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The Everlasting God (El Olam)

An episode of the Reformed Thinking podcast, hosted by Edison Wu, titled "The Everlasting God (El Olam)" was published on July 26, 2025 and runs 37 minutes.

July 26, 2025 ·37m · Reformed Thinking

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Deep Dive into God as El OlamThe New Testament (NT) profoundly receives and intensifies the theme of God's eternality, demonstrating both continuity with the Old Testament and a climactic Christological focus. While not using the specific Hebrew term "El Olam," the NT employs equivalent concepts and phrases to convey God's timelessness, integrating this understanding into a robust Trinitarian confession.The NT does not dilute classical Jewish monotheism but rather subsumes it into a more comprehensive understanding of God's eternal glory, with the entire biblical storyline operating with El Olam as an "immovable fulcrum." Pauline writings, for instance, explicitly connect God's eternality to the gospel, identifying it as the revelation of the "eternal God" and praising the "King of the ages, immortal, invisible." The permanence of the gospel's benefits rests on "transactions older than creation itself."The most significant development is the direct application of eternality to Jesus Christ. Jesus' assertion, "Before Abraham was, I AM," provocatively claims "shared divine timelessness." The "eternal Word" entered time without surrendering His timelessness, and the language celebrating YHWH's changeless eternity is applied directly to Christ in Hebrews, safeguarding His capacity to secure an "everlasting covenant." Christ's resurrection further seals this, demonstrating His "indestructible life," leading to a believer's "eternal security grounded in eternal being" through union with Him.The NT also presents a robust Trinitarian confession, where Father, Son, and Spirit equally inhabit eternal glory, understood as their "shared life." Furthermore, the NT consistently affirms God's eternal decree and foreknowledge, ensuring that history's unfolding, including events like the crucifixion and final judgment, is the "temporal execution of an immutable, eternal decision." This divine eternality culminates in the Book of Revelation, which concludes the biblical narrative with acclamations to Him who "lives forever and ever."Reformed Theologian GPT: https://chat.openai.com/g/g-XXwzX1gnv-reformed-theologianhttps://buymeacoffee.com/edi2730

Deep Dive into God as El Olam


The New Testament (NT) profoundly receives and intensifies the theme of God's eternality, demonstrating both continuity with the Old Testament and a climactic Christological focus. While not using the specific Hebrew term "El Olam," the NT employs equivalent concepts and phrases to convey God's timelessness, integrating this understanding into a robust Trinitarian confession.

The NT does not dilute classical Jewish monotheism but rather subsumes it into a more comprehensive understanding of God's eternal glory, with the entire biblical storyline operating with El Olam as an "immovable fulcrum." Pauline writings, for instance, explicitly connect God's eternality to the gospel, identifying it as the revelation of the "eternal God" and praising the "King of the ages, immortal, invisible." The permanence of the gospel's benefits rests on "transactions older than creation itself."

The most significant development is the direct application of eternality to Jesus Christ. Jesus' assertion, "Before Abraham was, I AM," provocatively claims "shared divine timelessness." The "eternal Word" entered time without surrendering His timelessness, and the language celebrating YHWH's changeless eternity is applied directly to Christ in Hebrews, safeguarding His capacity to secure an "everlasting covenant." Christ's resurrection further seals this, demonstrating His "indestructible life," leading to a believer's "eternal security grounded in eternal being" through union with Him.

The NT also presents a robust Trinitarian confession, where Father, Son, and Spirit equally inhabit eternal glory, understood as their "shared life." Furthermore, the NT consistently affirms God's eternal decree and foreknowledge, ensuring that history's unfolding, including events like the crucifixion and final judgment, is the "temporal execution of an immutable, eternal decision." This divine eternality culminates in the Book of Revelation, which concludes the biblical narrative with acclamations to Him who "lives forever and ever."

Reformed Theologian GPT: https://chat.openai.com/g/g-XXwzX1gnv-reformed-theologian

https://buymeacoffee.com/edi2730

Contemporary Conversations Joseph & Nick Local Ministers having conversations on modern challenges that affect the local Church and our Christian walk. Using Scripture and Reformed thinking to navigate these waterways in a Biblically sound way. Axe to the Root with Bojidar Marinov | Reconstructionist Radio Reformed Network Reconstructionist Radio | Reformed Christian Podcast In theory, all of us know our orthodoxy. We know about the Trinity, about our redemption. We can speak about our solas, and we know our TULIP. But then, when most of us go out in the world and meet reality, we still view it and assess it through pagan eyes. That’s because our modern theology has become abstract, limited to the world of our personal faith, and divorced from God’s reality. Bojidar Marinov’s Axe to the Root Podcast will help you turn your abstract theology into a relevant, applied theology, by thinking covenantally about every area of life, and about every practical issue in today’s world. This is a production of Recon Radio. My Path to Atheism by Annie Besant (1847 - 1933) LibriVox My Path to Atheism is a remarkable document in many ways, not least that it was written by a woman in Victorian England, not the most open free-thinking of societies, especially for women at that time. It needed a remarkable woman to write such a revolutionary and to 19th century minds, heretical document in a society where the Church had such a stronghold. Besant herself was originally married to a clergyman, but her increasingly anti-religious views and writings led to a legal separation. She went on to become a member of the National Secular Society and thence to co-edit the National Reformer, which put forth ideas on revolutionary ideas at the time such as trades unions, national education, birth control and so on. In 1877 Besant published this book 'My Path to Atheism' which was compiled from a series of lectures in which she surgically dissects the basic tenets of Christianity. As one reads the chapters, one can follow the evolution of her ideas from Theism to Atheism, ending up Reformed Forum Reformed Forum Reformed Forum supports the church in presenting every person mature in Christ (Colossians 1:28) by providing Reformed theological resources to pastors, scholars, and anyone who desires to grow in their understanding of Scripture and the theology that faithfully summarizes its teachings.
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