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  • "The Wicked Man's Portion" (Job 20:26-29), Part 4/4
    2026/03/10

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    What if your suffering isn’t proof of guilt but evidence of God’s careful love? We step into Job’s story and surface a liberating truth that cuts against easy answers: not every blow is payback. Using the friends’ accusations as a foil, we show how a partially right theology can become crushing when it’s misapplied, and why the gospel refuses to let condemnation define a believer’s pain.

    Together we trace a clear line from Job to Romans 8. If God justifies, who can bring a charge? We unpack chastisement versus wrath, clarifying how the cross forever separates God’s people from judicial condemnation. This isn’t spiritual spin—it’s the logic of imputed righteousness. Christ doesn’t return us to neutrality; he clothes us in his own obedience, which means no accusation—human or hellish—carries authority over those in Christ. That assurance doesn’t excuse sin; it fuels repentance, resilience, and gratitude in the middle of real loss.

    Along the way, you’ll hear voices from the community, including a brother living through war, reminding us that these truths matter most where life hurts. We talk about trust under pressure, prayer that holds when answers don’t come quickly, and how to stand when friends misread your trial. If you’ve wondered whether God is against you, or felt crushed by spiritual suspicion, this conversation offers solid ground: suffering can correct and mature you, but it cannot condemn you. Your Redeemer lives, and his verdict stands.

    If this helped anchor your hope, share it with someone who needs courage today. Subscribe for more gospel-centered conversations, leave a review to help others find the show, and tell us: what promise steadies you when life breaks hard?

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    33 分
  • "The Wicked Man's Portion" (Job 20:26-29), Part 3/4
    2026/03/10

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    Start with a hard question: if sin tastes sweet, why does justice feel so bitter? We walk straight into that tension, tracing a line from the fall to a fixed day of judgment and the scriptural claim that calamity can be an appointed heritage. The language of portion and inheritance reframes suffering and accountability—not as cosmic roulette, but as measured justice under a sovereign God who gives precisely what is due.

    From there we take on a claim many avoid: Jesus is king right now. Not a future monarch waiting in the wings, but a present ruler who conquered at Calvary and sits at the right hand of God. We look at the worship of the magi, the placard on the cross, and the testimony of Hebrews to argue that denying His current reign repeats yesterday’s unbelief. If He reigns, then we are not spectators of an unfinished story—we are citizens of His kingdom today, summoned to live under His authority with clear eyes and steady hearts.

    We also address the millennium and the meaning of a thousand years in Revelation, urging a symbolic, apocalyptic reading that resists the churn of headline-driven prophecy. The kingdom is within and among us; the King rules now, and He alone will end the age in a way no newspaper can predict. That steadies our imagination in a world eager to baptize every conflict as a final sign. Instead of fear, we offer vigilance. Instead of hype, hope. And at the center of it all, a call to trade the delicacy of sin for the better heritage of grace—life, glory, and a home in the household of God.

    If this conversation sharpened your perspective, share it with a friend, subscribe for more, and leave a review telling us where you land on Christ’s present kingship. Your voice helps others find the truth.

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    34 分
  • "The Wicked Man's Portion" (Job 20:26-29), Part 2/4
    2026/03/10

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    What if the loudest pain in someone’s life isn’t a verdict but a test of faith—and a test of our wisdom too? We examine Zophar’s polished theology in Job 20 and ask whether his case against Job reveals insight or a dangerous leap from general truth to personal accusation. When Scripture says the wicked person’s wealth “shall flow away” in the day of wrath, does that mean every sudden loss signals hidden sin, or are we confusing God’s appointed judgment with our snap judgments?

    We follow the thread from Job to Genesis, unpacking the phrase “in the day” as more than a timestamp. It signals a certainty in God’s timing, an appointment only God sets. That insight reshapes how we read suffering, prosperity, and providence. It also confronts our habit of using outcomes as proof: successful equals blessed, ruined equals wicked. By walking through the logic of Zophar, we reveal how true statements turn harmful when applied without context, compassion, or evidence. We contrast this with the furnace story in Daniel, where the faithful endure while their oppressors fall, showing that pain can refine rather than condemn.

    Along the way, we spotlight Job’s posture under pressure—his endurance, his questions, and his refusal to curse God even when friends push for a confession that fits their narrative. We talk honestly about Satan’s strategy to weaponize partial truths through well-meaning voices, and how wisdom without love can still wound. The conversation points us back to Christ as the only lasting security, since prosperity alone cannot shield anyone from judgment or guarantee peace.

    If you’ve ever been misread in your worst season—or been tempted to “explain” someone else’s suffering—this is a timely listen. Join us as we trade quick verdicts for discernment, pair theology with mercy, and let God own the calendar of justice. If the episode resonates, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review to help others find the show.

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    34 分
  • "The Wicked Man's Portion" (Job 20:26-29), Part 1/4
    2026/03/10

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    What if the words are true but the target is wrong? We walk through Job 20:26–29 and sit with Zophar’s fierce claims about the fate of the wicked—stored darkness, a fire not blown, heaven revealing hidden iniquity, and earth itself rising up in opposition—then we ask the hard pastoral question: what happens when accurate doctrine is applied to the wrong person. Using vivid language from the text, we explore how Scripture portrays judgment as deliberate rather than accidental, personal rather than mechanical. “A fire not blown” becomes a window into divine justice that doesn’t rely on human bellows, and “all darkness… hid in his secret places” challenges the idea that delay equals escape. Along the way, we wrestle with the communal fallout of sin—how consequences reach a household—and why private spaces are not safe havens for public harm.

    We also tackle the unsettling claim that creation itself testifies against unrepentant evil. When heaven exposes and earth opposes, “random” setbacks suddenly look like wake-up calls, not coincidences. That changes how we read our frustrations and how we speak to others in pain. The crucial correction surfaces: these verses rightly describe the lot of the wicked, but Zophar is wrong to hang them on Job. That misfire becomes a modern warning for counselors, friends, and leaders—handle sharp truths with discernment, humility, and love.

    If you’ve ever wondered how to tell the difference between firm conviction and harmful certainty, this conversation offers categories, Scripture, and examples that keep justice and mercy in tension. Join us as we think aloud about sin, exposure, providence, and the hope that grace is a miracle given, not a wage earned. If this helped you see the text more clearly, subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave a review to tell us what stood out.

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    33 分
  • 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.

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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.

    Listen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify

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    33 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
    Each week we discuss some of the most important issues we face in our society today.

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    33 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.

    Listen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify

    Support the show

    BE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    続きを読む 一部表示
    33 分