• The Eve We Thought We Knew: What Happens When Nothing is Happening
    Apr 21 2026

    In the traditional telling of the Garden of Eden, the story quickly moves to a forbidden tree, a deceptive serpent, and a catastrophic failure. But when we look closely at the text, we find something entirely different unfolding before any of that happens: paralysis.

    In Episode 3, we step inside the Gan to observe a human frozen by the tension between maximum permission and absolute consequence. We explore what God does when the environment He designed sits idle, and how He iterates by bringing in an Ezer Kenegdo—not a subordinate helper, but a powerful, opposing rescue force. We also look at the Serpent, whose questions and actions, when read carefully even in English, reveal him not as a deceiver, but as an experienced catalyst asking diagnostic questions.

    This isn’t a moral fable about human failure and divine wrath. It is an exposition of fear, the consequences of that fear when understanding is missing, and a profound, relatable look at what happens when consciousness gains the capacity to distinguish before it is ready to hold that capacity.

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    31 Min.
  • The Garden You Know and The Gan You Don't
    Mar 29 2026

    What if the Garden of Eden wasn't an orchard, but the description of a system? In this episode, we consider the Hebrew words Gan, Nata, Etz, Akol, Da'at and Peri as a constellation of coherent meaning. By decoupling these terms from their botanical translations, we discover an ancient architectural framework that mirrors the modern Scientific Method and Agile methodology.

    • The Forensic Deconstruction: We move past the inherited "pastoral" image of Eden to look at the "set, the physics, and the system" of the text.
    • The Decoded Vocabulary:
      • Gan (Garden): A protected, controlled environment similar to what we'd call a "laboratory" or a "sandbox."
      • Nata (Planted): To drive firmly into the ground so that it does not move.
      • Etz (Tree): A structural framework or material for a vessel.
      • Peri (Fruit): The result or outcome of a process.
      • Akol (To Eat): Retention as capability; the capacity of a vessel to retain what it receives.
      • Da’at (Knowledge): Experiential, embodied knowing (like touching fire) rather than factual information.
    • The Scientific Method in Genesis: How Francis Bacon’s Novum Organum (1620) aligns with the ancient patterns of observation, engagement, and feedback found in the Hebrew text.
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    30 Min.
  • Sin and Faith: How We've Misread Both
    Mar 29 2026

    Have you ever played Monopoly for hours, only to discover you’ve been playing by “house rules” that aren’t even in the rulebook? In this debut episode, we look at how 2,500 years of translation drift has obscured the original "manual" of the Hebrew Bible. We deconstruct two foundational words—Sin and Faith—to reveal a system built on logic, feedback, and structural integrity rather than blind belief and condemnation.

    In college, a group of engineering and urban planning students—a Catholic, two Christians, and an Atheist—sat around late at night with one shared observation: The Bible is a product of 2,500 years of translation. That conversation left host Fred Williams with one nagging question: “What does the word ‘Sin’ actually mean?”

    Moving past Latin and Greek into the original Hebrew, the answer was shocking.

    In this episode, we explore:

    • The Archery of Chattah: Why "Sin" isn't a moral stain, but a functional term for "missing the mark"—pure feedback for the next shot.
    • The Engineering of Emunah: Why "Faith" isn't blind belief, but the reliability and structural integrity of a proven framework.
    • The Telephone Game: How "House Rules" replaced the actual rulebook, creating a false conflict between science and scripture.

    This isn’t about replacing your worldview; it’s about seeing the full picture—both images in the optical illusion.

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    27 Min.