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  • LIVE: "Reserved to the Day of Destruction" (Job 21:22-34), Part 4/4
    2026/03/25

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    A lavish funeral can look like a final verdict. Job won’t let us believe that. We start with Job 21 and the uncomfortable reality that wicked people can prosper, be celebrated, and even be carried to the grave with honor, ceremony, and crowds. That tension is not a side note for us, it’s the point: if you’ve ever watched injustice go unpunished and wondered whether God sees, Job is speaking your language.

    We then follow Job’s argument where it actually leads: judgment may be delayed, but it is not denied. Death becomes the appointment nobody can cancel, and no amount of money, influence, or image management can change the day we stand before God. From there, we challenge the kind of shallow “answers” that pretend suffering is always a quick proof of guilt. Job calls it what it is: comfort in vain. We talk about how theology can be weaponized, why indirect accusations crush people who are already low, and why truth is the only thing that can hold weight when someone is hurting.

    Finally, we lift our eyes to Jesus Christ. We reflect on the riches of Christ, His humility, and the cross, including the sobering reality of sin placed upon Him and the glory of redemption accomplished for sinners. The conversation closes with Scripture-based encouragement, a picture of real Christian fellowship, and a prayer for unity, endurance, and boldness. If this strengthened you, subscribe, share it with a friend who needs real comfort, and leave a review with the biggest takeaway you’re walking away with.

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    39 分
  • LIVE: "Reserved to the Day of Destruction" (Job 21:22-34), Part 3/4
    2026/03/25

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    God “cannot look upon sin” is a phrase many Christians quote, but we rarely sit with the implications. If God is that holy, how can a person “full of sin” claim they can approach Him by sheer free will and make salvation happen with a simple choice? We follow that question all the way down into total depravity, the logic of grace, and why the new birth has to come before genuine faith and repentance.

    We also challenge popular church language that quietly centers the sinner as the decision-maker. When we say “I accepted Jesus,” do we accidentally imply God is waiting for our approval? We argue for a better frame: we receive Christ because God first regenerates, justifies, and opens blind eyes so we can truly see. Along the way, we connect these doctrines to lived experience, not as word games, but as the difference between self-salvation and mercy.

    Then we turn to Job 21:31 and ask why the rich and powerful so often go unchallenged. Why is “God” safe to say in public while “Jesus” is treated like a liability? We talk about celebrity culture, workplace pressure, and the fear that keeps Christians quiet, while remembering that earthly justice is often imperfect and influence can buy silence. Job’s point still stands: people may escape accountability here, but no one escapes God’s.

    If you care about Christian theology, Reformed doctrine, Scripture in public life, and the hard courage of Christian witness, listen through and sit with the questions we raise. Subscribe for more, share this with a friend who’s wrestling with free will and grace, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway.

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    39 分
  • LIVE: "Reserved to the Day of Destruction" (Job 21:22-34), Part 2/4
    2026/03/25

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    Evil people thriving while good people suffer is not a modern scandal. It’s an ancient problem, and Job 21 tackles it head-on. We start with a personal question about silence, gratitude, and “living in the moment,” then press into something heavier: if tomorrow isn’t promised, what does faithful urgency actually look like in real conversations, real friendships, and real homes?

    We talk about evangelism without pretending we control outcomes. As parents, we carry a unique responsibility to bring the gospel to our kids with clarity and patience, even when it’s not welcomed. With friends, we weigh love against pressure, and we share what it looks like to keep your footing when people mock your pursuit of Christ. We also get honest about those moments when you knew you should have spoken up and didn’t, and how prudence is different from fear.

    Then we open Job 21:29-30 and follow Job’s logic: if you paid attention to the world, you’d notice the prosperity of the wicked is common. That reality doesn’t cancel God’s justice. It clarifies it. Judgment can be delayed without being absent, because the wicked are “reserved” for a day of destruction and a day of wrath. We close by unpacking why “one sin makes you guilty,” tying it to God’s holiness, the seriousness of sin even in thought, and why rejecting Jesus Christ is the most dangerous choice a person can make.

    If this helped you think more clearly about suffering, justice, and gospel urgency, subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find the conversation.

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    39 分
  • LIVE: "Reserved to the Day of Destruction" (Job 21:22-34), Part 1/4
    2026/03/25

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    A lot of Christian “advice” sounds spiritual but lands like a verdict: if you’re suffering, you must be hiding sin. We push back hard by staying in the text of Job 21, where Job dismantles the neat equation his friends keep forcing on him. He points to something we all recognize but rarely know what to do with: some wicked people live long, comfortable lives, while others limp to the grave with bitterness and grief, and death comes for both.

    We also slow down on the danger of speaking for God when we only have outward evidence. If someone is anxious, depressed, broke, sick, or downcast, we are not licensed to announce the cause. From there the conversation opens into bigger doctrines Job 21 naturally raises: God’s providence, delayed judgment, and why “getting away with it” is not the same as escaping justice. We talk about God’s long-suffering, wrath stored up, and why the gospel of Jesus Christ is the only hope of mercy when every life finally meets the bar of divine justice.

    Listeners also hear a thoughtful Q&A on judgment day, degrees of punishment, and what changes at the resurrection when body and soul are reunited. We bring in Malachi’s blunt question about the “God of judgment” and end with a clear reminder that God is not absent or guessing. He sees all, knows all, and orders all, which comforts the suffering believer and warns the unrepentant. If this helped you, subscribe, share it with a friend who needs steadiness, and leave a review with the biggest question you’re still wrestling with.

