BibleProject - The Wilderness of the Sea
Episode Date: September 8, 2025The Wilderness E2 — In the Bible, the wilderness is an uninhabitable, hostile place for human life. And in the creation narratives of Genesis 1 and 2, the wilderness symbolically represents the chao...s of a pre-creation state. In this episode, Jon and Tim explore the wilderness language in the creation narrative and how it contrasts with Eden, God’s oasis of beauty, order, and abundance.CHAPTERSRecap on the Meaning of the Wilderness (0:00-9:16)Pre-Creation Wilderness and the Eden Oasis (9:16-40:27)Wilderness and Eden Imagery in the Prophets (40:27-57:32)OFFICIAL EPISODE TRANSCRIPTView this episode’s official transcript.REFERENCED RESOURCESCheck out Tim’s extensive collection of recommended books here.You 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.SHOW MUSIC“Break Bread” by Lofi Sunday, Oly.Lo“Refuge ft. Just Derrick” 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)
We are studying an important biblical setting in the Bible.
It's called the Midbar, translated as the wilderness.
The wilderness is a lifeless and dangerous place.
It's a place of fear and death and destruction.
However, there's this whole other set of characters who, when they go into the wilderness,
they face a crisis of life and death, and they meet God and they trust him.
And then what they get in the wilderness is Eden.
In today's episode, we are going to look at the creation narratives in the beginning of the Bible as God creating life out of the wilderness.
God plants a garden in the wilderness, and God takes the dust of the wilderness and forms humanity.
He breathes into humanity, the breath of life.
So the origins of everything is wilderness.
The default state within the Eden narrative's way of thinking about it is the wilderness.
We'll consider how life and creation is an oasis in the wilderness.
Everything that sustains my life comes from something that was before me and outside of me.
Adam and Eve are placed in the garden, and they're invited to enjoy God's life.
But another creature appears to deceive them, promising that there's more to be found outside of God's life.
When a deceiver shows up into the story, it's a snake.
and the snake crawls in from the wild.
So this is a creature that comes from the chaos realm,
and then it spreads chaos.
Adam and Eve listen to the voice of chaos.
And so they're banished from the garden into the wilderness.
We came out of the wilderness.
We go back to the wilderness, from dust to dust.
Today on the podcast, we're going to look at Genesis 1 through 3 as a framework
to think about how all of existence is God's,
sustaining us in the wilderness.
If God doesn't sustain our existence and fold us into his infinite life,
we will turn back into that wilderness once again to the land of thorns and thistles and dust.
That's today. Thanks for joining us. Here we go.
Hey, Tim. Hello, John.
We just jumped in as of last episode into a theme stuff.
on the place in the Bible called the wilderness.
Yes, the midbar.
The midbar.
In Hebrew.
That's the most common default name for this region.
It's a region where people don't live.
Yeah, that's right.
Because it's dry.
It's dangerous.
You can travel through it, perhaps, if you dare.
Yeah, if you have resources or someone that can provide you the resources.
Yeah.
Specifically water.
Yeah.
Yeah.
If you have enough water.
or nowhere to find it.
So there is a stretch of wilderness from Egypt to Israel, which takes a couple weeks to get
across on foot, and so that's more manageable.
There's a whole stretch, though, between the hill country of Jerusalem, Judea, if you wanted
to head straight east to Babylon and Nineveh.
And you just can't cross that.
No.
That midbar is...
Yeah, it's like 500 miles.
Yeah.
And, again, we're thinking of...
rolling hills with ravines with scrub grass and really this isn't your classic
hearty trees Sahara desert no not like sand dunes sand dunes yeah this is what I would
think of as kind of high desert is something we have around here but where if you can find
water you can make a little town yeah yep oasis yeah and there are and there are out
there's vegetation and there's animals but it's dangerous and good luck
making a living out there.
Yeah.
Yep, that's right.
And then I was just thinking about this,
there's, if you think of it as a Venn diagram
of two overlapping circles,
on one side is like the garden land.
It's one circle.
And then the other circle is the wilderness,
the midbar.
But then Midbar can also refer to the transition region
that goes right up to the garden land.
Yeah, the fields.
And then the word field
can refer to a field in the garden land
but also the transition
to the wilderness
and so field and wilderness
or sade and midbar
kind of have this overlapping
region of this the transition land
and you can talk about that transition land
in terms of its midbar-ness
or its sade-ness
because sade can also be farm field
so yeah that was a little
picture that unfolded in my mind
yeah and why would you find yourself out in the wilderness
usually to graze animals
You could graze animals because it's times of the year, rains come.
Yeah.
And those areas that aren't normally fertile, some grasses will grow and go bring your animals out there.
That's how Moses ends up out in the Sinai area.
That's what he's doing.
But you would likely not build a town.
It'd have to be a pretty special little place with a well or something if you're going to like stay there.
Yeah, that's right.
Or a big plaster-lined hole in the ground, a cistern, to capture a lot of water so that you can use that in the dry sea.
Oh, okay.
Oh, that's what a cistern is.
Oh, interesting.
Yep.
You would find yourself in the wilderness if you were fleeing from your enemies,
and you just had to get out of Dodge, as they say.
Yeah.
So famously, David.
David will spend time out there.
