Tag: faith

  • The Chosen – Season 3 – Episode 7 Rewind

    The episode opens up with people celebrating a Jewish holiday called Purim, but not everyone is happy. Purim should’ve been a party. Music, dancing, food, laughter—the whole community buzzing with celebration. But under all that noise, something is off. Simon is carrying a storm inside him, Eden’s miscarriage weighing on him like a stone he can’t put down. And Andrew and Philip? They’ve just returned from the Decapolis looking like men who accidentally set a small village on fire.

    Andrew and Philip went to the Decapolis to help at Leandor’s request. Noble mission. Good intentions. But somewhere between the travel and the teaching, they dropped the parable of the Great Banquet into the middle of a cultural minefield. The Jews were offended because it sounded like gentiles were being invited into God’s story. The gentiles were offended because it sounded like they were only invited as an afterthought. In short, Andrew and Philip managed to upset everyone.

    But Jesus doesn’t scold them. He doesn’t sigh or shake His head or send them to the corner to think about what they’ve done. Instead, He tells them this is part of the process. Ministry is messy. Growth is messy. People are messy. So, He gathers the disciples and says, “We’re going back.” John stays behind to wait for Simon—much to John’s frustration—until Jesus reminds him that people in pain need presence, not impatience.

    Meanwhile, Matthew has his own moment of vulnerability. Mary finds prayer tassels hidden in his home, and Matthew tells her a story not found in scripture—about an old man who took on his family’s crushing debt so the Romans wouldn’t destroy them. The man was headed for a prison camp for the rest of his life, sacrificing himself so his family could breathe free. Before he left, he gave Matthew something more precious than wealth: his prayer tassels. A symbol of God’s power, the strength of prayer, and the stubborn, unshakeable importance of faith.

    Back with the disciples, everyone can see Simon is unraveling. He’s distant, distracted, brittle. And Jesus quietly tells John that the success of the entire trip depends on Simon. Eventually, Simon breaks open and tells John the truth: Eden miscarried while he was away, and the damage was so severe she may never carry a child. His grief has curdled into anger. He blames Jesus. “How could He let this happen?” John doesn’t offer clichés. He simply reminds Simon that Jesus never promised ease. He promised Himself—and sometimes that means walking through pain, not around it.

    When they finally reach the Decapolis, a deaf man with a speech impediment is brought to Jesus. In front of the crowd, Jesus heals him. Word spreads fast. Religious leaders gather. Crowds swell. Tension rises. Something big is stirring.

    If you want to dig deeper into the scripture behind all of this—the parables, the healing, the grief, the faith—check out the free study guide attached. It’ll take you further into the story than the episode alone ever could.

  • The Chosen – Season 3 – Episode 6 Rewind

    The episode kicks off with a jolt: Pontius Pilate’s wife bolts awake from a nightmare involving Jesus and a snake. It’s the kind of dream that hangs in the air like smoke—unsettling, symbolic, and clearly pointing toward the moment when she’ll later warn Pilate during Jesus’ trial. The show isn’t subtle here, and honestly, it shouldn’t be. This is foreshadowing with a spotlight.

    Meanwhile, the slow‑burn tension between Mary and Tamar finally erupts into an honest conversation. Mary calls out Tamar for being bold, loud, and a little too confident for her taste. But as the layers peel back, it becomes painfully obvious that Mary’s real struggle isn’t Tamar at all—it’s herself. She’s still dragging around the weight of her past like a chain she thinks she deserves. Tamar, in her wonderfully unfiltered way, refuses to let her stay there. She pushes Mary toward the truth: forgiveness isn’t something you admire from a distance. You have to step into it.

    Then the episode shifts gears and gathers everyone for a wave of Jesus‑powered moments.

    First, Zee is confronted by the very Zealots who once expected him to kill for the cause. Instead, he tells them the Messiah has arrived—and he’s already following Him. It’s a mic‑drop moment for a man who once lived by the blade.

    Next, Gaius shows up expecting to enforce Quintus’ orders and break up the tent city. But something in him softens. Instead of barking commands, he starts helping people. The Roman with a rigid exterior suddenly looks…human.

    Then two disciples of John the Baptist arrive with a question straight from John’s jail cell: “Are you the one who is to come, or should we look for another?” You can almost hear the impatience in the subtext. Jesus doesn’t argue. He simply turns, heals, restores, and lets the miracles answer for Him. John’s disciples don’t leave with a theory—they leave with evidence.

