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  • LIVE: God Casting the Fury of His Wrath (Job 20:20-25), Part 5/5
    2026/03/08

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    What if your first thought in a friend’s crisis is the wrong one? We dig into Job’s relentless cycles and discover why repetition is a mercy, not a mistake: it trains our instincts to slow down, listen well, and speak with care. The friends sound biblical, yet they miss Job by a mile—because truth without context becomes a weapon. We trace how assumptions grow when evidence is thin, why tidy formulas like “suffering equals guilt” fail the righteous, and how to ask better questions before we offer answers.

    Walking verse by verse through Job 20–21, we explore a bracing theme: the wicked feast until the bill arrives. Appetite swells, satisfaction vanishes, and judgment interrupts the party. That warning doesn’t invite smugness; it invites sobriety and hope. We talk about readiness not as spotless performance, but as a life bent toward holiness—hating sin, loving Jesus, and adjusting our speech to heal, not harm. Trials, we argue, are the furnace of sanctification, not the proof of scandal, and the way we stand with the suffering reveals what we truly believe about God.

    Along the way, the group shares last-word takeaways, celebrates answered prayer, and renews a commitment to biblical precision. We discuss why context beats proof-texts, how stewardship of words matters when conversations travel far beyond the room, and we close by praying for a divided nation to be made steady, humble, and united under truth. If you’ve ever wondered how to be a better friend in the fog of pain—or how to let scripture correct your instincts before your instincts correct someone else—this conversation will sharpen your heart and your tongue.

    Enjoy the study, share it with your group, and if it helps you think and love more clearly, subscribe, leave a review, and tell us the one insight you’re taking into your next hard conversation.

    RISE RADIO
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    33 分
  • LIVE: God Casting the Fury of His Wrath (Job 20:20-25), Part 4/5
    2026/03/08

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    Grace that holds. Judgment that’s real. Hope that doesn’t blink. We walk straight into the tension many avoid: if God calls, does He fail? If salvation is a gift, why do some harden their hearts? We explore effectual calling with clear-eyed honesty, showing why the assurance of Christ finishing the work fuels humility, not pride, and urgency, not apathy. The gospel is not a soft option; it’s the only lifeline that makes sense of a holy God, a broken world, and a Savior who actually saves.

    From there we tackle a topic culture loves to mock: hell. Not sensationalism, not scare tactics—clarity. We talk about separation from God’s common grace, why eternal judgment has no early release, and how the law exposes our need down to the level of thought. You either stand clothed in Christ’s righteousness or stand alone. That distinction is not abstract theology; it’s the difference between peace and terror when life ends. Along the way we address modern claims that “hell is conquered” in a way that empties judgment. Scripture speaks otherwise, and we show why truth and love are never rivals when souls are at stake.

    Anchored by vivid passages in Job 20, we trace the imagery of inevitable justice: evade one weapon and another finds its mark; wounds go deep; terror closes in. We’re candid about the pull of feelings over texts, then bring the conversation back to a simple, urgent call: seek Christ now. Not tomorrow. Not when it’s convenient. The Mediator stands ready, the cross is enough, and mercy is offered to the contrite.

    If you value thoughtful, Scripture-shaped conversations about salvation, wrath, grace, and real hope, this one’s for you. Listen, share with a friend who needs clarity, and leave a review to help others find the show. Then tell us: what truth challenged you most today?

    RISE RADIO
    Each week we discuss some of the most important issues we face in our society today.

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    34 分
  • LIVE: God Casting the Fury of His Wrath (Job 20:20-25), Part 3/5
    2026/03/08

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    Judgment rarely sends a save-the-date. We open with God’s faithfulness and move straight into the hard edge of Job 20, where the wicked settle in to savor their winnings and find the sky breaking over their heads. That picture isn’t theater; it’s a mercy. It shakes us out of spiritual entertainment—prophecy charts, calendar raptures, and vibes that pass for theology—and brings us back to a steady gospel that can bear real life.

    We draw a firm line: salvation has always come by grace through faith, from the first pages of Scripture to the last. Baptism and communion aren’t entry fees; they are gifts to the rescued—public joy in the water and regular grace at the table. At the same time, we warn against shrinking these gifts into options that never land in practice. Real faith loves the ordinances because real faith loves the Lord who gave them. Along the way, we talk about how God shows no partiality—souls are weighed by the same standard, and identity labels won’t excuse unbelief when we stand before Christ.

