BibleProject - Earlier Explorations of Redemption
Episode Date: August 18, 2025Redemption Hyperlink Episode (E11) — There are so many themes in the Bible, from redemption to exile, to mountains and cities. In every series, we attempt to isolate and study one biblical theme. Bu...t it’s important to remember that biblical themes are woven together throughout the Bible like instruments in a symphony. Today in this hyperlink episode, we’ll listen to clips from previous podcast series where the theme of redemption also came up in Jon and Tim’s conversations.View all of our resources for Redemption →CHAPTERS Redemption and the Day of Atonement (0:00-30:24)Redeeming the Time (30:24-38:20)Redemption From the Grave (38:20-50:24)OFFICIAL EPISODE TRANSCRIPTView this episode’s official transcript.REFERENCED RESOURCESClip 1 is from “What Is the Day of Atonement?,” episode 6 in our 2022 series, Leviticus Scroll.The Mythic Mind by Nicolas WyattSin, Impurity, Sacrifice, Atonement: The Priestly Conceptions by Jay SklarCult and Character: Purification Offerings, Day of Atonement, and Theodicy by Roy GaneClip 2 is from “Poetry Q+R,” episode 22 in our 2018 series How To Read the Bible.Clip 3 is from “What Happens After We Die?,” episode 3 in our 2017 series, Nephesh / Soul.Surprised by Hope: Rethinking Heaven, Resurrection, and the Mission of the Church by N.T. WrightYou can view annotations for this episode—plus our entire library of videos, podcasts, articles, and classes—in the BibleProject app, available for Android and iOS.Check out Tim’s extensive collection of recommended books here.SHOW MUSIC“Eucalyptus ft. Eluzai” by Lofi Sunday“Solace ft. ahmo” by Lofi SundayBibleProject theme song by TENTSSHOW CREDITSProduction of today’s episode is by Lindsey Ponder, producer, and Cooper Peltz, managing producer. Tyler Bailey is our supervising engineer, who also edited today’s episode and provided the sound design and mix. JB Witty does our show notes, and Hannah Woo provides the annotations for our app. Our host and creative director is Jon Collins, and our lead scholar is Tim Mackie. Powered and distributed by Simplecast.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to Bible Project Podcast.
I'm your host today, Michelle Jones, back to wrap up our series on redemption.
This is a new type of episode we've been trying out called a Hyperlink episode.
In every series, we attempt to isolate and study a biblical theme.
But it's important to remember that biblical themes are woven together throughout the story of the Bible
like a symphony. Today, in this Hyperlink episode, we'll listen to clips from previous series
where the theme of redemption appears naturally in conversation. As we begin, let's remember
that a redemption is a transfer of a possession from being lost back into the possession of its
rightful owner. Human beings belong to God and exist to live in union with God, but humans, tragically, are lost
when taken possession by sin and death.
The story of the Bible, then, is a story of how God will repossess humanity.
That is, transfer us back to where we belong, to restore us into union with him.
In other words, God wants to redeem us.
Thanks for joining us.
Here we go.
Our first clip is from our series on the Leviticus scroll back in July of 2022.
At the very center of the scroll of Leviticus is a climactic ritual called the Day of Atonement, or Yom Kippur.
On this day, the high priest casts lots for the fate of two innocent and blameless goats.
One goat symbolically receives the sin of Israel and then is sent away to encounter a spiritual enemy
in the wilderness named Azazel.
The second goat is brought into God's holy place, the tabernacle,
and the blood of this goat is sprinkled on the cover of the Ark of the Covenant,
the throne of God himself.
This is a strange image for us,
but we need to remember that in the ancient world,
the blood symbolizes life,
and the life of something blameless can cover over the reality of death.
While this series on redemption has focused on the Passover Lamb,
the Day of Atonement is another piece of the biblical mosaic
that helps us understand the death and resurrection of Jesus.
This conversation comes from the Leviticus Scroll series,
Episode 6 titled What is the Day of Atonement?
Let's listen in.
Leviticus 16, this chapter is in the section
that's at the center of the center of the center of the Torah.
So we know we're close to the heartbeat of the message of the Torah
when we enter into the tent on the Day of Atonement.
This chapter is super, super important.
So Aaron will take the two goats
and present them before Yahweh at the tent of meeting
and he's going to get out dice.
Usually they're called casting lots, but it's rolling ancient dice.
And the dice will determine the fate of these goats.
one lot will assign the goat for Yahweh,
the other lot will assign the goat for Azazel.
Who's this?
Azazel.
It's a wonderful question, John.
So let me just show you, Leviticus 16, verse 8.
NIV translates the word Azazel as,
for the scapegoat.