But if you had to get from one place to another, and the wilderness was in between,
and you had to go through the wilderness, out of slavery, into some new place,
this is classically the wilderness that Israel went through.
So you could find yourself in there,
just it's the in-between place to get where you're going.
Yeah, and actually, so that helps us understand the main meanings of the wilderness.
One, it's the base default, is it's a sparsely or just uninhabited place for humans,
lack of resources, and dangerous creatures.
That's the environment.
Then the other main set of associations then is what happens when people get in that environment
and they run out of resources and they're,
standing at the edge of life and death, these are moments where God comes to meet people,
and based on whether they trust God, they experience that desert as a place that ends their life,
or they experience that end of their life as this crazy transition into an oasis and a refuge,
but that seems totally like beyond all reason because God is providing for you in ways that you could have never done.
out of your own resources.
And this is what's called the test.
So the word test in the biblical story
is primarily associated with Israel's experiences
of life and death and lack of resources in the wilderness.
Okay.
That's a basic summary.
Yeah.
So you wanted to show us how the wilderness appears
in the first pages of the Bible.
Yeah.
So I mentioned in our last conversation
The way that the biblical authors use the wilderness imagery and locations is one to talk about real places in the events and the lives of these characters.
But that's the physical description.
There is also a metaphysical, like a larger set of ideas about the nature of reality, the human experience of being mortal,
night creatures, God as being the eternal one, you know, from whom all things come and to whom all
things go, like that metaphysical reality. Yeah, I don't know if it's landing for me in the abstract
the way we're talking about it. Okay. Well, then since the biblical authors didn't talk about it in the
abstract, I won't either. Let's just get in to these narratives. But the wilderness
stands, I think, symbolically or metaphysically,
as an image of nothingness or non-existence.
And once something has been brought into existence,
once you are in the wilderness or are facing the wilderness,
going back to non-existence or nothingness is what we call death.
These are primary meanings of the wilderness,
nothingness and death.
The first two narrows.
in the Bible, is the seven-day creation narrative, which has real clear literary boundaries.
Then in Genesis 2, verse 4, a new narrative begins.
These are the birthings, or the generations of the skies and the land in the day that we're created,
and then God plants a garden.
And these two creation narratives, they work on different timelines, use different imagery,
but both of them begin with the depiction of the pre-creation state as
wilderness using wilderness vocabulary which is just fascinating so the first sentences of genesis
one one in the beginning in the beginning i'll work from my translation here which over time
i've come to prefer using the Hebrew words underneath the divine names oh in the beginning
Elohim created so where we have God in our English translations using the Hebrew word Elohim
and then where we read Lord, in all capital letters,
usually in our English translations of,
it's the divine name, Yahweh.
So there's no Yahweh in the seven-day creation narrative.
It's just Elohim, which is not a name.
It's a class of deity.
It's a title that our best paraphrase is spiritual being.
In the beginning, a spiritual being, the spiritual being.
Mm-hmm.
Created.
Created, the skies in the land.
What's up there?
and what's down here.
You look up?
Yeah.
That was created by Elohim.
Yeah, everything you see when you look up,
that hasn't always been there.
And it doesn't sustain itself.
Look down here.
Look at everything.
It wasn't always here.
And it doesn't sustain itself.
So where did it come from?
Elohim.
Okay.
Wow.
That's remarkable.
How?
Who, what, when, where, why?
Verse two says,
let me tell you.
Let me tell you the story.
Okay.
Now, you should know, the land was wild and waste,
and darkness was over the face of the deep waters.
This is the beginning state, the pre-creation state.
So these two words, the Hebrew phrase, I translated it wild and waste.
Modern English translations mostly do formless and void.
The Hebrew phrase is Tohu-vav-ho.
and both of these words are used elsewhere in the Hebrew Bible.
They mean unordered, Tohu, and uninhabited or empty.
So wild, meaning disordered, and waste, meaning uninhabited.
And this actually matches the sequences of three days.
Days one through three are about God ordering sky, land, and sea.
So ordering.
And then days four, five, and six are about God filling it.
with inhabitants, the lights, the birds and fish, and the humans and the land animals.
But here's other places where these words are used.
So in Deuteronomy 32, Moses is writing a poem about how God found Israel like finding an abandoned
person dying and thirsty in a wilderness.
So in Deuteronomy 32 verse 10, he, that is God, found him, that is Israel, in a desert,
land and it's the word eretz for land there's the word land from here in genus one verse two
in the eretz midbar and there's our wilderness word okay and in the tohu of a howling
desolate wilderness so tohu's a descriptive word of it yep and it's the first of that phrase
wild and waste tohu vavohu so it means disordered unorganized disordered why don't you just
translate it unordered uninhabited oh yeah that would be good it just doesn't rhyme doesn't rhyme
because to have oh has that poetic tohuva bohu rhymes okay so the wild and waste i've adopted from
everett fox is translation because the alliteration of the w's captures some of the wild is
representing unordered yeah yeah that computes the wild i mean there is an order to the wild
From our point of view, there is elaborate, intricate order to the wild.
When you say our point of view, you mean from a modern point of view?
Yes, that's right.
Oh, it's the way ecosystems work and balance, it's remarkable system of order.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But if you're not appreciating that.
Yeah.
And you're not focused on that.
And you're just thinking about, can I survive out there?
Yeah.
Is it ordered for me?
