034: Epstein and the Church's response to the Sexual Abuse Crisis
Send a text(TW: Frank discussions of exploitation, sexual abuse, rape, and assault)The news feels like a gut punch, and yet the patterns are old: powerful people exploit the vulnerable, and too many institutions fall silent. We sit down with sexual health educator and Sex Ed Reclaimed founder Kristen to process the latest Epstein files and the wider sexual abuse crisis in churches and culture. Together we trace how objectification and porn create a pipeline to power-seeking behavior, why “just talk about lust” solutions miss the mark, and what genuine repentance looks like when harm has been done.We don’t sanitize Scripture to make it easy. Esther wasn’t a pageant winner; she was a trafficked teenager in a predatory system. Bathsheba wasn’t a seductress; she was targeted by a king. When study notes and sermons blame victims, congregations learn to miss abuse in real life. We challenge that lens and point to Jesus, who consistently dignifies women, commissions them as witnesses, and dismantles status games by redefining greatness as service. The way of Jesus is not quiet neutrality—it’s courageous protection of the vulnerable and clear-eyed truth about power.Expect practical steps, not platitudes. We walk through survivor-first policies, mandatory reporting, boundaries for leaders, and how to build a culture that talks plainly about sex, consent, and digital habits. Kristen opens a window into solicitor education—what actually shifts men who’ve been caught paying for sex—and offers tools parents can use to teach their kids dignity and safety from an early age. If you’ve felt angry, numb, or alone in the weight of these stories, this conversation names the grief and points to a faithful path forward.If this resonates, share it with someone who needs language for what they’re feeling, subscribe for upcoming episodes on the female disciples during Lent, and leave a review so more people can find these conversations. Your voice matters—how will you use it today?Find Kristen Miele at https://www.sexedreclaimed.com/ or on social media @sexedreclaimedWatch for her upcoming book in Fall 2026! Support the show...................Follow We Who Thirst on Instagram, Threads, or YouTube! To join Jessica LM Jenkins' mailing list, or access the full research bibliography for this episode visit www.wewhothirst.com/links . Thank you for supporting the Women of the Bible in Context podcast, your contributions make this ministry possible!
033 Bathsheba, Abishag, and a Kingdom On The Brink (1 Kings 1-2)
Send us a textThe room is cold, the kingdom colder. David can’t keep warm, and the palace drafts Abishag the Shunammite to lie beside him—an ancient remedy that exposes a deeper crisis: a fading king, a fragile succession, and a court willing to spend a woman’s future to buy a few degrees of heat. From that stark image, we follow the threads of 1 Kings 1–2 as Bathsheba steps back into view, not as a pawn but as a strategist and mother who knows how to turn truth into action.We walk through Adonijah’s armored pageant and the alliances behind his claim, then listen as Nathan cues Bathsheba to confront David with a promise and a duty. Her words are careful and cutting, and they work: Solomon is anointed at Gihon, the royal mule becomes a sign of legitimate rule, and the city’s shout rolls down the valley. Mercy spares Adonijah—on conditions. What happens next reveals how the politics of the harem intersect with the politics of the crown. As Queen Mother, Bathsheba receives Adonijah’s “small” request to marry Abishag, a move loaded with dynastic meaning. She carries it to open court with formal precision, and Solomon hears it for what it is: a renewed bid for the throne. The verdict is swift. The kingdom holds.Still, one name lingers. Abishag’s story fades into the margins, her life circled by decisions she didn’t make. We wrestle with that silence, the ethics of ancient power, and the way Scripture both records and critiques systems that consume women. Along the way we unpack name meanings, geography, and ancient customs to make the text vivid: why Gihon mattered, why a mule signaled legitimacy, and how the Queen Mother’s seat shaped policy. Above all, we keep sight of the God who keeps sight of those power overlooks—Bathsheba, Abishag, and all who feel shelved in the shadows.If this exploration deepened your understanding or gave you new empathy for the women at Scripture’s hinge points, share it with a friend, subscribe for more, and leave a review with the question you’re still pondering. Your reflections help others find the show. Support the show...................Follow We Who Thirst on Instagram, Threads, or YouTube! To join Jessica LM Jenkins' mailing list, or access the full research bibliography for this episode visit www.wewhothirst.com/links . Thank you for supporting the Women of the Bible in Context podcast, your contributions make this ministry possible!