One lot for Yahweh, the other lot for the scapegoat.
Even that English phrasing is a little bit odd
For the scapegoat
Yeah, instead of as the scapegoat?
Yeah, it makes you sound like this goat
is being sent for some other...
On behalf of...
For some other thing named the scapegoat.
And actually, the oddity is the problem
at the heart of the NIV's interpretation here.
The New American Standard also translates it as scapegoat,
so does King James,
but the ESV transliterates
the word Azazel with a capital A.
Yeah. One lot for Yahweh, one lot for Azazel.
Like it's a name of something.
Yeah, and the NRSV does that as well.
Why do they do that? Well, so notice the parallelism of verse 8.
It's almost like a poetic line.
Aaron will cast lots for two goats.
One lot for Yahweh, the other lot for Azazel.
So the sentence structure leads you to think that each lot will designate
each goat for someone.
Then we'll just keep reading.
Then Aaron will offer the goat
on which is the lot for Yahweh fell
and make it a purification offering.
And the goat on which the lot for Uzazel fell
shall be presented alive before Yahweh
to make atonement for it,
to send it to Azazel into the wilderness.
So there is ample evidence
that the earliest interpreters
of Leviticus understood this as the name of a spiritual being.
A Smitic scholar, Nicholas Wyatt, thinks it derives from two roots.
One is the word azaz in Hebrew, which means strong,
and the other one is L, which means spiritual being,
powerful spiritual being, who resides in the wilderness.
So here's the next thing that is interesting.
The two goats are presented together as a singular offering.
And there's no other offering that's quite like this.
So first, the goat that is for Yahweh,
he shall slaughter the goat of the purification offering that's for the people.
And he will bring its blood inside the veil.
Inside the holy place.
Yeah.
The holy of holy.
And this is it.
This is like the time that he goes in once a year.
He will do with its blood, as he did with the blood of a bowl.
He will sprinkle it right on the atonement lid on the mercy seat.
and he shall make atonement for the holy place
because of the impurities of the sons of Israel
and because of their transgressions
in regard to all their sins.
So he will do this for the tent of meeting
that dwells in the middle of them
in the middle of their impurities.
All right, two goats.
One is going to be an atonement.
Purification offering.
That's right, yeah.
And we know from that
purification offering,
the life blood's taken from the animal
and the animal gave its life
even though it didn't deserve it
because it didn't have blemish
so it's this idea of something
without the moral feelings that you had
even though its blemishes
weren't about moral failings
they were a symbol of them
they were a symbol of them
is dying on your behalf
the blood is drained out
the life is in the blood
there's some sort of life power
still in that blood
the priest sprinkles it
on objects
and on the space
and
it's still hard for me to wrap my mind around
but this idea of
our corruption
our moral feelings
isn't just something
that screws with me
and my relationship
with maybe God
or with others
it actually screws up
with the whole environment
of vandalism
or vandalism is the metaphor
you've been using
and that
the lifeblood
is this ritual kind of cleansing
to kind of clear the air
clean the slate
but also because of the transgressions
in regard to their sins
there's two reasons
given here in Leviticus 1616
making atonement
one because of the impurities
of the sons of Israel
so this is like
this is the stuff that doesn't have to do
with moral failings
impurities just means like
being impure we just talked about
being ritually impure
And it's as if those ritual impurities of skin disease and of touching dead bodies and of leaking reproductive fluids.
And these are all symbols, fluids and substances that are associated with death or the loss of life.
It's as if the tent in the middle of the camp is depicted as surrounded by a chaotic sea of encroaching death by dying people who live around the tent.
And those are constantly breaking at the shore, as it were,
and spattering up little bits of impurity over the tent curtains
and slowly vandalizing.
So that's one image.
So that needs to be dealt with.
And then the second reason given is because of their transgressions
in regard to all their sins.
Their moral impurities.
And that's also polluting?
It's also polluting.
And so the singular act of atonement,
it's dealing with both.
And we're back to our conversation many episodes ago.
The atonement is used in two ways.
And the Hebrew Bible scholar here that I've learned the most from is Jay Sklar,
his book, Impurity and Sin and Atonement in Ancient Israel.
That's not the precise title, but we'll put a link in the show notes to this book,
is the atonement is used in two ways related to the two main meanings of its root word.
One is to provide a ransom.
When you wrong someone, you owe them.
And so when we wrong each other, we wrong God.
That's core to this idea.
And so we owe God for wronging each other.
And so a blameless life being offered unfairly to give its life for my sins is a ransom.
