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  • LIVE DISCUSSION: "The Oneness/Modalism Heresy" Part 4/4
    2026/02/02

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    Start with love that existed before anything was made. That’s the thread we pull as we open Proverbs 8, John 3, Matthew 3, and John 5 to explore how the Father delights in the Son through the Spirit—and why that eternal relationship safeguards the gospel we preach. We move from text to clarity, showing how Scripture’s demand for two or three witnesses undercuts modalism and anchors the reliability of Jesus’ claims.

    We get practical fast. Questions pour in about the first “light” in Genesis, the Spirit hovering over the waters, and what it really means for Jesus to be at the right hand of God if there’s only one throne in heaven. We unpack how biblical throne language points to authority and dominion rather than physical seating, and why the ascended, incarnate Christ sharing the Father’s reign is the best news for weary disciples. Along the way, we map Daniel 7’s Son of Man, John 1’s Word, and Revelation’s river of life to show how the canon speaks with one voice: God alone creates, and the Father, Son, and Spirit work inseparably as one God in three distinct persons.

    You’ll also hear thoughtful guardrails for study: how doctrinal errors multiply when the doctrine of God is off, how to test teachings by Scripture, and how analogies like Adam and Eve can help without replacing revelation. The tone stays warm and pastoral, with space for real questions and honest wrestling, pointing you toward a faith that is both sturdy and adoring. If you’re navigating conversations with friends or family about the Trinity, or if you want deeper confidence that the gospel rests on God’s own self-giving love, this one will steady your steps and sharpen your answers.

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    33 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: "The Oneness/Modalism Heresy" Part 3/4
    2026/02/02

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    Ever wonder why Scripture so carefully speaks of the Father sending the Son and the Spirit being sent to us? We walk through the shape of salvation as a triune work: the Father initiates, the Son accomplishes redemption by bearing wrath on our behalf, and the Spirit applies that finished work to our hearts. This isn’t wordplay; it is the logic that makes adoption, assurance, and worship hold together without strain.

    We press into the biblical backbone behind this claim. From Daniel’s vision of the Son of Man coming to the Ancient of Days to Paul’s language in Romans and Colossians, the texts force us to reckon with real personal distinctions in God. Adoption becomes luminous when a natural Son stands at the center: we are sons by grace because He is Son by nature. Reduce the Son to a mode and you turn sonship into a metaphor and inheritance into poetry. Lift Him up as the eternal beloved of the Father, and the Spirit’s witness—crying “Abba, Father”—lands with living power.

    We also make the case that the Holy Spirit is not an abstract force but a divine person who speaks, teaches, grieves, and intercedes. Treat Him as a mere attribute and communion with God evaporates into theory; receive Him as Lord and He guides, seals, and comforts with purpose. Underneath it all is a profound claim: God is love, eternally. Eternal love requires an eternal beloved, and that is why the Father, Son, and Spirit are not theological extras but the beating heart of the gospel. Join us as we test assumptions, trace the Scriptures, and call the church back to its core confession that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of the living God.

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    33 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: "The Oneness/Modalism Heresy" Part 2/4
    2026/02/02

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    Start with a hard question: when Jesus prays, who is He talking to? We take that question straight to Scripture and uncover a clear pattern across the birth of Christ, His baptism, the transfiguration, Gethsemane, and His ongoing intercession. The threads converge on one reality: the Bible presents one God in three distinct persons, and that clarity is not a technicality—it safeguards the meaning of prayer, obedience, the cross, and salvation itself.

    We walk through the relational language of the New Testament—Father sending the Son, the Son obeying and saying not my will, but yours, and the Spirit descending and regenerating—and explain why these are not theatrical roles but real personal distinctions within the unity of God. That frame unlocks the power of mediation. A mediator stands between parties. First Timothy 2:5 calls Jesus the man Christ Jesus, mediator between God and men, while Hebrews and 1 John describe His intercession and advocacy with the Father. These terms lose force if the Son is merely the Father in disguise. They gain depth when the Son, truly God and truly man, presents His finished work to the Father on our behalf.