032 Ingrid Faro on the Hidden Pillars Of Salvation History
Send us a textWhat if the Bible’s turning points hinge on women we were taught to ignore? We sit down with Dr. Ingrid Faro to follow a bright thread through Scripture—Eve’s resilient hope, Rahab’s audacious confession, Tamar’s righteous risk, Hannah’s prayerful courage, Bathsheba’s hard-won voice, and Jehosheba’s daring rescue—that together advances the story of salvation. Far from side characters, these women act as God’s agents at moments when everything could collapse.We begin with Ingrid’s journey from deep personal trauma to Old Testament scholarship, and how study in Hebrew and archaeology opened space for healing. Then we reframe Genesis 1–2 as the bedrock for human dignity and shared vocation: image-bearers called to rule together, with the woman named ezer, a strong ally, and tsela, the sacred “side” that holds up the dwelling of God. This lens clarifies the rest of Scripture—if a side is missing, the structure fails—and challenges church cultures that sideline women and dim their witness.We also set Bathsheba’s story straight by following the verbs of power—who sees, sends, and takes—and by reading the narrative through trauma-aware eyes. David’s sin is named; Bathsheba is never blamed. From there, we trace how women serve as a barometer of communal health: when they’re honored and heard, families and nations thrive; when they’re silenced or harmed, collapse follows. Along the way, Ingrid offers practical counsel for those discerning seminary, plus a curated list of resources to keep learning and leading.Listen to rethink familiar passages, recover the voices Scripture highlights, and rediscover a mission built for men and women to carry together. If this conversation resonates, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find these stories and join the dialogue. Support the show...................Follow We Who Thirst on Instagram, Threads, or YouTube! To join Jessica LM Jenkins' mailing list, or access the full research bibliography for this episode visit www.wewhothirst.com/links . Thank you for supporting the Women of the Bible in Context podcast, your contributions make this ministry possible!
031 Presence Over Power: The Nativity As God’s Answer To Trauma
Send us a textAdvent isn’t a glossy postcard here; it’s a story told under the stare of a fortress and the echo of marching boots. We open the Nativity in the time of Herod and Rome, where fear, taxes, and crushed revolts shape daily life—and where lament becomes a holy practice of agreeing with God that the world is not as it should be. From Zechariah’s once‑in‑a‑lifetime temple moment to Mary’s dangerous “yes” in Galilee, we follow the threads of personal shame, public pressure, and prophetic hope that converge on a peasant birth with cosmic consequences.Zechariah hears that John will prepare a people, turning hearts when loyalty is fractured. Mary sings the Magnificat, announcing a great reversal that lifts the humble and disorients the proud. Joseph learns that salvation addresses corporate sin and covenant faithfulness, not just private faults. Shepherds receive a proclamation guarded by a heavenly host—an army announcing peace not enforced by empire, but born in God’s favor. In the temple, Simeon and Anna name the child as light for the Gentiles and glory for Israel, while warning that the path of redemption will pass through suffering.When Magi honor the newborn king, Herod’s rage explodes, and the family flees as refugees to Egypt. The trauma doesn’t stop after the manger; it molds Jesus’ childhood in Nazareth, surrounded by unrest and stories of revolt. And yet, when he speaks as a man, he refuses the lever of power. Presence, not power, defines his kingdom. Bread for the hungry, healing for the sick, dignity for the lowly—this is how God answers lament. Christmas, then, is God with us in the thick of it, holding our hands through grief while moving history toward renewal.If this season feels heavy, you’re not outside the story—you’re inside its very heart. Listen, share with someone who needs steady hope, and leave a review to help others find this conversation.For more nativity episodes, be sure to catch:013 Historical Context of the Nativity: Part 1014 Historical Context of the Nativity: Part 2020 Boy Jesus in Trauma's Shadow (Interview with Joan Taylor) Support the show...................Follow We Who Thirst on Instagram, Threads, or YouTube! To join Jessica LM Jenkins' mailing list, or access the full research bibliography for this episode visit www.wewhothirst.com/links . Thank you for supporting the Women of the Bible in Context podcast, your contributions make this ministry possible!
030 Bathsheba, Power, And A Better Hermeneutic - Interview with Liz Daye
Send us a textBathsheba’s story has been trimmed into a tidy cautionary tale for far too long. We open the text back up with hospital chaplain and theologian Liz Day to confront the real dynamics at work: power, consent, silence, and the cost borne by survivors when churches protect kings and blame women. Starting with how Bathsheba is framed from pulpits and commentaries, we unpack the myths—like “lust made him do it”—and trace how Scripture itself reads the moment through Torah ethics and Nathan’s parable, where the stolen lamb mirrors the life-altering harm Bathsheba endures.Together, we ask better hermeneutical questions: Where is God in this text? What is God like? We notice God’s refusal to endorse abuse, God’s prophet confronting a king, and Scripture’s pattern of letting survivors like Tamar speak. We challenge the popular use of Psalm 51 as a shortcut back to platform, naming why confession without justice, repair, and power relinquished is not repentance. From there, we move into practice: how to become trauma-informed communities that believe disclosures, make space for lament, and choose presence over platitudes. We talk about sharing power, setting real limits on leadership, empowering survivors, and reshaping discipleship at the grassroots so children learn a truer story—one where righteousness and justice belong together.If you’ve wrestled with David and Bathsheba, sensed a disconnect in how the story is preached, or wondered how churches can genuinely be safe for the wounded, this conversation offers language, tools, and hope. Listen, share with a friend who needs it, and then tell us: what one change would make your community safer for survivors? Subscribe, leave a review, and keep the conversation going.Get the PDF download: “Evidence That Bathsheba’s Story Is Rape, Not Adultery.” Link in the episode description and on our website Support the show...................Follow We Who Thirst on Instagram, Threads, or YouTube! To join Jessica LM Jenkins' mailing list, or access the full research bibliography for this episode visit www.wewhothirst.com/links . Thank you for supporting the Women of the Bible in Context podcast, your contributions make this ministry possible!