Yeah.
Because when I order things, I get a field going.
I get a stone wall around it.
Water source.
There's a, yeah, I've got a well, and I build a little house, and the rains will come in a way that is predictable enough.
That's the order I need.
Yeah.
And it doesn't have that kind of order.
So it's wild.
It's Tohu.
It's Tohu.
Yeah.
And God found Israel in a land of Midbar in the Tohu of a howling, desolate wilderness.
Howling.
Like the wind?
Yeah.
The sound of the wind.
Yeah.
And I think where a howling comes from is when there's very few objects to block the wind.
You get a lone tree out there, like in deserts in this part of the world.
There'll be just one tree for a mile in each direction.
It found some water.
So when the wind comes, you really hear it because there's just one thing blocking the wind.
And so it ends up being like a musical instrument.
Is that why?
I think that...
You're hearing it whistle through that tree?
Yeah.
Yes.
Yeah, so the deserts are a place of howling.
Howling, yeah.
In the Isaiah Scroll, Isaiah 45, this is a direct reflection on Genesis 1.
This is what Yahweh says, the one who created the skies.
The one who formed it, he formed and made the land.
He established it, like on the waters.
He did not create it to be Tohu, but he formed it.
in order to be inhabited.
So here forming is organizing an environment
so that it can be filled up.
Okay.
Yeah.
I am Yahweh, there's no other elheim.
So there's two descriptions of the pre-creation state.
The first one is Tohu-Vavahua wild and waste.
And in both cases, it's referring to land
that is uninhabitable and unorganized.
The Tohu part.
Yep.
Yeah, that's right.
Cool. And then Vavohu, which you're translating Waste, and I'm seeing the word wasteland show up actually a lot.
And I'm just realizing, I don't think I know what that means.
What does I mean for land to be waste? Or what waste land?
Yeah. In our English translations, it's rendering Hebrew words that mean empty or uninhabited.
Okay. Why waste? When I think of waste, I think of like a trash heap.
I know. Yeah, totally. It's a great question.
So I think primarily what it means is ruined.
Waste means ruined.
Yeah.
Ruined land.
Like land that maybe used to be good, but now is ruined.
Waste in old English means desolate or uninhabited.
It's from the Latin, which means empty, vastus.
So that's become waste.
So somehow that word, which originally just meant desolate,
began to mean trash in modern English.
Yeah, yeah, sure.
Which is not the original meaning.
Yeah.
So a wasteland is a desolate land.
Yeah, wow, that's really interesting.
Yep.
I have to reform my understanding of that word.
Yep, uninhabited.
And that's echoing off of the empty, the Vohu.
Vohu occurs a lot less, only three times in the Hebrew Bible.
And one of them is Genesis 1, verse 2.
One of them is Jeremiah quoting Genesis 1, verse 2,
to describe what God's going to do to Jerusalem when Babylon comes.
which is decreated, it will become Tohu-A-Vohu again.
It's used in Isaiah 34 to describe the land of Edom
once it's decreated by Babylon
and all of these desert animals,
pelicans and hedgehogs and owls and ravens,
and God will stretch over it
a measuring line of Tohu
and a plum line of voho.
So usually when you stretch measuring lines, you're building something up.
But here, God is stretching measuring lines to systematically tear down something.
Okay, that's interesting.
To make it disordered and uninhabited.
Okay.
So the two words are Tohu and Vohu.
Why is it Vahvohu?
Oh, Vah is and.
And.
Oh, Vah is and?
Yeah.
Well, that's good to know.
Yep.
Yeah.
Tohu and Vohu.
So that's the first image.
The first description of the pre-creation state
is the land is wild in the waste.
And we're given another description
of that pre-creation state.
Darkness was over the face of the deep waters.
The Tahom.
Tahom refers to the bottomless waters of the sea,
the deepest parts of the sea.
Yeah, we talked about this in Chaos Dragon.
Yes, that's right.
And so in our last conversation you talked about
to the west is just water.
to the east is desert.
This is so important.
Yeah.
Yeah.
To the east is Toho Vavo.
Yeah.
To the west is the Tahome.
Is the Tahoe.
Yeah.
And so in a way, they're like two ways of talking about the same idea.
Yes.
The watery chaos.
Yeah.
And the wilderness chaos.
So it's a puzzle why the pre-creation state is described in two ways.
Yeah.
At the beginning of Genesis 1.
as land that is uninhabitable and unordered
and as a dark, chaotic ocean.
But then what really becomes the puzzle
is then when you continue on, it's all ocean.
Yes, as the story goes on,
it says the spirit of Elohim was fluttering
over the face of the waters.
Yes, and then it's just waters.
And then we're going to find the land emerged from the waters.
Exactly.
And you're like, well, but the land was already there.
So then you've got to come back and be like,
sense was the land wild and waste if it's submerged under waters there you go yeah yeah yeah in other words
the seven days consist of god separating the waters and then bringing the dry land up out of the waters
so we've really sold out to the waters so creation in the seven day narrative is god bringing dry land
up out of the water yeah and then ordering the land and to describe the state before the dry land
is ordered and above the waters and ready for life is for the land to be wild and waste.
That's right.
We submerged in some way like not accessible.
Yeah, that's right.
And this is intuitive.
If you ever walk out to an ocean or a sea, you can see the land disappear into the waters and then just become...