But then also another metaphorical kind of scheme is that my sins and impurities pollute the divine presence like that encroaching
waves of ickiness. And so that blood can overpower the forces of death by standing in my place
as a blameless substitute where life, a blameless life can cover over death and sin. Both stories
are being told right here in Leviticus 1616. And this goat, which is only one half of the
Day of Atonement offering, the one that goes into the holy place by the priest, does that.
The emphasis is on the pollution and the vandalism.
Yeah, I have to separate them to make sense of them.
But the idea is our signs of mortality, our impurities,
which are not morally wrong, but they are signs that we're dying, creatures.
And then also my moral failures and death and moral failure
is linked closely together in the biblical story
because the only reason we're all outside of Eden
is because of humanity's moral failings.
and so the moral failings are compensated for
and the effects of our moral failings
are reversed by the blood of the substitute
put on the atonement lid
as if this lid, which is the place
where God's presence touches down
is the place where God has provided the substitute.
I'm not saying any of this makes deep intuitive sense
but I'm saying it's a symbolic ritual language
that I've had to work a long time
to learn what it's saying
but I think once you
sympathetically can enter into the
symbols you can see
at least the story
so this one represents a blameless life
who can ascend
the mountain of the Lord Psalm 15
only the blameless one
who does what is right and just
so this animal
unfairly dies for the sins
of the non-blameless
and carries in its life
to cover over the effects of Israel's sins
that have polluted the most holy place.
That's the symbolism here.
All right.
What we also hear is nobody else should be in the tent
when he brings in that goat.
Just one representative human and Yahweh.
Okay, down to verse 20.
So then he comes out.
And when he finishes atoning for the holy place
and for the tent of meeting
and for the altar,
because he actually sprinkles blood on all those,
this is cool
so where he goes is
he takes the blood of that go
and he goes in to the most holy place
which is going to the most westward
point
the door is always facing east
toward the sunrise
so you go in through the door
that brings you into the courtyard
you go past the altar
you go in the east door
so you're constantly going west
but what happens is he takes the blood in
and then he starts a journey
from the western holy spot
to go east
to sprinkle the blood
yeah and he's sprinkling it
each key point on his eastward exile from the holy place.
Adam and Eve are exiled at the east side of the garden.
Cain is exiled east of Eden.
The Babylonians go east.
So it's as if the high priest is following the eastward exile of humanity
from the early chapters of Genesis,
sprinkling blood at every exile along the way.
So then he comes out and he comes to that goat that's alive.
and he puts the two hands, and he presses them down on the head of that goat that's alive.
And he confesses over at all the iniquities of the sons of Israel, all their transgressions and all their sins.
He will place them on the head of the goat.
Now, there's good symbolic language for you.
Put the sin on the goat.
Yeah, somehow.
Somehow.
Then what he does is send it into the wilderness by the hand of a man of my time.
A man of the time, a man of appointing.
Someone will send him out.
And that goat will carry upon itself the iniquities of Israel to a land that is cut off.
And he will send the goat into the wilderness.
The sins are exiled.
Yeah.
So the Holy of Holies represents like the Eden Tree of Life center.
And the one goat goes in there.
The blameless goat goes in there.
the living goat
goes out into the wilderness
to a cut off land
the opposite end of the cosmos
in the biblical imagination
and what's interesting
is Azazel is not brought up there
noticing that
here it's just called the realm of being cut off
in the wilderness
which is the opposite of the garden
so scholars call this
the elimination ritual
and I learned
a lot about this
from reading lots of scholars.
One particularly illuminating account
for this ritual
was a scholar named Roy Gain
in his book, Colt and Character.
It's a whole book about
purification offerings
in the Day of Atonement
and the problem of evil
in the Hebrew Bible.
So I'm just going to talk
through this kind of extended quote
but this was hugely illuminating for me.
And he says,
no part of this goat,
the living goat, is offered to Yahweh.
This is not a sacrifice.
It's an elimination ritual.
The biblical prescription does not call for the death of this goat.
It is simply sent away as a ritual garbage truck,
carrying controlled toxic waste to Azazel.
Now, Azazel's precise nature is elusive.
The reason for the lot ritual before Yahweh
is that he must decide the role of the goats
through what appears to be chance.
Through the lot ceremonies, the goats are designated as belonging to Yahweh and Azazel, respectively, each being a party capable of ownership.
The fact that Yahweh is a supernatural being could be taken to imply that Azazel is the same.
But the animal is not an offering to Azazel. Rather, the live goat transports Israelite failures to Azazel, who ends up having to take this noxious load.
the ritual is an unfriendly gesture to Azazel.
It's more like sending someone a load of chemical or nuclear waste.
Because it's Yahweh who commands the priest to perform the ritual,
it appears that Azazel is his enemy.
