Genesis Marks the Spot

Carey Griffel

Raiding the ivory tower of biblical theology without ransacking our faith.

  1. 2 DAGE SIDEN

    From Noah to Christ: Wrath, Refuge, and Vindication - Episode 177

    Genesis 7:1 says Noah was righteous “in this generation.” But what does that mean, and how does Noah’s story help us think about wrath, judgment, exile, and Jesus? In this episode, we trace the biblical pattern of the righteous one who passes through judgment, is preserved and vindicated by God, and becomes the means through which life continues. Beginning with Noah and moving through Isaiah 26, Passover, exile, Daniel, Ezekiel 14, and Jesus, this episode explores a non-PSA framework for understanding wrath and judgment. Rather than treating wrath only as individual penalty or punishment transfer, Scripture gives us a much broader picture: judgment against violence, bloodshed, covenant collapse, corruption, and disordered creation. Yet the faithful may still suffer within that judgment, waiting for God’s protection, vindication, and restoration. Noah gives the early pattern. Exile gives the depth. Jesus brings the pattern to its climax. On This Rock Biblical Theology Community:  https://on-this-rock.com/   Website: genesismarksthespot.com    Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/GenesisMarkstheSpot    Music credit: "Marble Machine" by Wintergatan Link to Wintergatan’s website: https://wintergatan.net/   Link to the original Marble Machine video by Wintergatan: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IvUU8joBb1Q&ab_channel=Wintergatan Chapters (00:00:00) - Wrath, Judgment, and the PSA Question(00:07:30) - Why Exegesis Matters(00:14:23) - The Righteous One(00:16:36) - Noah’s Righteousness in Genesis 7(00:19:37) - Biblical Justice Is Bigger Than Punishment(00:27:27) - The Ark as Refuge Through Judgment(00:30:27) - The Biblical Remnant Pattern(00:34:21) - Isaiah 26 and the Door of Refuge(00:43:41) - Hidden with Christ Through Death and Resurrection(00:45:25) - Exile as a Major Picture of Wrath(00:53:18) - Daniel, Ezekiel 14, and the Righteous in Judgment(00:58:47) - Jesus Enters Israel’s Exile Story(01:01:53) - What Happens to Wrath Without PSA?(01:03:01) - Noah, Exile, and Jesus

    1 t. 10 min.
  2. 24. APR.

    Flood Files: From the Waters of Greece - Episode 176

    Moving beyond Mesopotamia and into the Greek flood traditions as part of our wider series on global flood stories. The Greeks certainly had myths about a flood, but do Greek flood narratives actually function as strong evidence for a single ancient global flood remembered independently across cultures? To answer that, we revisit our methodology. Not all flood traditions carry the same evidential weight. We have to ask where a story comes from, how it was transmitted, what genre it belongs to, how early it is attested, how much detail it contains, and whether its similarities to other flood stories are “cheap” or “costly.” We also have to ask whether we are looking at internal cultural memory or something that spread by contact, prestige, and narrative diffusion. Sometimes what people are sure they saw turns out to be something else entirely. “You probably thought you saw something up in the sky other than Venus…” From there, we explore the Greek material itself. That includes the primeval flood of Ogyges, the better-known flood of Deucalion and Pyrrha, and key witnesses such as the Catalogue of Women, Pindar, Plato’s Timaeus, Apollodorus, Ovid, and Berossus. Along the way, we ask what is early, what is late, what is fragmentary, and what may reflect later literary consolidation. The result is a much messier picture than the popular claim that “every culture has a flood myth.” Greek flood traditions are real, ancient, and fascinating. But they are also uneven, layered, and heavily shaped by literary development, regional identity, and likely narrative diffusion. In other words, the waters of Greece preserve something meaningful — but not necessarily the kind of clean, independent witness people often want them to be. Or to put it another way: “the truth” may still be out there, but the evidence has to be weighed carefully. On This Rock Biblical Theology Community:  https://on-this-rock.com/   Website: genesismarksthespot.com    Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/GenesisMarkstheSpot    Music credit: "Marble Machine" by Wintergatan Link to Wintergatan’s website: https://wintergatan.net/   Link to the original Marble Machine video by Wintergatan: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IvUU8joBb1Q&ab_channel=Wintergatan  Chapters (00:00:00) - Opening the Greek File(00:02:44) - Methodology: Memory, Diffusion, and Evidence(00:08:20) - Criteria for Weighing Flood Traditions(00:12:39) - Cheap vs. Expensive Similarities(00:16:13) - Diffusion, Migration, and Cultural Memory(00:19:19) - Chronology, Contact Zones, and Explanatory Models(00:22:44) - Multiple Greek Flood Myths(00:23:09) - Ogyges, the Primeval King(00:25:08) - Deucalion(00:29:15) - Early Witnesses: Catalogue of Women and Pindar(00:31:37) - Plato’s Timaeus(00:41:46) - Ovid and the Lasting Greek Flood Narrative(01:00:31) - Berossus and Mesopotamian Transmission(01:04:37) - Final Grade

    1 t. 14 min.
  3. 17. APR.