Become the waters.
It just goes, right?
It goes away.
Yeah.
So just intuit, that means they're probably the land.
keeps going down under the waters.
But it's just under there.
So why is this land above the waters?
How did that happen?
Because we can be on this land.
I can't be on the land under the water.
Yeah.
Tectonic plates.
Totally.
Totally.
So the concept of creation in the seven-day narrative
is God providing the dry land
in the midst of the waters
and then making it fruitful and organized
so humans and animals can live together.
That's creation and Genesis of one.
in Genesis 2 verse 4 it flips we get an introduction Genesis 2 verse 4 these are the generations of the skies in the land when they were created
and then we get a new introduction in the day of Yahweh Elohim making the land in the skies and there was not any
shrub of the field yet in the land and there was not any plant of the field yet sprouting
because Yahweh Elohim had not sent rain upon the land
and there was no human to work the ground
and a stream would go up from the land
and it would water the face of the ground.
That's all background.
Verse 7 is where the action really begins.
Yahweh Elohim formed the human from the dust of the ground.
So what's so interesting here is humans are made last in the seven-day narrative.
Yeah, we didn't talk about it, but in the last narrative, it ends with humans made.
On the sixth day.
On the sixth day, and then the seventh day arrested.
And then that whole narrative ends.
This really is truly like, let me tell you the story again.
Yeah, from a different angle.
From a different angle.
And this time, it starts just depicting a wilderness.
A dry land, no water.
No fields, no shrubs.
And it's called the field.
The sadeh.
Ah, it's called the field.
It's not called midbar.
It's not called Tohu Vavohu.
It's just called the sadeh.
But it's an uncultivated sadeh.
Yeah.
There's no shrub, which is wild, like plants that grow up.
There's not even wild plants out there yet.
And there's no veggies.
There's no carrots.
Oh, okay.
And cucumbers growing because, well, one, there's no rain.
There's no water.
And there's no human.
And you only get cucumbers.
All lined up in nice rows when you have water in humans.
And you only get like acacia trees and shrubs growing out in the wilderness.
When there's water.
If you have waters.
So in verse six, how do you get from a dry, desolate waste to the Garden of Eden?
The first thing God provides is water.
A stream goes up out of the land.
And then, well, if that waters the ground, then I guess you got wet ground to work with.
then Yahweh El-Heem formed.
There's that word that Isaiah used,
shaped the human from the dust of the adamant of the ground
and breathed into his nostrils, the breath of life,
and the human became a living being.
And Yahweh Elohim planted a garden in Eden,
which means delight toward the east.
So you began with no plants and no water and no human.
Then God provides water, makes the human.
Plants a garden.
Plants.
So three statements of the problem, and step by step, every one of those problems gets resolved.
So let's just notice, biblical authors put these two narratives side by side so that we would compare and contrast and meditate on them.
And I've heard you say in the first one, there's too much water.
It's just all dark water.
Everything submerged in dark abyss.
And then in the next one, it's actually, there's no water.
It's literally the opposite.
It's just dry land that needs water.
That's right.
Two opposite ways of saying the same thing.
Yeah.
So creation in the seven-day narrative is God bringing dry land up out of the water so that a garden can sprout.
Genesis 2 is God bringing water to the dry land.
Oh, yeah.
To water it.
To bring plants.
And the word create and make barra and assa are used in the seven-day narrative.
and then the words form and make.
Yatsar and Asa are used in the Eden narrative.
And then as we saw in Isaiah, he just draws on language from both of them.
I didn't create the land to be uninhabited.
I formed it to be lived in.
So Isaiah saw these two narratives as complementary.
So if you start with the second story,
then wilderness is very literal, just wilderness.
It's land that doesn't have water.
It's the wilderness.
Yep, that's right.
In Genesis 1, where it says the land is and then describes it as wilderness.
Kind of getting meta.
You're getting more meta.
Yeah, it's good.
Turned up the volume of like the meaning behind the wilderness of it's a place where disorder reigns and life has no place.
Like, that's really like how everything is this realm of disorder.
Okay.
Okay, excellent.
So what the wilderness means is that you go out to the wilderness and you face reality that, oh, man, here I am cruising along in the nice little hill country with rain and food and there's cucumbers and sheep.
You're an ancient Israelite right now?
I'm an Asian Arabian.
I'm not describing my actual daily life.
Yeah, okay.
And if I live in the green land long enough, I can start to feel like, oh, man.
I'm making it here
I can make this work
Yeah
Got this little plot
And when I go out to the wilderness
I face the reality
That oh man
I came from
Fragile mortal
Human creatures
And I just won the lottery
Of the like
I'm alive
And I'm here
This land has water
That it produces
That's water
Plants
Yeah
Like
That's necessary
for me to be alive. That sustains my life comes from something that was before me and outside of me
and take the chain all the way back. Where did they come from? And how were their lives sustained my parents?
And then my grandparents. So walk out of the hillside into the desert is to kind of walk back into
decreation in a way. That's right. Yeah. Kind of see how order turns into disorder. And then you can
kind of start to tell yourself the story of like everything came from here. Yeah. But somehow,
the generosity of God through rain and through plants, there is now hope for life.
