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  • LIVE: "God Shall Cast Them Out of His Belly" (Job 20:12-19), Part 5/5
    2026/03/07

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    Ever been told there are two separate judgment seats—one for the wicked and a safer one for the righteous? We challenge that comfortable split and unpack Paul’s insistence that we must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ. From there, we map a clearer path through a topic that often breeds fear: believers are not re-tried for salvation, but our works are weighed for reward. That means no condemnation, yet real accountability, and a richer vision of grace where crowns reflect Christ’s life in us and become gifts we gladly lay down.

    We also slow down to ask what “the day” actually means. Not a rolling verdict on your week, but the Day of the Lord when Jesus returns and reveals what was built on gold and what was built on stubble. Along the way, we confront the idea of “degrees”—of reward and of torment—without turning eternity into a scoreboard. Think of the thief on the cross: almost no time to produce fruit, yet welcomed into paradise. If that is the mercy at the edge, imagine the generosity of God toward a lifetime of imperfect but faithful obedience, where perfect joy is full for everyone and still honors real faithfulness.

    Midway, we caution against a study habit that derails many good intentions: cross-referencing so fast that context can’t breathe. We share a practical method—understand the passage on its own terms, then connect the dots—and explain why Revelation so often becomes a maze. Finally, we return to Job 20 to expose the thin logic of Zophar’s charge that suffering proves guilt. Prosperity is not proof of righteousness, and history’s empires—including our own—have often swollen by exploiting the poor. Scripture answers with a sobering image: the wicked swallow riches, and God makes them give them back. Divine justice is not arbitrary; it is exact.

    If this conversation clarified your view of judgment, reward, and hope, follow the show, share it with a friend who loves tough texts, and leave a review telling us what “the Day” calls you to build.

    The Bible’s Most Puzzling Verses Explained
    Curious Verses is a Bible commentary podcast for anyone who’s ever read a passage...

    Listen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify

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    32 分
  • LIVE: "God Shall Cast Them Out of His Belly" (Job 20:12-19), Part 4/5
    2026/03/07

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    What happens when you reread your past after grace breaks in? We start with a jarring moment: a former rock frontman, once convinced his songs gave voice to pain, discovers he’d been preaching despair, drugs, and self-harm. That confession opens a candid exploration of sin’s strategy—how it starts small, earns our loyalty, and ends as a master—alongside the surprising hope the gospel offers when identity shifts from sin to Christ.

    We move through raw stories of addiction’s tunnel vision and the way “private” choices ripple through families and friends. Then we press into Scripture with care: the difference between breaking man’s law and offending God, why spiritual words require the Spirit, and how Moses choosing reproach over Egypt still reads like freedom. The heart of the conversation centers on identity and assurance. If believers are said to “not sin,” what does that mean when we still fail? We unpack union with Christ, imputed righteousness, and why there’s no condemnation for those who belong to him—without letting holiness fall off the map.

    The group tackles the Judgment Seat and the often-misread passage on wood, hay, and stubble. We clarify what it means to build on the foundation of Jesus with work that lasts, how motives are tested, and why rewards don’t undermine grace. Along the way, we challenge both cheap assurance and anxious striving: salvation is secure, and stewardship still matters. By the end, you’ll have a clearer grasp of how sin’s lie of hopelessness is broken, why identity in Christ changes how we act and speak, and how to pursue a life that endures the fire with joy.

    If this conversation gave you language for your own story, share it with a friend, subscribe for new episodes, and leave a review to help others find the show.

    The Bible’s Most Puzzling Verses Explained
    Curious Verses is a Bible commentary podcast for anyone who’s ever read a passage...

    Listen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify

    Support the show

    BE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

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    32 分
  • LIVE: "God Shall Cast Them Out of His Belly" (Job 20:12-19), Part 3/5
    2026/03/07

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    What if the sweet taste you chase is the very thing turning to poison inside you? We pull on a hard thread through Job’s fierce metaphors and today’s habits—alcohol, gluttony, vaping, and the quiet pride that renames greed as ambition—and reveal how pleasure becomes master, then jailer. Lisa’s story cuts through theory: the nights that felt like a blast until they didn’t, the moment excess stood over a breaking marriage, and the sober truth that “it gets you” long before you admit it’s there.

    We go deeper than warnings. Confession becomes the hinge of hope—quick, full, open. Not performance, not penance, but the courage to name the deed, mark the dates, and invite scrutiny that loves you enough to say no before the relapse. We talk about why secrecy festers, why people defend their chains as virtues, and how the language of grace grows faint when isolation takes hold. Then we tackle wealth with Job’s unsparing image: swallowing riches only to vomit them back out. Prosperity without righteousness cannot hold; sooner or later God casts out what was taken or treasured without truth.

