DTGm Revelation Studies
Exploring the Deep Things of God thru the Revelation.
Exploring the Deep Things of God thru the Revelation.
Episodes
Wednesday Apr 01, 2026
Abrahamic Covenant Uncovered: It's Not What You Think
Wednesday Apr 01, 2026
Wednesday Apr 01, 2026
Hey friend — join Scott Stanley as he gently peels back the Abrahamic Covenant to show that "circumcision" points to a change of mind and faith, not just a physical ritual.This short talk ties Genesis and Romans together, explaining how being Abraham's "seed" means thinking and believing like him — a simple, eye-opening shift that will make you want to read the Bible for yourself.
Wednesday Mar 25, 2026
Unveiling the Deep Things of God
Wednesday Mar 25, 2026
Wednesday Mar 25, 2026
Scott Stanley, representing DTG Ministries ("Deep Things of God"), delivers a profound teaching rooted in the scriptures, emphasizing spiritual revelation, true understanding of salvation, and preparation for end-time challenges. His ministry is grounded in the belief that God reveals hidden spiritual truths through His Spirit, truths largely obscured by traditional religious teachings and apostasy.
Wednesday Mar 18, 2026
When Jacob Wrestled God: The Hip That Changed a Nation
Wednesday Mar 18, 2026
Wednesday Mar 18, 2026
Hey friend — I'm Scott Stanley with DTG Ministries, and in this episode I want to take you on a journey that completely shifted the way I see Scripture. We start in Genesis 32 with Jacob wrestling the angel, and we unpack how that night-long struggle is more than history: it's an allegory for a Jew wrestling with the truth that Jesus is the Messiah. Jacob clings, he won't let go, and that stubborn hold changes his name to Israel — a mark, a limp, a transformation.
We dig into the strange detail of Jacob's hip being "out of joint" — an ancient-word picture that points to a mark, a branding, even a beheading in symbolic language — and we trace how that image echoes through Micah and Revelation. It's wild how a limp becomes a spiritual badge for those who have wrestled with and accepted the Son of God.
Then we move into Isaiah (9, 40–49) and see how the message of the Son of God lights on Jacob and turns him into Israel. The apostles were the first to receive that light — they became spiritual Israel — and everything between them and the last-generation church is the story of apostasy and eventual restoration. This is a map for how God forms a people: from concept to flesh, from rejection to acceptance, from promise to fulfillment.
But here's the heart of it: Jesus didn’t just bring information — He embodied an attitude. "The Spirit without measure" isn’t data, it's disposition: gentleness, meekness, long-suffering, love. Isaiah 42 and John 3 show a Savior whose strength is quiet, whose power perfects itself through humility. That's the pattern we’re called to follow — not loud conquest, but patient, loving witness that sanctifies and saves.
If you want a study that ties Genesis, Isaiah, the Gospels, and the apostles together in a way that warms the heart and challenges the mind, come wrestle with me. We’re after a changed mind more than a changed body — a heart that bears the mark of the cross and walks with the Spirit, gentle and full of grace. Let's explore this together and let it reshape how we see Jesus, Israel, and our own calling.
Wednesday Mar 11, 2026
'the Great God'? Jesus Christ
Wednesday Mar 11, 2026
Wednesday Mar 11, 2026
Scott Stanley, representing DTG Ministries, explores the theological understanding of Jesus Christ in relation to the Book of Revelation, focusing especially on how Jesus is referred to as “God” in scripture and what that means within Christian doctrine. The discussion critically examines traditional Trinitarian views and offers an alternative interpretation grounded in biblical prophecy and scripture analysis.