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    38 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: "Shall Any Teach God" - (Job 21:22-27), Part 4/4
    2026/03/24

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    Some of the hardest moments in faith come with a simple, brutal question: why does the wicked person seem to thrive while the faithful person suffers. We sit with Job’s argument and refuse the easy answers. A comfortable life is not automatic proof of God’s blessing, and a painful life is not automatic proof of God’s anger. What looks like “postponed accountability” may actually be God’s patience, a mercy-filled delay meant to lead someone to repentance, and a warning that rejecting that mercy has weight.

    We connect Job’s tension to Jesus’ own teaching through the story of Lazarus and the rich man, and we talk honestly about how persecution, false accusations, and betrayal show up in real Christian life. Instead of trying to decode every trial with a spiritual formula, we aim for the kind of love Jesus modeled: wash feet, forgive enemies, and stay steady when reviled. We also dig into discernment, self-examination, and why listening closely reveals what’s really in a person’s heart.

    Judas becomes a cautionary mirror for all of us, especially around money and ambition. Luke 16 draws a line in the sand: you cannot serve God and mammon. We talk about Christian stewardship, building and working with God first, and praying for integrity and clear direction in business and family life.

    If you’ve ever felt confused by prosperity, suffering, or the gap between appearances and reality, come walk through these Scriptures with us. Subscribe for more conversations like this, share this with a friend who’s wrestling, and leave a review with the question you want us to answer next.

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    36 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: "Shall Any Teach God" - (Job 21:22-27), Part 3/4
    2026/03/24

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    Somebody you know is hurting, and the room goes quiet. Then the guesses start. They must have sinned. God is punishing them. If they were really faithful, this wouldn’t be happening. We sit with the Book of Job and confront how fast suspicion becomes a verdict, especially when it’s dressed up as spiritual “wisdom.” Job pushes back hard: you’re speaking from imagination, not evidence, and your words are beating me down when I’m already crushed.

    We talk about whether Job’s companions are true friends or exposed enemies, and why indirect condemnation can function like modern passive aggressive communication. The contrast with Nathan confronting David makes the lesson plain: truth requires facts, humility, and the courage to be clear. When there are no receipts, religious talk turns into accusation, and a “tongue lashing” becomes real violence. We also dig into Job 21 and the prosperity assumptions people use to explain suffering, then ask the harder question: what do you do when you believe in God’s justice but you don’t see it on your timeline?

    From there, the conversation widens to Jesus, the false charges brought against Him, and how an illegal trial still moved forward for the sake of expediency. That connection pushes us toward Christian discernment, deeper Bible reading, and a steadier trust in God’s sovereignty. We end by looking at the Second Coming of Christ, not as the suffering servant, but as King and Judge, and what it means when the wicked appear to prosper in the meantime.

    If this challenged you, subscribe, share it with a friend who needs clarity, and leave a review so more listeners can find it. What part hit closest to home for you?

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    37 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: "Shall Any Teach God" - (Job 21:22-27), Part 2/4
    2026/03/24

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    You can watch someone thrive and assume God approves. You can watch someone suffer and assume God is angry. Job refuses both shortcuts, and that refusal forces a more honest kind of faith.

    We start with the reality that God cannot be taught knowledge and that every soul has an appointed time. That sobers how we talk about hell, grace, and salvation, and it reshapes how we share the gospel. We reflect on Jesus calling out blind guides, speaking the truth without begging for a response, and trusting the Spirit to bring in every sheep the Father gives. From there we read Psalm 73 and sit with the uncomfortable honesty of envy when the wicked prosper, then follow the psalm into the sanctuary where the end finally comes into focus.

    The heart of the conversation centers on Job 21: one person dies full, another dies bitter, and neither storyline gives outsiders the right to play judge. “Death is no respecter of persons” becomes a mirror for our priorities, our striving, and our assumptions. We talk stewardship, discouragement in ministry, and the quiet ways Christians can tear each other down by judging tattoos, clothes, habits, or demeanor. Job’s pushback against his friends’ indirect accusations challenges us to be more forthright, more humble, and a lot quicker to encourage.

    If you’ve ever confused circumstances with God’s verdict, you’ll feel this one. Subscribe, share with a friend who needs courage, and leave a review with the biggest takeaway you’re walking away with.

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    37 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: "Shall Any Teach God" - (Job 21:22-27), Part 1/4
    2026/03/24

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    The Book of Job has a way of ruining our favorite explanations, especially the ones that sound spiritual but flatten real life. We camp out in Job 21:22-34 and let Job ask the cutting question most of us avoid: “Shall any teach God knowledge?” From there, we challenge the impulse to treat suffering as a sure sign of guilt and comfort as proof of innocence. If you’ve ever wondered why the wicked prosper or why faithful people suffer, this passage speaks with blunt honesty and surprising clarity.

    We also explore what it means that God “judges those that are high.” No leader, nation, or cultural powerhouse sits outside God’s authority, and even modern debates about who has the “right” to exist get reframed under God’s providence. Then a live interruption shifts the tone into a real-time clash over certainty and objective truth, exposing how quickly conversations about God turn into deeper questions about authority, eternity, and conviction.

    Finally, we return to Job’s two portraits of death: one person leaves this world healthy and at ease, another dies in bitterness, and both end in the same grave. The takeaway is not despair, but humility and urgency. God’s justice is not absent, but it is not a formula we control, and mercy is found in Jesus Christ. Subscribe for more verse-by-verse Bible teaching, share this with someone who wrestles with the problem of evil, and leave a review with your biggest question from Job 21.

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    37 分