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  • LIVE DISCUSSION: (Job 15:21-23) "WICKED MAN'S DEMISE" Part 4/4
    2026/02/04

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    You can spend a lifetime wandering with an empty soul while a full table sits within reach. We explore that unsettling truth through a clear, urgent journey: why money and status never quiet a restless conscience, how the Bread of Life meets us in the wilderness, and why the simplest step—repent and believe—feels so hard when pride wants something grand. This is not a maze of theology; it’s a straight path to hope.

    We walk through the image of feasting that David paints and connect it to the nearness of salvation: the word is in your mouth and heart. Along the way, we challenge the myth that spiritual life is earned or rare. The story of Naaman shows how we resist simple obedience, preferring heroic effort over humble trust. We talk frankly about mortality—the “day of darkness” that makes every other comfort feel thin—and name the unavoidable decision at the edge of eternity: Christ or nothing. Not scare tactics, just clarity about what truly sustains a person when time runs short.

    Our goal is pastoral and practical. If your heart has been loud with fear, guilt, or exhaustion, you’ll hear why only Jesus can carry sin and gift righteousness, why the conscience can finally rest, and how assurance comes from receiving rather than achieving. We invite you to stop stalling for a better moment, stop worrying about other people’s opinions, and take the meal that gives life. If the table is set and the Bread of Life is before you, will you sit and eat?

    If this moved you, share it with someone who’s searching, hit follow, and leave a review so more listeners can find a clear path to hope.

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    16 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: (Job 15:21-23) "WICKED MAN'S DEMISE" Part 3/4
    2026/02/04

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    What if the blessings you envy are the very things starving your soul? We dig into the hard gap between worldly success and true blessing, using the story of Job to expose how comfort can blind us and how affliction can open us to God’s richest work. From there, we center our identity as joint heirs with Christ—a status that reframes money, status, and ambition—and ask what it looks like to steward gifts for God’s glory rather than self.

    The conversation gets personal as we talk about real inheritance. One listener shares how open-handed generosity freed their heart, while another reminds parents that the greatest legacy is leading children to Jesus. We draw a powerful line from Augustine to his mother Monica, whose gracious toughness guarded his doctrine and, through him, strengthened the church for centuries. That same calling sits with every household today: teach, guard, and guide with love and conviction.

    We also face the weight of judgment and the mercy of delay. Pharaoh’s confidence at the Red Sea becomes a warning against pride, and the image of the “sword” ready to fall calls for urgency without panic. God’s patience is a window, not permission. We explore election and the relentless pursuit of God, not to spark debates but to anchor hope: the Shepherd knows his own and will not let them go. It all culminates in a simple, searching image—the wicked wandering for bread while the Bread of Life stands ready to satisfy. If success has felt empty and striving has left you restless, this conversation points to the only food that lasts.

    If this resonates, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a quick review. Tell us: where are you choosing to set your mind this week?

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    31 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: (Job 15:21-23) "WICKED MAN'S DEMISE" Part 2/4
    2026/02/04

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    What if the loudest sound in a successful life is a troubled conscience? We dive into Job’s debates and find a mirror for our own moment: brilliant arguments that miss the mark, confident opinions that drown out wisdom, and a culture that calls greed ambition while the heart keeps asking harder questions.

    We walk through Eliphaz’s portrait of the wicked and the “dreadful sound” that follows them into prosperity, connecting it to modern leaders and celebrities who can buy anything except peace. Along the way, we challenge a popular myth: that knowledge alone guarantees truth. It doesn’t. Without wisdom, humility, and love, even accurate doctrines become arrows aimed at the wrong target. We talk about why study matters, how to ask God for wisdom that tempers learning, and how to keep counsel from turning into cruelty.

    From Psalm 73 to Proverbs, we trace how Scripture reframes success, suffering, and the restless chase for “just a little more.” Wealth isn’t evil, but the love of it distorts our vision and hollows our desires. True inheritance doesn’t pad an account; it anchors a soul. Streets of gold are pavement because presence is the treasure. That’s why legacies fade while life in Christ endures. If your reward is now, it ends. If your reward is Christ, it begins now and it doesn’t end.

