An epistle written to us. Where do temptations come from? If anyone lacks wisdom. What does it mean to waiver? Hearing intensely and comprehending still isn’t enough.
[00:00:15] Jason: Welcome to the weekly Deep Dive podcast on the Add on Education Network. The podcast where we take a look at the weekly come follow me discussions and try to add a little insight and unique perspective. I am your host, Jason Lloyd, here in the studio with our friend and this show’s producer, Nate Pyfer. Yes, sir.
[00:00:33] Nate: Yes, sir. You are. You are here with me. I am here with you, our friend.
[00:00:37] Jason: Happy to be here with you.
[00:00:38] Nate: I’m happy to be here with you, too, buddy. I’m sorry that we’re a day late.
I have a baby that’s teething, and I’ve needed to be helping at home and not family gallivanting down to the studio to record podcast, but family first. But we’re here.
[00:00:51] Jason: I’m glad we get to do this and we get to enjoy doing this, but at the end of the day, family first.
[00:00:56] Nate: It is. Sorry that it’s a day late, everybody.
[00:00:58] Jason: Thanks for your patience.
[00:00:59] Nate: It’s my bad on this one.
[00:01:00] Jason: Don’t even worry about it. Don’t even sweat it. We’re happy to do this, and we’re happy that you’re tuning in.
[00:01:05] Nate: We do appreciate it. Thank you for being patient.
[00:01:08] Jason: All right, we’re coming in with good vibes, man. We were just reflecting on last week’s discussion. Come follow me. And Hebrews.
[00:01:15] Nate: Good one.
[00:01:15] Jason: It’s just fun.
[00:01:16] Nate: It was a good one.
[00:01:17] Jason: There’s one scripture that I didn’t notice last week. That I noticed this week from last week.
[00:01:23] Nate: Okay.
[00:01:23] Jason: That just makes me laugh. It’s a short one. I’m ready. Hebrews, chapter ten, verse 31. It is a fearful thing to fall in the hands of the living God.
And it’s kind of talking about, I think, responsibility sometimes. It’s a fearful thing to fall in the hands of a living God. Lord, I’m willing to do what you want me to do. Well, that’s a fearful thing that you’re signing up for. Who knows what’s going to follow as we’re talking about all those examples of faith? It’s a fearful thing to fall in the hands of a living God.
[00:01:56] Nate: I like it.
[00:01:57] Jason: We’re going to have some other ones here this week. We get to talk about James. I am excited for James. Okay.
And first, I think we need to go through a little bit of a lesson on the name James.
[00:02:09] Nate: Okay. You know, I love this stuff because it’s weird.
[00:02:12] Jason: James is one of the weirdest names, I think, in the New Testament. Not weird as far as it’s just.
[00:02:17] Nate: Not very Hebrew y, right.
[00:02:19] Jason: Well, that’s the weird thing, right? It comes from the Hebrew Jacob. And you’re like, wait, what? How did James come from Jacob? And in Spanish, it’s Santiago. And you’re like, wait, what? Okay, how did we get Santiago from James? Or.
So let me break down the Spanish to Latin a little bit, and let’s play with this name.
Saint. Saint, right? Tiago. And you’re like, Tiago. Why? Saint Tiago. And Tiago is Yago, which is actually. You can almost hear it from there. Yago coming from Yaakov, which is Jacob. Okay.
And the James also from the Hebrew.
Yakomas from the Latin. So really Latin is what’s kind of throwing the wrench in the Hebrew here. Yakomos becomes James, but it’s also from the Jacob. So in his time, his name’s probably actually Jacob, but it comes weirdly translated from the Hebrew and the Greek and the Latin to the English to where we refer to him as James. Some Bibles, you’ll actually see Jacobus. Jacobus.
And if you read in Spanish, you’ll see Santiago. Okay, but it...