It's likely, therefore, that Azazel is some kind of spiritual being,
that his presence in the desert regions is the extreme opposite
of God's holy presence in the Holy of Holies.
However, the nature of Azazel's personality is not revealed
in Leviticus likely to avoid the danger
that some might be tempted to honor him.
This is the snake.
It's a name for the snake.
And so that evil one is the architect behind
why we're all outside of Eden.
So once a year, we send him a load of BS
in a paper bag on fire.
Right? And we send it out.
Like, send it back where it came from.
Ring the doorbell.
It's the elimination.
ritual. It's so illuminating. And both goats together, remember, are a singular purification offering.
How do you get that both goats are a singular? When he said, back when he said, take two special
goats for a singular purification offering. Okay. So one is the blameless one who goes in and gives
its life for sinful people and its blameless life ransoms them from death and also purifies the pollution
of their iniquities.
And then the other goat represents
Yahweh's desire to do away
with the effects of sin and evil
once and for all by sending
the load of waste back to the one
who brought it into the world in the first place.
This is the core of the Day of Atonement.
It's remarkable.
Yeah.
So Jesus is talked about
in terms of being an atoning sacrifice.
He talked about his own coming death.
as an atoning sacrifice. Yes.
What's interesting about Jesus is he is bringing together all of the mosaic tiles
of depicting God's victory over the evil one
and his dealing with the consequences of human sin,
and he's merged them all together.
So important passages here for Jesus are like Mark 1045,
where after two disciples come and say,
hey, Jesus, you know, when you're enthroned as the king of the universe,
could like we sit at your right and left hands
and Jesus says you
you have no idea what you're asking for
are you going to be able to be baptized
go through the waters
that I'm going to have to go through
that's suggestive of
purification
purification yep
you know the kings
of our world he says
love to become lords over people
they love to have authority
but now here in this crew
the one who is great
becomes the servant.
Whoever wants to be first
must become the servant of all
for even the son of Adam,
the son of humanity,
didn't come to be served,
but to become a servant
and to give his life as a
lutron
ransom for many.
Atonement?
Yeah, sacrificed atonement
that ransoms someone from death.
Yeah.
The word atonement's not used.
No, it's the word,
redemption. Yeah, is to purchase someone from a state of slavery leading unto death.
Yeah. But the point is here, he's activating the son of Daniel 7, the son of man.
He's activating the suffering servant of Isaiah with this language. And he's activating the Exodus narrative of redemption from death through the death of the Passover lamb.
Let's mark 1045. Other key passages, I'll just, I could go to end.
any of the Last Supper narratives, but Jesus chooses Passover. I'll go to Luke 22's account of the
Last Supper, but Jesus chooses the weekend of Passover to time his showdown with the powers in
Jerusalem. In Luke's account, he says, I've desired to eat this Passover with you before I come.
When he takes the bread, he says, this is my body given for you, do this in remembrance of me.
In the same way, he took the cup and he said, this cup, which is poured out for y'all, is
the new covenant in my blood.
Poured out versus sprinkled.
That's interesting.
Yeah, because remember, the blood would get taken from an animal, a purification offering.
It would get taken in to the Holy of Holies and sprinkled in the holy place and then sprinkled
on the altar.
And then what's left in the bowl gets poured out at the base of the altar.
Okay.
Yeah.
So here, Jesus is merging together imagery from the purification offerings happening in the tabernacle.
The cup.
And the purification offerings that happen throughout the year
culminate in this one great purification that is the Day of Atonement.
But he's doing this on Passover, which is a different type of substitute.
A different narrative, but both had to do with the sins of Israel
and the sins of the empires of this world lead to slavery and evil in death.
And so Yahweh is going to bring a great flood of justice over the land.
but for anyone who wants to be covered by God's mercy,
he provides a blameless substitute.
That's the Passover lamb.
But that's also essentially what the Day of Atomah is about.
He's brought Israel out into the wilderness,
a land of danger and death,
and he's provided a way for them to be washed of their sins and impurities.
But man, if they don't deal with them,
they're going to pollute Yahweh's presence, and he'll leave,
which will leave them to die in the wilderness.
And so the Day of Atomac goats become another way of looking into the mystery of what Passover is.
The Hebrew Bible is a huge mosaic.
So all these narratives, and here ritual symbols help us become wise about what's wrong with us
and what's wrong with the world.
What has God doing about it?
What has God done about it?
And Jesus, just in a very few little words, brings all of these narratives.
images together in a really provocative way.
And the Last Supper is an important place for that.
What Christians like to say is that these sacrifices were pointing to or trying to enact
what Jesus actually accomplished.
Yeah.
Yep.
That's right.
That he's actually doing something that all of the symbolism was the hope and power of.
