Guest: Dr. Michael LeFebvre. Genesis 8 suddenly starts sounding like a calendar. Specific days. Specific months. A sequence that feels unusually precise for a biblical narrative.But what if those dates aren’t just about tracking time?In this episode, Michael LeFebvre invites us to see these details in a completely different light. The dates in the flood story may actually line up with the agricultural calendar of ancient Israel—the rhythms of planting, waiting, and harvest that would have shaped everyday life.That opens up a much bigger question: are these dates meant to be recognized?We explore how the flood narrative might be echoing familiar seasonal patterns, how ancient listeners could have heard these markers in relation to their own lived experience, and how the story itself may be structured around the cycles that sustain life.Rather than reading the dates as mere chronology, this conversation suggests they function as signals—connecting the story of the flood to the world of agriculture, renewal, and re-creation.Genesis 8 gives us the clues. The question is whether we know how to read them.If you’ve ever wondered why this story suddenly becomes so specific, this episode offers a compelling answer: it may be speaking the language of the land itself.The conversation is based around Dr. LeFebvre's monograph, The Liturgy of Creation : Understanding Calendars in Old Testament Context (2019)
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Gen 11: The Tower of Babel and the Scattering of the World
Gen 10 : The Table of Nations: Why the Genealogies Matter
Gen 9: What Did Ham Do… and Why Is Canaan Cursed?
Gen 7 : The Flood: The Bible vs. Mesopotamia
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