    We also map the triune pattern of salvation: the Father elects, the Son redeems, the Spirit regenerates and sanctifies. This is the living choreography behind every conversion, a single divine will enacted inseparably by three persons, each acting according to personal properties. Even the Old Testament prepares us for this unity-in-distinction: the Shema’s confession of one Lord, the Elohim language of Genesis, and the Angel of the Lord and Name theology hint at plurality-in-unity fulfilled in Christ and the Spirit. Far from puzzle-box religion, this is the Bible’s straightforward witness that preserves the gospel’s center.

    If this conversation helps you see Scripture’s coherence more clearly, share it with a friend, subscribe for future deep dives, and leave a review telling us the passage that most clarified the Trinity for you. Your reflections shape where we go next.

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    33 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: "The Oneness/Modalism Heresy" Part 1/4
    2026/02/02

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    Ever wondered how Scripture can say God is one while revealing Father, Son, and Holy Spirit in living, relational harmony? We take on the challenge head-on, not with philosophy but with clear passages that refuse to be flattened into a single-person performance. At the Jordan River, Jesus stands in the water, the Spirit descends, and the Father speaks from heaven—no costume changes, no echo tricks, just the triune God revealing himself in love and mission.

    From there, we walk through John 14 where Jesus promises “another Comforter,” the Spirit of truth whom the Father sends at the Son’s request. The language is unmistakable: three distinct persons acting in perfect unity for our good. We also reach back to Genesis 1:26—“Let us make man in our image”—to show how the Old Testament sows seeds of plurality within the one God, later named fully in the New Testament as Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Along the way, we address common objections, including why “Everlasting Father” in Isaiah 9:6 does not erase the real distinction between the Father and the Son.

    What does this mean for daily faith? Everything. Prayer finds its shape when we come to the Father, through the Son, in the Holy Spirit. The gospel holds its power when we see the Son obediently laying down his life to the Father, and the Spirit applying that finished work to our hearts. A solitary god cannot be love from eternity, but the triune God is love—forever Father loving the Son in the fellowship of the Spirit—and that love welcomes us into communion.

    If this conversation sharpened your view of God and gave you new language for prayer and worship, share it with a friend who’s wrestling with these questions. Subscribe for more Scripture-first studies, and leave a review with your favorite passage that shows the Triune God at work.

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    33 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: "Man Drinks Iniquity Like Water" (Job 15:14-16), Part 4/4
    2026/01/30

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    What if your best qualities are more like moonlight than sunlight—real, beautiful, yet entirely borrowed? We lean into that humbling image to explore why God doesn’t place His trust in creatures, even righteous ones, and how that clarifies the difference between holiness that shines and holiness that originates. The conversation threads through Job’s story, Eliphaz’s hard words, and the subtle ways sincere doctrine can be twisted into a weapon when a friend is in pain.

    Together we unpack strong biblical language about human depravity—unclean, abominable, filthy—and show how a truthful diagnosis amplifies, not diminishes, the glory of grace. The more clearly we see sin’s depth, the more clearly we see Christ’s sufficiency. That realism reshapes discipleship: resident sin remains, so we practice daily vigilance, keep our minds renewed, and resist the myth of spiritual autopilot. A listener question opens a careful distinction about heaven being “not pure” in God’s sight: it’s a contrast of dependence, not a flaw in glory. Even angels stand by grace, not independent moral credit.

    We also address the pastoral heart of the matter: what it means to bring Scripture as a balm rather than a bludgeon. Eliphaz states true things but misapplies them to accuse Job of “drinking iniquity like water.” We talk about how sin can feel like false refreshment, why living water in Christ displaces those cravings, and how real comfort looks like presence, patience, and prayer—not drive-by proof texts. The episode closes with reflections, gratitude, and a call to keep drawing from the Word and the Spirit as our sustaining stream.

    If this conversation stirred something in you—about humility, compassion, or a fresh thirst for living water—follow the show, share it with a friend who needs hope, and leave a review so others can find it. Your reflections help us keep these deep, honest dialogues going.

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    35 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: "Man Drinks Iniquity Like Water" (Job 15:14-16), Part 3/4
    2026/01/30

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    If even heaven isn’t clean enough for God, where does that leave the rest of us—and what does that mean for raising our kids? We open with the ordinary moments that expose the human heart: a toddler’s swat, a child’s stubborn no, the instinct to get our way. Then we hold those moments up to the blazing light of Job’s questions and the doctrine of total depravity. Not to shame parents or scare kids, but to see clearly why early formation matters and why the antidote can’t be found in willpower or better techniques.

