The Bible is not a collection of moral lessons or spiritual tips. It reads like a unified story building toward one ending — and it begins with a catastrophe. A fracturing of identity, relationship, and purpose so complete that all of human history since then has been its aftermath. But buried in the rubble of Eden is a promise. One seed. One whisper of a Deliverer.
From Dust to Dwelling traces God’s promise across fourteen centuries and fourteen chapters — from Abraham's impossible covenant to Moses' Passover lamb, from David's throne to Isaiah's Suffering Servant, from a manger to an empty tomb. It follows the Spirit's fire at Pentecost, the church scattered into the world, and it arrives at the ending Scripture was always building toward: not escape from the world, but its restoration. The tree of life accessible again. God with His people, unmediated, unbroken. The exile over. The ache, finally, answered.
The Bible is not a collection of moral lessons or spiritual tips. It reads like a unified story building toward one ending — and it begins with a catastrophe. A fracturing of identity, relationship, and purpose so complete that all of human history since then has been its aftermath. But buried in the rubble of Eden is a promise. One seed. One whisper of a Deliverer.
From Dust to Dwelling traces God’s promise across fourteen centuries and fourteen chapters — from Abraham's impossible covenant to Moses' Passover lamb, from David's throne to Isaiah's Suffering Servant, from a manger to an empty tomb. It follows the Spirit's fire at Pentecost, the church scattered into the world, and it arrives at the ending Scripture was always building toward: not escape from the world, but its restoration. The tree of life accessible again. God with His people, unmediated, unbroken. The exile over. The ache, finally, answered.