Avsnitt
-
Story 16 – Words from the Fire
Exodus 19–20
You can’t build a nation without law.
But this law wasn’t whispered in secret.
It was spoken in fire—to an entire people.
The Israelites stand at the foot of Mount Sinai.
There’s smoke. Thunder. A voice so powerful, they beg for it to stop.
But this isn’t about fear. It’s about formation.
After 400 years of slavery, God isn’t just giving commands—
He’s restoring identity.
These aren’t shackles.
They’re scaffolding.
Ten words to rebuild what Egypt broke.
This is the only moment in Scripture where God speaks audibly to a whole nation.
Not just to one man. Not just to the elite.
To everyone.
And what He gives them isn’t control—it’s covenant.
Not blind obedience—but a better way to be human.
Because law, in God’s hands, isn’t a cage.
It’s a compass.
Story 17 – The Idol in Our Hearts
Exodus 32
Moses is on the mountain.
The people are down below.
And forty days of silence is all it takes for them to turn gold into a god.
They build a calf—not as a new religion, but as a replacement.
A way to keep the story… while controlling the source.
That’s what idolatry is.
Not just statues.
But anything shiny enough to replace trust.
And when God sees it?
He doesn’t just get angry.
He offers Moses a way out: “Let Me start over—with you.”
But Moses pleads for mercy.
He becomes a mediator. A foreshadowing. A stand-in for grace.
This is a story about impatience. About distortion.
About how easy it is to build something fake…
When God is taking longer than we’d like.
And it’s a warning—
That even after miracles, manna, and mountaintops…
We’re still tempted to shape God into something we can manage.
Story 18 – Where God Lives
Exodus 25–31, 35–40
After betrayal, after failure—you’d expect God to leave.
Instead, He moves closer.
And says: “Build Me a home.”
Not a palace.
A tent.
Portable presence.
Because this God doesn’t stay distant.
He travels with His people.
The Tabernacle isn’t just architecture.
It’s a cosmic blueprint.
A place where heaven touches earth.
Every detail matters.
The gold, the fabric, the oil, the incense—
All offered by people who failed Him.
Because God’s not looking for perfection.
He’s looking for space.
And when they finish?
Glory fills the tent.
So thick that even Moses can’t enter.
This is a story about beauty.
About devotion.
About a God who chooses to dwell—
Even in the aftermath of rebellion.
If you’ve ever wondered whether God would still choose you after your worst mistake—
This story says: Yes.
-
New Episodes drop every Tuesday at 1pm!
Story 13 – I Am Who I Am
Exodus 3
Some stories begin with fire.
This one begins with silence.
Moses is 80. A fugitive. A forgotten man herding sheep in the wilderness.
He thinks his purpose is behind him.
But then… a bush burns.
And it doesn’t burn out.
This isn’t spectacle. It’s invitation.
God calls his name—and Moses responds: “Here I am.”
What follows is a sacred confrontation—not just between God and man, but between calling and fear.
Moses says: “Who am I?”
God replies: “I will be with you.”
And when Moses asks God’s name?
The answer isn’t a title. It’s an existence.
“I Am who I Am.”
This is a story for anyone who feels too old, too broken, too late.
Because sometimes, the call doesn’t come in youth.
Sometimes it comes in the wilderness.
When everything is quiet enough to hear it.
Story 14 – Blood, Frogs, and Fire
Exodus 7–12
“Who is the LORD, that I should obey Him?”
That’s Pharaoh’s question.
And God answers… with plagues.
This isn’t chaos. It’s confrontation.
Each plague is a strike against Egypt’s gods.
The Nile turns to blood.
The sky turns black.
Frogs, gnats, and fire dismantle an empire’s belief system—one false god at a time.
But this isn’t just about Egypt.
Because we all cling to our own pharaohs.
Power. Control. Identity. Image.
And sometimes, God breaks what enslaves us—so we can finally let go.
This is a story of judgment, yes—
But beneath that?
It’s a story of deliverance.
Story 15 – The Sea That Saved a Nation
Exodus 14
The Israelites are free—but not safe.
They’ve escaped Egypt, but now they stand at the Red Sea.
Behind them: Pharaoh’s army.
In front of them: water.
And in their hearts? Panic.
This is where deliverance gets dangerous.
Where God says something wild:
“Stand still. I will fight for you.”
Then: “Now move.”
Moses lifts his staff. The sea parts.
And they walk through the impossible.
Not around it. Not over it.
Through it.
This is the story of a God who doesn’t just save His people—
He teaches them to walk by faith…
Even when the path looks like death.
Because some seas are meant to be crossed.
And some enemies? Meant to drown.
-
Saknas det avsnitt?