    But the episode doesn’t end on a triumphant note. It ends with Eden finally revealing the heartbreak she’s been carrying alone: she had a miscarriage while Simon was away. Simon’s reaction is devastating. He’s shattered, and the scene leaves the air heavy with grief. This storyline isn’t found in Scripture, and the show doesn’t claim it is. But it does explore the emotional cost of discipleship in a way that feels painfully real.

    If you want to dig deeper into the themes, tensions, and biblical connections woven through this episode, check out the attached study guide.

  • The Chosen – Season 3 – Episode 5 Rewind

    Jesus is back on the move, and He’s not easing into anything. The moment He steps into town, the atmosphere shifts. Jairus, a respected synagogue leader, comes running with desperation written all over him. His twelve‑year‑old daughter is slipping away, and every doctor has thrown up their hands. Jairus is clinging to one last hope: if he can just get Jesus to her in time.

    But here’s where the episode gets deliciously layered. While Jairus is scrambling to find Jesus, Nathaniel and Thaddeus cross paths with a woman who has been bleeding for twelve long years. Twelve years of pain, shame, isolation, and being labeled unclean. And suddenly we’ve got two stories, two crises, two people reaching for Jesus… and the number twelve stamped on both. That’s not an accident. That’s a divine wink.

    As Jesus heads toward Jairus’ home, Luke tells us the crowd was pressing in on Him. Picture it: people shoulder to shoulder, craning their necks, trying to get close enough to see the miracle-worker everyone’s talking about. And in that crush of bodies, the woman slips in behind Jesus. She doesn’t dare touch His skin — she knows the rules, she knows what people think of her — but she reaches for the very edge of His garment. The lowest part. The part that drags in the dust.

    And instantly, she’s healed.

    Jesus stops. Power has gone out of Him, and He knows exactly who it went to. When she steps forward trembling, He doesn’t scold her, shame her, or remind her of the law. He calls her daughter. After twelve years of being untouchable, unwanted, and unseen, the Messiah looks her in the eyes and claims her as His own. In the show, He even touches her face — a simple gesture that carries the weight of a thousand hugs she never received. It’s tender, personal, and deeply restorative.

    And then Jesus keeps moving toward Jairus’ house… only to be met with the news no parent ever wants to hear. The girl is gone. Too late. But Jesus isn’t rattled. He tells them not to fear, only believe. Death doesn’t intimidate Him. He walks into that house, takes the girl by the hand, and brings her back to life. Twelve years old, restored in an instant.

    The episode wraps with a burst of joy — the disciples splashing around in the water like a bunch of brothers on a summer afternoon. The woman who was healed heads to the fresh water for her cleansing ritual, and Jesus and the disciples join her. Technically they’re supposed to, since they touched her… but let’s be honest, they’re also just having a great time. You can almost hear the laughter echoing off the shoreline. It’s a glimpse of the kind of everyday joy Jesus must have shared with His friends.

    Now that your heart is warmed up and your imagination is buzzing, dive into the attached Bible study. Watch the scriptures come alive, compare the episode with the text, and reflect on what Jesus is revealing through these intertwined stories of faith, healing, and identity.

  • The Chosen – Season 3 – Episode 4 Rewind

    The episode opens like a highlight reel from the disciples’ two‑by‑two mission trip. They’re coming back with dust on their feet, fire in their eyes, and stories that sound almost too wild to be real. They healed the sick. They cast out demons. They preached the kingdom. They taught the Lord’s Prayer to people who had never heard anything like it. And yet, for all the power they carried, most of them admit they didn’t fully understand what was happening. They just knew one thing: Jesus was working through them.

    Back in Capernaum, Eden meets a woman named Veronica who lets her in on a secret. There’s a hidden spring nearby where the women can wash clothes and gather water without the usual crowds. It’s a small moment, but it feels like a breath of fresh air for Eden, who has been carrying more than she lets on.

    Meanwhile, Jairus and Yussif are deep in conversation. Shmuel has demanded details about the Sermon on the Mount, and that request forces them to talk openly about Jesus. Jairus finally admits he’s been reading the letters Yussif shared with him. And then he says it plainly: he believes Jesus might be more than a rabbi or a prophet. He believes in Him.