    Clean and Unclean Before Sinai - Episode 175

    We ask a deceptively simple question: what do “clean” and “unclean” animals mean in Genesis 7 before Sinai and before the food laws of Leviticus? If Noah is told to bring extra clean animals onto the ark, what kind of distinction is he already expected to understand? Is this mainly about sacrifice? Is it about food? Or does the category point to something deeper? This episode looks at the wider ancient Near Eastern world of animal hierarchy, sacrificial suitability, ritual meals, and sacred order, and then traces how Israel’s Torah integrates those ideas into its own holiness system. Along the way, we consider Leviticus 11, Leviticus 17, Leviticus 20, and Deuteronomy 14, asking how food laws, purity categories, sacrifice, and holiness relate without collapsing into one flat system. We also discuss why “clean” and “unclean” are not simple synonyms for “sinful” and “holy,” why dietary laws are not best explained by hygiene or health, and why the ark preserves more than biological life alone. It preserves a differentiated sacred order that culminates in rightly ordered worship after judgment. This is a deep dive into Noah, Leviticus, sacrifice, purity, and the logic of holy order in Scripture. On This Rock Biblical Theology Community:  https://on-this-rock.com/   Website: genesismarksthespot.com    Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/GenesisMarkstheSpot    Music credit: "Marble Machine" by Wintergatan Link to Wintergatan’s website: https://wintergatan.net/   Link to the original Marble Machine video by Wintergatan: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IvUU8joBb1Q&ab_channel=Wintergatan  Chapters (00:00:00) - Why the Clean/Unclean Question Is Complicated(00:06:31) - The Main Question in Genesis 7(00:10:43) - Leviticus and the Purity Problem(00:15:08) - Unclean Is Not the Same as Sinful(00:19:43) - Ancient Near Eastern Context(00:22:10) - Why It Cannot Be About Diet Alone(00:28:49) - Why It Cannot Be About Sacrifice Alone(00:33:01) - Animal Hierarchy, Ritual Meals, and Suitability(00:44:38) - Other Interpretive Frameworks(00:50:07) - Levitical Purification and Holiness(01:00:10) - Noah, the Ark, and Sacred Order

    1 t. 12 min.
  4. 10. APR.

    Two by Seven: Are We There Yet? - Episode 174

    In this episode, we return to the flood narrative to ask a cluster of strange but important questions about the animals and the ark. Why does Genesis 6 say two of every kind, while Genesis 7 speaks of clean animals by sevens? Why does the text mention food before the ark-entry scene fully unfolds? Why does Genesis say “Noah did this,” only to keep giving more instructions afterward? And how does Noah already know the difference between clean and unclean animals? Drawing on Gordon Wenham, Victor Hamilton, John Walton, Kenneth Mathews, and Umberto Cassuto, we explore several interpretive options. Along the way, we also consider whether Noah had to gather the animals himself, why the food verse matters more than it first appears, and how these details connect the flood story to creation, Adam, Joseph, and the broader patterns of Genesis. This episode does not try to solve every problem at once. Instead, it clears space to read the text more carefully and prepares the way for a deeper follow-up on the strangest question of all: why Noah already knows clean and unclean animals. On This Rock Biblical Theology Community:  https://on-this-rock.com/   Website: genesismarksthespot.com    Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/GenesisMarkstheSpot    Music credit: "Marble Machine" by Wintergatan Link to Wintergatan’s website: https://wintergatan.net/   Link to the original Marble Machine video by Wintergatan: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IvUU8joBb1Q&ab_channel=Wintergatan Chapters (00:00:00) - Stranger Than We Think(00:05:03) - Two of Every Kind? Reading Genesis 6 Closely(00:10:53) - Genesis 7 Starts the Scene Again(00:16:01) - Strange Question #1: Why the Command Repeats(00:24:27) - Epic vs Prose Patterning(00:29:40) - Does Noah Gather the Animals, or Do They Come?(00:33:20) - Strange Question #2: Two Animals or Seven?(00:36:18) - Strange Question #3: Why the Food Verse Matters(00:40:21) - Adam, Joseph, and the Theology of Preservation(00:43:35) - Strange Question #4: It's Done — So Why More Instruction?(00:46:09) - Strange Question #5: Clean and Unclean Before Sinai

    1 t. 6 min.
  5. 3. APR.