Yeah.
So here an important distinction needs to be made between the actual historical activities happening
in around the 10.
tyrannacle, and the Hebrew Bible's
representation of all of that. Because the Hebrew Bible
gives us a literary representation of the Day of Atonement
and a Passover, but included within a collection of scrolls that have
all of these other stories in it. And one scroll in the Hebrew
Bible is Isaiah, which tells you Israel and humanity
really needs is a person who will ascend to the high
place and offer their life as a blameless sacrifice. In other words, Leviticus is alongside Isaiah,
is alongside Genesis. So when the author of Hebrews says, it's impossible for the blood of
animals to take away sins, he's not saying something new. What he's saying is what is already
the message of the Hebrew Bible, because the Hebrew Bible is telling you that the animal sacrifices
are just a symbolic gift of Yahweh
of a down payment of something bigger
that needs to happen, which is of a blameless human
who would come and stand in the holy place
and offer their life.
And that's what Moses' story is about.
Does that make sense?
So Jesus saw himself as the blameless goat
whose blood is purifying.
Now there's a goat who bears the sins
and is cast out.
Jesus identify with that goat?
It seems like the gospel authors want to associate Jesus with both goats,
one by being the blameless sufferer.
But then there's the emphasis that Jesus' death is happening outside the city,
near a burial plot, grave area, outside the city gate.
Yeah.
And so the one place in the New Testament this is really exploited
is in the letter to the Hebrew.
where he says, therefore Jesus also that he might sanctify the people through his own blood
suffered outside the gate. So let us go out to him outside the camp bearing his shame.
The purification offering animals, their remains were taken outside the camp to a dumping site.
So it could be that he's referring to that. He could also be referring to the goat that is exiled
outside of the camp as well.
you go join him well because there's 1 peter 2 oh yeah jesus himself bore our sins in his body yep
that makes me think of like the ordination of the scapegoat with like taking the sins yeah yeah of bearing the sins
yeah yeah what verse is that uh 24 there it is yeah he links jesus to a sacrificial and
animal that carries our sins. And there's only one animal that's said to carry the sins of Israel.
And that's the goat for Azazel. Yeah, the scapego. Yeah. So that, it's a good example. That little
line comes from Leviticus 16. But he's refracted that language through the way, that's all summarized in
Isaiah 53, which he's also quoting from right here. And then in the next line where he says,
Oh, by his wounds you've been healed. By his wounds we've been healed. So he's reading the day
of atonement through the poem about the suffering servant. That's what we're seeing. Peter's
mind is so saturated that he thinks about the day of atonement through the prism, through the
looking glass of Isaiah 53. He sees them as deeply connected. Where did Isaiah get the idea
that the suffering servant would bear the sins? Yeah. Yeah, I think from the day of
atonement and from the narratives about Moses, giving his life for the sins of the people and
so on. So, yeah, this is the chapter that resolves the crisis at the center of the center of the
of the Torah. And the fact that it needs to happen every year also tells us that it's like a
stopgap. This is not new creation. This doesn't settle it. We haven't restored humanity back to
Eden. We're still enacting something. Yeah, that's right. What God has given,
is a way for Torah instruction,
and a way for his people to understand who they are,
what they need, what God wants to give them.
This is what the ritual instructions
of Lividaicus are all about.
Yeah.
Also as a concluding note,
when we were talking about the offerings before,
you showed there was a sentence where God says,
I have given them to you?
I'm giving them to you.
Yeah.
This isn't like an obligation we owe to God to try to appease him,
but it was a gift that God was giving to us to know we can be in a right standing
and to embrace this right standing.
Yeah.
It's actually in the chapter right after the Day of Atonement.
It's in Leviticus 17, where God says,
the life of flesh is in the blood,
and I have given it to you on the altar to make atonement for yourselves.
it's God presented as the initiator and the giver of the blameless life
that will ransom from death and purify from the effects of sin.
God is giving the life of the blood to us.
Yeah, the life of a blameless one.
Of a blameless one.
Yeah.
As a gift.
Yep.
That is clearly how Jesus saw it,
which is why he presented himself as the gift of God.
as God's gift
to a failed Israel
and a failed humanity
which is I think why
you know the apostles
and the apostle John among them
of whoever penned the letters of John
and whichever apostle you think it is, the one that abandoned him
in Gisemone or the one
John the elder who stuck around
with Jesus' mom by the cross
but either way
John's take away from
having seen Jesus die
is the most simple, profound statement in the New Testament.
God is love.
And he demonstrated his love for us and this while we were,
well, actually, I'm merging it now with Romans 5.
While we were still sinner, the Messiah died for us.
