エピソード

  • LIVE DISCUSSION: The Birth of Jesus: Joyful and Dreadful (Part 4/4)
    2025/12/25

    Send us a text

    A baby in a manger isn’t a soft story—it’s the opening move of God’s rescue that confronts every heart. We trace a bold arc from Isaiah 65 through John 3 and Luke 2 to show why the birth of Jesus leads directly to the Cross, why grace both comforts and judges, and how the hope of Revelation reframes Christmas as a call to trust, not a season of sentiment. Along the way, we tackle works righteousness head-on, revisit Jacob and Esau to clarify election and mercy, and lean into Romans 9’s image of the potter and the clay to place confidence where it belongs: in the God who saves.

    We also zoom out historically to the “Angel of the Lord,” exploring how early readers wrestled with divine presence in the Old Testament and how those moments foreshadow Christ. That thread helps us see Scripture’s unity—one plan, one Messiah, one finished work that grants living bread and living water to those who believe. The challenge is bracing but hopeful: celebrating Christ’s birth while ignoring his death empties the holiday of its power. Real joy comes from seeing the manger as the road to Golgotha and the empty tomb.

    You’ll hear heartfelt exhortations for bold witness at family tables, honest warnings about cultural Christianity, and a live rendition of O Come, O Come, Emmanuel that centers our longing on the One who ransoms captives and ends exile. If you’re ready to trade vague cheer for deep assurance—and to let Scripture shape your celebration—this conversation will steady your heart and sharpen your voice. Subscribe, share this episode with someone who needs courage this week, and leave a review to help more listeners find gospel clarity during the holidays.

    Support the show

    BE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    続きを読む 一部表示
    34 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: The Birth of Jesus: Joyful and Dreadful (Part 3/4)
    2025/12/25

    Send us a text

    What if the joy of Christmas starts at a manger but finds its meaning on a cross? We dive into the paradox at the center of the season: a sovereign Savior who chose to die. Moving from Old Testament signs to Simeon’s startling words in Luke 2:34, we unpack how the incarnation is not simply quaint or sentimental—it’s the first step in a costly mission that would end with a blood-bought people and a cleansed conscience.

    We walk through John 10 to hear Jesus claim agency over His own life and death: no one takes it from Him; He lays it down and takes it up again. That choice reframes sacrifice and love. Then we connect Hebrews 9 to show how the High Priest entered the holy place once for all, not with the blood of animals but with His own, securing eternal redemption. Along the way, we talk about conscience and celebration—why gifts, trees, and traditions are secondary, and why the cross must be central if we want Christmas to be more than noise.

    This conversation is candid and pastoral. We name the opposition Jesus still faces, the way His presence reveals hearts, and the humility it takes to admit we cannot save ourselves. We aim to help you anchor your holiday in the gospel: Christ appointed for the fall and rise of many, the cornerstone some reject and others rest upon. If “born to die” sounds harsh, it’s because love this fierce is uncommon—and exactly what we needed.

    If this resonates, follow the show, share the episode with a friend who needs hope, and leave a review telling us how you’re keeping the cross at the center of Christmas.

    Support the show

    BE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    続きを読む 一部表示
    34 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: The Birth of Jesus: Joyful and Dreadful (Part 2/4)
    2025/12/25

    Send us a text

    What if the joy of the manger makes sense only in the shadow of the cross? We open Luke 2:34 and hear a hard truth with hope inside it: the arrival of Jesus reveals hearts, lifting the humble and humbling the proud. Across an honest, scripture‑anchored conversation, we push past seasonal sentiment and trace a single throughline—Christ was born to die and rise, not to prop up our comfort or politics, but to rescue us from sin.

    Together we unpack Isaiah 53 and Hebrews 10 to show that the Incarnation was not a divine band‑aid. The eternal Son took a prepared body and stepped into history with purpose. Along the way, we clear up popular myths, contrast Barabbas with Jesus as two rival “saviors,” and confront the way many still seek a conquering hero without a crucified Lord. Neutrality dissolves when you meet him: he forces a response. Trust your own case before a holy God, or cling to the Mediator who never loses one of his sheep.

