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  • LIVE: "Thou Art Become Cruel To Me" (Job 30:20-31), Part 4/4
    2026/04/17

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    What if the most confusing part of your suffering is not the pain, but what you think it says about God? We start with a listener question about God’s preceptive will and “free will,” and that opens into a raw, Scripture-driven conversation about grace, obedience, and why the heart resists God apart from His help.

    We camp in Philippians 1:29, where Paul says it is “given” to believers not only to believe, but also to suffer for Christ’s sake. That one verse forces a different way of thinking about salvation, effectual grace, and the first cause of our faith. Then we pull in 1 Peter 3 to face a hard category most of us avoid: suffering for doing good “if the will of God be so.” Job becomes the lived example, a righteous man who cannot make sense of a trial he did not choose and did not order.

    We also bring in John 13:16, because it cuts our pride down to size: a servant is not greater than his master. If Christ suffered, we should not treat hardship as automatic proof God has left us. The conversation closes like a family around a table, sharing last thoughts, encouragement, and prayers, with a steady reminder that God reveals Himself through creation, fall, curse, and redemption and our trials are not outside His story.

    If this helped you rethink suffering, God’s sovereignty, or the Book of Job, subscribe for more, share it with a friend who needs steadiness right now, and leave a review so others can find it. What line of Scripture do you hold onto when life hurts?

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    39 分
  • LIVE: "Thou Art Become Cruel To Me" (Job 30:20-31), Part 3/4
    2026/04/17

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    People ask “What is God’s will?” like it’s one simple answer. We found it’s only simple until you open the Bible and notice God both commands and ordains, and those are not the same category. That difference, preceptive will versus decretive will, becomes the key that unlocks a bunch of hard passages and even harder questions we all hear in real conversations.

    We work through concrete examples like the crucifixion of Christ and Pharaoh’s hardened heart, showing how God’s holy commands stand firm while his sovereign decree still governs history. Then we go straight at the emotional “gotcha” questions people use to attack the sovereignty of God, including the problem of evil. Along the way, we name the common bait and switch: using the phrase “God’s will” without defining it, then blaming God for what he forbids.

    From there, we connect sovereignty to salvation and assurance. If man is the first cause of salvation, God becomes a responder and grace quietly turns into a reward. We talk through why that mindset fuels legalism, why Galatians refuses it, and how Hebrews warns against going back to the law as if Christ is not enough. We also clarify Hebrews 6 by distinguishing genuine faith from people who only “taste” and later walk away, and we end with a simple line that holds the tension: we trust God’s decree and we obey God’s commands.

    If you want clearer theology, steadier comfort in suffering, and better words for tough Bible questions, press play, then subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review with the biggest question this raised for you.

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    39 分
  • LIVE: "Thou Art Become Cruel To Me" (Job 30:20-31), Part 2/4
    2026/04/17

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    Job doesn’t sound like a distant Bible character here. He sounds like someone who did the right things, cared for people in crisis, and now can’t understand why his own suffering is met with darkness instead of relief. We read Job 30:24–31 closely and sit with the emotional logic behind his words: “When I looked for good, evil came.” That single line opens up grief, confusion, and the terrifying feeling that God has pulled back the warmth you used to know.

    We also talk about the thin ice Job steps onto when he starts pressing God for an answer. There’s a real human instinct in suffering to push harder, to say more, to risk saying the wrong thing if it might finally break the silence. Along the way we explore how lament shows up in the body and in public life, why Job compares himself to lonely creatures, and what it means when even music stops bringing comfort.

    Then we take on the theology beneath the tension: what “evil” means in biblical language, how calamity relates to God’s sovereignty, and why the distinction between God’s decretive will and God’s preceptive will matters for anyone trying to make sense of the problem of evil. If you’ve ever wondered how God can be sovereign without being charged with moral evil, this will give you clearer words and steadier categories.

    Subscribe for more Bible study conversations, share this with a friend who’s walking through suffering, and leave a review with your biggest question about Job’s honesty and God’s silence.

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    39 分
  • LIVE: "Thou Art Become Cruel To Me" (Job 30:20-31), Part 1/4
    2026/04/17

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    Job’s words in chapter 30 are some of the most startling in the Bible: “I cry unto thee, and you do not hear me.” We sit with that line without rushing past it, because many Christians know what it’s like to pray and feel nothing back. As we read Job 30:20–23, we talk about the moment Job’s suffering language shifts from God feeling distant to God feeling opposed, and why that turn can be spiritually dangerous even when it’s coming from real pain.

    We also dig into Job’s strange picture of being lifted up to the wind and “dissolved,” connecting it to the biblical imagery of wheat and chaff. That metaphor opens a bigger conversation about interpretation under pressure: when you’re grieving, sick, isolated, and worn down, your soul can start reading circumstances as rejection. We explore the difference between God’s actual purpose in trials (refining, humbling, strengthening faith) and Job’s lived experience in the middle of the storm (disorientation, despair, and the fear that death is near). If you care about biblical lament, Christian suffering, God’s silence, and how to pray through spiritual depression, this conversation lands close to home.

    Along the way we talk candidly about why we should be slow to judge Job, how massive loss rewires what “normal faith” even feels like, and how God can still call a believer upright while knowing they will have dark moments. If this helped you, subscribe for more Bible study through Job, share the episode with someone who’s hurting, and leave a review with the line that hit you hardest.