    But belief doesn’t erase fear. Jairus’ daughter has fallen sick, and he quietly asks Yussif if God is punishing him for following Jesus. It’s a heartbreaking question, and one many of us have whispered in our own moments of panic. But God is not a punisher waiting to strike. Jairus is looking at his situation through a narrow lens, and he has no idea how much more is unfolding behind the scenes. The next episode will show just how far God is willing to go for a father who dares to believe.

    Then there’s Simon. His marriage feels like it’s unraveling thread by thread, and he doesn’t know how to stop it. He goes for a walk to clear his head and runs into Gaius, of all people. Simon confesses he’s at an impasse — stuck between what he’s done and what he can’t undo. He doesn’t even know why Eden is upset, mostly because he hasn’t slowed down long enough to ask her.

    Gaius gives him simple advice: say, “You’re right. I am sorry.” It’s not a magic formula, but it’s a start. And it points to something deeper. We all hit impasses. We all wish we could go back and rewrite the past. But the only way forward is repentance — honest, humble, open‑handed repentance. That’s where redemption begins. Not in perfection, but in turning back toward the one we’ve hurt and the One who heals.

    Dive into the attached study guide to go deeper into the episode.

  • The Chosen – Season 3 – Episode 3 Rewind

    Who knew an episode could feel like a homecoming, a holiday celebration, and a showdown on a cliff all at once? While the disciples are out on their two‑by‑two mission announcing the Kingdom of God, Jesus heads back to Nazareth—His hometown, His childhood streets, His old stomping grounds. And The Chosen doesn’t waste a second before pulling us into His past.

    The episode opens with a flashback of Jesus as a toddler, then later as a young boy working with Joseph. Joseph gives Him a family heirloom—a bit and bridle said to date all the way back to Moses and the Exodus. Passed down from generation to generation, it’s a symbol of heritage and hope. And while this detail isn’t from scripture, the show clearly wants us to tuck it away for later seasons.

    Back in the present, Jesus spends time with Mary and reconnects with old friends—Lazarus, Mary, and Martha. This is our very first introduction to the trio who will become some of His closest companions. And what timing: Nazareth is buzzing with the celebration of Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year. Jesus joins right in, sharing food, laughter, and memories with the people who watched Him grow up.

    But then comes the moment everyone in Nazareth has been waiting for: Jesus is asked to read at the synagogue. He begins with authority and grace, and the crowd is captivated. For a moment, it feels like a hometown triumph. Then everything shifts.

    The people want proof. Not faith, not trust—proof. They want the same miracles they heard He performed in Capernaum. They want a sign on demand. And when Jesus refuses to play the hometown‑hero magician, the mood turns fast.

    Jesus reminds them of a hard truth: no prophet is accepted in his hometown. Then He brings up two stories they definitely didn’t want to hear—God providing for a Gentile widow in Zarephath through Elijah, and God healing the Gentile commander Naaman through Elisha. These were moments when God’s mercy reached beyond Israel, and the crowd is furious that Jesus dares to mention them.

    Their anger boils over. They drive Him out of town, up to the edge of a cliff, ready to throw Him off. It’s one of the most dramatic moments in the Gospels—and one that rarely gets talked about. But scripture records it clearly. And then comes the miracle hidden in plain sight: Jesus simply walks away. Through the crowd. Untouched. Unstoppable. Because it wasn’t the place, and it wasn’t the time.

    God’s protection is unmistakable. Their rage couldn’t overpower His purpose.

    If you want to dig deeper into the scriptures behind this scene, check out the study attached. It’s always powerful to trace these moments back to the Bible itself. The show brings the story to life, but the Word anchors it in truth.

  • The Chosen – Season 3 – Episode 2 Rewind

    Crowds who heard the Sermon on the Mount didn’t just go home inspired—they packed up their belongings, marched to the outskirts of Capernaum, and set up a full-blown tent city. Think of it as an impromptu revival mixed with a neighborhood campout. People were hungry for more teaching from Jesus, and they weren’t going anywhere until they heard it.

    Of course, nothing attracts Roman attention faster than a large group of people gathering without permission. The disciples noticed the swelling crowd and immediately imagined Rome assuming the worst. But Rome wasn’t worried about a rebellion. Rome was worried about money. Quintus, ever the opportunist, simply redrew the city borders so the entire tent city fell under taxable territory. Problem solved—from Rome’s perspective, anyway.

