenant promise and God’s protection, even when Isaac is not at his best.Then the chapter shifts from one bad decision to a long stretch of pressure. God blesses Isaac’s work with an overflowing harvest, and that blessing draws jealousy. Wells get stopped up, neighbors pick fights, and Isaac keeps moving because water is life in a desert. Those repeated well disputes become a picture of spiritual leadership and endurance: sometimes God uses resistance to push us into the place where we finally have room to breathe. If you’ve ever wondered why obedience can still come with conflict, Genesis 26 answers that with honesty.We also talk about the whiplash of real life: Isaac finds peace with his enemies through a treaty, only to face fresh pain at home when Esau’s choices bring grief to the family. That contrast raises the question many of us carry: why does it feel like there’s never a season where everything is fine at once? The takeaway is simple and strong: you don’t need a perfect life to have a blessed life, because God is with you in all things, and He does not stop being faithful.Subscribe for daily Bible study, share this with a friend who’s tired, and leave a five-star review to help more people find the show. What’s the “one thing” in your life that feels hardest right now?We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
A single meal can expose what we truly value, and Genesis 25 doesn’t let us look away. We start with the sweeping handoff from Abraham to Isaac, tracing how a family becomes nations through Keturah’s descendants, Ishmael’s line, and the covenant inheritance that stays with Isaac. These details are more than names. They are the Bible’s way of showing how legacy forms, how conflict grows, and how God keeps moving history forward even as one generation fades. Then the story tightens into the kind of personal struggle many of us know: unanswered questions and the ache of waiting. Isaac pleads with God for Rebekah, God answers with twins, and Rebekah brings her fear straight to the Lord when the pregnancy feels like a battle. We talk through God’s surprising prophecy, the rivalry that begins before birth, and why Genesis keeps highlighting reversals that challenge the “normal” rules of power and position. If you’re searching for a clear Genesis 25 summary with practical Bible study insight, this chapter is packed with both theology and real life. Finally, we unpack the moment that gives the message its title: Esau trading his birthright for bread and lentil stew. We break down what the birthright meant in that culture and why this was far more costly than “a bowl of soup.” The bigger takeaway hits home fast: impulse can steal a future, but God’s mercy still meets us when we’ve made a mess. Subscribe for daily Bible breakdowns, share this with a friend who needs a reset, and leave a review. What’s one impulse you’re learning to resist?We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
A stranger shows up at a well and asks for a drink. Minutes later, a young woman is hauling what amounts to hundreds of gallons of water for ten camels, and the future of a biblical family line is changing in real time. Genesis 24 is one of the most unforgettable stories in the book of Genesis, and we love how it proves that God’s providence often hides inside everyday chores.We follow Abraham’s servant as he takes an oath, travels to Abraham’s relatives, and prays a dangerously specific prayer for guidance. Then Rebekah steps onto the scene and does far more than anyone would expect, revealing the kind of character that can carry covenant promises forward. Along the way we talk arranged marriage in the ancient world, the servant’s worship response when God answers, and the moment Rebekah is asked directly if she’s willing to go.The second half turns the story into a practical faith challenge for modern life: you never know what an act of kindness will do. We also keep it honest about boundaries, because Christian kindness is not the same as being careless. If you want a clear Bible study, a story-driven Christian podcast, and a takeaway you can live today, Genesis 24 delivers.Subscribe to the Bible Breakdown Podcast, share this with a friend who needs hope, and leave a five-star review so more people can find daily Bible teaching.We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
Sarah’s story can be easy to overlook until you slow down and feel the weight of Genesis 23. Abraham gets the headline moments, but Sarah lives the long obedience: leaving home, trusting a promise she didn’t personally hear, and staying faithful through years of uncertainty. Her death isn’t just a historical footnote, it’s a moment that exposes the quiet heroes in our lives and asks whether we recognize them while they’re still here. We read the chapter closely and unpack why Abraham insists on purchasing the cave of Machpelah at full price, in public, with witnesses. It’s a real estate deal, but it’s also a spiritual marker: the first permanent piece of the promised land owned by Abraham’s family. Along the way, we talk about grief, dignity, and what it means to honor someone in a way that lasts. If you care about Bible study, Genesis, and how Scripture shapes everyday life, this conversation lands in a very practical place. The challenge is simple and uncomfortable in the best way: don’t wait for a funeral to say what you mean. Pray, ask the Holy Spirit to bring someone to mind, and then take the next step to tell them their value with clarity and sincerity. If this helped you, subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave a five-star review so more people can find the Bible Breakdown Podcast.We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
