The Great Exchange · Come and Dine
The Words of the Journey
A Glossary for the Series
Keep this nearby as you walk. You do not have to memorize anything — when a word lands on you, look it up here. The first set is the language of the teaching itself. The second is the Greek and Hebrew keys that open it. This glossary grows as the journey grows.
The Framework Words
The language of the teaching — in plain terms.
- The Great Exchange
- The whole teaching. At Calvary, Christ purchased restoration for every faculty of the human body — part by part. The Great Exchange is His finished work becoming substance in you.
- Come and Dine
- The journey. Forty-three days at the table with the resurrected Christ: three days of clearing, forty days of daily communion, and a lifetime in the overflow.
- The Clearing
- The first three days. Fasting and prayer that echo the three days the body of Christ lay in the tomb before the resurrection table was set. Not the table yet — the preparing of the body to host it. The clearing is mercy. The table is coming.
- The Broadcast
- Not the video. The signal your own body has been transmitting — the old law’s running report of symptom, diagnosis, lack, and shame, moving through the nervous system and out through the mouth, mostly without your permission.
- The Substrate
- The underlying ground the broadcast grew in: the nervous system, the deep soil where your defaults were laid down over years. In the clearing, the substrate is being shifted onto a new governing law.
- The Table
- Holy Communion. Where the finished work crosses the threshold into your body. Not the place that makes you clean — the place where the already-clean come into agreement with what the blood already did.
- The Receiver Problem
- If you are not yet walking in what Christ purchased, you do not have a grace problem — you have a receiver problem. The supply is finished. The breakdown is at the point of receiving.
- Faculty by Faculty
- How the exchange is walked — one part of Christ’s body at a time: His eyes, His tongue, His back, His hands, His feet — each one having purchased specific territory for yours.
- The Overflow
- Where the journey lands. Not a wait for something not yet given, but a life lived inside an abundance that has already been poured.
- Tetelestai
- “It is finished.” The finished work of the cross. The word every teaching closes on — because the work is already done; we are only learning to receive it.
- Papa
- God as Father — what He is, and what He has invited every one of us to call Him.
- Ruach
- The Holy Spirit. The Hebrew root is feminine, which is why these teachings use feminine pronouns for Her.
The Greek & Hebrew Keys
Each one a key that unlocks something specific in the covenant.
- diakrinōn· Greek
- To discern; to distinguish thoroughly; to see clearly what is actually in front of you. The whole assignment of the table (1 Corinthians 11:29).
- lambanō· Greek
- To receive — continuous, ongoing, deliberate. The verb Paul attaches to reigning in life (Romans 5:17). The hand on the button.
- trōgō· Greek
- To gnaw, to chew, to consume with deliberate intention. The physical eating word Jesus locks onto in John 6 — substance, not symbol.
- phagō· Greek
- To eat in the ordinary sense. The word Jesus uses before He shifts to trōgō — nibbling a symbol versus gnawing the substance.
- zōē· Greek
- The God-kind of life — the uncreated life of God Himself. Distinct from bios (biological life) and psuchē (soul life). What the elements carry into the body.
- nomos· Greek
- Law; a governing principle that runs automatically, the way gravity does (Romans 8:2). There is an old one and a new one.
- pneuma· Greek
- Breath, wind, Spirit — the same word for all three. Why the breath is never separate from the Spirit.
- anamnesis· Greek
- Remembrance — not the merely-mental kind. The deliberate making-present of what is already real (Luke 22:19).
- hesed· Hebrew
- Covenant lovingkindness; faithful love that keeps showing up, new every morning. The mercy underneath the clearing.
- katharizō· Greek
- To cleanse — present, continuous tense. The blood of Jesus cleanses, right now, on a loop (1 John 1:7).
- anaxiōs· Greek
- “In an unworthy manner.” An adverb, not an adjective — it describes the manner of approach to the table, not the worth of the person. Manner, not worthiness (1 Corinthians 11:27).
- aphesis· Greek
- Remission; a sending-away. Not a cover-up but a release — the way a creditor sends a debt away rather than collect on it.
Tetelestai. It is finished. Bring somebody with you.