That's right. The default state within the Eden narrative's way of thinking about it is
the wilderness. We came out of the wilderness and we're going to say we go back to the wilderness
from dust to dust. So the default state is nothingness. It's a way of saying that
everything that we love and value is hanging by a thread.
Its default state is not to exist because what we can constantly...
Are you saying if you chase the chain down far enough, it becomes nothingness?
It becomes nothingness.
Yeah, if we go back words in time, everything hangs by a thread.
If we go forward in time, it's all on a thread and going back to nothingness again.
Yeah.
So Genesis 1 takes that meta, and it's saying, yeah, exactly.
And the biblical portrait of God is that God was and is and is to come.
Yahweh, He is.
God's existence is not conditional on some other things supporting God to be.
He doesn't need rain to exist.
Yeah, totally, no.
He doesn't need a stream to exist.
That's right.
So anything other than God that does exist has a conditional existence.
So the opposite of existence is nothingness.
We have an opposite.
God doesn't have an opposite.
God just is.
But you and I are not, we aren't just are.
I can't say that.
Is it the opposite of being and is, is to not be?
It's non-being, yeah.
Not being.
You and I have an opposite of non-being.
But God doesn't have that opposite.
God is.
What do you mean?
This is classical theism, Christian Theology 101.
I am, but I will one day not be.
Right.
and one day in the past you were not i was not you have not always been i am for a moment and then i will
not be that's right that's that's right that's right that's my state and for anything
whose existence is conditional to even exist there must be some one something greater than it
within which that encases its existence and who or what is that thing and that is what
all of the monotheistic
religions call God
in English
English word
so the wilderness
is a way of saying
for created beings
we come from the dust
and
if God doesn't sustain our existence
enfold us into his infinite life
we will return to the dust
and the wilderness is the
primary image
to talk about that from a land
perspective the chaos waters
are the other main image.
Okay, so you're saying you can look at the land.
Yeah.
And you can go, you know, I look far east,
and it's just like disordered, dry, uninhabitable wasteland.
Yeah.
But as it comes up this step into the hills.
Central hill country of Judea and Israel.
Suddenly it's inhabited, it's ordered,
there's life, and we can flourish.
And so one way to think about this journey of everything, not just me, not just the land, but like everything, is from the wilderness into the garden, into the garden, into an ordered state.
That's right.
Okay.
And if God doesn't continue to supply generously the water and the stable ground, we will turn back into that wilderness once again.
and that is decreation.
Yeah, that's the metaphysical meaning of wilderness.
So I think the biblical authors want us to actually think on that level
as well as the more literal or earthly images because, not just because I say so,
because of what the biblical authors do with these images as you go through the biblical story.
So let me just show you.
So the Eden story is all about how God wants.
to give a gift to the humans, to move them from a phase of fragile, mortal, conditional life,
and give them a gift of eternal life by making available the tree of life.
That's in Genesis 2.
Yep, Genesis 2.
God sprouts a garden, and then in the middle of the garden is this tree of life.
But there's also this tree of knowing good and bad.
God says, don't eat.
That tree will lead you to the opposite.
of eternal life.
Back into waste.
Yeah, back to die, to go back into nothingness.
So the basic idea of Eden is to remain alive.
And Eden's this oasis.
So Eden itself is a little oasis surrounded by nothingness.
And if I want to avoid returning back into the nothingness,
I need to stay here.
And I need to stay connected to a life.
that is outside my own, an infinite source of life.
And that's what this narrative then represents.
And then what God says is,
you're going to need to trust my word to really have life.
If you want access to the tree of life,
trust what I say.
And right now what I say is,
don't do this one thing.
Don't eat of the tree of knowing about it.
That's right.
So isn't it interesting
that when a deceiver
shows up into the story,
it's a snake
and the snake
crawls in
from the sada
the field
the snake
is a beast
of the field
okay
and this is
the kind of
uninhabited field
this is the arid field
yeah
so sade can refer
to a farm field
like a cultivated
region
but it can also
refer to a region
that's at the border
of the desert
and the garden
yeah
it comes in from the wild
yeah
so this is a creature
that comes from the chaos realm
and it crawls in
and then it spreads chaos
creates it deceives the humans
gets the humans
when it says it was shrewd
more than any beast of the field
you actually gave us a list
of all the like chaos creatures
oh yeah is referring to that list
yeah totally yeah like there's owls
and jekylls and hyenas
hyenas and scorpions and
they're all crafty
like desert creatures
but you know who's the most
crafty of all the desert creatures?
Yeah, it's a comparative.
The snake.
More shrewd than any of the beast.
And think all of them, they're crafty in the sense of they avoid being seen.
You barely ever see them.
Yeah.
And they can survive out there.
It's wild.
You've got to be pretty shrewd to survive out there.
You've got to be shrewd.
I've never quite thought of it this way.
I guess I always read this in like, you've got all the animals, all the cute bunnies and the things and you know.
And then you've got one.
You got that snake.
And he's the shrewd snake.
But now all of a sudden I'm really.
When you say, no, this is the creature from the wild.
Yeah, yeah.
Because Adam's named all these other animals, right?
Mm-hmm. Right. Yeah, the ones that are there.
The ones that are there.
Yeah, yep.
This is like, it's the outside animal crew.
Yes. Yes. Ooh, that's good. I like that.
That's interesting. The ostrich is out there, too, right?
Yeah. Yep, the ostrich.