    While all that political maneuvering was happening, Simon and Eden finally had a moment to breathe and be together. After so much time apart, their reunion feels warm and overdue. Simon even shares his desire to start a family, which lights Eden up. She admits she was angry during his absence, but she held onto Jesus’ words to her: “He sees her.” That reminder carried her through the loneliness.

    Matthew, meanwhile, had his own emotional mountain to climb. After Jesus’ teaching on reconciliation, he went to his parents to apologize for the pain he caused them. But then something unexpected happened—they apologized too. They confessed their regret for rejecting him and told him they were proud he was following Jesus. Matthew went in hoping to make things right, and instead discovered that his obedience to Jesus had softened their hearts as well. It’s a powerful reminder that our steps of faith can ripple farther than we ever imagine.

    Soon after, the disciples gather around Jesus to hear what comes next. Jesus reveals His plan to send them out two by two to proclaim the kingdom of God. They won’t just be preaching—they’ll be healing the sick, casting out demons, and announcing the arrival of God’s reign to every Jewish community they encounter. It’s a bold mission, and Jesus trusts them with it.

    But the episode ends on a deeply personal moment. Little James finally voices the question he’s been carrying: how can he be sent out to heal others when he himself remains unhealed? His limp, his pain—his thorn—feels like a contradiction. Jesus responds with tenderness and clarity. Little James’ faithfulness in suffering is itself a testimony. His endurance, his praise, his trust—these shine just as brightly as any miracle. He doesn’t need to be healed to believe, and his story will speak to people who are walking through their own pain.

    If you’re ready to go deeper, open the attached Bible study guide. It’s free, and it’s a great way to explore the scriptures behind this episode. Let’s sit with the words of Jesus and see how they shape our understanding, our faith, and our lives.

  • The Chosen – Season 3 – Episode 1 Rewind

    Well, we all knew this moment was coming, but it finally happened: Jesus officially invites Judas Iscariot to join the disciple squad. And let’s be honest—every time Judas steps into the frame, there’s this little voice in the back of our minds whispering, “Oh no… here we go.” But for now, the Twelve are complete, the team is assembled, and Jesus steps up to deliver one of the most iconic teachings in all of human history: the Sermon on the Mount.

    Jesus launches into the sermon, and the episode gives us a highlight reel of some of the most challenging, heart-exposing teachings ever spoken. He walks through the “you have heard it said… but I say to you” commands—anger, lust, oaths, retaliation, loving your enemies. Then He shifts into treasures on earth, anxiety, judging others, and finally the unforgettable image of the wise man building his house on the rock instead of the sand. If you haven’t revisited the full sermon lately, take a moment to read Matthew 5:1–7:27. It’s worth every minute.

    After the sermon, the crowd is buzzing. People can’t stop talking about the authority in Jesus’ voice. Not charisma. Not theatrics. Authority. The kind that makes you rethink your entire life in a single afternoon.

    We also meet a new character this episode: Joanna. She may seem like a small addition now, but she’s going to become a significant supporter of Jesus’ ministry. Keep an eye on her—there’s more coming.

    Meanwhile, two disciples feel the weight of Jesus’ teaching and decide it’s time to make things right.

    Andrew heads to Mary’s house to apologize for the harsh words he threw at her when fear got the best of him. He admits he was wrong, and Mary reveals something heartbreaking—no one has ever apologized to her before. Andrew’s humility becomes a healing moment for them both.

    Matthew, on the other hand, walks straight into one of the most emotional confrontations of the season. He returns home, expecting the same rejection he received years ago when his father declared he had no son and even sat Shiva to mourn him. But this time, something has changed. His father opens the door, looks at him, and calls him “son.” It’s a moment of reconciliation that feels almost too good to be true—and yet exactly like something Jesus’ teachings would inspire.

    After all this, Jesus gathers the disciples and tells them they’re taking a short break. They’ll split up for a couple of days, then regroup. Before they go, He prays over them using the words of Psalm 3, covering them with truth and protection as they head out.

    If you want to go deeper into the Sermon on the Mount—what’s biblical, what’s creative interpretation, and how to actually live out these teachings—join me in the attached study guide. We’ll walk through the scriptures behind the scenes of The Chosen and explore how these ancient words still shape our lives today.