    Easter Through a Divine Council Lens - Episode 173

    What happens when you read Easter through the Divine Council worldview? In this special episode, Carey reflects on how biblical theology and the Divine Council worldview reshaped her understanding of the gospel, the cross, and the resurrection. Rather than reducing Easter to a narrow legal framework, this episode explores a richer biblical pattern: covenant, allegiance, deliverance, sacred space, resurrection, new creation, and the victory of God over every rebellious power. Along the way, Carey explains why the Divine Council worldview is often misunderstood, why the story of Scripture cannot be flattened into a simple sin-management system, and why the resurrection must remain central to the meaning of Easter. She also reflects personally on how these patterns helped correct distorted views of God and opened up a deeper understanding of the gospel. This episode touches on biblical theology, the rule of faith, the relationship between Scripture and tradition, critiques of penal substitutionary framing, participation in Christ, Passover, sacred space, liturgy, temple theology, and the cosmic scope of Easter. On This Rock Biblical Theology Community:  https://on-this-rock.com/ Website: genesismarksthespot.com    Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/GenesisMarkstheSpot    Music credit: "Marble Machine" by Wintergatan Link to Wintergatan’s website: https://wintergatan.net/   Link to the original Marble Machine video by Wintergatan: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IvUU8joBb1Q&ab_channel=Wintergatan Chapters (00:00:00) - My Faith Journey and Why Biblical Theology(00:08:00) - Biblical Theology and the Divine Council Worldview(00:16:08) - The Bible as a Rule of Faith(00:23:56) - Why I Reject a Flattened PSA Framing(00:28:39) - Sin, Death, Suffering, and Participation(00:34:33) - Atonement, Sacred Space, and Purification(00:38:46) - Covenant Deliverance vs. Reformation Soteriology(00:41:05) - Easter as a Cosmic, New-Creation Event(00:47:14) - Sacred Space, Liturgy, and Memorial(00:54:40) - Correction, Discernment, and the Gospel(01:01:45) - Easter Blessings

    1 t. 3 min.
  6. 27. MAR.

    Wrath and Rescue: Saved Through Judgment - Episode 172

    We continue into the flood narrative by closely examining Genesis 6:17–18. What at first looks like a small textual unit turns out to be a concentrated picture of divine judgment, de-creation, preservation, and covenant. Verse 17 announces comprehensive destruction through the flood, while verse 18 sharply pivots toward preserved life, named persons, and covenantal continuity. Along the way, we ask how the flood helps us think about the wrath of God. Even though the word wrath does not appear in the passage, the narrative still gives us a foundational biblical picture of judgment. Rather than treating wrath as mere emotion or as a cold legal mechanism, this episode explores how Genesis presents judgment as both intentional divine action and a giving over of the world to its own corruption. This episode also traces the literary structure around Genesis 6:13–18, highlighting the oracle and instrument of death, the ark instructions, and the covenant promise. The flood is not only the means of destruction; it is also the means through which Noah and his household are preserved. That pattern then opens outward into Scripture’s larger story: the Red Sea, exile and remnant, Christ’s judgment-bearing faithfulness, and the New Testament’s baptismal use of Noah as a pattern of salvation through judgment. If covenant language has ever felt vague or overly “Christianese,” this episode works to make it concrete again. Covenant here is not an abstract theological idea. It is God’s answer to universal judgment, his commitment to preserve life through death-waters. On This Rock Biblical Theology Community:  https://on-this-rock.com/   Website: genesismarksthespot.com    Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/GenesisMarkstheSpot    Music credit: "Marble Machine" by Wintergatan Link to Wintergatan’s website: https://wintergatan.net/   Link to the original Marble Machine video by Wintergatan: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IvUU8joBb1Q&ab_channel=Wintergatan  Chapters (00:00:00) - Wrath and Genesis 6:17–18(00:04:18) - Judgment, preservation, and covenant(00:08:07) - Ark instruction inclusio(00:21:56) - Divine agency and the flood of waters(00:33:25) - All flesh, breath of life, and decreation(00:44:29) - The covenant turn in verse 18(00:51:19) - Ark and covenant: preservation through judgment(00:52:23) - Canonical trajectories: Noah, baptism, and salvation(00:59:29) - Allegiance and covenant, not mechanism(01:05:44) - Global flood myths and covenant(01:10:10) - Correction: Jesus and the Father’s wrath

    1 t. 11 min.
  7. 20. MAR.