God is, the atonement is a revelation of the love of God
for Jesus and for the apostles.
And I think here in Leviticus too,
it just takes a little more work for us to get there.
That clip was from our 2022 Leviticus Scroll series, Episode 6, titled What is the Day of Atonement?
You can listen to the entire nine-part series to dive deeper into the structure and themes of the book of Leviticus.
Now, let's add another theme to the mix.
In a long series about how to read the Bible, Tim and John spends six episodes talking about how biblical poetry works.
30% of the Bible is poetry, full of metaphoric language.
Metaphor is our fundamental way of perceiving the world.
We create understanding by comparing familiar experiences with new ideas,
and every culture has its own way of developing metaphoric language.
We say things like, do you have time, or I'm out of time, or can I buy some more time?
These are all phrases that show that we think of time as a possession.
This clip is from the question and response episodes that conclude the discussion on biblical poetry.
Does Paul think of time as a possession that needs to be purchased?
Let's listen in.
Hi, John and Tim. I'm Chris Powers from Carbondale, Illinois.
You talked about the metaphor of time as a possession and used it as an example of a modern metaphor.
Then you said that the Bible doesn't view time in this way.
However, in Psalm 3115, David says, my times are in your hand, and in Ephesians 516, Paul writes that we should redeem the time.
Don't these phrases suggest that both David and Paul view time figuratively as a tangible and valuable possession?
Thanks so much. God bless.
Yeah, that's good. This was actually a little detail in our conversation about metaphor schemes, time as a possession.
Yeah, how much had you thought about that before you mentioned it in the podcast?
Oh, like not at all.
Yeah, it seemed like kind of just a afterthought kind of thing.
However, though, I do think biblical author's conception of time is fundamentally different.
That's the whole thing that I would love to learn more about.
My point in that moment was just the Bible isn't filled with the same metaphors of time as a possession that we use.
We use it so much.
We use it so much.
I lost time, spare some time.
give some time, gain some time, buy some time.
And the biblical authors don't use that kind of vocabulary.
However, Chris, you identified two.
Interesting text.
One, right, in Psalm 31, my times are in your hand, David says, to God.
And then in Ephesians chapter 5, yeah, Paul talks about redeeming the time.
So I did.
I went and looked both those up and thought about those because you're questioning, Chris.
Here's what's interesting.
in neither one of those cases is time my possession so in psalm 31 david's whole point is
my time belongs to you my time belongs to god yeah so time isn't my possession it's god's
it's something god has and that he providentially you know orchestrates so you could use
so you could say i'm saving time for god yeah that would be a funny way to talk like yeah like
You just saved me some of God's time.
Yeah.
And even in Ephesians chapter 5, time, when it says redeem the time, it's not because time is mine.
It's because time is evil.
What he says is redeeming the time because the days are evil.
And redeem is Exodus language.
That's purchasing a slave's freedom to release them into the promised land.
So time is, the metaphor is, in slavery to evil.
In slavery to evil.
Yeah. Time's a captive of evil.
Time is a captive.
And we in the power of the new human, Jesus, are able to free time from its slavery to evil and release it into the new creation.
So that's a great example of...
What a cool metaphor.
It is a cool metaphor. So the common Western metaphor is time is a possession.
Times my possession.
Time is my possession.
So if I redeem it, it means I maximize it from my purpose.
Yeah, right. And that's actually how I would typically read that verse.
Redeem the time. Okay, maximize my time. I'm not going to sleep in. I'm not going to...
Whatever. But, which isn't necessarily completely off the mark.
Yeah. Yeah, that's right.
You're saying the metaphor that the Bible's drawing upon is...
When you look at his use of the word redeem.
Yeah. The metaphoric scheme in his head is time is a captive.
Time. It's the Exodus scheme. Time is in slavery.
Yeah. Actually, it's bigger than that.
It's just the world is in slavery to evil and selfishness.
Okay.
And time is one example that can generate many different types of people are enslaved to evil.
Well, when he says time, is he referring to like, you know, the age, how we talked about the age of sin and death, the age of, yeah.
Yeah, that's right.
So we're in an age that is captive.
Yes.
And we can rescue the age.
We can be a part of redeeming the time, freeing it from slavery.
But redeeming time seems kind of trite, like, oh, I'm going to say.
an hour. But rescuing an age, that's right. That sounds epic. Right? Yeah. Yeah. Again, our English
word redeem has become bland from its biblical meaning. So think purchase or rescue. Yeah.
And purchase in terms of purchase something that's enslaved so that you can free it. But he's not
talking about like, you know, organize your calendar better. That's not Paul's point. No, oh, no,
totally not. His point is like that we live in an era
that is enslaved to evil.
