エピソード

  • LIVE DISCUSSION: "Job Fights Back" (Job 12:1-6) - Part 3/3
    2026/01/09

    Send us a text

    Mercy looks like open doors in a storm—and sometimes the loudest pulpits fall silent when it matters. We start with Houston’s crisis as a litmus test for leadership and stewardship, then widen the lens to ask why so many believers still treat wealth as proof of God’s favor. If prosperity equals righteousness, how do we explain the success of thieves and exploiters? That question drives us into Job 12, where the upright man is mocked and the wicked look secure, and into Psalm 73, where envy gives way to clarity in the sanctuary.

    We don’t stop at personal ethics. We tackle hard talk on capitalism, socialism, and communism, not to score points but to show how each system can drift toward concentrated power. Then we examine U.S. aid, Israel’s social benefits, and the uncomfortable feedback loop between foreign dollars and domestic politics. The goal isn’t partisanship—it’s integrity. If we honor human dignity abroad, we should honor it at home; if we condemn “dependency,” we should also name who depends on influence and funding to keep power. Along the way, we probe end-times narratives, pushing back on sensational readings that reward confidence over humility and headlines over careful exegesis.

    The heart of the episode is a return to Scripture: Job’s protest against retribution theology, Psalm 73’s shift from snapshots to ends, and a fresh look at Genesis 12:3 that centers Abraham’s true family—those who share his faith, across nations and histories. Together, these threads call us to a wiser metric for spiritual health: not applause, not comfort, but truth told with humility and resources spent on people in need. Join us as we seek wisdom that steadies the soul and a faith that serves without flinching. If this conversation stirred your thinking, subscribe, share it with a friend, 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
    37 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: "Job Fights Back" (Job 12:1-6) - Part 2/3
    2026/01/09

    Send us a text

    Ever been treated like your misfortune is proof of your guilt? We dive into Job 12 and confront a reflex that shows up in church and culture alike: the rush to reduce complex suffering to simple moral math. We name how karma language sneaks into Christian counsel, why it removes God from the story, and how sowing and reaping actually sits under God’s sovereignty rather than fate. Along the way, we wrestle with discernment—when to answer and when silence is wisdom—drawing strength from Paul’s gritty picture of endurance under slander and scarcity.

    The heart of the episode is Job’s “dim lamp” image. He says those at ease despise a flickering light. We unpack how that metaphor exposes a painful pattern: communities celebrate bright, useful lamps and discard them when they falter. Job isn’t confessing failure; he’s naming perception. “Slipping” isn’t rebellion—it’s unintentional loss of footing. When we mistake appearance for reality, we condemn the wounded instead of trimming the wick, adding oil, and shielding the flame. That shift—from suspicion to stewardship—changes how we listen, pray, give counsel, and show up for people whose lives no longer look tidy.

    We also challenge the comfort-equals-virtue myth and the spectacle of celebrity religion that values optics over obedience. Real wisdom grows not from formulas but from walking with God through storms, holding our tongues when our theories outpace our love, and moving toward the afflicted with patient mercy. If you’ve been blamed for a storm you didn’t cause—or if you’re ready to become the kind of friend who tends the lamp instead of tossing it—this conversation will steady your steps and widen your heart.

    If this resonates, follow the show, share it with a friend who’s in a hard season, and leave a review telling us where you’ve seen the “dim lamp” dynamic—and how we can do better together.

    Support the show

    BE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    続きを読む 一部表示
    37 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: "Job Fights Back" (Job 12:1-6) - Part 1/3
    2026/01/09

    Send us a text

    What if the answers you’ve leaned on were never meant to carry the weight of real suffering? Tonight, we walk with Job as he pivots from defense to a fierce, clear-eyed response, challenging the tidy formulas that equate prosperity with righteousness and loss with secret sin. The tone changes, the stakes rise, and a deeper wisdom breaks through the noise: God’s sovereignty stands even when providence withholds explanations.

    We share why Job’s sarcasm is not bitterness but a scalpel that cuts through spiritual arrogance. Zophar’s health-and-wealth logic collapses under scrutiny as Job exposes how cliché theology can wound the afflicted. We dig into the difference between knowledge and wisdom, how shared doctrines can be misapplied, and why true care requires listening before labeling. The conversation draws parallels to religious gatekeeping across eras, showing how certainty without compassion becomes cruelty dressed as counsel.

    From there, we press into the mystery of providence. Faith is not a code to crack; it’s trust in a God whose justice is exact yet often hidden in its unfolding. We explore how uncertainty can be an intentional part of spiritual growth, forging dependence, humility, and endurance. If you’re weary of cause-and-effect religion and want a sturdier hope—one that refuses to measure holiness by comfort or success—this walk through Job 12 will steady your steps and widen your view of God’s ways.

