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  • LIVE DISCUSSION: Job 4:1-9 Eliphaz Speaks (Part 4 of 4)
    2025/11/21

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    What if the problem isn’t what you believe, but how you use what you believe? We walk through Job’s exchange with Eliphaz to expose a common trap in modern church life: right doctrine delivered in the wrong way. The insights are both theological and pastoral—clear enough to challenge our assumptions, practical enough to reshape how we teach, correct, and comfort.

    We start by confronting the myth of the “plain reading” badge. Quoting more Scripture isn’t the same as applying it well. Eliphaz said many true things yet misread Job’s condition and God’s heart. From there we press into sovereignty, election, and God’s attributes. If God is omniscient, omnipotent, and unchanging, He doesn’t suspend those traits when salvation is at stake. That conviction reframes persistent objections about justice and hell, and it anchors our prayers: Your will be done is not a platitude; it’s a confession of reality.

    We also talk about maturity in the trenches—how to handle disagreement without rushing to “false teacher,” when to step away from fruitless debates, and why asking “What do you think about Christ?” beats comparing church labels. Along the way we name the blind spots that keep hurting people: mistimed truth, condescending tone, and tradition elevated above Scripture. The call is to invite challenge, be ready to unlearn, and bring orthodoxy with gentleness to those with “feeble hands and weak knees.”

    If you’ve ever wondered why your accurate answers still fall flat, this study will help you pair conviction with compassion and doctrine with discernment. Listen, reflect, and share your takeaway. And if it sharpened you, subscribe, leave a review, and pass it to a friend who loves the Bible and wants to love people better.

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    36 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: Job 4:1-9 Eliphaz Speaks (Part 3 of 4)
    2025/11/21

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    A friend’s words can steady you or break you, and Job’s story shows how quickly counsel can turn into a verdict. We dive into the sharp edge of Eliphaz’s reasoning—truths about judgment, sown and reaped—but ask the harder question: what happens when a true statement lands on the wrong person at the wrong time? Our conversation walks through courage as restraint, the confusion of composure with faith, and the subtle power of rhetorical traps that push sufferers to confess what they do not owe.

    We explore how respect for elders could have shaped Job’s silence, why oral tradition mattered, and how even with a complete Bible today we still fall for the same easy math: pain equals guilt, prosperity equals blessing. Abel’s name punctures Eliphaz’s claim about the innocent, and that moment becomes a mirror for us. The problem is not only doctrine; it’s aim and application. A right verse can wound if it ignores context, character, and the God who sees the heart. Job’s losses expose an old mistake we keep making—equating circumstances with standing before God—and they call us back to humility.

    Along the way, we push back on prosperity thinking and the search for tidy causes. Suffering may be a crucible for faith rather than a spotlight on failure. Satan misread the heart of a faithful man; Job’s friends did too. That’s why we advocate for biblical precision over pride, patience over gotcha moments, and counsel that serves rather than shames. If you’ve ever been on the receiving end of shallow answers in a deep night, this conversation offers clarity, courage, and a better way to walk with people in pain.

    If this resonated, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs careful counsel, and leave a review to help more listeners find thoughtful conversations like this.

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    36 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: Job 4:1-9 Eliphaz Speaks (Part 2 of 4)
    2025/11/21

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    A compliment can feel like a hug—until it becomes a runway for a rebuke. We walk through Eliphaz’s opening to Job: the soft words, the strategic praise, and the swift pivot to “practice what you preach.” It’s a move many of us have felt in moments of pain, when someone seems to care yet uses that care to justify a verdict. We dig into why this approach wounds, why it often sounds wise, and how to spot it when it shows up in our own counsel.

    Together we unpack the harmful equation that visible suffering equals hidden sin. That tidy formula promises control but collapses under the weight of real life and honest Scripture. Job’s grief, his talk of darkness and despair, isn’t a confession of hypocrisy; it’s the language of a heart still turning Godward while everything else falls apart. We reflect on God’s sovereignty and goodness when affliction strikes, how comfort received becomes comfort given, and why tears aren’t evidence against faith but expressions within it.

    We also get practical. What helps a friend in ashes? Presence over answers. Charity over certainty. Truth carried on a gentle voice rather than a gavel. We explore how knowledge without love becomes noise, how tactical praise manipulates, and how to hold hope without silencing lament. By tracing Eliphaz’s errors, we learn a better way to walk with those who suffer: lift before you lecture, and if you must choose, choose to lift.