I like an ostrich, though.
I think, because we've only ever ever encountered them in zoos.
I hear they're pretty gnarly, actually.
I think they're kind of like hippos.
Oh, yeah. You don't mess with them.
Did, they will rock your world.
I think hippos kill more people than like...
Alligators or very dangerous.
Yeah. Okay, this is a good insight.
Yeah.
This is landing for me too in a way I haven't quite ever thought about.
All the beasts of the field...
Because the field is the...
We're talking about the uncultivated field.
Yeah.
The desert field.
That's right.
Creatures from that realm.
Yeah.
So they're all shrewd, and this snake's the most shrewd.
Because it can live above and below ground.
It's pretty fast.
Pretty fast.
It can strike with light and speed.
Yeah, it's tricksters.
So, this thing crawled in and deceives the humans,
gets them to do the thing that God said not to do
because they actually think that it is better than what God said.
Yeah.
Mistrust his word.
That's right, yeah.
So once the humans choose to do what God said not to do,
they have chosen to cut themselves off
from the source of true life.
And so what God does is he says he's going to exile them, send them out of the garden.
And what he says to the human in Genesis 3, verse 17, he says,
because you've eaten from the tree that I said don't eat from it,
cursed is the ground on account of you, with pain, grief,
you will eat from it all the days of your life, thorns and thistles,
it will sprout for you, and you will eat the ground.
the plants of the field.
By the sweat of your face, you will eat bread until you return to the ground, because from
it you were taken.
You are dust, and to the dust, you will return.
So lots of important images here.
You were taken from the ground.
You cut yourself off from the life source outside yourself.
You go back to the ground.
From the wilderness, back to the wilderness.
If you want to eat any bread up out of the ground,
you're going to have to deal with a ground that's a wilderness ground.
And thorns and thistles become a primary symbol of the wilderness.
But it grows stuff out of the ground, but you can't eat it.
Like in the hill country, it rains and mild.
A lot of the stuff that just grows up out of the ground.
You can just eat it like fruit trees.
So you go back to the dust, and what the ground does grow by itself, you can't eat from it.
Okay, so I'm getting this picture then.
You've got this desert land that God waters, plants a garden.
And the garden he plants is like you're fully in the ordered state.
Yeah.
It's so, like, ordered, everything you need is there, and you're not giving a sense that they have cultivated it.
It's just like...
God cultivated it.
Yeah.
So you're in the deep of order.
Because you talked about how there's the outskirts
where you're not quite in the wilderness.
Oh, yeah, right, right, right.
But the land, it's rough.
You might go out there with your sheep.
You might find some water,
but it's still kind of considered wilderness.
Right.
And it sounds like that's where he's saying,
now you've got to go deal with that.
Exactly.
You've got to deal with that kind of land.
Yeah, that's right.
Genesis 323,
Yahweh, Elohim, sent the human out.
from the garden to work the ground from which he was taken and he banished this is that driving out
yeah banished from so you're right they're in the hub of like the most ordered yeah yeah place
and when you're in that place you are not sustaining your own life your whole existence is a gift
but if you have chosen by your own desire to separate yourself from that life that god wants to
give you, well, then you will return to the default state from which you emerged, which is
for a creature, nothingness, because we don't have an infinite life inherent within ourselves.
So if we separate ourselves from the condition of our existence, we will return to the dust.
That's metaphysically.
The idea is being communicated through this wilderness imagery of being banished from the garden
back to the wilderness, to the land of thorns and thistles.
Okay, so there you go. That's the Eton narrative.
So in Isaiah 41 and 43, these are passages that we looked at in our previous series on the New Exodus.
Israel returning from Babylonian exile in the days of Zerubbable and, like, recounted in Ezra, Nehemiah,
the hope for that return was talked about by the prophet in the latter chapter.
of Isaiah in the 40s. And it's portrayed as an analogy of Israel leaving Egypt, going through the
desert to go up to the promised land. Now they're leaving Babylon to go through the desert to the
promised land. So God talks about how his people are like the oppressed and needy ones who are
looking for water, but there isn't any water. And their tongues are parched with thirst. And God says,
I will not abandon them.
I'll open up rivers on the bare heights
and springs in the midst of valleys
I'll turn the wilderness into a pool
and the dry land into a fountain of water.
I'll even put cedar trees
right there in the midbar, in the wilderness.
So there we're drawing on the Genesis 2.
Imagery.
Now God's not creating the whole cosmos,
but he is bringing an Eden
oasis of life
in the middle of a desert
and verse 20
then of Isaiah 41 says so that
they that is my people
might see this and recognize it
that the hand of the Lord has
made this that's the word
Asa used in Genesis
1 and 2
and that the Holy One of Israel
created this
and it's referring to
what's the this
yeah so this is all about
God is going to
create a way for his people who were taken captive by the Babylonian soldiers in Jerusalem.
People slaughtered, leaders executed, they were marched in chains up to the Euphrates and then down
the river to live in Babylon. A whole bunch of them are going to get to go back. That seems
impossible. How is that possible? I mean, Babylon's a superpower. Yeah. So to describe it,
The impossibility of us ever being free and getting to return and making that long trek back home, how could that ever be?
And that's what this poem is describing that return journey home, but using the wilderness becoming a garden.
Yeah, using the language of creation.