-
New episodes drop every Tuesday.
Welcome back to The 100 Sacred Stories. If you’ve ever felt like faith was a fight more than a feeling—this one’s for you.
I’m Casey Marx. I’m not a preacher. I’m a man who’s walked through grief, success, loss, doubt, and hope. I’ve built a life I’m proud of—and still found myself, some nights, staring at the ceiling asking, Why did this happen?
This episode isn’t about the polished kind of faith.
It’s about the kind you wrestle for.
It’s about the fight that leaves a scar—and a blessing.
Part I: Jacob – The Fight in the Dark (Genesis 32)
It starts with Jacob. Alone. On the eve of a reunion with the brother he betrayed.
In the dark, he’s attacked—not by a thief, or a soldier—but by God.
They wrestle. All night.
And Jacob refuses to let go. He’s not begging for escape—he’s pleading for blessing.
“I will not let You go unless You bless me.”
It’s gritty. Desperate. And real.
He walks away limping.
And with a new name—Israel.
Because sometimes, the only way to be changed… is to wrestle your way into it.
Part II: Joseph – Betrayed, Imprisoned, Exalted (Genesis 37–50)
Then we move to Joseph—the dreamer.
Betrayed by his brothers, sold into slavery, wrongly imprisoned, and forgotten.
But he doesn’t quit.
He keeps showing up with integrity when no one’s watching.
And eventually—he rises. Not just to power—but to purpose.
Because when famine strikes, the same brothers who sold him out… come to him for help.
And he forgives them.
“What you meant for evil… God meant for good.”
This isn’t just about survival.
It’s about transformation through injustice.
Part III: Moses – The Basket, the River, and the Plan You Can’t See (Exodus 1–2)
Finally, we meet Moses—not at the burning bush, but in a basket.
In the middle of genocide, a Hebrew mother places her baby in the Nile.
That baby floats into Pharaoh’s household—into privilege, into destiny.
God doesn’t begin this story with fire from heaven.
He begins it with a crying child… in danger… and in His care.
Because sometimes deliverance doesn’t start with strength.
It starts with surrender.
With trust.
With a mother letting go.
Jacob wrestled with God and limped away blessed.
Joseph endured injustice and forgave those who broke him.
Moses floated through chaos into calling.
If you’ve been betrayed—if you’ve lost something you can’t explain—if you’ve ever screamed at heaven in the dark:
You’re not broken.
You’re Israel.
You’re Joseph.
You’re Moses.
Faith doesn’t always come with answers.
Sometimes it comes with a limp.
But that limp might be the mark of a blessing you fought for—and received.
-
Episode 3 – When God Asks Everything
Genesis 12–22
Abraham. Sodom. Isaac. Three stories. One journey of faith.
What do you do when God asks for everything?
In this episode of The 100 Sacred Stories, we trace the path of a single man through three of the most defining moments in Scripture—moments that still echo today.
First, we meet Abraham at 75. No children. No certainty. And then God says, “Go.” No map. No timeline. Just a voice—and a promise. What unfolds is the beginning of covenant: a man who chooses to walk into the unknown not because he has answers, but because he trusts the One who calls.
Then, the story turns to judgment and mercy in the twin cities of Sodom and Gomorrah. We watch as Abraham dares to negotiate with God—not out of rebellion, but compassion. We see a city collapse not just from sin, but from the loss of what it means to be human. We learn what happens when people can no longer see others as sacred.
Finally, we arrive at the mountain. The Binding of Isaac. The most haunting scene in Abraham’s life—and one of the most debated in all of Scripture. God says, “Offer your son.” And Abraham walks. Three days of silence. A knife raised. And then—a ram in the thicket.
What do these stories teach us?
That faith is not about perfection. It’s about movement.
That mercy is often delayed, but never absent.
That even in the silence, God still provides.
And that when you trust God with what you love most, you may find the place you feared is the place He meets you.
This episode is for anyone who has ever wrestled with uncertainty. Anyone who has stood at the edge of a decision that could change everything. And anyone who wonders if they have what it takes to say yes—even when it costs everything.
I’m Casey Marx. And this… is The 100 Sacred Stories.
-
This is what happens when we trade reverence for comparison. When envy festers, when violence becomes background noise, and when we build towers to heaven trying to prove we matter.
This episode is a descent—from brotherhood to bloodshed, from grace to floodwaters, from sacred identity to branding and Babel.
We begin with Cain and Abel: two brothers, two offerings. One gives his best. The other gives enough. When God receives Abel’s gift and not Cain’s, something ancient wakes up in Cain—a twisted mixture of insecurity and resentment. And instead of looking inward… he turns on his brother. Not because Abel did something wrong—but because Abel’s goodness exposed Cain’s mediocrity.
