The Myrrhologist Podcast

The Testimony of Jesus: Genesis Through Revelation

Marissa Saint Luc Season 1 Episode 11

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This is a video about The Testimony of Jesus: Genesis Through Revelation
What if the Bible is not simply a collection of books—but one continuous testimony? In this special episode of The Myrrhologist Podcast, we walk through all 66 books of Scripture from Genesis to Revelation, following the story through the meanings of the names, Hebrew and Greek roots, covenant movements, prophetic themes, and the unfolding testimony of Jesus Christ. Beginning with Bereshit—“In the beginning”—we trace the formation of man, the fall, the promise of the Seed, the calling of a people, the rise and fall of kings, the cry of the prophets, the silence between covenants, and the arrival of the Messiah.

We explore Malachi as the hingepoint, the prophetic pause after the Old Testament, and the symbolism of Tav (ת)—the final letter associated with 400—viewed as a mark, seal, and ending point before fulfillment. From the wilderness to the throne, from promise to fulfillment, from the garden to Revelation’s unveiling, this episode asks one question:

What story have the Scriptures been telling all along?

And the answer echoes through every page: Jesus.

This is not a study of disconnected books. It is a journey through a breathed scroll. A testimony. A covenant story. A revelation of the One who stands at the center of it all.

“In the beginning…” to “Come, Lord Jesus.”
The scroll opens.
The Lamb is revealed.
And the story continues.