  • House of David – Season 2 – Episode 8 Rewind

    Saul finally learns the truth he’s been dreading: David isn’t just a talented warrior or a rising star in Israel—he’s the anointed one. And Saul does not take this news well! He hurls a spear straight at David’s chest. It misses, but only because David moves like a man who’s been dodging spears his whole life. A fight breaks out, Ishvi jumps in, and the whole scene feels like the royal family has officially crossed the point of no return.

    David bolts to Michal, knowing Saul won’t stop until he’s dead. But the moment he tells her he’s been anointed by Samuel, everything shifts. Michal feels blindsided—hurt that he kept something so massive from her. She loves David, but she also loves her father, and the show leans into that tension beautifully. She won’t run with David, but she will help him escape. Out the window he goes, while she stages a fake “David” in the bed.

    David flees to Samuel, and their conversation becomes the emotional heart of the episode. David feels abandoned, hunted, and unsure of what comes next. Samuel gives him three truths that land with weight: he is never truly alone because God is with him; he must learn to be still if he wants to hear God; and a life of serving the Lord is rarely the easy road. These lines feel like they were written for every believer watching, not just David.

    Meanwhile, Jonathan stumbles into the chaos back at the kingdom and runs into David. David learns Jonathan and Sara are expecting a child, and he makes a promise that echoes through Scripture: he will never harm Jonathan’s descendants. Jonathan, ever the loyal friend, tries to reason with Saul. When that fails, he creates a secret signal involving his bow and arrows to warn David whether Saul is still out for blood.

    David then heads to Nob, where Ahimelech gives him consecrated bread and Goliath’s sword.

    The next scene has Samuel blocking the road to Nob, though Scripture puts it in Ramah. And while the episode shows Saul’s messengers tormented by Samuel, the biblical text says they were prophesying. Still, the spirit of the moment—God stepping in to protect His chosen one—comes through clearly.

    When Saul finally gets to Nob, hears about David having Goliath’s sword, he erupts. He accuses Ahimelech of betrayal and orders his men to kill the priests. They refuse. Doeg, however, does not. He and his men slaughter eighty‑five priests—a moment as chilling in the show as it is in Scripture.

    Then comes the death of Samuel. It’s a heavy scene, though the show moves it earlier than Scripture does. Biblically, Samuel’s death appears in 1 Samuel 25, after several of the events portrayed here. Still, the loss hits hard. Samuel has been the spiritual backbone of Israel

    As the episode closes, Saul meets with the King of Edom—who we recognize as Ishvi’s former captor. This is the moment you can feel the House of Saul cracking apart. Alliances are shifting, loyalties are fraying, and Saul is spiraling into darkness with alarming speed. Whatever comes next, it won’t be pretty.

    The final scene brings us back to David, alone and praying: “Show me your purpose, show me your will for your kingdom.” It’s the perfect ending for a season built on calling, conflict, and the slow, steady rise of God’s chosen king. David’s story is far from over, and the kingdom is on the brink of transformation.

    If you want to dig deeper into the Scripture behind these scenes, the attached study guide walks through every passage used in this episode. This is the season finale and the final part of the guide. I hope it’s helped you see David’s story with fresh eyes and a deeper love for the Word. Here’s hoping the next season gives us even more to explore.

  • House of David – Season 2 – Episode 7 Rewind

    The House of Saul is officially falling apart, and this episode wastes no time proving it. The moment the dust settles from last week’s chaos, Jonathan gets hit with a truth bomb from Saul himself: his own mother was the one who set up David.

    Meanwhile, Merab and Michal are left cleaning up after Saul’s latest volcanic outburst. Michal looks around at the wreckage of their once‑proud household and asks the question everyone’s been thinking: “What happened to our family.” And honestly, who can blame her? This should be a season of joy. Her wedding to David is right around the corner. Instead, Ahinoam is banished, the family is fractured, and the royal palace feels more like a battlefield than a home.

    But for a brief moment, the clouds part. Sara pulls Jonathan aside and announces she’s pregnant. Jonathan lights up like someone just handed him the Ark of the Covenant. It’s the first genuine smile we’ve seen from him in a while, and it feels like a small miracle in the middle of all this madness.

    Then comes the long‑awaited wedding. Michal and David complete the mikvah ritual, step into a beautiful ceremony, and David offers a heartfelt prayer that feels both tender and prophetic. When he finally kisses his bride, it’s the kind of moment the House of Saul desperately needed—a reminder that God still weaves beauty into broken places. Jesse even makes an appearance, and in true fatherly fashion, he pulls David aside afterward with a warning that cuts straight to the heart: keep God above everything. A message David needed. A message we all need. God first. Always.