    Together we trace a thread from the nursery to the throne room. Scripture says God puts no trust in saints and that even the heavens are not clean in his sight. That doesn’t indict holy angels as sinners; it tells us all creaturely purity is derivative. If God won’t stake salvation on the best of his creatures, he certainly won’t rest it on our fragile choices. We weigh the competing claims of Calvinism and Arminianism in plain language, asking whether the decisive cause of salvation rests in God’s grace or in human decision. The logic of Job pushes us toward a humbling and hopeful conclusion: God acts because we cannot.

    From there, we bring the theology home. What does “you will be saved, you and your household” mean for parents trying to set the tone of their homes? We talk headship without harshness, boundaries without legalism, and practices that give kids covenantal access to the gospel—daily Scripture, honest repentance, patient correction, and a house shaped by prayer. Parents are stewards, not saviors. The good news is that the God who doesn’t trust angels to keep themselves will not trust salvation to us either; he keeps those he saves. That reality quiets panic, fuels courage, and turns everyday moments into training in grace.

    If this conversation sharpened your vision or encouraged your resolve, share it with a friend, hit follow, and leave a quick review. What’s one truth you want to plant in your home this week?

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    35 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: "Man Drinks Iniquity Like Water" (Job 15:14-16), Part 2/4
    2026/01/30

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    What if the core problem isn’t bad choices but a broken nature—and what if the cure is not a cleaner slate but a new heart? We take you from Ezekiel’s promise of renewal to Jude’s assurance that Christ himself keeps us from falling, weaving Scripture with real stories of family, strongholds, and the quiet battles that shape daily life. The point isn’t to minimize sin; it’s to recognize why grading it on a curve leaves everyone short of the canyon’s edge.

    We push past the myth of “try harder” religion and show why imputed righteousness is not theological jargon but oxygen for a tired soul. If Christ’s perfect life counts as ours, then assurance stops riding the rollercoaster of our habits and starts resting on his finished work. That changes how we parent, how we pray for loved ones, and how we face the moments when we fail and want to hide. You’ll hear why Job’s sacrifices hint at a deeper truth: Jesus accounted for sin in full—past, present, and future—so repentance becomes a return to love, not a plea for entry.

    Along the way, we ask hard questions with gentle honesty: Are children born innocent or merely untested? Can anyone bridge the gap to divine holiness by effort? What does it mean to be a new creation rather than an improved version of the old self? If you’re wrestling with assurance, striving under spiritual exhaustion, or longing to see renewal in your home, this conversation offers clarity, conviction, and comfort anchored in the Word.

    If this resonates, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs assurance, and leave a review to help others find these conversations. Your voice helps this community grow.

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    35 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: "Man Drinks Iniquity Like Water" (Job 15:14-16), Part 1/4
    2026/01/30

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    What happens when a true doctrine is used the wrong way? We dive into Job 15:14–16 and wrestle with Eliphaz’s stark claims about human sinfulness, the purity of God, and why no one “born of a woman” can declare themselves righteous. The passage is theologically rich—touching on total depravity, moral inability, and the inevitability of sin—yet the conversation shows how truth can wound when it’s misapplied to a suffering friend.

    Together we unpack the universal scope of “What is man” and the piercing image of “drinking iniquity like water.” If even the heavens are not clean in God’s sight, human self-approval crumbles. We trace how this standard exposes a deeper problem than bad behavior: a fallen nature that cannot produce righteousness. That’s where grace becomes more than comfort language; it’s the only way anyone can stand. We talk candidly about why salvation requires an external initiative from God, how faith is awakened rather than engineered, and why Christ deals not only with our actions but with our nature at the cross.

    Along the way, we also challenge the subtle errors of Job’s friends—equating consensus and age with truth, calling accusation “consolation,” and reading suffering as proof of secret sin. Our goal isn’t to soften Scripture but to apply it wisely: to hold firm to God’s holiness while extending patience to the afflicted. If you’ve ever wondered whether doctrine can be both sharp and healing, this conversation offers a map for conviction and compassion to coexist.

    If this resonates, follow the show, share it with a friend who loves the book of Job, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway so we can keep these deep dives coming.

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    35 分