    We also look around at our moment—rampant deconstruction, casual unbelief, and the ache for control—and name it for what it is: a crisis that Scripture anticipated. Yet there’s hope in the remnant refined, the people who call on his name and are kept. Even his name is mission: “he shall save his people from their sins.” Christmas, then, is more than birth; it’s the opening act of a rescue written before the foundation of the world. If that reframes your holiday, you’re in the right place.

    Listen, share with someone who needs clarity over comfort, and leave a review so others can find the show. If this sparked a question or pushback, tell us—where do you stand when the Light exposes the heart?

    Support the show

    BE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    続きを読む 一部表示
    34 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: The Birth of Jesus: Joyful and Dreadful (Part 1/4)
    2025/12/25

    Send us a text

    A quiet manger scene can feel safe, but Luke 2:34 won’t let us stay comfortable. Simeon’s prophecy says the child is “set for the fall and rising of many,” forcing us to ask whether Christmas is our lifting to life or a mirror of our unbelief. We open the text and follow its thread through the purpose of the incarnation, the necessity of the cross, and the uncomfortable truth that grace rescues the humble and confronts the proud.

    We walk through what “set” really means: not seasonal sentiment, but divine appointment. That appointment has decisive effects—some are raised from spiritual death by trusting Christ, while others stumble over a gospel that cancels boasting. Along the way, we address common assumptions about Christmas, tackle the idea that Jesus came to generally improve everyone’s life, and return to Matthew 1:21 to anchor hope in a Savior who actually saves His people from their sins. The manger, we argue, is bright only because the cross stands behind it.

    If you’ve felt the tension between tradition and truth, this conversation makes space for both joy and honesty. Celebrate, but celebrate with clarity. Let your songs carry the weight of why He was born: to die and to rise, to divide and to deliver, to humble our pride and heal our hearts. Press play, sit with Simeon’s words, and ask the question that matters most: is His birth your rising or your ruin? If this episode moves you, share it with a friend, subscribe for more, and leave a review with your takeaway from Luke 2:34.

    Support the show

    BE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    続きを読む 一部表示
    34 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: God Destroys the Wicked & the Righteous (Part 4/4)
    2025/12/23

    Send us a text

    A hush settles over heaven, earth, and even hell—not emptiness, but anticipation. We open with that piercing image from Revelation and follow its thread through Job 9, tracing how humility, judgment, and hope meet when God steps onto the scene. Where modern faith often mistakes understanding for control, we sit with Job’s confession: “I am dust and ashes.” That posture reframes everything—how we think about suffering, why outward outcomes mislead us, and what true reverence sounds like when words run out.

    We explore the hard edge of justice: the righteous and the wicked can share the same outward fate, and appearances cannot decode God’s verdicts. From Ecclesiastes to Job, the Bible refuses easy answers and invites a longer view of providence. Then we consider the thirty minutes of silence in heaven—the calm before the storm—and the shout that ends it: Christ’s call that wakes the dead, the trumpet that gathers his people, and the transformation that follows. It’s the loudest sound to ever break the quiet, and it anchors a hope no circumstance can erase.

    Along the way, we challenge annihilationism with the text’s own logic. If “destruction” means nonexistence, resurrection and judgment collapse. Instead, Scripture speaks of ruin under just, eternal consequence—weight that magnifies the cross rather than minimizes it. That’s why a mediator matters. Job longs for one who can plead without self-condemnation; we point to Jesus, the righteous advocate at the Father’s right hand, turning affliction into refining mercy and carrying us through when our lips would only accuse us.

    If you’re wrestling with suffering, confused by the prosperity of the wicked, or hungry for a sturdier hope, this conversation meets you with gravity and grace. Listen, share it with a friend who needs courage today, and if it helps you, subscribe and leave a review so others can find it too.

    Support the show

    BE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    続きを読む 一部表示
    31 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: God Destroys the Wicked & the Righteous (Part 3/4)
    2025/12/23

    Send us a text

    What if your best words can’t move God—but love can? We step into Job’s world of ash and argument and discover a paradox that still confronts us today: the holier God is, the more honest we must be about our limits. We feel the sting of friends who misunderstand pain, the ache of prayers that seem to vanish, and the shock of realizing that humility is the only doorway wide enough for hope.