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    39 分
  • LIVE: "Because He Has Loosed My Cord" (Job 30:1-19), Part 3/3
    2026/04/16

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    Pain has a way of making God feel like the problem, and Job’s words don’t hide that tension. We sit with a heavy section of Job 30:16–19 where Job describes unrelenting affliction, sleepless nights, and the humiliation of feeling thrown into the mire. Then we slow down and ask the question most believers eventually face: when life hurts this badly, how do we keep our language about God clean while still telling the truth about what we feel?

    A big turning point comes as we connect Job to James 1. We talk through the inner mechanics of temptation, how desire pulls us, how sin grows, and why Scripture refuses the idea that God tempts us to evil. From there, we lay out a practical framework: the same hardship can be a test God permits for refining faith, while the enemy works the moment as temptation toward accusation, despair, and spiritual drift. That “two-sided coin” helps make sense of why trials can carry both danger and reward.

    You’ll also hear a wide range of reflections from the group, including a standout contribution from Brother Israel joining live from Nigeria in the early hours of the morning, reminding us that true submission to God doesn’t cancel crisis, it anchors us through it. We close with stewardship lessons from Job’s “naked I came” mindset, a reminder about storing treasures in heaven, and a candid conversation on Bible unity, Old Testament and New Testament continuity, and why that matters when you interpret suffering.

    If you found this helpful, subscribe, share it with someone walking through a trial, and leave a review so more people can find this Job Bible study. What part of suffering tests your faith the most right now?

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    39 分
  • LIVE: "Because He Has Loosed My Cord" (Job 30:1-19), Part 2/3
    2026/04/16

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    Respect can vanish overnight, and sometimes the worst part isn’t the loss of comfort, it’s the public contempt. We sit with Job 30 as Job gets treated like a disgrace by the very people he once helped, and we name the brutal reality of suffering that feels personal, unfair, and isolating. When no one shows up to defend you, what does faith even sound like?

    We connect Job’s humiliation to Jesus’ suffering and the Scriptures that put words to the ache, especially Psalm 22 and Isaiah 53. We talk about what it means to endure without sinning, why “turn the other cheek” is more than a slogan, and how silence can tempt us to start speaking for God. Along the way we challenge the habit of building conclusions from what God hasn’t said, because arguments from silence can quietly turn pain into distorted theology.

    We also wrestle with spiritual warfare, intrusive thoughts, and the possibility that temptation targets the mind when the body is already exhausted. We hold God’s sovereignty and human responsibility together, and we end with James 1 to clarify what trials can produce and what God never does: He does not tempt anyone to sin. If you’ve ever felt unheard, misjudged, or spiritually exhausted, this conversation will give you language, Scripture, and a steadier grip on endurance. Subscribe for more, share this with someone in a hard season, and leave a review. What’s the hardest part of trusting God when He feels quiet?

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    39 分
  • LIVE: "Because He Has Loosed My Cord" (Job 30:1-19), Part 1/3
    2026/04/16

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    If you’ve ever thought, “I believe God is sovereign… so why does this feel pointless?”, Job 30 will meet you right where you are. We sit with Job’s raw humiliation as the people who once watched him with respect now treat him like a joke. The pain is not only physical. It’s relational, public, and relentless. And it forces a question most of us would rather dodge: what do we do when God’s providence feels like it’s crushing us instead of comforting us?

    We take Romans 8:28 seriously, not as a bumper-sticker line but as a literal claim that everything works together for the good of those in Christ. That includes the headlines, the powerful people making decisions far above our pay grade, and the private losses nobody else sees. We also talk about biblical interpretation and why Christians can get oddly inconsistent about what’s symbolic and what’s plain, then live day to day as if God’s promise isn’t actually true.

    Along the way, we face the ugliness in us and around us: the temptation to gloat when someone falls, the urge to retaliate when we’re shamed, and the bitterness that grows when we feel “burned” after trying to do good. We end by tracing Job’s mockery to the greater pattern it foreshadows, Jesus Christ enduring scorn and shame, giving sufferers both a Savior who understands and a path to follow.

    If this helped you, subscribe, share it with a friend who’s carrying something heavy, and leave a review so more people can find the conversation. What part of Romans 8:28 is hardest for you to trust right now?

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    39 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: "Israel Removed, Yet Israel Remains" Part 5/5
    2026/04/13

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    “All Israel will be saved” is one of the most quoted lines in the New Testament, and one of the most misunderstood. We slow down and read Paul’s argument the way he builds it: not as a slogan for nationalism, but as a gospel claim about who belongs to God and how God keeps his promises.

    We start in Romans 2, where Paul defines a true Jew as someone inwardly transformed, with circumcision of the heart by the Spirit. From there we move to Romans 9 and the line that stops so many debates cold: “They are not all Israel who are of Israel.” We talk through what that means for Abraham’s children, for the difference between flesh and promise, and for why Paul can defend God’s faithfulness even when many ethnic Israelites do not believe.

    Then we connect it to Romans 11 and the olive tree: one tree, natural branches broken off through unbelief, wild branches grafted in through faith, and a “fullness” that brings Jews and Gentiles together into one family of God. That’s the frame we use to explain “all Israel shall be saved” without inventing a second track plan for the church and national Israel. Along the way, we address common dispensational assumptions, the theme of spiritual Israel, and the practical need to know not only what we believe, but why we believe it, using clear Bible passages.

    If this clarified your view of Israel, the church, and salvation by grace through faith in Jesus Christ, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway.

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    34 分