When the veil of the temple tore at the moment of Christ’s death, most of us were taught to read it as a general theological statement: the way to God has been opened. The barrier is removed. All are welcome now.
That reading is not wrong. It simply does not go deep enough.
In Episode 7 of the Kingdom Architecture Podcast, we trace the veil all the way back to its origins — not in Exodus, but in Eden. We discover that Eden was not merely a garden. It was the cosmic mountain where the three heavens overlapped: the First Heaven, the Second Heaven, and the Third Heaven converging in one location, in perfect, unmediated fellowship between God and man.
The Fall shattered that overlap. The Tabernacle memorialized it. The torn veil announced that the exile was over.
The apostle Paul, in 2 Corinthians 3, moves the entire conversation into a location most sermons never reach: the veil he describes is not over a building. It is over the heart. And when it is removed, what is unveiled is not a general theological access point. It is the Inner Room within you.
Eden was not destroyed. It was redesigned. And the new address is within the believer.