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SPEAKER_00

Welcome to the Mirologist Podcast. I'm your host, Marissa St. Luke. And today, we're stepping into the continuity of Scripture as one breathed testimony. The Scriptures declare that all scripture is God-breathed, which means God exhaled the breath of life. And when breath moves, it carries rhythm, a cadence, a sequence. And today I want you to hear the sound of him walking, moving through scripture, telling his testimony through the books, from Genesis to Revelation. So we're going to listen for that breath today. And this is not for casual listening. I really want you to take this revelation in. So if you're busy doing something, I want to invite you to pause and to give this moment reverence. Because we're about to take a stroll through the mind of Christ. And I'll be honest, it's a little difficult right now to keep my composure because I've been holding this back and I'm just awestruck. I just pray that this strikes your heart to burn just a little longer, to linger just a little deeper, and to see him a little clearer, to know, to really know that the truth that we hold on to as believers keeps being affirmed, and nothing our bridegroom prepared for us was in vain. Many approach this book as an instruction only or moral framework as principles to live by. And while it does instruct, that is not its center. This is a revelation of a person. All of the accounts, all of these names, all these storylines, they're not disconnected narratives. They are witnesses. And even when people speak about the end, reducing it to conflict over land, to nations as geography. We have to let Scripture define its own language. In the New Testament, it reveals that in Christ, a new reality has emerged. The words for nations is ethni. It speaks of peoples, identities, groups drawn from humanity. And what we see is this: God is not reclaiming territory, He is redeeming a people. This does not erase the physical, but it reveals that the deeper work is always covenantal before it is geographical. Everything is being brought into alignment under Christ. And Scripture says that He is the only one in whom all things hold together. This is not an unfinished effort. This is a finished work being revealed. And there is something else that cannot be ignored. Every worldview, every belief system, at some point must answer the same question. Who is Jesus? Some say he was a prophet. Some say he was brought to bring Christ consciousness, or he was just a wise man, a moral reformer. Some called him a rebel. The religious leaders accused him, even saying that he operated in the spirit of Beelzebub, who is the Lord of the flies. It's a name that's used for the ruler of demons. Every other idea of who this man is becomes an accusation. He embodied holiness, confronting systems that could no longer recognize God in their midst. And yet, watch his posture. Even Jesus, though fully aligned with the Father, submitted himself to the order of God. He comes to John the Immerser, standing in the Jordan, not in a temple, but in a wilderness. John was the herald, the announcer of a new order. John was the voice in the wilderness, the forerunner who was crying out to come out of dead religion, come out of man-made systems. His mission was proclaiming that the kingdom of heaven was at hand. The king has one. That's the gospel. He was saying, prepare your heart because the one who carries the kingdom is no longer hidden. And he wasn't building a movement, he was preparing a people. And Jesus humbled himself and steps into that water to fulfill all righteousness, to announce right standing. This is a governmental inauguration. This is kingship being revealed. And he takes the weight of the kingdom upon his shoulders in a river. And he enters submission to reveal the pattern of the kingdom. And what happens after? The heavens open, the spirit descends, and the father speaks. And then he does something no ruler has ever done. He overcame the kingdoms of this world by laying down his own life. His victory did not look like Rome. It looked like punishment beaten to a cross and then a resurrection. And because he overcame this way, his kingdom cannot be shaken. Because death itself is the greatest enemy of every earthly kingdom. In the natural, kingdoms are preserved through succession, through power, through force. But this kingdom is secured through death and established through resurrection. And because of that, it cannot be overthrown. The kingship of Christ does not pass through fragile lineage. It stands on indestructible life. And that's why this story matters. So I want you to listen with ears to hear what the Spirit is saying. And I just want to pray before we unveil this mystery. So, Father, we just come before you with reverence for your word. We thank you for bestowing a kingdom on us that can never be shaken and for handing us the instruction manual to walk in your will and to follow the path that you let us seek and find. As we are all on separate journeys, encountering various trials that produce testimonies, they all point back to one. And we thank you that we now have the gift of the Holy Spirit to be overcomers through this tribulation of confusion and pressure. Lord, we are ready to rise up in resurrection power, to be a witness in this earth. We are the ones that desire ears to hear. Father, we just ask that you would renew our minds. Lord, you spoke these words across all timelines. Your voice echoes to us as we walk out the remnant of mustard seed faith in this last generation. That your voice would stretch far and wide, that your name would be lifted up higher than ever before. As knowledge increases, let it be made manifest that there isn't just knowledge of good and evil, but there is only one truth, and that there is healing in the leaves from the tree of life. Holy Spirit, we thank you for bringing us up through the door. You lead us into all truth, and we just thank you now for opening the eyes of our understanding. You are the one who breathed these scriptures into existence. You drop the burden of the Lord on each vessel to assist you author this text. You preserve the testimony of Jesus Christ. So I humbly offer this work as a sacrifice of praise. All this research and intention and leading by you to illuminate your word as we walk through it. Let every sequence uncover your design. Jesus, you are the center of the scroll. You are the one every line is pointing to, the beginning and the end, the author and the fulfillment. Let this teaching produce understanding that leads to obedience and the revelation that leads to falling more in love with you. Amen. So once upon a time, there was a beginning. Genesis, Barashit. It begins with the head. God creates, light pierces darkness, a man is formed from dust. Woman is drawn from his side. Breath enters the vessel, but sin enters, and the arrow misses the mark. Creation fractures. Yet even there, God speaks a promise, a seed, Exodus, which means names. God calls a people by identity and brings them out of bondage. And Leviticus means he calls them near and teaches them how to approach the holy presence of God. Numbers means in the wilderness. The people are counted, tested, and formed in the desert. Deuteronomy means words. God gives words again. Words that shape, test, and define. Joshua means the Lord is salvation. They enter the promised land because salvation belongs to the Lord. Judges means to judge and to govern. God raises up deliverers, but the cycle reveals itself when they step out of God's water. The people drift. Then you have Ruth, which means friend or companion. In hidden faithfulness, redemption begins quietly. And then we have 1 Samuel, which means heard by God. The cry of the people is heard, and a prophet rises. 2nd Samuel, heard by God. David's throne is established, but even kings must bow before covenant. Then we have 1 Kings, authority rises. 2nd Kings, authority falls, because human kings cannot preserve what God governs alone. 