Wednesday Mar 04, 2026
When Wheat and Tares Meet the Furnace: Revelation Decoded
Wednesday Mar 04, 2026
Wednesday Mar 04, 2026
Hey — it’s Scott Stanley here with DTG Ministries, and in this episode I’m walking you through Revelation in a way that actually feels practical, not just mysterious. We dig into Matthew 13 and the parable of the wheat and the tares to see how truth and iniquity grow side-by-side, why the enemy sneaks tares in while people sleep, and how the harvest at the end of the world separates the two — not by condemning people but by exposing and burning out the iniquity with the faith of Christ.I talk about how the Son of Man works through people — through the church and messengers — to sow truth, and why the ‘‘furnace of fire’’ isn’t about burning people but about the spiritual furnace (the faith of Jesus) that purges what offends. We trace this from Genesis 15’s smoking furnace up through Revelation 14 and 16, showing how the cross, the lamp, and the smoking furnace are all part of God’s way to purify our minds and restore the Holy Spirit’s understanding.We also unpack some commonly misunderstood bits: the difference between Babylon and New Jerusalem as mindsets, the false prophet and the whisperer who sow tares, and the idea that Christ comes as a thief — meaning there’s no secret pre-end rapture before the final harvest. I explain Har‑Moed (the mount of the congregation) versus the misread ‘‘Armageddon,’’ and why Christ is calling people into truth even as demonic spirits gather the literal-minded to battle.Above all, this episode is a call to compassion, grace, and longsuffering — the character of God that the cross is meant to teach us. If you’re tired of seeing people cling to teachings that don’t set them free, or if you want to learn how to let truth replace tares in your own thinking, come along. This is about a personal battle for understanding and a humble invitation to let God’s Spirit heal and reshape how you see everything.
Wednesday Feb 25, 2026
Blessed Like Abraham: What “I Will Bless Those Who Bless You” Really Means
Wednesday Feb 25, 2026
Wednesday Feb 25, 2026
Hey friend — Scott Stanley here with DTG Ministries. In this episode I dive into that famous promise to Abraham (“I will bless those who bless you, and curse those who curse you”) and peel back what it really means when we read the Bible through the Spirit. Spoiler: it’s not about ethnic politics or literal real estate — it’s about faith, relationship, and who we become when God speaks and we believe.We walk through Galatians, Genesis, Romans, John, and Hebrews to show how being a child of Abraham is spiritual, not merely biological. Abraham was counted righteous because he believed God; the “seed” is ultimately Christ, and anyone who believes God like Abraham does becomes part of that spiritual family. That’s the heart of the blessing.I also unpack the role of the Holy Spirit as the living understanding of the cross — how the Spirit energizes compassion, grace, long-suffering and other Christlike abilities in us. Belief brings you into the seed of Abraham, but continuing in Jesus’ word and allowing the Spirit to shape you is how the seed becomes a child — transformed and free from the power of iniquity.We’re in a time of apostasy, and literalism about promises to Israel has led many astray. I challenge the common take that we must support a political, non-Messianic Israel simply to gain God’s blessing. The blessing spoken of in Genesis and Galatians points to those who receive Messiah’s testimony, who believe what God declared about His Son.If you’re wrestling with these texts or tired of surface-level takes, come along. This episode is an invitation to think deeper, to test the spirit, and to move from being a seed (having the truth) to being a child (living out the Spirit’s fruit). Let’s keep seeking the deep things of God together and let the testimony of Jesus change how we see promise, people, and purpose.
Wednesday Feb 18, 2026
Everyone Who Loves Is Born of God — The Seed of the Woman
Wednesday Feb 18, 2026
Wednesday Feb 18, 2026
Hey friend — I want to share the heart of this episode with you. Scott Stanley digs deep into Revelation and the Johannine writings and brings a steady, intimate stream of insights — like the latter rain — about what it really means to be "born of God" and to walk in love. He traces the big threads from 1 John through Psalm 45, Proverbs 8, and back into Revelation, and the result is surprisingly tender and powerful.
At the center is a simple but startling claim: everyone who truly loves is born of God — and that starts with recognizing Jesus as the Son of God. Scott teases apart believing from knowing: belief that Jesus is the Son is the first step, but knowing God (that deeper revelation and relationship) is what lets love actually live in you. That’s why the cross, the testimony of God, and the Spirit matter so much.
He also unpacks the idea of God’s "seed" and the Spirit that remains in us (1 John 3:9, 1 John 4:7). Using Psalm 45 as a picture of the risen Savior and Proverbs 8 for the eternal wisdom behind the plan, Scott shows how God had a solution in mind from the very beginning — a seed that would redeem us from iniquity, give us the Spirit, and empower a life that truly resists sin.
