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  • LIVE DISCUSSION: (Job 14:17-22) "You Sew Up My Iniquity) - Part 3/3
    2026/01/28

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    Mortality has a way of simplifying what actually matters. We open Job 14 and sit with its hard claim that death cuts our ties to earthly honor and shame, then trace how that truth reframes legacy, ambition, and the way we love our families. Along the way, we tell real stories—praying for prodigal kids, feeling the ache of unanswered hopes, and hearing the quiet challenge to trust God more than our own plans.

    Together we press into the difference between knowing about Jesus and truly knowing Him. We talk through election, grace, and why faith isn’t a badge of superiority but a gift that humbles us. The courtroom picture becomes vivid: good deeds can’t dismiss the case against us, but the cross can. That clarity opens space for forgiveness in messy relationships and courage for honest witness without control. We also face the sober arc of dying—pain in the body, mourning in the soul—and the surprising calm many saints display, a “dying grace” that points past our fear to the One who holds us.

    If you’re weary of chasing a legacy that won’t matter to you in the grave, this conversation offers a different aim: become a faithful servant of Christ today and leave the outcomes with Him. Pray for those you love, forgive quickly, read Scripture in community, and let God change what you want at the core. Listen, reflect, and share this with someone who needs hope. If this moved you, follow the show, leave a rating, and tell us what question about eternity you want us to tackle next.

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    35 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: (Job 14:17-22) "You Sew Up My Iniquity) - Part 2/3
    2026/01/28

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    What if your life is a lease, not a possession—and the One who owns it has already defeated death? We dive into the hard edges of suffering through Job’s eyes and follow the thread to the empty tomb, making the case that without the resurrection, faith is noise, but with it, every moment carries eternal weight. This isn’t about scare tactics or spiritual posturing; it’s about coherence. If Christ rose, justice isn’t theoretical, mercy isn’t sentimental, and hope isn’t wishful thinking.

    We wrestle with 1 Corinthians 15 and its stark claim that without the resurrection, preaching is pointless and faith is futile. From there, we tackle Daniel 9 and why prophecy must lead us to the Anointed One rather than to speculation that skips over the cross. History isn’t a pile of accidents; it’s a providential weave where empires rise and fall to serve a single story. When Scripture is read as one book about one Savior, the fog lifts—eschatology stops being a hobby and starts shaping how we live, love, and endure.

    We also go straight at the heart: sin touches everything, including our most religious moments. Words reveal the soul more than appearances, and the cure isn’t polish but repentance and a steady diet of God’s Word. Job’s realism about death reframes our days: God dismisses his soldiers when their watch is done, and for those in Christ, dismissal is not defeat. That future clarity gives present courage—love people now, speak truth now, and let the resurrection decide how you carry grief, confront error, and pursue joy that suffering can’t crush.

    If this conversation stirred you, share it with a friend, subscribe for more, and leave a review telling us the one question about resurrection or prophecy you want us to tackle next.

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    35 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: (Job 14:17-22) "You Sew Up My Iniquity) - Part 1/3
    2026/01/28

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    When even mountains crumble and rocks shift, what chance do our plans have? We dive into Job 14 with a simple but piercing claim: if creation’s strongest pillars erode, human pride has nowhere to stand. From that image of mountains to rocks to dust, we trace a line through our daily ambitions, the myth of permanence, and the quiet ways time exposes what we truly trust.

    We sit with the slow lessons of erosion. Water wears stone not with shock but with patience, and that pattern reframes how we think about delay, judgment, and hope. Mockers measure God by the clock; Job measures us by the landscape. Along the way we bring in lived moments—a jersey in the mail, a neighbor who shows up in the snow—to show how providence interrupts our scripts and teaches gratitude. Creation becomes a tutor, reminding us that stability is granted, not seized.

    The heart of the conversation centers on hope, justice, and love. Job says God destroys the hope of man—meaning the carnal hopes we build on status, longevity, and control—so he can replace them with a sturdier promise. We talk about the cross as propitiation rather than polish, the reality of wrath and the weight of atonement, and why the resurrection is the kind of permanence erosion cannot touch. The takeaway is both sobering and freeing: hold plans lightly, cling to the One who outlasts time, and be ready today. If this resonates, subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave a review telling us which hope you’re rebuilding on God.