    If this resonated, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs a wiser word, and leave a review to help others find thoughtful, faith-deepening conversations.

    Support the show

    BE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    続きを読む 一部表示
    37 分
  • "The Eyes of the Wicked Shall Fail" (Job 11:15-20) - Part 3/4)
    2026/01/08

    Send us a text

    What if anxiety isn’t just a modern condition but a spiritual crossroads where control collides with trust? We dive straight into that tension with honest stories—parents navigating a child’s milestone without crushing the relationship, a vow to never be hurt again that hardened into control, and the slow, surprising healing that came through Scripture and prayer. The thread that ties it all together is simple and demanding: bring everything to God, even when the outcome is unclear.

    We anchor the conversation in Job, challenging a common mistake that prosperity equals God’s approval and suffering equals punishment. Zophar’s counsel carries truths misapplied, and we unpack why that matters for anyone who’s ever wondered if pain means they’ve failed God. Instead of quick fixes, we talk about uprooting seeds—worry, fear, and the urge to manage outcomes—before they grow into larger sins. Philippians 4:6 comes alive here: be anxious for nothing by leaning into prayer, supplication, and thanksgiving, not denial. That rhythm reframes anxiety as an invitation to dependence rather than a verdict of defeat.

    Along the way, we sit with hard-won insights from trauma survivors who found the courage to confess idols, lay down control, and listen for the Shepherd’s voice. We also own the discomfort of correction, shedding assumptions and choosing gentleness when addressing others’ struggles. The goal isn’t sentimentality; it’s clarity with compassion, truth that heals rather than shames. By the end, dependence on God emerges as the real metric of growth—one choice, one prayer, one surrendered outcome at a time. If you’ve ever asked “what’s next?” with a knot in your stomach, this conversation offers sturdy hope and a practical path forward.

    If the episode resonates, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs encouragement, and leave a rating or review to help more listeners find these conversations.

    Support the show

    BE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    続きを読む 一部表示
    36 分
  • "The Eyes of the Wicked Shall Fail" (Job 11:15-20) - Part 2/4)
    2026/01/08

    Send us a text

    What if the thing you’re calling “natural concern” is quietly choking your faith? We open a candid, compassionate conversation about anxiety, worry, and trust—testing big claims against both scripture and lived experience. No clichés, no easy outs: just a room full of believers wrestling with Peter’s sinking, Job’s silence, and the spike of a modern amygdala.

    We start by separating uncertainty from worry. Uncertainty is inevitable in a finite life; worry is what happens when control becomes an idol. Some of us argue that vigilance—like a parent rushing a child from the street—is love in action. Others push back with passages that call worry a thorn that stifles fruit. The middle path emerges: not all who suffer are guilty, but all suffering signals a fallen world. That lens reframes the question from blame to direction—do we grasp tighter, or do we cast our cares on God who cares for us?

    Voices around the table bring it home. A mother confronts late‑night dread over her adult daughter, choosing repeated surrender over rumination. A believer shares how panic once ruled her days and how God used prayer, community, and time to bring real relief. We look at pre‑fall logic to consider whether anxiety could exist in Eden, and why that matters for how we name what hurts us now. Then we read Jesus’ warnings about the “worries of life,” and Peter’s command to humble ourselves and cast anxiety onto God. Psychology doesn’t threaten faith here; it clarifies the battlefield. Trauma can lock our nervous system into overdrive, yet hope calls us to keep handing the weight back to Him.

    By the end, we offer a practical, faithful rhythm: name the fear, refuse its throne, seek wise care, and keep praying. Guard your mind, resist the enemy’s snares, and let uncertainty drive you to deeper dependence. If you’ve ever wondered whether worry is sin, symptom, or signal, this conversation will challenge and comfort in equal measure.

    If this resonates, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs courage today, and leave a review so others can find these conversations.

    Support the show

    BE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    続きを読む 一部表示
    36 分
  • "The Eyes of the Wicked Shall Fail" (Job 11:15-20) - Part 1/4)
    2026/01/08

    Send us a text

    What if the neat answer to your pain isn’t just unhelpful, but wrong? We open Job 11 and sit with Zophar’s confident diagnosis—repent and the fear will lift—then test it against Job’s integrity and the deeper current of his anguish. The conversation moves past lost wealth and shattered health to the fear that actually grips Job: the felt distance of God, the quiet that unsettles those who love Him most.