    Walking through Job 9, we wrestle with the stunning confession that even if we were righteous, we could not answer God. That’s where the conversation turns from despair to gospel. Job imagines silence in the courtroom of heaven; Christ, truly righteous, speaks. Not with manipulation, but with merit—His blood, His obedience, His cross. We explore Jesus as our mediator and advocate, the One who reasons with the Father on our behalf and never loses a case. Along the way, we tackle tough claims: why God does not overlook sin, how “no” can be a merciful answer, and why self-justification is a form of idolatry that keeps us from grace.

    As the panel shares personal reflections—choosing the narrow, obscure path over the obvious one; learning to let go of outcomes we can’t control; recognizing sovereignty not as cold fate but as fierce love—we begin to see Job’s insight sharpen. He senses a heavenly counsel he could not witness and yields to a God who cannot be resisted. The episode closes with a vision of holy silence from Revelation, a reverent pause before majesty that quiets our arguments and lifts our eyes.

    If this conversation stirred something in you—curiosity, comfort, or a new question—share it with a friend, hit follow, and leave a review. Your reflections help others find a path through their own ash heaps toward the Advocate who speaks for them.

    Support the show

    BE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    続きを読む 一部表示
    31 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: God Destroys the Wicked & the Righteous (Part 2/4)
    2025/12/23

    Send us a text

    What if your turning back to God isn’t your first move, but His? We open Job 9:13 and watch the “helpers of the proud” crumble under a reality that refuses to flatter us: when God acts, no rival can resist Him. From that bracing start, we follow a path through repentance, sovereignty, and the kind of holy fear that shrinks our egos and steadies our steps.

    Together we explore why Scripture calls repentance a gift God grants, not a virtue we manufacture. Acts 11 and 13 and 2 Timothy 2 frame salvation with God as first cause and our turning as genuine effect. That view doesn’t erase moral agency; it awakens it. Outside of Christ, the will bends inward. In Christ, new birth opens a real choice for holiness, which is why testimonies often sound like interruption: a child convicted beyond his years, a persecutor stopped on the road, a skeptic pierced by truth. Grace isn’t a pat on the back. It’s a resurrection.

    We also recover a neglected word: fear. Not panic or superstition, but a holy terror that honors the weight of God’s glory. Sinai thundered. Job trembled. Jesus told us whom to fear. That reverence cleans our speech, checks our temper, and keeps us from cozying up to pride or its enablers. The higher we see God, the smaller we see ourselves, and the freer we are to confess, to repent, and to live low before the Almighty with durable hope.

    If you’re hungry for a faith with spine and warmth, one that rejects a sentimental deity and embraces the sovereign Lord who grants life, this conversation is for you. Listen, share with a friend who loves Scripture, and leave a review to help others find the show.

    Support the show

    BE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    続きを読む 一部表示
    31 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: God Destroys the Wicked & the Righteous (Part 1/4)
    2025/12/23

    Send us a text

    What if the hope you need doesn’t depend on how clearly you can see God, but on how surely He sees you? We journey through Job 9 to confront a bracing, liberating claim: when God takes or gives, no one can hinder Him—and that is the bedrock of real comfort. Job’s words thread together paradoxes we all live with: God feels distant while remaining near; faith feels fragile while being kept by a Preserver who does not fail.

    We unpack how this sovereignty speaks into the ache of unanswered questions and the noise of unhelpful counsel. The conversation challenges a modern reflex to make human choice the first cause of salvation. Instead, we trace the biblical order of grace: the Father gives a people to the Son; the Spirit brings new birth; faith and repentance arise as gifts from a changed heart. If that sounds abstract, we ground it in vivid images—from Esther’s raised scepter to Paul’s language of new creation and Jesus’ call to be born from above—showing why “I accepted Jesus” misses the deeper miracle that the King accepted us.

    Along the way, we address common confusions: Does perseverance mean we can’t fall? How does repentance relate to regeneration? What hope is there when God feels hidden? The throughline is simple and strong. God’s nearness is not measured by our perception but by His promise. His gifts—grace, faith, repentance, sanctification—are not bargaining chips but the unstoppable flow of His mercy. When He decrees light, dark hearts awaken. When He preserves, weary saints endure.

    If you’re hungry for a sturdier comfort and a bigger view of God, this conversation aims straight at the heart. Listen, share with a friend who needs ballast in the storm, and if it serves you, follow and leave a review so others can find it too.

    Support the show

    BE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    続きを読む 一部表示
    31 分