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  • 'The Wicked Say To God: "Depart From Us" (Job 21:8-16), Part 5/5
    2026/03/14

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    If you’ve ever looked at someone’s life and thought, “They must be blessed because they’re doing well,” this conversation will challenge you in the best way. We start with Job’s sharp critique of his friends: they label him wicked because he’s suffering, yet they can’t explain why many wicked people prosper, stay powerful, and die in comfort. That tension forces a deeper question for every believer: can wealth, health, and stability really prove righteousness, or are we just reading the outside and calling it truth?

    From there we go straight to Scripture, spending extended time in Isaiah 53 and letting the prophecy interpret our instincts. The Suffering Servant is unimpressive to the eye, despised, rejected, and wrongly assumed to be “smitten of God” and afflicted. That is exactly the trap Job is exposing and it’s a trap the modern prosperity gospel keeps rebuilding. We also connect “bruise” language to Genesis 3:15, showing why bruising implies something painful but not permanent, pointing through the cross to the resurrection of Jesus Christ.

    We end with practical application and comfort: warnings about envy, reminders about God’s sovereignty, and Psalm 32’s clear promise of forgiveness for the one who confesses. If you want Bible study that deals honestly with suffering, prosperity, and how to avoid shallow spiritual judgments, press play, then share this with someone who needs it and leave a review. What’s one way you’ve seen success mistaken for God’s approval?

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    35 分
  • 'The Wicked Say To God: "Depart From Us" (Job 21:8-16), Part 4/5
    2026/03/14

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    Isaiah says “All the seed of Israel will be justified” and we refuse to let that line stay vague. We walk it all the way through Scripture, asking the uncomfortable question it creates: if many in national Israel fell in unbelief, what does the Bible mean by Israel? From the “children of the promise” to Paul’s argument in Romans 9–11, we make the case that the true seed of Abraham is defined by union with Christ, not by bloodline, heritage, or national identity.

    That theological foundation spills into a blunt warning about modern Christian narratives that treat a present-day nation-state and end-times speculation as the center of God’s plan. We challenge dispensationalism, the fixation on a rebuilt temple, and the idea that God’s future depends on geopolitical loyalty. The thread we keep pulling is simple: the Holy Spirit takes up residence in redeemed people, and the new covenant reality is bigger than borders, buildings, and slogans.

    Then we turn to Job 21 and the prosperity of the wicked, because real life keeps raising the same protest: why do arrogant people thrive while the faithful suffer? Job’s answer is both honest and bracing. The wicked may live long and die quietly, yet their prosperity can fuel a darker creed: “Depart from us” and “what profit is prayer?” We name that mindset as practical atheism and end with Job’s corrective about divine providence: their good is not in their hand, and neither is the final reckoning.

    If this stretched your thinking, subscribe, share it with a friend who wrestles with these questions, and leave a review so more listeners can find the conversation. What do you think “Israel” means in Isaiah 45:25?

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    35 分
  • 'The Wicked Say To God: "Depart From Us" (Job 21:8-16), Part 3/5
    2026/03/14

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    The wicked can look untouchable: businesses succeed, families seem carefree, parties never stop, and the money keeps multiplying. We sit with Job 21 and ask the question most people are afraid to say out loud: if suffering is supposed to reveal God’s displeasure, why do those who disregard Him often appear to thrive?

    We dig into the difference between prosperity and blessing, and why “relying on wealth” becomes a spiritual trap even for people who claim they are fine. A disruptive caller crashes the conversation with loud self-confidence and a list of possessions, and we use that uncomfortable moment as a mirror: when someone builds an identity on status, what happens to the soul, to humility, and to the fear of God? We also talk about the culture-wide pull of celebrity, politics, and wealth concentration that trains us to admire the very kind of power Job is describing.

    Then we take a sharp turn into theology and interpretation, wrestling with Christian assumptions about dispensationalism, modern Israel, and how to read key passages in Isaiah alongside Romans 9–11. You may not agree with every conclusion, but you will hear the core challenge repeated: stop judging truth by outcomes and start judging outcomes by Scripture.

    If this conversation helped you think more clearly about money, suffering, and faith, subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave a review. What part challenged you most?

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    35 分
  • 'The Wicked Say To God: "Depart From Us" (Job 21:8-16), Part 2/5
    2026/03/14

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    The wicked look untouchable, the faithful feel squeezed, and Job refuses to accept easy answers. We sit with one of the most unsettling themes in the Book of Job: why people who rebel against God can enjoy safety, wealth, long lives, and thriving families while God’s own people experience the rod of correction. If you have ever looked at corruption, abuse, or powerful people escaping consequences and thought “where is justice?”, you will recognize the tension immediately.

    We work through Job’s language about the rod of God and connect it to Hebrews 12, where discipline is tied to love and sonship. That raises big questions about what chastening means, what it reveals about relationship with God, and why Christian suffering is not always a sign of failure but can be a tool God uses to cultivate growth. We also push into the meaning of “receiving” salvation, challenging the assumption that redemption is mainly a human decision and highlighting God’s initiative in receiving sons through regeneration.

    The conversation gets practical and urgent as we contrast the temporary prosperity of the wicked with eternal realities. Heaven is described as an eternal rest centered on Christ’s glory, while hell is treated as more than a word and more than a metaphor. We also call out prophecy sensationalism and modern claims of visions, tongues, and fresh revelation that imply the Bible is not sufficient. If you care about biblical justice, Christian perseverance, sound doctrine, and the hard honesty of Job, this will stretch you.

    Subscribe for more, share this with a friend who is wrestling with suffering and justice, and leave a review to help others find the show. What part of Job’s argument hits closest to home for you?