A father. A promised son. A three-day walk toward a command that makes no sense. Genesis 22 doesn’t let us keep faith in the safe and abstract, so we slow down and trace every step of Abraham and Isaac on the road to Moriah, including the line that changes everything: “We will come right back.” That one sentence reveals a kind of trust most of us want, but struggle to live.We talk about why God tests faith, what the Bible is really showing when Abraham obeys without bargaining, and how Hebrews explains Abraham’s confidence that God would still keep His promise through Isaac. Along the way, we dig into Jehovah Jireh, “the Lord will provide,” not as a catchy phrase but as a name born from a lived moment where God intervenes and provides a substitute.If you’re walking through a hard season, carrying a burden you didn’t choose, or trying to understand why God sometimes leads us into difficulty instead of around it, this conversation is for you. We keep it practical: God doesn’t ask us to be great; He asks us to be faithful. Trust is worship, and it can shape the people watching us, just like Isaac watched Abraham.Subscribe for daily Bible breakdowns, share this with a friend who needs courage, and leave a five-star review to help more people find the show. What part of Genesis 22 challenges your trust the most?We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
A long-awaited promise finally arrives and somehow it doesn’t make life easier. Genesis 21 gives us Isaac’s birth, Sarah’s laughter, and a moment that should feel like pure celebration and then it pivots into conflict, grief, and the heartbreaking exile of Hagar and Ishmael. That mix is exactly why this chapter feels so honest: God keeps his word, but he doesn’t keep it in a vacuum.We walk through the full Bible story arc in Genesis 21, from Abraham and Sarah’s miracle in old age to the painful fallout of earlier choices. We sit with Abraham’s torn heart as he sends his son away, and we watch God meet Hagar in the wilderness with compassion, provision, and a future. If you’ve ever wondered whether your messy feelings mean you’re missing God, this chapter offers a steadier answer: sometimes God is answering one prayer while you’re still waiting on another.We also talk about why Beersheba matters, how the Abimelech treaty shows Abraham’s growing stability, and what it means to “celebrate the wins” while you “trust God in the tension.” This is practical Christian encouragement rooted in Scripture, built for daily Bible study, and aimed at helping you know God one step at a time.Subscribe so you don’t miss the next chapter, share this with a friend who needs hope today, and leave a review so more people can find the Bible Breakdown Podcast.We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
Abraham has already seen God rescue him once, so why does he reach for the same fear-based lie all over again? Genesis 20 brings that uncomfortable question to the surface, and it hits home because it sounds like us: pressure rises, stakes feel high, and “protect myself first” starts to feel reasonable. We walk through Abraham’s decision to call Sarah his sister, the moment King Abimelech takes her, and the startling way God steps in with a warning that forces the truth into the open.What makes this chapter sting is that Abimelech, a pagan king, ends up looking more honorable than Abraham. We talk about reputation, witness, and how quickly compromised integrity spreads beyond us, even affecting an entire household. At the same time, we see God’s mercy protecting Sarah and keeping His promise on track, proving again that God works through flawed people without excusing the flaw.Then we bring it into everyday life: the boardroom, real estate deals, hard conversations, and the chaos of social media. “They won’t play fair, so I can’t either” is a common mindset, but it’s not the calling. We unpack what it means to be different without being a pushover, to keep boundaries without losing honesty, and to show the world that character can be consistent even when it costs something.If you care about Bible teaching, Genesis 20 explained, Christian integrity, and faith under pressure, this one is for you. Subscribe, share with a friend who needs a reset, and leave a review so more people can read the Bible with us.We’d love to hear from you. (For questions, use the links above.)Contact us- Ask a QuestionSend EncouragementTake a Next Step-SOAP Bible Study Method.Bible Reading Plan.Free Weekly Newsletter.Socials-Facebook.Instagram.X. YouTube.The More We Dig. The More We Find.Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT). Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
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