• The Whole Old Testament Happens on One Road
    Mar 20 2026

    Abraham left Mesopotamia and followed a crescent-shaped arc of land toward the promised land. Centuries later, the exile sent Israel back the same way - northeast, toward Babylon, retracing every mile.


    That is not a coincidence. The Fertile Crescent is the highway the whole Old Testament story runs on.


    In this episode, we build the geographic big picture: why civilization emerged along this corridor, which empires dominated it, and why Abraham's journey, the famine narratives, and the road to Babylon all follow the same arc.


    Explore the OT in its original context: https://otincontext.com


    #OldTestament #BibleStudy #BiblicalGeography

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    11 mins
  • They Didn't Just Conquer Israel - They Made It Disappear
    Mar 13 2026

    The ten lost tribes of Israel aren't actually a mystery. We know exactly what happened to them - and the real answer is more chilling than any theory about Ethiopia or the British Isles.

    In this episode we trace the rise of the Neo-Assyrian Empire, the most feared power in the ancient world, and the systematic policy they used to dismantle conquered peoples - not just militarily, but structurally. We cover the fall of the northern kingdom in 722 BC, Jerusalem's unlikely survival under Sennacherib in 701 BC, and what Isaiah, Jonah, and Nahum together say about a God who governs even the most brutal empires in history.

    Includes: Sennacherib's own annals, the Lachish reliefs, Sargon II's deportation records, and 2 Kings 17's explanation of why Israel really fell.

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    13 mins
  • You Are to Jesus What Jesus Was to Abraham
    Mar 5 2026

    From Abraham to Jesus is roughly two thousand years. From Jesus to you is roughly two thousand years. Once you feel that distance, the Old Testament stops feeling remote and starts feeling like a story you can actually navigate.

    In this episode, Scott introduces the single most useful tool for reading the Old Testament -- a framework of five chapters covering the full sweep of biblical history from Origins through the period of Rebuilding and Waiting. Along the way, he uses a simple time mirror centered on Jesus to show how the BC and AD sides of history reflect each other at the same distances. Moses mirrors Luther. David mirrors the medieval world. Ezra mirrors the early Middle Ages.

    The framework doesn't ask you to memorize dates. It asks you to recognize something you already know -- and apply it to the world of Scripture.


    🗺️ Explore the OT in its original context: https://otincontext.com

    👥 Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/oldtestamentincontext

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    11 mins
  • What Is Stratigraphy? How Archaeologists Read the Ground Like a Book
    Feb 27 2026

    When archaeologists dig at a site like Hazor, they're not just moving dirt — they're reading history written in layers. Understanding stratigraphy is the key to understanding how we know what we know about the ancient world of the Old Testament.


    In this episode we cover what a tell actually is, how archaeologists assign meaning to destruction layers, how Hazor illustrates all of this with stunning clarity, and why pottery matters more than almost anything else for dating ancient sites.


    🗺️ Explore the OT in its original context: https://otincontext.com

    👥 Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/oldtestamentincontext

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    13 mins
  • What Is a Nation? Ancient vs. Modern Concepts (Episode 3.1)
    Feb 19 2026

    (Note: This episode includes references to on-screen map demos. For the full visual experience, watch on YouTube — but the teaching stands on its own as audio.)

    When you read "nation" in the Old Testament, what do you picture? A country on a map with borders and a flag? That's not what the word means — and the difference changes how you read the entire Bible.

    In this episode, we explore how the ancient world understood nations, states, and peoplehood — why you can't draw a nation on a map, and why this distinction is the engine of the whole Old Testament story.

    This is Episode 3.1, the first in our Nations & Empires series.

    Episode links:

    • OT in Context App: https://otincontext.com
    • YouTube (with visual demos): https://youtube.com/@OTinContext
    • Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/oldtestamentincontext

    Previous: The Land of Canaan: Why This Specific Place? (Episode 1.5)

    Next: Suzerains, Vassals, and Satrapies: How Ancient Politics Worked (Episode 3.2)


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    9 mins
  • The Land of Canaan: Why This Specific Place?
    Feb 12 2026

    Of all the places God could have planted His people — the fertile Nile, the rich plains of Mesopotamia — He chose a narrow, contested strip of land wedged between empires. Why?


    In this episode, we explore the geography of Canaan: a land so compact you could walk across it in a few days, yet packed with more geographic diversity than regions ten times its size. From the coastal plain to the central hills to the Dead Sea — the lowest land elevation on earth — this land was built for dependence, exposure, and encounter.


    ⏱️ TIMESTAMPS

    0:00 - Why there?

    0:34 - What this series is about

    1:10 - The space between empires

    3:15 - A land of remarkable diversity

    6:10 - Why this place? Position, dependence, exposure

    9:24 - Many names, one land

    10:24 - What's next


    🔗 LINKS

    OT in Context App: https://otincontext.com

    Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/oldtestamentincontext


    🎬 PREVIOUS: Jericho: 11,000 Years of History

    🎬 NEXT: Coming soon


    #OldTestament #BibleStudy #BiblicalGeography #Christianity #BibleHistory #Archaeology

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    12 mins
  • The One Story: How It All Fits Together
    Feb 5 2026

    Quick—tell me the story of the Old Testament. Not a story FROM the Old Testament. The story. The whole thing. If that's hard to answer, you're not alone.


    Most of us know the pieces—David and Goliath, the Exodus, a talking donkey somewhere in the middle—but we've never seen how they fit together. Today, we fix that.


    ⏱️ TIMESTAMPS

    0:00 - Tell me the story

    0:37 - Intro

    1:09 - The puzzle problem

    2:49 - Four words that change everything

    4:43 - The thread that holds it together

    6:34 - Everything points forward

    8:15 - Why this changes how you read

    9:07 - What's next


    🔗 LINKS

    OT in Context App: https://otincontext.com

    Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/oldtestamentincontext


    🎬 PREVIOUS: Let Me Show You: Your First Exploration of the Ancient World

    🎬 NEXT: The Land of Canaan: Why This Specific Place?


    #OldTestament #BibleStudy #BiblicalGeography #Christianity #BibleHistory

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    10 mins
  • Jericho: 11,000 Years of History
    Jan 31 2026

    Think the oldest cities are in Europe? Think again. Jericho has been inhabited, conquered, and rebuilt for over 11,000 years—older than Stonehenge, older than the pyramids, older than widespread agriculture.


    Most people only know Joshua 6, but this city appears throughout the Old Testament at every major transition point: Balaam's blessing, the conquest, Ehud's assassination of Eglon, David's humiliated ambassadors, Hiel's curse, and Elijah's departure.


    Let's explore the city that won't stay dead.


    🔗 LINKS

    OT in Context App: https://otincontext.com

    Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/oldtestamentincontext


    🎬 PREVIOUS: Let Me Show You: Your First Exploration of the Ancient World

    🎬 NEXT: The Exodus Route Debate

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    10 mins