    If this conversation helped you rethink comfort, share it with someone who needs gentleness today. Subscribe for more thoughtful, Scripture‑rooted episodes, and leave a review to tell us what challenged you most.

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    36 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: Job 4:1-9 Eliphaz Speaks (Part 1 of 4)
    2025/11/21

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    Suffering has a way of exposing our theology, and nowhere is that more vivid than when Eliphaz steps up to answer Job. We walk through Job 4 with open Bibles and open eyes, tracing how a polished, confident friend leans on retribution logic—if you suffer, you must have sinned—and why that neat formula collapses under the weight of a righteous man’s pain. The conversation threads together Job’s imagery of light and darkness, the “hedge” that feels like a prison, and the uneasy truth that affliction can be a severe mercy that keeps us near to God.

    We don’t stop at the ancient scene. We hold up a mirror to modern counsel: the quick claims of “the Holy Spirit told me,” the appeal to study hours as authority, and the soft-spoken rebukes that hit like hammers. Knowledge matters, but wisdom knows when to speak, how to apply truth, and when to sit in faithful silence. Together we examine three core errors in Eliphaz’s approach—assuming the innocent never suffer, that suffering always signals past sin, and that Job’s pain proves guilt—and we offer a better path shaped by humility, compassion, and reverence for mystery.

    If you’ve ever been wounded by well-meaning “comfort,” this deep dive offers language and tools to do better. Learn how to anchor counsel in Scripture without playing the Holy Spirit, how to avoid legalistic cause-and-effect assumptions, and how to serve a grieving friend with presence, patience, and hope. Press play to rethink certainty, recover tenderness, and remember that God’s purposes are larger than our tidy equations. If this resonates, subscribe, share with a friend who needs gentler counsel, and leave a review to help others find the show.

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    36 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: The Confusion of Job (PART 4 of 4)
    2025/11/19

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    What if the very suffering that exhausts you is also God’s way of keeping you close? We gather around Job’s raw questions and discover fresh courage in the truth that he begged for a mediator, and we live with one—Christ, the merciful and faithful High Priest who leads us through the fire and not around it.

    We start by naming the paradox: grace often arrives dressed as hardship. Romans 5 reframes pain as the pathway to endurance, character, and hope, while Hebrews 2 lifts our eyes to Jesus, the captain of salvation, perfected through sufferings. That language unhooks perseverance from self-effort and anchors it in Christ’s steady command. Along the way, we explore Galatians 2:20 and Romans 8:18 to ground identity in union with Christ and to weigh present sorrows against future glory that can’t be measured. Personal reflections remind us that worldly wins are vanity next to hearing “Well done.”

    The conversation turns on a powerful insight about Job’s “hedge.” Satan saw protection to be stripped, Job felt a prison he couldn’t escape, and God intended preservation through affliction. We unpack how the light within—divine life—helps us interpret pain, and how a hedge of thorns can keep a wandering heart near the Shepherd. Job’s sighs, vigilance, and fear meet a sober comfort: God’s sovereignty wastes no wound. The call is practical and pastoral—guard your heart, lean on your High Priest, and let worship reshape your horizon.

    We close with prayer and a simple charge to live what we’ve learned tomorrow. If you’re tired, doubting, or aching for meaning in the middle of loss, this study offers language, scripture, and hope to steady your steps. Subscribe, share with someone who needs courage today, and leave a review to help others find this conversation.

    Catch On Fire Podcasts

    This channel does a deep dive into the scriptures so as to teach what it means to be...

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    37 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: The Confusion of Job (PART 3 of 4)
    2025/11/19

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    What if suffering doesn’t start at the cross but in the cradle? We take a hard look at where Christ’s pain truly begins—at the incarnation—then set it beside Job’s restless cries for the grave. From veiled glory to servant shame, we explore why Jesus’ suffering holds infinite worth and how that changes the way we carry our own pain.

    We start with the flesh-versus-spirit tension and ask why the Son’s descent matters for ordinary grief. Job becomes a mirror: a righteous man stripped of status, health, and peace, longing for the leveling mercy of death. But where Job seeks relief, Christ chooses humiliation for the life of the world. Many were crucified; only One of infinite dignity died with power to redeem. That truth reframes loss, disappointment, and the nights when light feels like a burden rather than a gift.