Which is what Genesis 2 was.
Yeah. So, this is something that these Israelites could never create of their own.
own resources and power. I see. Yeah, it's interesting to think if you go back to Genesis 2,
banished from the garden, now into this in-between state, the wilderness, you've got to work it,
you're going to be ground back into. And you would think, cool, let's go back to the garden.
But here, it's God planting a new garden. Yeah. Where they are. Yeah, that's right, in their
wilderness. In their wilderness. In the wilderness. Okay, so flip it. The prophet Ezekiel in chapter 36,
is hoping for the land that they had to leave.
So in Ezekiel 36, it's an oracle to the hills,
the hill country of Israel.
And he says in verse 34,
the land that was desolate, emptied,
will once again be worked that is farmed.
In the place where it was desolate in the eyes of everybody
who would walk over those hills,
people will start saying,
whoa, this desolate land has become
like the Garden of Eden.
He'd stray it up by quotes from the story.
Waste and desolate lands and torn down cities
are being rebuilt and re-inhabited.
So the restoration of God's people
to go back to their land and rebuild their life there
is described in the language of creation,
new creation of Genesis 2.
A garden being planted out of the wilderness.
Yeah.
So the wilderness was a place
where the Israelites, after being brought out of Egypt,
literally faced death and an impossible situation,
and God provided water for them.
That's the Sinai wilderness.
It's a Sinai wilderness.
We'll look at those stories in the future episodes.
So that was a moment where God provided life out of non-life.
And both Eden's story and that story
is being drawn upon by Isaiah and Ezekiel to say,
it looks like we're facing another situation of non-life.
Their state of slavery then is a wilderness,
and then their homeland is now kind of in a state of wilderness.
Yeah.
So if a new creation moment is about God creating Eden
out of a hopeless environment or a hopeless situation.
Right, yeah, okay.
So kind of the Eden creation has become like a metaphor
for God renewing your life or renewing your life circumstances.
Right, yeah.
Similarly, if God is going to decreat a person or a place or a community,
in a fascinating way, both Jeremiah and Isaiah will use the language and imagery of creation
stories, but inverse them.
But you remember how we have the wilderness and the sea?
Yeah.
And they seem opposite to us, but symbolically they mean that.
the same thing.
Land coming up out of the sea and wilderness getting water.
Yeah, okay.
So when Jeremiah, I don't know why I'm laughing, I just,
in this struck me, it felt so profound, so simple.
But I remember reading this, when I first started reading the Bible,
I would come across things like this and be like, what?
It doesn't make any sense.
So in Jeremiah 51, he's describing the downfall of Babylon, Israel's oppressor.
So in verse 41 of Jeremiah 51, Jeremiah says,
how Babylon has been captured.
The praise of the whole earth.
You used to be honored by all the nations.
Now you've been seized.
Babylon will become an object of horror among the nations.
The sea has come up over Babylon.
She's been engulfed by its tumultuous waves.
Let's pause there.
So that's inverting the seven-day creation narrative.
Yeah. Submerged.
Submerged.
Verse 43.
Her cities have become an object of whole.
a parched land
and a desert
a land
where no one lives
and no son of Adam
walks through
okay
which is it
yeah
we're back here again
has been flooded
and submerged
yeah
or is it
dry desert land
yeah look at this
so the same
now you say
well it's poetry
but this makes sense
to somebody
to call it
it got flooded
by a sea
or it got
so unflutted
that it became
a dry desert
But when you're edging up against nothingness, you are in the wilderness or in the watery state.
It's like two ways of describing the same reality of nothingness.
I guess I struggle with the word nothingness.
We've talked about this a lot before.
You really are trying to nail home this idea of nothingness.
I feel like there's a sense of a journey.
Right?
And as soon as you pop out of nothingness into somethingness,
it's still so close to nothing, right?
That it's like disordered, it's the Tohu, Voh, it's just that moment of nothingness becomes something, but it's really still nothing.
Yeah.
It's what it feels like, and that's what it feels like when you go from the hill country into the wilderness.
It's like you just keep going and you're getting closer and closer to just the end of it all.
Yeah, we're working actually in real classic philosophical territory here, but if you're,
you have
God
defined as
the one who's
not a being
God is being
God is
necessary
existence
and then
you have
non-existence
if you have
a creature
who's made
that is somewhere
it's not God
but also
exists so it's not
non-existent
if you put it on a spectrum
it's still way closer
to non-existence
than like
God
so I think
this
Right.
That's a more abstract way of what you're saying.
Yes.
So even things that do exist, just hang by a thread.
Right.
Because we don't have to exist.
Wilderness is talking about the things that exist hanging by a thread.
That's it.
Yeah.
And at some point, that thread unravels into nothingness.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And that is the wilderness.
Yeah.
Okay.
So get this.
Okay.
This is the last thing I'll show you.
In Isaiah 21, there's this poem about the downfall of Babylon.
and it's given a little heading
it's called an oracle
which means a prophetic poem
and the title, it's given a little title
it's called an oracle
about the wilderness of the sea
and then it's about how
Babylon's going to become a wilderness
and fall and fallen as Babylon
but it's called the wilderness of the sea
that's cool
it's super cool
and what's so interesting
is you can go to the commentaries
and biblical scholars don't know what to do with this phrase.
It's really interesting.
