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  • LIVE DISCUSSION: "The 7yr Great Tribulation HERESY" (Dan 9:24) - Part 4/4
    2026/01/23

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    What if joy isn’t the absence of pain but the fruit grown through it? We open the Scriptures and make a hard, hopeful claim: affliction is not a detour from the Christian life; it is one of God’s ordinary tools to shape mature disciples. From James’ call to “count it all joy” to the witness of Hebrews, we trace how faith is proven in the fire, not padded by comforts. Rather than selling a painless path, we invite you to see trials as the place where dependence on Jesus deepens and endurance becomes beautiful.

    Together we push back on the urge to escape tribulation and ask whether that impulse fits the pattern of Christ and His body. With John the Baptist as a vivid example of decreasing so Christ might increase, we consider how fulfillment, covenant, and precision in Bible reading steady our hope. You’ll hear frank challenges to pre‑trib assumptions, not for controversy, but to encourage a fearless return to the whole counsel of God. The goal is clarity, humility, and courage—letting Scripture lead, even when it confronts our favorite frameworks.

    What gives this conversation its pulse is the community around it. Friends speak life over a passionate teacher, testimonies surface of minds changed by patient study, and the room turns to prayer—asking God to fill us with boldness, keep our hearts soft, and fix our eyes on the return of Jesus. If you’ve ever felt intimidated by eschatology, or if suffering has made you question your footing, this is a warm, uncompromising guide back to solid ground. Listen, weigh every claim against the Word, and join us in a simple practice: love the truth, love the church, and keep going with joy. If this resonates, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs courage, and leave a review to help others find these conversations.

    Wednesday in the Word
    What the Bible means and how we know, the longest running Bible study podcast in the world

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    39 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: "The 7yr Great Tribulation HERESY" (Dan 9:24) - Part 3/4
    2026/01/23

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    What if the key to Daniel’s 70 weeks isn’t a chart, but a person? We open the episode by contrasting the Day of Atonement’s yearly cycle with the finality of Christ’s once-for-all sacrifice. From there, we move carefully through Daniel 9:24 and its six sweeping promises—finishing transgression, ending sin, reconciling iniquity, bringing everlasting righteousness, sealing vision and prophecy, and anointing the Most Holy—and show how each finds its fulfillment in Jesus. Rather than kicking these gifts into a distant future, we ask what it means for the church today if they are already ours in the gospel.

    We take a hard look at popular dispensational timelines. How can a “seven-year tribulation” be labeled as such when the first half is defined as peace? Why is “confirming the covenant” treated like “breaking a treaty”? We explore a simpler, Scripture-led reading: roughly three and a half years of Jesus’ public ministry to the cross, followed by about three and a half years of apostolic ministry focused on Israel, culminating around Stephen’s stoning. That frame clarifies Jesus’ “this generation” warnings and the judgment that fell on Jerusalem, without turning prophecy into a puzzle of news headlines.

    Along the way, our panel shares candid stories of unlearning early assumptions about rapture charts and rediscovering the clarity of the New Testament. The result is both pastoral and practical: a stronger grasp of Christ’s finished work, confidence that the new covenant is here, and a calm focus on what truly remains—His return. If you’ve wrestled with Daniel 9, end-times fear, or the tug-of-war between systems and Scripture, this conversation centers you back on Jesus and His completed redemption.

    If this challenged or encouraged you, follow the show, share it with a friend who loves Bible study, and leave a review so others can find it. What part of Daniel 9 do you want us to unpack next?

    Wednesday in the Word
    What the Bible means and how we know, the longest running Bible study podcast in the world

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    39 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: "The 7yr Great Tribulation HERESY" (Dan 9:24) - Part 2/4
    2026/01/23

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    What if the six promises of Daniel 9:24 aren’t hanging over the future but were nailed down at Calvary? We take a hard look at the text and walk through Hebrews 9, Romans 5–6, Colossians 2, and Ephesians 2 to ask whether Scripture itself says the work is finished. Our aim is simple: test the claim that Jesus, as mediator of the New Covenant, accomplished the end of sins, made reconciliation for iniquity, brought in everlasting righteousness, sealed vision and prophecy, and was anointed as the Most Holy.

    We start with the cross as the decisive act. Hebrews says Christ appeared once to put away sin by the sacrifice of Himself, and Romans says He died unto sin once. That means the end of sins is not a future pause in human behavior, but the present end of sin’s condemning power for all who believe. From there we trace reconciliation: while enemies, we were reconciled to God by the death of His Son. Add Colossians’ declaration that all trespasses are forgiven and the record of debt is canceled, and the picture sharpens—this isn’t a plan on layaway. It’s already purchased.

    Then we tackle everlasting righteousness. Paul announces a righteousness revealed now apart from the law, credits believers as righteous through the obedience of the One, and locates this grace in union with the risen Christ. If righteousness is ours now, what future week are we still waiting for? We also address “sealing up vision and prophecy,” centering fulfillment on Jesus’ own words that everything written in Moses, the Prophets, and the Psalms concerning Him must be fulfilled. God has spoken to us by His Son, the telos of revelation and the anchor of our assurance.