    And then the good news ends as the House of Saul isn’t done crumbling—it’s just getting started.

    Ishvi kills his own wife. Yes, you read that correctly. Just when she was becoming one of the most lovable characters in the entire show. She loved Ishvi. She fit into the family. She comforted Merab. She taught Merab to hunt. She was loyal, warm, and exactly the kind of person this family needed. But curiosity led her straight into danger. She spotted the mysterious man with the eye patch, followed him, and overheard Doeg sending a pigeon with a message that the grain silo fire wasn’t caused by the Philistines after all. She told Ishvi. And Ishvi pushed her off a cliff.

    Merab witnessed the whole thing. And instead of running, she joined him. Merab tells a cover story that Dinah was depressed over her father’s death. It’s chilling how quickly the lie forms, how easily the darkness spreads.

    Then the real bombshell drops: Ishvi has been the architect of the family’s destruction all along. He fueled the divide between his parents. He nudged Merab toward David to stir tension between the sisters. He started the silo fire. He’s been playing a long, twisted game, and now he reveals his final card—he tells Saul that David is the anointed one. He’s known the truth the entire time and used it to manipulate everyone around him.

    Saul’s reaction is exactly what you’d expect: rage, betrayal, and a complete unraveling.

    Abner summons David to Saul’s bedroom to play the lyre, hoping music might calm the king. Instead, Saul confronts David directly. Did Samuel choose you? David answers with the kind of boldness only someone chosen by God can muster: God chose me. And that’s all it takes. Saul hurls a spear at him, and the screen cuts to black.

    Season finale next. And it’s going to be a storm.

    If you want to dig into the scriptures behind all this drama, the attached Bible study will take you deeper into the truth beneath the storytelling.

  • House of David – Season 2 – Episode 6 Rewind

    Saul being mad at David is nothing new, but this episode takes that anger and turns it into a full‑blown royal meltdown. And the wild part is that, underneath all the dramatic flair, the show is actually tracking pretty close to scripture. So let’s dive in.

    Merab starts the episode furious at David for refusing to marry her. She expected a royal wedding, a crown, a future. Instead, she gets a polite “no thank you” from the giant‑slayer. And she’s not the only one fuming. Saul is insulted, embarrassed, and ready to turn David’s refusal into a death sentence. Ahinoam, ever the strategist, decides it’s time to remove David from the picture altogether.

    Saul’s infamous request for one hundred Philistine foreskins is straight from scripture. But the show adds a twist: a trap at the Forge of Gath. David and his thirty men walk straight into an ambush, the Philistines lock them inside, and then they set the place on fire. It’s a death trap with Saul’s fingerprints all over it. But David being David, he blows the doors off the forge, escapes with his men, and then becomes the main target of an entire Philistine force. At one point, it looks like the whole army is coming for him.

    And yet David stands his ground because he knows God is with him. Even the Philistine king sees it. He calls off his troops, not out of mercy, but because he realizes he’s up against something far bigger than David. He’s up against the Lord.

    Meanwhile, back in Israel, it seems like everyone is getting married except Merab. Ishvi and Dinah tied the knot earlier, and now Jonathan and Sara get married in her hometown. Jonathan pours out his heart, tells her he won’t be king because David is the one God anointed, and admits he’s relieved. Sara accepts his proposal, her grandfather marries them, and they head back to the kingdom to share the news. The whole family celebrates. Well… almost the whole family. Merab is still simmering.

    And then David returns. Not only alive, not only victorious, but carrying double the number of foreskins Saul demanded. Two hundred. Twice the price. Twice the humiliation for Saul.

    In the show, David doesn’t just complete the mission—he destroys the forge, escapes the trap, and outsmarts everyone who wanted him dead. Then he walks right up to Saul and declares that he wants Michal’s hand in marriage announced the next day. David is done playing small. Saul, furious that his plan failed, lashes out at Ahinoam and banishes her from the kingdom.

    Now we’re left on the edge of a royal cliff. Will the next episode finally give us the wedding we’ve been waiting for? Ishvi and Dinah barely had a ceremony. Jonathan and Sara had a sweet but simple one. But David and Michal? This feels like it’s building toward something big, something royal, something worthy of the future king of Israel.

    Check out the attached bible study for additional detail and scripture references.