And we can be a part of rescuing this era.
Yeah, and actually it's the crowning.
It's a crowning statement of a whole series of metaphors in Ephesians 5,
where he talks about you were formerly dark, but now you are light in the Lord.
So that's Genesis 1.
And then he talks about the fruit of the light.
So all of a sudden the light grows fruit.
There's like a mixing metaphors now.
Yeah.
And what's the fruit of the light?
Goodness, righteousness, truth.
New humanity.
Yeah.
And then he says, don't participate in the unfruitful actions of the dark.
Rather, shine light on them.
Wow.
So light is this type of tree that grows fruit.
Dark is this kind of thing that grows unfruit.
Yeah, totally.
And then he says, for this reason, it says, he quotes a hymn that they sing.
the church, wake up, oh sleeper, rise from the dead, and Messiah will shine on you. So now dark
is associated with death and light associated with resurrection and new creation. This is so saturated
metaphors. Yeah. And this is very typical for Paul. His mind is steeped in the metaphors of the
Hebrew Bible. And so he will mix them and combine them creatively. This is the whole point we're
making is the early biblical narratives, especially Genesis, are the same.
seed bed of the entire biblical, metaphorical imagination.
Light, dark, death, life, fruit.
This is all Genesis 1 through 3 imagery.
So then when he says, redeem the time for the days are evil,
he's venturing into the Exodus narrative to talk about time as a captive to evil.
Yeah, you're participating in the redemption of creation.
So he's not talking about, yeah, get more efficient with your calendar.
Yeah.
He's talking about loving your neighbor.
as yourself and loving God.
Living like you are ushering in a new era.
Yeah, living as if you're in the new Garden of Eden.
Yeah.
Even though we're in the in-between time.
Beautiful.
Yeah, Chris, Powers. Thank you. Good question.
Thanks, Chris.
That clip was from our 2018 series on how to read biblical poetry,
specifically the poetry question and response episode.
Now, let's move to our third and final clip.
In our series on redemption, we talked about God redeeming humanity from the realm of sin and death
and bringing humanity into the realm of God's own life.
But this raises an interesting question.
What happens to us between the time we die and when God raises us to new life?
In 2017, John and Tim did a series on the Hebrew word nefesh, which in English gets translated as soul.
In Hebrew thought, our nefesh simply means physical life or the fact that we are a living being.
When characters in the Bible talk about their nefesh, they typically mean their embodied existence that is sustained by God's own life.
And while the biblical authors believe that your life or your existence can persist after your body is in the grave, there's a little discussion on what that type of life is.
In this clip, John and Tim discuss what happens to our nefesh after we die.
Can God redeem our nefesh from the grave?
Here's Tim and John.
So the reason why the biblical authors have a category for a you that survives after death, after your body gives out,
it has a do with their deep conviction that God made this world good, that he loves it,
and that he's committed to it.
And he's committed to rescuing it
so that it can be what he always meant it to be.
And if that's the case,
then within this biblical, right, Hebrew mindset,
death cannot be the end of me.
What the biblical authors refuse to speculate about
is what is the me?
What is the state and experience of the me
after I die?
and we've had these conversations before
it's just there's virtually no information
yeah the grave or being with the Lord
and so here we go
here's one of just
it's a great example in the Old Testament
where the poet of Psalm 16
is talking about
how God is committed to him
connected to David the hope of the David King
how God's committed to him
and he says Psalm 16 verse 8
I've set the Lord continually before me
because he's at my right hand, I won't be shaken.
Therefore, my heart is glad.
My glory rejoices.
My flesh dwell securely.
You won't abandon my nefesh to the grave.
Or allow your holy one to see the pit.
You'll make known to me the path of life.
So here's a sense of,
you won't abandon my nefish to the grave.
so when I die
Isn't my body
going to go to the grace?
Yeah, so in that sense
my nefesh
my physical existence is
but there's another sense
in which
that can't be the end of the story
if this God is who
this God says he is
he's committed
to redeeming his world
and his people
and so here's the use of
nefesh that does seem
to be the you
that isn't tied
to your current mortal
body but is connected to the you that will be the immortal physical you you've made known to me
the path of life there'll be a way through death to a physical existence on the other side so this is
not talking about afterlife this is talking about when this nephish when this prototype of my nephish
gets out the next version will be what you usher me into so it's very important this is not talking about
the afterlife. Even in this use, we're not talking about an immortal, eternal soul. It's talking about
my nefesh will take new form. So, I mean, he's going to die. But in another sense, he's able to
say, you're not going to let my nefish die. How do you know he's going to die? He knows he's going to
die? Well, I think there's a sense of, I mean, it's just being human. You're going to die.