    Together, we examine how doctrine has to walk. Repentance is a gift when sin is real; it is cruelty when assumed. Zophar’s moralism shows what happens when truth lacks compassion and context. We explore why some suffering does not trace back to personal failure, how preservation steadies the believer, and why Job never charges God foolishly even as he pleads for light. Along the way, we bring in passages on fear, judgment, and assurance, and we work through a hard pastoral question: Is anxiety born from uncertainty a sin, or can it become a signal that drives us into God’s presence?

    If you’ve ever faced a storm you couldn’t explain, this study offers language, Scripture, and hope. You’ll hear how to resist false guilt without hardening your heart, how to carry honest questions to God, and how to keep your footing when heaven seems silent. Subscribe for more chapter-by-chapter studies through Job and share this with someone who needs gentler counsel and sturdier comfort today. What part of Job’s story challenges you most right now?

    Support the show

    BE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    続きを読む 一部表示
    36 分
  • "WHO CAN HINDER GOD?" (JOB 11:7-14) - PART 3/3
    2026/01/07

    Send us a text

    Ever been told “just be a good person” and felt the bar shift under your feet? We take aim at fuzzy standards of goodness and trace the question back to its source: if only God is truly good, then reconciliation with Him must start on His terms, not ours. That frame sets up a bracing walk through Job 11, where Zophar offers a correct-sounding remedy with a disastrously wrong diagnosis—and where many of us still stumble when we slap generic answers on specific pain.

    We talk candidly about doctrinal drift and the subtle ways people keep the Christian label while sanding down hard edges like judgment, hell, and the narrow gate. Not to sensationalize, but to restore clarity: eternity matters because the One we offend is eternal, and separation from Him isn’t a metaphor to update away. Then we go practical and pastoral. On the mission field, a mother at a children’s hospital believes her child’s illness is punishment. Prosperity slogans offer quick fixes. We counter with a richer hope: Jesus heals bodies and forgives sins, and He cares most for the soul. That reorders our prayers, our counsel, and our courage.

    Job’s story becomes a map for empathy. Zophar assumes sin; God is doing something deeper. We learn why right truth misapplied can harm, and why real ministry refuses to say “go research it” when we should say “let’s walk through this together.” Along the way, testimonies of illness, fear, and steadfast faith reveal how suffering often becomes the very path God uses to answer prayers for trust and maturity. The result isn’t theory—it’s worship. A live song and closing prayer gather our hearts around the God who gives, who takes, who keeps, and who never wastes our tears.

    If you’re wrestling with pain, doctrine, or doubt, lean in. Subscribe, share this with a friend who needs steady hope, and leave a review with the one question about suffering you want us to tackle next.

    Support the show

    BE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    続きを読む 一部表示
    39 分
  • "WHO CAN HINDER GOD?" (JOB 11:7-14) - PART 2/3
    2026/01/07

    Send us a text

    What if hell isn’t escape or annihilation but the terrifying reality of meeting God without a mediator? We dig into the book of Job to challenge fashionable doctrines that flatten eternity and soften judgment, exploring why scripture calls God’s knowledge higher than the heavens and deeper than hell. That only makes sense if hell is no metaphor but a bottomless reality—eternal in duration and weight—mirroring the very terms we gladly accept for heaven.

    We open the text and address a hard claim: annihilation would be a kind of hope, an end to consciousness that empties judgment of its moral gravity. Scripture refuses that shortcut. Hell’s depth underscores the infinite worth of the One we offend, and the cross of Christ makes sense only if the wrath he bears is truly eternal. Along the way, we confront the gulf between God’s sovereignty and our desire for autonomous freedom. From Zophar’s challenge—who can hinder God?—to Genesis’s example of God restraining sin, we trace a line through the Bible that presents a world governed by decree, not chance. The difference between determinism and fatalism matters here; God’s providence is not random drift but personal purpose.

    We also wrestle with how we speak. Doctrine without mercy can bruise, as Job’s friends prove. So we aim for a posture that refuses theological trend-chasing yet remains patient with honest questions. We reject arguments built on silence and return to the analogy of faith, letting scripture interpret scripture instead of bending it to modern tastes. The through-line is clear: the Bible prepares us for judgment and points us to the only safe place to stand—under the mediation of Christ, who saves to the uttermost.

    If you value hard truths handled with care, this conversation is for you. Listen, take notes, test every claim in the Word, and share it with someone who needs clarity today. Subscribe, leave a review, and tell us what doctrine you’re wrestling with—we’re listening.

    Support the show

    BE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    続きを読む 一部表示
    39 分