And many people propose that the text has been corrupted
because their assumption is that's an incoherent thing to say.
It's like saying the light of the dark.
Yeah, totally. Yeah.
And in literal terms, that's what it means to say,
the wilderness of the sea.
But in terms of the symbolic and metaphysical meaning,
for Babylon, its cosmos has come to an end.
It's going back into nothingness,
and so it becomes both a wilderness and a sea.
So it's an oracle about the wilderness of the sea.
By combining the two, it really smacks you over the head
to make you go, oh, yeah, this is a metaphysical kind of thing.
Yeah, yeah.
Because the sea is a very tangible thing I can understand.
The wilderness is something I can understand.
But what they represent as that edge of nothingness,
that hang on by a thread
than to call it the wilderness of the sea
that just pops you into it.
Yeah, this is certainly why,
flipping to the last page of the Christian Bible,
when Babylon has fallen in the revelation
and the new Jerusalem comes down,
it's described in a handful of ways.
The new creation is described as a new sky and a new land
and the sea was no more.
No sea.
No sea.
But also, no more wilderness.
Oh, where's that?
In Revelation 21, God says, look, I am making all things new.
And then God says, I'm the alpha and the omega, the beginning and the end.
So lots of Genesis 1 language there.
I will give to the one who is thirsty from the spring of the water of life.
Infinite water, infinite life.
There's our little spring from Genesis 2.
And then in Revelation 22, this city, this heaven, come to earth, city, is also the source of that river, because there's the river of the water of life flowing out, and there's the tree of life there, yielding its fruit, and the leaves from the tree bring healing to the nations.
So it's as if the whole world is becoming gardenized.
so no more sea and the whole world becomes the new creation is is the garden yeah so it's implicit
that there's no more wilderness okay but both wilderness and sea become past memories and so think
metaphysically this is an astounding thing to say it's as if all created things are brought
into the infinite abundance of god's own life i am making all things new
So, in the metaphysical sense, where wilderness represents the chance of slipping back into nothingness,
there's going to be a state where that just isn't a reality anymore.
Yeah.
If I'm sitting in Eden, slipping back into nothingness is not a concern anymore, if I am intimately connected to God's own life.
Where are the ostriches going to live?
I know.
No, they're amazing creatures.
Not that I would want to be around one up close.
Yeah, I mean, those are wonderful questions that I think maybe...
I'm getting too physical with this metaphysical idea.
Yeah, I think that's right.
It's the same thing with the sea.
Yeah.
Like, where's the river going to flow into?
Yeah.
It's going to make some kind of collection of water.
Right.
That will be big enough.
We'll just call them lakes.
All right.
Great lakes.
So, yeah, there we're trying to just talk.
physically about the metaphysical ideas the biblical authors want us to think about.
So the more that I've sat with these ideas and seen how the ideas develop over the story
of the Bible, it has helped me so much to understand what is happening in stories about the
wilderness, which is essentially what we're just going to read and meditate on for the rest
of this podcast series.
Okay.
Yeah.
So if these are our two opposites, the garden and the wilderness and everything that they mean,
what are all of these stories about people going from gardens into wildernesses
or when people send each other, when people wrongfully send each other out of the garden?
Send each other out of the garden.
Like Abraham and Sarah, due to Hegar.
That wasn't her fault.
So people end up in the desert for all kinds of reasons.
and what happens there, that's so much of the drama.
It's a biblical story.
So that's what we'll start looking at next.
Thanks for listening to this episode of Bible Project podcast.
Next week, we'll leave the Garden of Eden
and we'll look at three stories of people who end up in the wilderness,
Kane, Pagar, and Moses.
All these stories are closely tied together
in terms of verbal connections that the authors have put there
because they want us to meditate on how people end up in wilderness environments.
And then what God does when he discovers that people are dying in the wilderness.
Bible Project is a crowd-funded nonprofit,
and we exist to experience the Bible as a unified story that leads to Jesus.
And everything that we make is free because of the generous support of thousands of people just like you.
Thank you so much for being a part of this with us.
Hi, my name is Jeff, and I'm from Battleground, Washington.
Hey, my name is Elizabeth, and I'm from the Dallas-Fort Worth area, and I first heard about
Bible Project from my husband, Jason.
I use Bible Project for learning more about my faith in Jesus Christ.
My favorite thing about the Bible project is taking difficult verses in the Bible and making
them easily consumable.
I love the podcast that comes out every Monday.
It is my favorite thing about the Bible project.
We believe the Bible is a unified story that leads to Jesus.
Bible Project is a nonprofit funded by people like me.
Find free videos, articles, podcasts, classes,
and more on the Bible Project app and at Bibleproject.com.
Hey, everyone. This is John Horton.
I'm an engineering manager with our platform team at Bible Project,
which is just a fancy way of saying that my team makes sure
all of the right information is available to the websites and apps
that we make available for free.
I've been working at Bible Project for nearly three years,
and my favorite part about my work
is that we get to participate in this incredible movement
that is bringing the Bible to life for people in new and engaging ways.
There couldn't be a better investment of time and energy,
and I'm so grateful that I get to be a part of it.
There's a whole team of people that bring the podcast to life every week.
For a full list of everyone who's involved,
check out the show credits and the episode description
wherever you stream the podcast,
as well as on our website.