    Finally, we consider the anointing of the Most Holy. Jesus reads Isaiah 61, “He has anointed Me,” and Hebrews shows Him entering the true holy place with His own blood. The greater temple is here, and no brick‑and‑mortar project can eclipse the holiness of the Son. Along the way we challenge the assumption of a future seven‑year tribulation, not to provoke for its own sake, but to preserve the glory and sufficiency of the cross. If the gospel did what Scripture says it did, speculation gives way to certainty, and worship deepens.

    If this conversation sharpened your thinking, share it with a friend, subscribe for more, and leave a review telling us where you stand on Daniel 9.

    Wednesday in the Word
    What the Bible means and how we know, the longest running Bible study podcast in the world

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    39 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: "The 7yr Great Tribulation HERESY" (Dan 9:24) - Part 1/4
    2026/01/23

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    Prophecy talk gets loud, but clarity lives in the text. We step through Daniel 9:24–27 with a simple aim: honor the timeline, follow the language, and ask whether the seventy weeks point us to Christ’s finished work or to a future Antichrist peace deal. Starting from the decree in Ezra 7 (457 BC), we track 483 years to the public appearing of Jesus around AD 26/27, then examine how the final “week” aligns with His ministry, His atoning death, and the inauguration of the new covenant.

    Together we unpack the six goals in Daniel 9:24—finishing the transgression, ending sins, making reconciliation for iniquity, bringing in everlasting righteousness, sealing vision and prophecy, and anointing the most holy—and show how the New Testament ties each to Jesus. We address the popular “gap theory” that inserts over two millennia between week sixty-nine and seventy, and explain why that move lacks biblical precedent and undercuts the prophecy’s purpose. With Jesus’ warnings in Matthew 23 as a guide, we connect the dots to the destruction of Jerusalem in AD 70, where sacrifice ceased and the old order gave way to the reality Christ accomplished.

    If you’ve heard about a seven-year tribulation, a broken peace treaty, and a future countdown built on Daniel 9, you’ll find a careful, Scripture-first alternative here. We focus on the Messiah’s covenant, the end of temple sacrifices, and the fulfillment that anchors Christian hope in a finished work rather than a speculative timeline. If this reframes your view of prophecy—or sharpens it—share the episode, subscribe for more deep dives, and leave a review with your biggest question for us to tackle next.

    Wednesday in the Word
    What the Bible means and how we know, the longest running Bible study podcast in the world

    Listen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify

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    39 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: "Your Days Are Numbered" Job 14:5,6 - Part 5/5
    2026/01/22

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    What if being born again is the first resurrection and the thousand years in Revelation 20 describes the age we’re living in right now? We dig into that claim with open Bibles and clear logic, asking whether a literal countdown can coexist with Jesus’ words that no one knows the day or hour. The conversation challenges popular end-times timelines, not to stir controversy for its own sake, but to re-center our hope on Christ rather than on charts.

    We walk through Daniel 9 and argue that the seventieth week points to Jesus Himself—His three-and-a-half-year public ministry, His atoning death, and His confirming of the covenant. That reframes the trope of a seven-year tribulation led by a treaty-making Antichrist, a concept that sounds familiar but lacks a firm textual home. Then we track Daniel 2’s stone cut without hands, striking during Rome, and connect it to the incarnation and the launch of an unshakeable kingdom. Along the way we explore how Antiochus IV’s desecration and the destruction of Jerusalem in AD 70 act as foreshadows—real events pointing beyond themselves to Christ’s global judgment and reign.

    Across it all, we keep Revelation anchored to its true subject: the revelation of Jesus Christ. The church stands on one foundation—the apostles and prophets with Christ as cornerstone—and that foundation does not get rebuilt in a later dispensation. If our interpretations push Jesus to the margins, we’ve missed the point. Come ready to weigh Scripture with us, question assumptions, and recover the courage and comfort that flow from knowing the King reigns now and His return remains certain and unknowable. If this conversation sharpens you, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review so others can join the study.

    Wednesday in the Word
    What the Bible means and how we know, the longest running Bible study podcast in the world

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    39 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: "Your Days Are Numbered" Job 14:5,6 - Part 4/5
    2026/01/22

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    What if the core assumption about human freedom is upside down? We open with a disruptive thought: if God cannot sin, lie, or change, calling his will “free” in the neutral, choose-anything sense misses what makes him holy. That reframes how we talk about human free will. If heaven removes the ability to sin, was “freedom” ever the gift—or is the gift a new nature that loves what is good?

    We follow that thread into the heart of salvation. The moment we say, “I’m in heaven because I chose better,” we drift into quiet boasting—smarter, humbler, more spiritual than others. Scripture cuts that off: with man salvation is impossible, and God grants repentance, faith, and mercy. The picture isn’t of neutral souls picking sides; it’s of dead hearts made alive. To make it concrete, we lean on Christ’s healings: blind eyes didn’t debate seeing and dead legs didn’t negotiate walking. New life acts by nature. That’s not robotic compulsion; that’s liberation from slavery to sin into glad obedience.