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    35 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: (Job 15:1-6) "Tongue Of The Crafty" - Part 4/4
    2026/01/28

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    If you’ve ever felt the tension between comfort and conviction, this conversation meets you where you live. We start with a bold claim: God’s perfection never changes, and that unshakable character is the only safe place to put your trust. From there, we challenge assumptions about Christian Zionism and any theology that ties Christian hope to geography, lineage, or a rebuild of sacred places. Christ is the final temple, and He gathers one people from every nation—Jew and Gentile—built together as living stones.

    We wrestle honestly with history and belief, drawing a clear line between people and mindsets while calling listeners to become students of Scripture rather than passengers of cultural narratives. The message is both corrective and freeing: Abraham’s promise points to a worldwide family in Christ, not a narrow destiny on a map. When faith is grounded in Jesus alone, unity expands, worship deepens, and our identity no longer depends on borders or politics.

    Then the lens narrows to the heart. We talk about personal revival—returning to Bible and prayer with urgency—and confront the counterfeit god of “love without truth.” Real love corrects, warns, and calls us to repentance. Jesus does not negotiate with sin; He leads us out of it. That’s why grace must walk hand in hand with truth, shaping a church that can endure dark days with courage and compassion. Along the way, we share real-life care through intercessory prayer for a sister facing surgery, modeling the kind of community that stands together when answers are scarce and fear is loud.

    Listen for a bracing, hope-filled call to trust God’s unchanging character, belong to a global body in Christ, and choose love with a backbone. If this resonates, subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review to help more people find the show—and tell us: where did truth challenge you most today?

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    34 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: (Job 15:1-6) "Tongue Of The Crafty" - Part 3/4
    2026/01/28

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    What if heartfelt lament isn’t rebellion but faith under pressure? We trace that question from the fire of Jeremiah and Isaiah to the ash heap with Job, where friends confuse honest grief with crafty speech. Along the way, we share a real story of walking back into church after tension, choosing reconciliation over avoidance, and learning that being wronged doesn’t guarantee a righteous response. The thread is simple and demanding: judge speech by truth, not by tone or circumstance.

    We dive deep into Job 15 and the charge that “your mouth utters iniquity,” asking why people label uncomfortable truths as unloving. The challenge lands on modern ground: believers often police emotion instead of testing claims by Scripture. We also confront selective courage in public theology. If Jesus is Lord, then any system that denies him stands opposed to the gospel; consistency matters more than cultural comfort. That doesn’t mean cruelty. It means clarity with humility, even-handed conviction, and a refusal to let sensitivity silence the message.

    From there we zoom out to the foundation: your doctrine of God directs your reading of the Bible. Start with who God is—holy, immutable, omniscient, omnipotent, sovereign—and hard passages come into focus without bending his nature. “God repented” in Genesis 6 reads as grief, not change. Claims about his will harmonize with his character across the canon. Interpretation is never neutral, so we call for a thick weave of biblical witnesses, testing ideas by the whole counsel of Scripture. The result is a steadier church life: lament without guilt, correction without pride, courage without partiality, and worship anchored in the God who never changes.

    If this conversation sharpened your thinking or steadied your heart, follow the show, share it with a friend who loves the Book of Job, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway. Your words help others find truth that doesn’t flinch.

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    35 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: (Job 15:1-6) "Tongue Of The Crafty" - Part 2/4
    2026/01/28

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    What if the people meant to comfort you become your fiercest critics? We dive into Job’s story to expose a pattern that still haunts modern faith communities: confusing usefulness with truth, mistaking grief for rebellion, and calling accusation “defending God.” From the raw opening reflections on human nature and piling on, to Scripture-guided corrections about the aim of instruction being love, we unpack how counsel turns cruel when it ignores the heart of the sufferer and the character of God.