The last line of the poem is, in your presence is fullness of joy, in your right hand or
pleasures forever. It seems like what the poet's straining at here is that if God is truly committed
to me and to this world, in this case to the line of David, then death can't be the end. There has to be
a form of life, eternal life, physical existence that God still has in store. There's a similar
sentiment in a conclusion of Psalm 73. It's just not that many, but that's the basic idea.
There's this verse
where it says
You will redeem my life from the grave
I think it's like
You will redeem my life from the grave
You will surely take me to yourself
Here it is, yeah
Psalm 49
Yeah
As for the wicked
Death will be their shepherd
But God will redeem
My Nefesh
He'll redeem my nefish
From the grave
For he will take me
That's what it says
He will take me
So what does it mean
for God to redeem, rescue a soul from the grave.
And again, we think, yeah, into the pearly, through the pearly gates or something.
To eternal bliss.
Yeah.
So think.
I'm going home.
So redeem is vocabulary from the Exodus story, rescue.
So what does it mean to be rescued from the power of death?
It doesn't mean that you, I'm trying to think, if you use the Exodus as an image, if you're enslaved in Egypt,
You're saved out of slavery.
And your status changes.
And your status changes, and you go into the promised land.
Yeah.
So here it's you're redeemed from having to die, and then your status changes so that you...
Can be alive.
Can be alive.
Yeah.
So there's a resurrection hope here.
Correct.
That's where these are the bedrock, or use a different metaphor, the seed bed.
Right.
And I'm not making this up.
The Apostle Peter thought so too.
the top of page 8. Psalm 16 was really important for the early Christians and how help them
find language about Jesus. This is right after Peter is giving a message, and he quotes the section
of Psalm 16 that we just read. And here's this commentary. He says, fellow Israelites, I tell you
confidently, the Patriarch David died. He was buried. His tombs with us to this day. But he was a
prophet, and he knew that God had promised him on oath that he would place one of his seed, descendants
on the throne. Seeing what was to come, he spoke of the resurrection of the Messiah,
in the quotes from the Psalm, that he was not abandoned to the realm of the dead, nor did his body
see decay. God raised this Jesus to life, and were all witnesses. So Peter looked at this hope that
he saw in the Psalms of resurrection, and he said, look, that's what happened to Jesus.
This poem wasn't talking about the afterlife.
This poem was talking about the hope of God rescuing someone into new physical existence.
It's not afterlife, it's more life.
Yeah, totally.
Yeah.
Or what scholar N.T. right, he has a clever phrase, his fat book on the resurrection,
he called it life after, life after death.
Life after.
Life after death.
Life after death.
Resurrection life after death.
I'm so confused.
Well, because by definition, if I die, if my body gives out, the hope and the trust is that what happened to Jesus will happen to me.
But most likely there's going to be a time gap, like there has been for many followers of Jesus.
So where are those people?
Oh, okay.
Life after life.
What is the afterlife existence of those?
And it's very, we have no idea.
It's described, very obscure.
Here we go, in the Old Testament.
Yeah.
It's just, there's no, nothing.
He will take me.
Yeah.
And then what we know is that death won't be the end.
You've redeemed me from the power of the grave.
And so if that's afterlife, that's life after death.
Yes.
Then what the resurrection is, is really the life after that.
Life after death.
The life after death.
And then Paul, right in those handful of passages, two, and then once with Jesus, right to the,
guy next to him on the cross.
Today you'll be with me in paradise.
Yeah, that's the after life.
To be absent from the body is to be present with the Lord.
So that's life after death, according to the New Testament, is to be with Jesus.
Yeah.
So we're all obsessed with what is life after death.
That's right.
And he writes clever turn of phrases to say, we should be more obsessed with the life that comes after the life to death.
And what the biblical authors are actually talking about is the life that comes after.
Life after life.
Life after death.
Come on, that's clever.
You get this clever.
So we should stop talking about the afterlife.
We should start talking about the life after.
Yeah, that's right.
There's life after life.
Yeah, that's right.
Life after.
Yeah.
That was from our 2017 Nefesh soul series, episode three, titled What Happens After We Die?
Check out our podcast archives to listen to the entire series.
Well, that's it for today's episode.
I hope you enjoyed listening to this Hyperlink edition of Redemption.
You can find links for the full episodes we sampled in the show notes.
Keep an eye out for an upcoming theme video on redemption,
along with a collection of resources for deeper study.
You can find everything on our app or at Bibleproject.com.
I'm Michelle Jones, and there's a whole team of people
working to bring this podcast to life every week.
For a full list of who's involved,
check out the show credits on the episode description.
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I don't know.