There’s a beautiful, practical edge here too: being part of the church, being like the son of man, and hearing the trumpet calls in Revelation are all wrapped up with walking in love. If you don’t accept Jesus as the Son and let the Spirit become your inner witness, you can’t live out the kind of love John talks about. That’s why Scott keeps bringing us back to the heart — intimacy with the Father through the Son and Spirit — and what it means for the end-times picture.
If you’re listening for transformation rather than just information, this episode is an invitation: let the testimony of God sink in, receive the seed and Spirit, and learn to walk in love. It’s conversational, candid, and full of Scripture-rich moments that feel like someone leaning in beside you and saying, “This is what I’ve seen — let’s live it.”
Wednesday Feb 11, 2026
When Compassion Meets Revelation: God's Mercy at the End
Wednesday Feb 11, 2026
Wednesday Feb 11, 2026
Scott Stanley of DTG Ministries explores the book of Revelation with a focus on God’s compassion and what happens at the end of the world. He defines compassion as awareness of suffering plus a desire to act, and ties this to biblical descriptions of God in Exodus, Psalms, and Luke.
Using examples such as Jesus healing the leper and feeding the 5,000, and Paul’s discussion of Jacob and Esau in Romans 9, Scott explains that God’s compassion is shown especially toward those who humbly receive Him. He contrasts those who bow the knee and receive mercy with those who resist and are hardened, like Pharaoh.
The episode applies these themes to the end times: the gospel will be proclaimed, many will receive God’s compassion and healing, and others will resist, attempting to lead the righteous astray but ultimately falling into their own pit. The message calls listeners to repentance, active compassion, and living out God’s character as revealed through the cross.
The episode closes with a prayer for unity, guidance, and the continued manifestation of God’s love and compassion in believers’ lives.
Wednesday Feb 04, 2026
Entering the City of God: Moses, the Cross, and the Face of Christ
Wednesday Feb 04, 2026
Wednesday Feb 04, 2026
Scott Stanley of DTG Ministries reflects on his quiet devotional experience and explores how the book of Exodus (chapters 33–34) points to the heart and mind of God revealed in Jesus. He describes a spiritual "bubble" of peace — the city of God — and contrasts it with the noise of the world that pulls us away.Using Moses’ request to see God’s glory, Stanley shows how the language of God’s "face" and presence connects to the New Testament revelation of Christ, the cross, and the bread of faces. He explains the rock and the piercing as images of standing in Christ and entering salvation through his suffering.The core message centers on the character of God: compassion, grace, and long-suffering. Stanley emphasizes that the cross both reveals humanity and displays God’s patience, calling believers to emulate that compassion by loving enemies and showing grace.Practical application includes guarding your quiet time, avoiding voices that pull you out of the holy city, and living the commandments of love so the Father and the Son will dwell with you. The episode closes with an invitation to enter the city of God, find rest in Christ, and be transformed into his image.
Wednesday Jan 28, 2026
Son of David — Lord of the Sabbath
Wednesday Jan 28, 2026
Wednesday Jan 28, 2026
Hi, I'm Scott Stanley with DTG Ministries. In this episode, I unpack Matthew 12 and explain why Jesus uses David as a type of the Messiah to answer accusations about breaking the Sabbath.
We trace Jesus' argument that the temple and sanctuary parables override a literal reading of the Sabbath law, showing that Messiah is greater than the temple and therefore "Lord of the Sabbath." I connect this to Hebrews 9 to show the sanctuary service as a figure pointing to spiritual realities.
The talk explores how heavenly things are understood in the mind, how Christ's ministry in the heavens is on our behalf, and how believers are invited to be seated with Christ through repentance and faith. I also discuss Revelation 7 and the sealing of the 144,000 as the redeemed truth and call listeners to open their hearts to the parables and mysteries of the kingdom.
Throughout, I emphasize the need for humility, ears to hear, and willingness to let the Spirit transform understanding so we can live in the truth Jesus came to reveal.






