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The reason the world feels broken is because it is broken—and we've forgotten what it was made for.
In this episode of Your Story Revealed, Greg Cash takes us back to Genesis 1–2, not as ancient mythology or a science debate, but as the baseline of all reality. Before sin. Before death. Before the world fractured.
Genesis doesn't begin with chaos. It begins with order. With goodness. With purpose. And unless we understand what the world was supposed to be, we will misdiagnose everything that's wrong with it now.
This episode explores:
Why Genesis 1–2 is the setting of the biblical story, not filler
Why death was never part of the original design
God as Author, not a character within creation
Humanity's role as image-bearers and covenant representatives
Why Jesus is called the last Adam
And why every covenant that follows is God restoring what was first lost
If you've ever wondered why the world feels off—or why the gospel matters at all—this is where the story has to begin.
Because many stories compete. But only one story defines reality.
By Greg CashThe reason the world feels broken is because it is broken—and we've forgotten what it was made for.
In this episode of Your Story Revealed, Greg Cash takes us back to Genesis 1–2, not as ancient mythology or a science debate, but as the baseline of all reality. Before sin. Before death. Before the world fractured.
Genesis doesn't begin with chaos. It begins with order. With goodness. With purpose. And unless we understand what the world was supposed to be, we will misdiagnose everything that's wrong with it now.
This episode explores:
Why Genesis 1–2 is the setting of the biblical story, not filler
Why death was never part of the original design
God as Author, not a character within creation
Humanity's role as image-bearers and covenant representatives
Why Jesus is called the last Adam
And why every covenant that follows is God restoring what was first lost
If you've ever wondered why the world feels off—or why the gospel matters at all—this is where the story has to begin.
Because many stories compete. But only one story defines reality.