    Listen for a grounded, honest conversation that trades performance for wisdom and noise for clarity. If this resonates, share it with a friend, subscribe for more thoughtful episodes, and leave a review to help others find the show. What are you chasing, and does it finally bring you peace?

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    31 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: (Job 15:21-23) "WICKED MAN'S DEMISE" Part 1/4
    2026/02/04

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    Ever been cornered by “old wisdom” that doesn’t fit your real life? We dive into Job 15, where Eliphaz stacks tradition, lineage, and supposedly pure teaching against a suffering friend, then slides into a sweeping portrait of the “wicked man” that feels more like a veiled accusation than careful counsel. The tension is palpable: if the ancients all agree and the pattern is clear, what space is left for Job’s agony or God’s hidden purposes?

    We walk through Eliphaz’s appeal to authority, the claim that truth stays untainted within the fathers’ circle, and the rhetorical shift that uses broad theology to make a narrow judgment. Along the way, we ask hard questions. When do doctrines that are generally true become damaging in personal cases? How do we keep discernment tethered to love so our counsel doesn’t turn into a courtroom? And what do we do when the tidy system says “guilty” but the Spirit says “wait”?

    This study doesn’t just parse ancient speeches; it probes the heart. We contrast the anxious restlessness of life without God with the quiet courage of hope in Christ. We reflect on Job’s patience under pressure, the friends’ certainty that misfires, and the larger comfort of God’s sovereignty—Satan can’t move an inch beyond permission, and suffering is never wasted for those who belong to the Lord. If you’ve ever watched truth used like a hammer when a hand was needed, this conversation offers a better path: listen longer, judge slower, hold to Scripture, and let mercy guide the application.

    Join us as we trace the fault lines between tradition and truth, accusation and aid, despair and assurance. Subscribe, share this episode with a friend who needs thoughtful encouragement, and leave a review to help others find the study. How have you learned to pair sound doctrine with gentle wisdom? We’d love to hear your story.

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    31 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: (Job 15:17-19) "Trusting Tradition & Antiquity" Part 4/4
    2026/02/03

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    A bruised heart doesn’t need a lecture; it needs a lifeline. We open Job’s story at the point where uncertainty intensifies pain and the chorus of “helpful” voices only deepens the wound. From there, we draw a straight line to our own lives: the way delayed judgment tempts the proud to assume God is absent, the way anxious minds manufacture explanations, and the way power and pressure never deliver peace. Instead of reading circumstances like a verdict, we learn to read the heart with humility and to speak carefully when a friend is in the fire.

    Together, we face the hard truth that spiritual harm often comes wrapped in confident advice. Job’s friends mirror a posture we must reject: stacking outward observations into moral conclusions while ignoring the soul. We talk about why the wicked confuse God’s patience with indifference, and why believers wait with hope, not panic. Then comes the pivot that changes everything: look to Christ and be saved. Justification is given, not earned. Temptation is common, not crushing. God provides a way of escape, often through endurance, and anchors us as more than conquerors in Jesus.

    Assurance doesn’t grow in the haze of striving; it grows in honest self-examination under grace. We walk through daily practices that align the heart with truth: testing whether we are in the faith, naming the desires that are changing, and learning to die to sin without slipping into despair or pride. No one can threaten what Christ has finished, and no checklist can add to it. Believe with your whole heart, and let that belief shape your words to the suffering, your patience with God’s timing, and your courage in the face of fear. If this conversation steadied your hope, share it with a friend, subscribe for more, and leave a review so others can find their way to peace.

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    10 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: (Job 15:17-19) "Trusting Tradition & Antiquity" Part 3/4
    2026/02/03

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    A tremor runs through the opening: if Christ’s voice shakes the earth, tone and tact won’t matter—truth will. That image sets our path through Job 15, where Eliphaz leans on the “wise men” and their fathers to corner Job with consensus. We press on the danger of mistaking tradition for revelation and show why Job, for all his anguish, keeps aiming at God rather than borrowing authority from the past.