    Through questions about whether the wicked “know their end,” we map will and nature with Romans 1 in view: apart from new birth, people answer to what they are. That’s why we keep telling the truth with urgency and tenderness. Christian liberty is not a license; it’s power to recognize sin, resist it with the Word, and rest in Christ who breaks the clasp of bondage. If you’re tired of calling poison sweet, this conversation offers clarity, courage, and a path back to life.

    If this spoke to you, follow the show, share it with someone who needs hope today, and leave a review to help others find it.

    The Bible’s Most Puzzling Verses Explained
    Curious Verses is a Bible commentary podcast for anyone who’s ever read a passage...

    Listen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify

    Support the show

    BE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

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    32 分
  • LIVE: "God Shall Cast Them Out of His Belly" (Job 20:12-19), Part 2/5
    2026/03/07

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    What if the thing weighing you down is the “spare” sin you keep just in case? We open the door on confession, reconciliation, and the quiet relief that follows honest repentance. Starting with hard, hopeful stories, we talk about making the first move to seek forgiveness—even after months or years—and how that simple act becomes a living witness to what Christ actually changes in us.

    We walk through Job 20’s bracing image of sin “kept under the tongue,” like a tire stored for later. This isn’t stumbling; it’s strategy. We show how deliberate indulgence forms routines, how even one cherished lust can hollow a soul, and why trying to make a pet sin a mediator with God always fails. From there, we draw a clear line between the righteous and the wicked: Christians still sin, but conviction hurts, humbles, and redirects. That ache is a gift. It trains our reflexes to seek God at the crest of temptation, not merely after the crash. We get practical about cutting triggers, guarding the tongue, and treating neglect—especially neglected reconciliation—as real sin.

    Psalm 51 becomes our map for a contrite heart: clean me, renew me, restore joy. We push back on spiritual theatrics and keep the gospel simple, because people are starving for mercy, not novelty. The conversation closes with a sobering truth: cherished sin breeds bondage, and bondage declares allegiance. Yet grace meets us here—not to excuse us, but to free us. By exposing our need, conviction magnifies Christ’s sufficiency and grows us in holiness with steady, daily steps.

    If this speaks to you, share it with a friend, subscribe for more honest conversations about sin, grace, and growth, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway so we can keep the dialogue going.

    The Bible’s Most Puzzling Verses Explained
    Curious Verses is a Bible commentary podcast for anyone who’s ever read a passage...

    Listen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify

    Support the show

    BE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

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    32 分
  • LIVE: "God Shall Cast Them Out of His Belly" (Job 20:12-19), Part 1/5
    2026/03/07

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    What if the sweetest thing in your life is quietly making you sick? We open Job 20:12–19 and follow Zophar’s searing imagery of sin as candy on the tongue that turns to venom in the belly. The twist: his theology about secret sin is sharp, but his aim is wrong—Job isn’t the villain here. Still, the passage gives us an unflinching map of how temptation works: first imagined, then savored, then swallowed, and finally paid for.

    I walk through the psychology of hiding sin—how we rationalize, rehearse, and protect what we think comforts us—until peace thins out and conscience grows sore. We talk about the cost that spills beyond the self: when deception and exploitation harm others, restitution belongs in repentance. You’ll hear why confession beats concealment, not because exposure is easy, but because truth is the only place healing can breathe. One listener shares a raw testimony of quitting vaping in a single step; others reflect on forgiving old wounds and making amends with people they once wronged.

    Along the way we ground everything in plain, practical steps: naming patterns without euphemism, inviting real accountability, replacing old loops with life-giving habits, and planning tangible repairs where we’ve caused damage. We frame obedience not as a checkbox, but as love in motion—the natural expression of a heart reshaped by grace. If you’ve been rolling something under your tongue, hoping the sweetness lasts, this conversation offers a different feast: courage, clarity, and the kind of freedom that doesn’t vanish when the thrill fades.

    If this spoke to you, subscribe, share it with a friend who needs courage to confess, and leave a review telling us one step you’re taking this week.

    The Bible’s Most Puzzling Verses Explained
    Curious Verses is a Bible commentary podcast for anyone who’s ever read a passage...

    Listen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify

    Support the show

    BE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

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    32 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: "The Joy of the Hypocrite" (Job 20:4-11), Part 4/4
    2026/03/05

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    Pain has a way of exposing what we really believe about God and each other. Walking through the tension between truth and mercy in the book of Job, we face a hard question: what happens when you’re doctrinally accurate but relationally unkind? We trace how Job’s friends—certain of their theology—slip into jealousy, self‑righteousness, and condemnation, turning biblical ideas into blunt instruments. Along the way, we unpack Job 20:11 across translations and show how “sin of youth” versus “youthful vigor” becomes a case study in misreading people through a rigid lens.