This story isn’t just the first murder. It’s the first mirror.
And when God asks Cain, “Where is your brother?”… Cain says what so many of us say: “That’s not my problem.”
But it is. It always was.
Then comes the Flood. A world where violence is the norm and conscience is a relic. Where the sacred is mocked, and the righteous walk alone. In that world, God doesn’t rage—He grieves. And one man, Noah, walks with Him anyway.
This isn’t just judgment. It’s a rescue mission. An ark is built—slowly, quietly, over decades. And when the rains come, God Himself shuts the door.
That’s not a threat.
It’s mercy.
Because sometimes, grace looks like separation.
And then we reach Babel.
A people with one language… one goal: “Let’s make a name for ourselves.”
This is the moment humanity trades being for branding. Instead of bearing the image of God, they try to build their way to heaven. They try to control what should be received.
So God confuses their speech—not as punishment, but as mercy. Because if He doesn’t disrupt their plan, they’ll destroy themselves.
And maybe that’s the story we’re in now.
We’re not drowning in water—but in noise.
We’re not killing our brothers with stones—but with sarcasm, with dismissal, with cold shoulders.
We’re not building towers of brick—but of image and ego.
This episode is about the fall we’re still living in.
And the invitation God still gives.
To walk with Him.
To lay down comparison.
To remember who we are.
I’m Casey Marx.
This is The 100 Stories.
Let’s begin again.
-
New episodes drop every Tuesday.
Episode 1 – Returning to the Beginning: Creation, Dust, and the Voice That Shapes Us
Welcome to the first full episode of The 100 Sacred Stories. This isn’t a sermon or a lecture. It’s a long-form, personal exploration of the most quoted and enduring stories in the Bible—not as dogma, but as blueprints behind our lives, our values, and the soul-level ache we all carry.
My name is Casey Marx. I’m not a pastor or theologian. I’m a founder, husband, and seeker. I built a half-billion-dollar firm. I lost my father at 15. I buried my best friend. I’ve walked through nihilism, ambition, suffering, and faith—and spent 25 years searching for the thread that ties it all together.
What I found—beneath the noise and dogma—was a set of ancient stories that still speak, shape, and save.
This podcast is my offering.
Part I: Why This Podcast Exists
This is a Saturday project, recorded in my office on off-hours. No production team. No spin. Just me, a mic, and a desire to pass on what I’ve learned to my children—and to anyone else standing at the edge, looking for meaning.
We begin where all great journeys do: the beginning. But before we open Genesis, we pause for something essential—how to listen.
Because these stories aren’t just meant to be read or analyzed. They’re meant to work on us. The way ritual, poetry, and story have always shaped humans—long before therapy or science could explain why.
Part II: How to Listen (Truth That Transforms)
Before Eden, before the flood, before the commandments—there was story. And story was survival. Our minds don’t change through data. They change through meaning.
Modern neuroscience, depth psychology, and ancient wisdom agree: stories rewire us. They transform our moral imagination. They awaken something abstract principles never could.
You don’t have to take every word literally. But when you live as if these stories are true—when you forgive, resist temptation, seek reconciliation—you build the kind of world these stories were teaching us to build.
Part III: Story One – The Creation of the World (Genesis 1)
“In the beginning, God created…”
You’ve heard it. But what if you could hear it again for the first time?
This isn’t just about light and planets. It’s about the chaos we all start in—and the voice that shapes it.
Every act of creation in your life mirrors Genesis 1. When you bring order to your home, your finances, your grief—you reenact the divine pattern. And when you stop and call it “very good,” you honor the same rhythm the Creator did.
Genesis 1 isn’t a science textbook. It’s a cosmic template. And it speaks to every overwhelmed soul standing in the mess.
Part IV: Story Two – Dust and Breath (Genesis 2)
Genesis 2 zooms in. It’s not about galaxies anymore. It’s about you.
God forms man from dirt—with His hands. He breathes life into him. When He sees man is alone, He doesn’t shame him. He makes a partner—not from his head or feet, but from his side. Close to his heart.
This isn’t just origin. It’s what it means to be human.
To be made of dust—and breath. To be seen—without shame. To be wired for communion. To need someone—and not call that weakness.
This story whispers it’s okay to want to be seen. To not be okay alone. To carry within us both clay and soul.
Outro: A Thread Worth Following
These stories set the stage for everything else. They teach us who we are, where we come from, and what we were meant to become.
If you’ve felt overwhelmed by chaos…
If you’ve wondered whether loneliness was a flaw…
If you’ve doubted God but kept seeking anyway…
This is for you.