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    35 分
  • 'The Wicked Say To God: "Depart From Us" (Job 21:8-16), Part 1/5
    2026/03/14

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    The fastest way to misunderstand suffering is to treat it like a confession. We open Job 21 by watching Job do something brave and painfully relevant: he refuses to let his friends turn his losses into a courtroom where they act as judge and jury. Their theory is simple and seductive, righteous people prosper while sinners suffer, so Job must be hiding sin. Job answers with a question that still unsettles every neat spiritual formula: why do the wicked live, grow old, and become mighty in power?

    We read Job 21:8-16 closely and trace Job’s description of the wicked’s outward prosperity. Their children are established, their legacy continues, their homes look safe from fear, and the “rod of God” doesn’t appear to touch them. We talk about what that does to a believer’s heart, especially when envy creeps in or when grief makes you wonder if God is against you. We also explore why visible success is not the same as spiritual health, and why outward suffering is not proof of divine rejection.

    The panel joins in with honest reactions about Job’s patience, the cruelty of spiritual overconfidence, and the importance of discernment. If you’ve ever heard someone explain tragedy with a smug sentence, this conversation is for you. Subscribe, share this with a friend who needs clarity, and leave a review with your answer: what’s the most harmful “comfort” you’ve heard someone offer in suffering?

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    35 分
  • LIVE: "Why Do The Wicked Live?" (Job 21:7), Part 4/4
    2026/03/13

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    The question behind Job still lands like a punch: why do the wicked get long lives, power, and peace while the righteous suffer. We start there and refuse to offer a neat, sentimental answer. Instead, we talk about God’s providence in affliction, the loneliness of being misunderstood, and the unsettling reality that God’s timing can look like silence. What we see in Job is not a weak God, but a patient God who leaves room for repentance and still holds every person accountable.

    From that foundation, we move into salvation and assurance with zero fluff. We push on free will arguments, responsibility, and what it means to stand before God “without excuse.” Then we tackle a doctrine we believe damages people: the claim that a Christian can lose salvation. If Christ’s righteousness is imputed to us, if the Holy Spirit indwells and regenerates, what sin limit makes God’s work reversible? We walk through the logic, the Scriptures being appealed to, and why perseverance of the saints is not a license to sin but a refuge for weary believers.

    We also zoom out to the wider religious landscape and the “faith plus something” impulse that keeps showing up, whether it’s rituals, rule keeping, or reshaping who Jesus is. That leads into a blunt critique of dispensationalism, modern Israel prophecy narratives, and end times panic that spikes with every war and election cycle. We argue for plain-text Bible reading over headlines and hype, and we end with prayer and a thoughtful question from someone who says they’re teachable about the rapture.

    If you value serious Christian theology, biblical interpretation, and clear talk about salvation, Israel, and end times claims, listen through and share it with someone who’s been rattled by the news. Subscribe, leave a review, and tell us what topic you want us to tackle next.

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    37 分
  • LIVE: "Why Do The Wicked Live?" (Job 21:7), Part 3/4
    2026/03/13

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    Comfort can lie to you. So can success. We sit with a single verse in Job and let it dismantle the reflex to judge a person’s spiritual state by what their life looks like on the outside. If someone is thriving, we assume God must be pleased. If someone is crushed by loss, we assume something must be wrong. Job won’t let that stand, and neither can we if we’re serious about Christian faith and biblical wisdom.

    We talk through why spiritual maturity learns to receive every circumstance through God’s hand, not through the world’s label of “good” or “bad.” That takes us straight into God’s sovereignty and providence: not a distant God who merely watches events unfold, but a God who orders what he allows, giving believers real confidence that suffering is not meaningless. Along the way, Ashley, Mariah, Candy, and Pat help press the point with honest questions and lived-in application.

    Then we tackle the “hedge around Job” and what Satan is actually after. The goal is not a cartoonish idea of stealing souls, but provoking a believer to curse God when life feels unfair. If the true hedge is God-given faith and relationship with him, then prosperity is not the protection we think it is, and loss cannot touch what matters most.

    We close with a practical challenge for how to care for others: when someone’s world is falling apart, start with the question that targets eternity, “How is it with your soul?” If you want a Job Bible study that confronts prosperity thinking, reframes suffering, and strengthens everyday discipleship, listen now, subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway.

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    37 分
  • LIVE: "Why Do The Wicked Live?" (Job 21:7), Part 2/4
    2026/03/13

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    Why do wicked people get long lives, full bank accounts, and public honor while faithful people suffer in silence? We sit with Job’s question and refuse the easy answers. The tension is real: if God is sovereign, then nothing happens outside His decree. If God is holy, then He is not the author of sin. Holding those truths together is where the conversation gets both challenging and comforting.

    We walk through the difference between saying God “allows” evil and confessing that God ordains all things without being morally guilty. That shift changes how we read Job 1, where Satan cannot touch Job without permission, and it changes how we understand our own trials. We also talk about human choice, desires, and why “what we see” in someone’s life can be a terrible measure of what is true about their soul.

    Then we land on the answer we keep circling back to: God is patient. His long-suffering toward the wicked is not weakness, it is purposeful restraint that magnifies His mercy and leaves no one without excuse. That patience is also a grace to believers who still pray for repentance and still plead the gospel with people who seem untouchable. Along the way, we confront prosperity thinking head-on, asking why we call money and comfort “blessings” but struggle to say the same about illness, loss, and hardship, even when Scripture says all things work together for our good.

    If this stirred questions or pushed on your assumptions, subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find these Job conversations. What do you think is the hardest part of trusting God’s providence when life hurts?

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    続きを読む 一部表示
    37 分