    We share a better path. Instead of diagnosing “hidden sin,” we talk about believing the best, building unity before debate, and taking a friend’s pain to God in prayer. Compassion looks like staying quiet longer, admitting “I don’t understand either,” and letting the fruit of the Spirit guide our tone. We explore why trying to sit in God’s seat—judge, king, priest—always breaks people, and how keeping God on the throne frees us to serve rather than control. This is practical, shoes‑on‑the‑ground discipleship for conversations that actually heal.

    You’ll hear real stories of restraint over retaliation, scripture applied with gentleness, and community showing up with presence, not platitudes. If you’ve ever been hurt by “help” or struggled to comfort someone in deep loss, you’ll find language, perspective, and steps you can use today. Listen, reflect, and share with a friend who needs hope. If this resonated, subscribe, leave a review, and tell us: where have you seen truth used without love—and what restored it?

    The Bible’s Most Puzzling Verses Explained
    Curious Verses is a Bible commentary podcast for anyone who’s ever read a passage...

    Listen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify

    Support the show

    BE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

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    36 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: "The Joy of the Hypocrite" (Job 20:4-11), Part 3/4
    2026/03/05

    Send a text

    Ever been shut down by “you don’t understand the context”? We open with that cultural reflex and pull it apart, showing how appeals to context can clarify truth—or quietly silence it. From there we step into the furnace of Job, where Zophar’s confident theology turns into a blade. He calls Job’s life a dream that vanishes at waking, flips “joy comes in the morning” into a sentence of judgment, and even drags Job’s children into the indictment. The result is a masterclass in how correct ideas can be misused when aimed at the wrong heart.

    We also wrestle with Jesus’ words in John 8:44—Satan as a liar and murderer “from the beginning”—and what that reveals about the origin of evil and the moral landscape of Genesis. Along the way we challenge inherited systems and easy answers, sharing how real growth often means unlearning what we assumed was settled. Several of us admit the hard truth: sometimes we have kicked people when they were down, taking a secret pleasure in being right instead of being loving. That confession reframes the entire debate. Why do we prefer to explain another person’s suffering rather than sit with them in it?

    Through Job’s resilience we see what endures when accusations fly: a longing to see the Redeemer and a faith that won’t break under scorn. We talk practical comfort—listening before lecturing, praying before pronouncing—and warn how certainty can become cruelty when humility is missing. If you’ve ever been on either side of that moment, this conversation will challenge your instincts and steady your soul.

    If this resonated, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs real comfort, and leave a review with one takeaway you’ll practice this week.

    The Bible’s Most Puzzling Verses Explained
    Curious Verses is a Bible commentary podcast for anyone who’s ever read a passage...

    Listen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify

    Support the show

    BE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

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    36 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: "The Joy of the Hypocrite" (Job 20:4-11), Part 2/4
    2026/03/05

    Send a text

    Power dazzles when it climbs fast, but Scripture keeps asking what holds it up. We open with a gut-check on loyalty—pray for the nation, yes, but don’t mistake it for home—and name the modern pull to worship politicians and celebrate celebrity as if either could save us. From there we step into Job, listening as Zophar sketches the wicked whose glory seems to touch the clouds, only to vanish in a breath. It’s a portrait we recognize today: talent crowned as virtue, charisma confused for calling, and success read as proof of righteousness.

    We then hold that image next to Isaiah 14, where the taunt against the king of Tyre exposes the lie of self-exaltation. This is where we slow down, open the text, and confront a widespread assumption: the lone appearance of the term “Lucifer” addresses a human ruler, not Satan. That correction isn’t just trivia; it’s a call to be careful readers who refuse to trade Scripture for slogans. When we get sloppy with the easy stuff, we grow vulnerable to anyone who speaks confidently while saying little that is true.

    With that lens, we track how counterfeit light works. Satan masquerades as an angel of light, and our age makes it easy to mistake the glow of attention for the grace of God. We talk about Babel as a blueprint for self-worship, about friends who arrive as helpers but feed on someone’s fall, and about the way Job’s friends use half-true wisdom to press a false verdict. The thread through it all is simple and searching: no height is secure unless it is built by righteousness, and no critique is safe unless it bows to God’s sovereignty.

    What sets us free is the confession Job anchors everything to: “I know that my Redeemer lives.” The true Morning Star does not posture; He descends, serves, and raises the humble. That is the light children of light follow—steady when fame flickers, strong when headlines shout. If this episode sharpened your thinking or nudged you back to the text, share it with a friend, subscribe for more, and leave a review with one belief you’re ready to fact-check against Scripture.

    The Bible’s Most Puzzling Verses Explained
    Curious Verses is a Bible commentary podcast for anyone who’s ever read a passage...

    Listen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify

    Support the show

    BE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    続きを読む 一部表示
    36 分