    The conversation turns personal and urgent. One of us grieves for friends and strangers headed toward ruin, and that sorrow becomes a charge: be a loving nuisance. Ask again, invite again, warn again. Today is the word God uses for repentance, which means grace is near today. We also push for deeper study—context over soundbites, whole-Bible sense over cherry-picked definitions. Words like world carry layers; meaning comes from the passage, not our preferences. If you’ve worn a thin, playful version of Christianity, it’s time to shed it and step into something weighty, glad, and true.

    Listen for a bracing tour through Job 20, a clear case against sensational doctrines that distract from discipleship, and a hopeful call to practice a serious, joyful faith. If this sparks you to pray, to study, to reach out to someone by name, tell us. Subscribe, share this with a friend who needs courage, and leave a review with one step you’ll take today.

    RISE RADIO
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    34 分
  • LIVE: God Casting the Fury of His Wrath (Job 20:20-25), Part 2/5
    2026/03/08

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    Calamity loves the summit. We open the text to a hard truth: when life feels most secure, the fall often begins—not because money or achievement are evil, but because sufficiency tempts the heart to drift. That image of a straitjacket at the peak becomes our guide as we examine how comfort breeds complacency, how trust in wealth grows fragile wings, and why collapse can arrive precisely when applause is loudest.

    Together we probe a deeper question: what story does our success tell about our souls? We visit Joseph of Arimathea as a rare portrait of faithful stewardship—quiet, costly, Christ-centered—and contrast it with modern scandals where pride, pressure, and power devour the people they promise to protect. The aim isn’t outrage for its own sake; it’s clarity. If you build on idols, idols collect their due. If you build on mercy, mercy multiplies.

    Our conversation widens to identity and hope. The people of God are not defined by passports or parties but by grace. The holy nation Peter describes gathers every tribe that trusts Jesus, and no empire can claim or cancel it. From there we set expectations straight: political figures and cultural titans are not saviors. The gates of hell do not prevail against the church, and worldly alliances will eventually betray those who lean on them. So we test our loyalties, trade panic for prayer, and ask better questions about what we finance, who we serve, and how our daily choices preach the gospel.

    We end where real change begins: repentance and fruit. Love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control are not sentimental extras; they are the public proof that our treasure is in heaven. Want to rethink what you trust, how you steward what you have, and where your true citizenship lies? Press play, share with a friend who needs courage, and leave a review with the one insight you’re taking into the week.

    RISE RADIO
    Each week we discuss some of the most important issues we face in our society today.

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    34 分
  • LIVE: God Casting the Fury of His Wrath (Job 20:20-25), Part 1/5
    2026/03/08

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    The room goes quiet when Zophar’s words land: no quietness in the belly, no lasting gain, calamity right when barns are full. We walk through Job 20 with clear eyes and open Bibles, tracing how a true doctrine about the wicked became a misfire against a righteous man. That tension—truth without wisdom—pushes us to ask harder questions about suffering, ambition, and what actually brings rest to a hungry heart.

    We unpack the anatomy of appetite: why the belly, as Scripture pictures it, never stops wanting; why more money, more security, and more applause rarely translate into peace; and how “arrival” is a mirage that drains delight even as it grows our to-do lists. The line “he shall not feel quietness in his belly” becomes a mirror for modern life, revealing why our calendars swell while our souls shrink. From there, we tackle the deeper spiritual law embedded in these verses: sin carries its own undoing. Greed consumes its gains. Pride isolates the victor. Exploitation hollows out legacies until “none of his meat be left.”

    We also refuse the lazy math that equates prosperity with God’s favor and pain with hidden guilt. Job’s integrity matters here—“The Lord gives and the Lord takes away”—because it reminds us that faith can bless God without gifts. We contrast the rich fool’s bigger barns with being rich toward God, showing how abundance becomes a trap when eternity is ignored. And then comes the line that still stings: “In the fullness of his sufficiency, he shall be in straits.” Distress always finds a door into stockpiled life. The answer is not more locks but a new love: Christ reorders desire, anchors joy beyond loss, and grants the quietness no fortune can buy.

    If this conversation challenged your view of success, share it with a friend, subscribe for more thoughtful, Scripture-centered episodes, and leave a review telling us where you’ve seen “more” fail to satisfy. Your story might be the bridge someone else needs today.

    RISE RADIO
    Each week we discuss some of the most important issues we face in our society today.

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    33 分
  • 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...

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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

    Send a text

    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!

    続きを読む 一部表示
    32 分