    I walk through the conversation’s pivotal insights: Job’s friends judged his words by impact, not accuracy, and equated pain with punishment. We test that reflex against a richer theology of suffering where God refines the righteous and invites bold lament. We also explore why truth stands on its own, even when it comes through flawed messengers, and why grace is never the wrong response when you don’t know the whole story. Throughout, we share lived experiences of relational strain and spiritual “pile-ons,” and we name the quiet courage it takes to refuse the hammer and be a healer.

    This episode is a call to rebuild how we correct, comfort, and carry each other. The body of Christ thrives through unity, not uniformity; empathy, not adrenaline; restoration, not rhetoric. If your theology breaks the wounded, it needs repair. Join us to rethink the “do better” instinct, learn to listen before you label, and rediscover how honest prayer deepens dependence on God. If this conversation helps you see a kinder path forward, subscribe, share with a friend who needs encouragement, and leave a review telling us how you’re choosing grace this week.

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    34 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: (Job 15:1-6) "Tongue Of The Crafty" - Part 1/4
    2026/01/28

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    What happens when the people who should comfort you bring the sharpest knives? We step into Job 15 and watch Eliphaz return with a blistering verdict, branding Job’s words as “east wind” and dismissing his theology as destructive heat. The clash isn’t just about doctrine; it’s about how doctrine is used. Are we building up the hurting with truth, or brandishing truth to build our own standing?

    We walk through the assumptions that fueled Job’s friends: the tidy equation of prosperity with righteousness and suffering with secret sin. That formula is seductive because it flatters our need for control. But it collapses under the weight of real life and the witness of Scripture. Job’s lament is not rebellion; it is reverent faith under pressure. He clings to God’s sovereignty, atonement, and wisdom while his community reads his pain as proof of guilt. Along the way we surface hard questions: Why are some bolder correcting brothers than confronting the world? How does jealousy hide beneath piety? What does compassion look like when the facts are unclear and the wounds are fresh?

    You’ll hear a candid roundtable where we name church hurt without flinching and still call the church to better love. We unpack why misapplied orthodoxy harms, how to discern motives when counsel feels cold, and why true courage comforts first and corrects with care. And we trace the arc toward vindication: God will later affirm Job’s words and require his friends to seek his intercession, a sobering reminder that the Lord weighs hearts, not optics.

    If you’ve ever been misunderstood while clinging to God, this conversation offers clarity, courage, and comfort. Listen, share it with someone who needs a gentle word today, and if it resonates, subscribe and leave a review so others can find it too.

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    35 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: (Job 14:7-17) "You Number My Steps" - Part 4/4
    2026/01/26

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    What if Job’s fiercest question unlocks the strongest assurance? We trace the bold logic: if God numbers our steps, He also watches over our sin—and that changes how we think about mercy, obedience, and whether salvation can be lost. Rather than reading Job as a skeptic in crisis, we hear a believer arguing from God’s character toward solid hope.

    We walk through the language of propitiation and the vivid “sealed bag” image—sins counted, covered, and rendered powerless to condemn. From there, we tackle a hard tension: every sin is seen, yet the same God who sees is the One who keeps. That reframes divine warnings as guardrails, not threats designed to paralyze. Obedience becomes evidence of God’s Spirit at work in us, not a self-manufactured badge. Along the way, we confront legalistic add-ons that burden consciences and replace Christ’s finished work with spiritual busywork.

    Personal reflections bring the theology home: being hidden in Christ means God sees the Son’s perfect obedience when He looks at His people. We also address the emotional reality of affliction, when it can feel like God is tallying failures, and how Job’s hope speaks into that fear. The conversation moves naturally into resurrection confidence—if a man dies, shall he live again?—anchoring perseverance in a future where change is promised and secure. With candid dialogue, Scripture, and prayer, we aim to ground assurance not in our grip on God, but in His grip on us.

    Listen to be strengthened in assurance, freed from performative faith, and refreshed by the God who keeps what He saves. If this helped you see Job—and Jesus—with new clarity, subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review so others can find the show. How has God’s keeping power changed the way you walk today?

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    33 分