    Where Have All the Arks Gone? - Episode 171

    In this episode, Carey takes a different approach to the question of Noah’s Ark’s location. Rather than trying to “solve” the mystery or defend a favorite site, this episode asks a more basic question: how should we weigh the evidence? Starting with Genesis 8:4 and the phrase “the mountains of Ararat,” we see that the biblical text gives a regional horizon, not a single named summit. From there, the discussion moves into historical geography, early tradition, Mount Judi and Mount Ararat as major contenders, the role of sacred geography and oral tradition, and how and why modern ark claims often rely on weak or poorly controlled evidence. This episode also connects the ark-location question to broader issues we’re exploring elsewhere: how traditions are preserved, how memory becomes attached to places, and why those same questions will matter for future work on global flood stories and comparative tradition history. Topics include: Why Mount Judi carries strong early traditional weight and why Mount Ararat became dominant in later imagination How the Epic of Gilgamesh and Mount Nisir fit into the discussion Why Durupınar, Ron Wyatt, and other modern claims should be approached skeptically How to think about provenance, chain of custody, independent verification, and evidential hierarchy Why “skepticism” is not unbelief, but disciplined critical thinking This is not an episode about forcing a final answer. It is about building a better framework for judging claims — one that respects the biblical text, takes early tradition seriously, and refuses to be carried away by sensationalism. On This Rock Biblical Theology Community:  https://on-this-rock.com/   Website: genesismarksthespot.com    Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/GenesisMarkstheSpot    Music credit: "Marble Machine" by Wintergatan Link to Wintergatan’s website: https://wintergatan.net/   Link to the original Marble Machine video by Wintergatan: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IvUU8joBb1Q&ab_channel=Wintergatan  Chapters (00:00:00) - Not the Same Old Question(00:05:29) - Oral Tradition and Sacred Geography(00:06:47) - The Mountains of Ararat(00:08:31) - How I Weigh the Evidence(00:15:41) - Verification, Outsiders, and Bad Science(00:24:17) - Ararat, Urartu, and the Biblical Frame(00:27:24) - Mount Ararat vs. Mount Judi(00:30:13) - Mount Nisir and ANE Flood Traditions(00:33:53) - Punching Up Mount Judi’s Case(00:36:24) - Why Mount Ararat Became Dominant(00:39:42) - Modern Ark Discovery Culture(00:42:32) - Durupınar(00:51:29) - Ararat Anomalies and Eyewitness Claims(00:52:33) - Nani?? NAMI and the “Wood Rooms” Claim(00:54:51) - Ron Wyatt and Sensationalism(00:59:31) - Why Finding the Ark Is So Hard

    1 t. 7 min.
  8. 13. MAR.

    Noah’s Ark: A Shelter in the Deep - Episode 170

    What exactly is Noah’s ark? In this episode, we examine the construction details in Genesis 6 and compare them with ancient Near Eastern flood traditions to see what the biblical text is and is not trying to do. We look at the Hebrew terminology, the ark’s dimensions and compartments, the puzzling “roof” or “window,” the use of pitch, and the striking lack of normal ship features like a mast, rudder, or sail. We also connect Noah’s ark with Moses’ basket and explore whether the ark functions as a kind of proto-sacred space—a divinely ordered vessel preserving life through chaos. Rather than treating Genesis as a technical blueprint, this episode focuses on the theological meaning of the ark and what it reveals about God’s judgment, mercy, and preserving presence. On This Rock Biblical Theology Community:  https://on-this-rock.com/   Website: genesismarksthespot.com    Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/GenesisMarkstheSpot    Music credit: "Marble Machine" by Wintergatan Link to Wintergatan’s website: https://wintergatan.net/   Link to the original Marble Machine video by Wintergatan: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IvUU8joBb1Q&ab_channel=Wintergatan  Chapters (00:00:00) - More Than a Boat(00:04:39) - Flood Parallels and Gilgamesh(00:09:43) - Genesis 6 and Ark Basics(00:10:52) - Moses’ Basket and Noah’s Ark(00:13:59) - Functional Creation and Ordered Space(00:17:02) - The Ark as Proto-Sacred Space(00:21:18) - The Meaning of Tevah(00:23:40) - What Is Gopher Wood?(00:27:35) - Rooms, Nests, and Compartments(00:31:19) - Pitch and Boundary Marking(00:35:06) - Dimensions and Seaworthiness(00:39:43) - Roof, Window, or Opening?(00:45:19) - The Door in Its Side and Three Decks(00:48:13) - ANE Boat Parallels(00:51:58) - Theological Meaning of the Ark

    1 t. 1 m.

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Raiding the ivory tower of biblical theology without ransacking our faith.

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