    From there we widen the lens to Revelation, not as an anxious timeline but as a symbolic, cyclical portrait of the Lamb’s triumph across history. “Signified” means shown by signs, so beasts and marks aren’t props for prediction charts. The seven seals, trumpets, and bowls echo each other as parallel angles on God’s work. The 144,000 represents the whole church—Jew and Gentile—an innumerable people sealed by grace. We contrast this with rapture-centered readings and show how a salvation-first approach restores awe, clarity, and courage.

    By the end, the through-line is clear: God raises the dead, grants a new heart, and binds us to righteousness as true freedom. That vision dismantles pride, steadies assurance, and turns Revelation into worship rather than worry. If you’re ready to rethink free will, regeneration, and apocalyptic hope around the sovereignty and kindness of God, this conversation will meet you there. Subscribe, share with a friend who loves big questions, and leave a review with the one idea that shifted your view most.

    Wednesday in the Word
    What the Bible means and how we know, the longest running Bible study podcast in the world

    Listen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify

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    39 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: "Your Days Are Numbered" Job 14:5,6 - Part 3/5
    2026/01/22

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    What if fear of death faded because your days were already counted by a good God? We open with the startling comfort that our months are “with” Him, then follow Job’s gritty example of faith that argues, pleads, and still rests. This isn’t fatalism dressed up as theology; it’s intimacy that changes how we face pain. When suffering hits, we learn to pray by God’s character—reminding Him of promises, mercy, and patience—not to twist His arm, but to steady our hearts.

    We also take on a deep question that shapes how you see salvation: does God simply foresee, or does He purpose? We challenge the idea that foreknowledge is mere foresight down time’s corridor. If God chooses because we would one day choose Him, grace becomes a response to our virtue. Instead, we argue that foreknowledge is fore-love—God setting His affection before we existed—so He can declare the end because He ordained the means. That’s why Job’s trust isn’t blind; it’s anchored. And it’s why Lazarus isn’t a cute story, but a living parable of regeneration: dead souls don’t deliberate; Christ calls and life begins.

    From there, we press into depravity, free will, and the popular appeal of prevenient grace. If grace only restores a neutral will so everyone gets a “chance,” the cross becomes a provision without a people, and certainty evaporates. The will and its choices aren’t identical; a will acts within a nature, and a fallen nature can only choose like a fallen nature. Regeneration is God’s initiative, not our momentum. That truth doesn’t erase agency; it makes faith possible. Known and held by an unchanging love, we learn to trust on purpose, pray with bold humility, and face our numbered days without dread.

    If this conversation challenged or comforted you, follow the show, share it with a friend who’s wrestling with sovereignty and suffering, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway. Your story might help someone else learn to trust.

    Wednesday in the Word
    What the Bible means and how we know, the longest running Bible study podcast in the world

    Listen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify

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    39 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: "Your Days Are Numbered" Job 14:5,6 - Part 2/5
    2026/01/22

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    What if the most liberating truth isn’t that you control your life, but that you don’t? We open with the hardest questions—death, loss, and the fate of the most vulnerable—and follow the thread through Job 14 to a surprising place: comfort found in God’s sovereignty. Not a cold doctrine, but a steady hand that numbers our days, sets our limits, and holds both the deceived and the deceiver. When Abraham lifted the knife over Isaac, he wasn’t denying reality; he was banking on a deeper one—that God raises the dead.

    From pandemic fears to everyday anxieties about health, risk, and safety, we’ve all felt the pull to micromanage survival. The counterintuitive relief is this: you will not leave this world a second early or late. That doesn’t excuse apathy; it frees you to love people, tell the truth, and live with courage. We wrestle with the idea that shortened lifespans might be mercy that restrains evil, but we keep circling back to Job’s point: each life has an appointed boundary, and the inner person is what ultimately endures. That calls for reconciliation with God, a work the flesh can’t perform and grace alone accomplishes.

    The conversation sharpens into two choices—either God is sovereign over man or man is sovereign over himself. There’s no middle lane. We talk about the impossibility of self-salvation, the tragedy of refusing grace, and the strange agreement that accompanies judgment. Yet hope runs through the whole thread: like a tree by water, the believer bears fruit in drought because the root is alive. Waiting is often where this becomes real. God’s silence can stretch, reasons stay hidden, and still we are invited to trust. Not fatalism, but providence. Not accidents, but appointments. If you’ve been shouldering the weight of outcomes you can’t control, this is a seat to lay them down.

    If this spoke to you, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs courage today, and leave a quick review to help others find these conversations. What part challenged you most?

    Wednesday in the Word
    What the Bible means and how we know, the longest running Bible study podcast in the world

    Listen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify

    Support the show

    BE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    続きを読む 一部表示
    39 分