1 Chronicles means the words of the days. So the story is remembered. And second chronicles, the words of the days. The story is recorded again, so the testimony cannot be forgotten. And this is a second witness. Then we see Ezra, which means help. A remnant returns. And then we have Nehemiah, the Lord comforts. The walls are rebuilt. Then Esther means hidden and concealed. Even when his name is not seen, his hand is preserving. And then the scroll turns inward. We have Job, which means the afflicted one. Suffering speaks before answers arrive. And then Psalms, which is praises. Worship rises in every human condition. And then Proverbs, which means wisdom sayings. Truth is applied to daily life. And then Ecclesiastes, the assembler, the gatherer gathers thoughts, questions, and the search for meaning under the sun. Then Song of Songs, the greatest song. Covenant love breaks through. Then come the prophets. Isaiah also means the Lord of salvation. Salvation is promised. Jeremiah means the Lord will rise. The weeping prophet carries the word of uprooting and rebuilding. Lamentations means how. The broken city cries, how did this happen? And in Ezekiel, God strengthens. God strengthens what exile tried to destroy. And then Daniel, God is my judge. Empires rise, beasts appear, but heaven is still ruling. And then Hosea, which means salvation. God loves an unfaithful people and calls them back. And then Joel, the Lord is God. The Spirit is promised to be poured out. Then we have Amos, which means burden, a weight placed on a man to speak what others refuse to face. This word presses, it exposes, it demands a response. And then we get to Obadiah, which means the servant of the Lord, a life fully yielded to God's authority. And through that servant, pride is brought low because what exalts itself cannot stand before him. Then we have Jonah, which means the dove. Mercy moves toward the undeserving, even through a reluctant messenger. Then we have Micah, which means who is like God? The question rises, who is like him in justice and mercy? And then Nahem, which means comfort. Comfort comes through the downfall of oppression. And then Habakkuk, which means embrace and wrestle. Faith wrestles until it can say, Yet I will rejoice. And then Zephaniah, the Lord hides. Judgment comes, but a hidden remnant is preserved. Then Haggai means my feast. The call returns to rebuild the house. And then Zechariah, the Lord remembers. God remembers his covenant and points to the coming king. And then Malachi, my messenger. And the final voice before the silence, a hinge point between two covenants, Malachi speaks, and heaven closes its mouth and points to the one who fulfills it. Now I want you to see something amazing. In between the Old Testament and the New Testament, for 400 years there's silence. In Hebrew, 400 is Tav, the final letter. It's a mark, a sign, and a cross-shaped ending. So watch this. The Old Testament closes on the first Tav. We have the first cross. Everything spoken, everything promised is now brought into completion. Then silence. Four hundred years. Second Tav. Second cross. A pause like a sealed scroll carried through generations. The message already delivered. The decree is already spoken. And the question rises: who is worthy to open the scroll? And when the story starts moving again, the third top appears on a hill called Calvary. So now we got three crosses standing. A living picture. The first of what was spoken in the Old Testament, the second, 400 years of silence, which was hidden, and then the third Tav, what is fulfilled. And at the center is Jesus Christ, the one who says it is finished. And we can see that all of it held together on the center cross as Jesus steps in as the word himself. And the scroll opens to reveal the book of Matthew, which means the gift of God. The king arrives, fulfilling promise, and then Mark, that is associated with hammer. The servant moves with urgency, breaking what must fall. Then we have Luke, that means light. Light comes to the outsider, the poor, the broken, the overlooked. And then John means the Lord is gracious. The word becomes flesh, and grace is seen in fullness. Acts mean actually acts of deed. What Jesus began, the Spirit continues through his people. And then the letters form the church. Romans means strength. The gospel is established in power and righteousness. And then 1 Corinthians means adorned. A gifted but broken people are corrected. And then 2 Corinthians adorned again. Weakness becomes the place where glory is revealed. And then Galatians means a wandering people. The church is called back from bondage into freedom. And then Ephesians, which means desirable or beloved. A people are seated in Christ and called into unity. And Philippians means lovers. A joy remains even in chains. Colossians means great or fullness. So Christ is revealed as supreme over all things. And 1 Thessalonians means victory, so hope is strengthened. And 2 Thessalonians is victory again. Endurance is strengthened again. 1 Timothy means honoring God. The household of God is set in order. And then 2 Timothy is honoring God. The charge is guarded to the end. Titus means honorable. So order and good works are established. And Philimon is loving. This book is about restoring a brother. And Hebrews are those who cross over. The people cross from shadow into substance. James means supplanter or the one that follows. So faith must move. Hearing must become obedience. And then we have 1 Peter, which means stone. A suffering people are strengthened. And then 2 Peter, which is a stone. The church is warned to remain steady. And then we have 1 John, which means the Lord is gracious. And then 2 John, the Lord is gracious. And we see where truth must be guarded. And then in 3 John we can see that faithfulness is honored. And then we have Jude, that means praise. The church is called to contend for the faith. And then finally, revelation. Unveiling. The covering is removed. The lamb is seen. Babylon falls, and the garden becomes a city, and God dwells with his people forever. Now let's read that without the names of the books. Once upon a time, in the beginning, names were given, and he called them into the wilderness. Through words he spoke that the Lord is salvation. Judges rose up, and this companion was heard by God and heard again. Kings were established, kings rose, and kings fell. Yet the days were recorded and recorded again. There was help, there was comfort, even when he seemed hidden. Praise rose, wisdom spoke, the voice gathered, and the greatest love broke through it all. And through it all, the Lord is salvation. The Lord will raise. How the people cried. God strengthens. God is the judge. God is salvation. Still, the Lord is God. A burden was carried. A servant was sent. A dove prophesied. And a question arose, who is like God? And comfort answered, but the wrestling remained. At times it felt like he hid, yet the call returned. The Lord remembered, and he sent his messenger before the silence. A marked pause, and then the supplanter follows. Wandering people are called back, and victory comes. And victory comes again. What was broken is now restored. Strength is established. Then the hammer strikes. The gift of God appears. Light breaks in. And now it moves. Through action, through the spirit, through breath, a people are called. A people are formed. A people learn to love. They cross over. Honor is restored. And honor is restored again. A stone is put in place, and then a stone is going on top of it. A people who are set firm. Praise remains. And God gives grace and God gives grace again, and then God gives grace a third time, established as a perfect witness. Until finally nothing is hidden. The unveiling of Jesus Christ. So all of the names in order have been telling us all along that the Lord is salvation revealed in Jesus Christ. And this bears witness to prove it. This is the testimony of Jesus. And I pray that this has left you in awe of the author and the finisher of our faith who stepped through time to reveal himself and to awaken something in you that refuses to burn out. You've been listening to the Mirologist Podcast, brought to you by Ahava Overflow Counseling, where we believe that Jesus is not only the answer, he is the key that unlocks every part of your body, your soul, and your spirit. And if this stirred something in you, I would ask you to subscribe, turn on these notifications, and share this with someone who is ready to see the scriptures through the breath of the Holy Spirit. You can find more at marissaintluke.com. Until next time, I pray that the hand of God would comfort, heal, and protect you so your life will reach the heights of becoming a testimony, a flame to a world that is still searching for the one true living, still breathing, the one who is close to the brokenhearted, none other than Jesus Christ. You've come and burned me with a kiss. And my