    We also wrestle with Job’s question: why give light to those in misery? Honest faith can intensify sorrow because it wakes us to what’s broken. Yet that same light refuses to be extinguished. We consider how pain demands to be felt, how sanctification works inside affliction, and why embracing trials can be an act of trust rather than defeat. Along the way we reflect on reward, endurance, and the simple reality that no servant is greater than the master. If our Master suffered, we will too—but not without purpose, and not without a future.

    Listen for a grounded, compassionate conversation that blends biblical theology with lived experience. If you’ve ever asked what good your faith does when the night won’t end, this one is for you. Subscribe, share with a friend who needs hope, and leave a review telling us where you think suffering begins.

    Catch On Fire Podcasts

    This channel does a deep dive into the scriptures so as to teach what it means to be...

    Listen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify

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    BE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

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    37 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: The Confusion of Job (PART 2 of 4)
    2025/11/19

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    If blessing isn’t a bigger paycheck or a smooth week, what is it really? We dive into Job’s most unsettling wish—to go all the way back—and why that detail exposes how little our “stuff” anchors faith. From personal testimonies to hard-won wisdom, we weigh the claim that every durable virtue is forged in affliction, not in ease, and ask why we so quickly equate God’s favor with what we can count and display.

    Together we trace Job’s longing for the grave as the great equalizer, where princes and paupers share the same stillness. That stark image opens a wider conversation about dependence: we don’t grow much in comfort, but we do grow when we must lean on God. We challenge the prayers we rush to pray—make it stop, fix this now—and consider a different aim: resilience, endurance, and faith that holds when nothing else does. Along the way we explore Paul’s bold call to rejoice in trials and the promise that severe testing often precedes a larger work of grace.

    We also draw careful lines between Job’s suffering and Jesus’ suffering. Both were innocent in their trials, both endured scorn, and both show us how to suffer well. But only Christ bore the totality of human sin and walked out of the grave. That distinction reframes our pain: our fire refines, his cross redeems. We discuss when Christ’s suffering began—temptation, rejection, incarnation itself—and why that matters for how we carry our own burdens without mistaking them for atonement.

    If you’ve ever asked why loss visits the faithful or wondered where true blessing hides when life falls apart, this conversation is for you. Listen, share with a friend who needs courage, and if the episode resonates, subscribe and leave a review so more people can find these conversations. What has the fire formed in you?

    Catch On Fire Podcasts

    This channel does a deep dive into the scriptures so as to teach what it means to be...

    Listen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify

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    BE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

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    37 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: The Confusion of Job (PART 1 of 4)
    2025/11/19

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    What if your faith had to outlast the loss of everything you love? We open Job 3 and sit with the raw ache of a righteous man who wishes he had never been born, yet refuses to curse God. The wager is set: Satan claims devotion is transactional. Job’s ashes answer back that love can endure without gifts, that lament can still bow to sovereignty.

    We walk through the text line by line, naming the pain without sanitizing it. Job imagines death as rest, envies the quiet of kings and infants, and still won’t take his life. That distinction matters. We bring theology and psychology together—talking through passive versus active ideation, the weight that trauma lays on the mind, and the honest ways faithful people express sorrow. Along the way, we hold up Christ’s agony before the cross as a compass: if the Son grieved righteously, so can we. The heart of the conversation is pastoral and practical, protecting the wounded from shame while inviting them to keep speaking to God when words are hard.

    We also challenge a common trap: chasing reputation with people instead of standing approved before God. Job’s neighbors see failure; God calls him upright. That reversal reframes endurance as courage—choosing obedience when even close voices say to quit. Affliction becomes a forge for holiness, not a verdict of abandonment. By the end, we surface a surprising insight: Job doesn’t long to rewind to better days; he imagines un-birth. The grief is that deep, yet it happens inside faith’s frame. If you’ve ever asked why pain lingers or how to keep going when prayer feels heavy, this conversation is for you.

    Listen, share with someone who’s struggling, and leave a review so more people can find hope here. Subscribe to get next week’s study as we keep walking with Job through the long night toward dawn.

    Catch On Fire Podcasts

    This channel does a deep dive into the scriptures so as to teach what it means to be...

    Listen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify

    Support the show

    BE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    続きを読む 一部表示
    37 分