    From there we wrestle with experience. Can a powerful vision be real yet misread? We share a candid story of hoped-for healing tied to a long-held tradition, and we talk about how the mind, especially under stress, can assign spiritual weight to impressions. The point isn’t to dismiss experience; it’s to interpret it by Scripture. God will not contradict his word, and discernment grows when we love the Bible more than we love the crowd’s approval or our own expectations.

    We also dismantle the nostalgia trap. Eliphaz romanticizes a time “when no stranger passed among them,” as if moral purity comes from insulation. We argue that every generation forgets its shadows. Moral clarity flows from grace and obedience, not from closed circles or majority votes. That brings us to a preview of Job 38, where God’s questions humble Job and heal him at once. A divine rebuke can be a gift when it resets our view of God and ourselves.

    Join us as we trace the line from consensus to conviction: measure every claim by Scripture, beware the seduction of the “moral majority,” and cultivate a steady appetite for truth that can weather criticism, confusion, and disappointment. If this conversation strengthens your love for God’s word, share it with a friend, subscribe for more thoughtful studies, and leave a review to help others find the show. What voices are you trusting this week, and how are you testing them?

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    37 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: (Job 15:17-19) "Trusting Tradition & Antiquity" Part 2/4
    2026/02/03

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    What if the story that moved you most isn’t the truth that will sustain you? We open a hard, honest conversation with a listener’s grief and a claimed vision, then walk through how to test experiences without crushing the soul that shares them. Using Job as our map, we watch Eliphaz reach for tradition, accumulated sayings, and personal insight—only to misapply wisdom when he needed scripture most. That same mistake is alive today: confident claims, thin texts, and pressure to submit to “a word” no one can find in the Bible.

    We dig into the difference between the Spirit illuminating scripture and the idea of the Spirit delivering new doctrine. Illumination deepens understanding of what God has already said; novelty competes with it. From Galatians’ stern warning about “another gospel” to the historical rise of movements built on private revelations, we stack the evidence for why the canon is enough and why the clearest love is the one that insists, kindly but firmly, on chapter and verse. Tradition still has a place, but only when it carries the same melody as the text. When customs add burdens or smuggle in new beliefs, Jesus’ own confrontations with religious leaders show the way back.

    We close with a pastoral charge: open the Bible with prayerful expectation and let God’s voice steady your steps. Experiences can inspire, mentors can guide, and emotions can be real, but only scripture can bind the conscience and anchor hope. If you’ve wrestled with a powerful “God told me” moment—your own or someone else’s—this conversation gives you a gentle framework and a firm foundation. If it isn’t in the Word, it isn’t binding. Subscribe, share this with a friend who needs clarity, and leave a review to tell us how you test truth.

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    37 分
  • LIVE DISCUSSION: (Job 15:17-19) "Trusting Tradition & Antiquity" Part 1/4
    2026/02/03

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    Start with Job 15 and something familiar happens: Eliphaz anchors his counsel in what he has “seen,” then insists Job accept it as authority. That move—experience elevated over revelation—feels uncomfortably modern. We pressed into that tension and traced how the same pattern fuels claims of oneness, modalism, tongues as a test of salvation, and the endless refrain of “God told me to tell you.” The through line is simple and urgent: experience can confirm truth, but it must never define it.

    We open the text in verses 17 to 19 and watch how Eliphaz frames credibility without exegesis. From there, we connect his approach to our moment, where recycled doctrines return under new names. History matters here, not as trivia, but as a map that shows where false turns lead. Along the way, we talk about the royal priesthood—every believer indwelled by the same Spirit, standing on equal ground. Teachers serve the church, but no one has a special hotline that outranks Scripture. If it cannot be shown in the text and in context, it cannot bind the conscience.

    Listeners share vulnerable stories of confusion, pressure, and being told that without tongues they lack the Spirit. We walk through why that standard fails the biblical test, how emotion can masquerade as authority, and why Hebrews anchors God’s speech now in the Son and the inscripturated Word. Personal guidance is real, but it guides application, not revelation. We end with a call to courage and humility: become a student of the Word, test every claim, welcome correction, and speak with clarity and mercy. Subscribe, share this with a friend who needs ballast, and leave a review telling us one belief you’ve recently tested against Scripture.

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    37 分