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  • LIVE: "His Eyes Shall See His Destruction" (Job 21:17-21), (Part 4/4)
    2026/03/23

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    The most unsettling kind of injustice is the kind that looks like it “works.” Some people do wrong, stay comfortable, build a life that seems blessed, and never face consequences in public. We sit with Job’s realism about the prosperity of the wicked and say the quiet part out loud: delayed judgment is still judgment. No one escapes God’s justice, even if their whole life looks like a celebration right up to the end. That theme isn’t meant to fuel smugness, it’s meant to wake us up.

    Then we go straight to the question that should humble every Christian: if God gives every sin its due, how can any of us stand? The answer is the heart of the gospel. We talk propitiation, the wrath of God, and why the cross is not God “letting it slide” but God satisfying justice through Jesus Christ. Christ bears what we owed, leaves our sin in the grave, and credits believers with righteousness, so reconciliation with God is real, not imagined.

    We also unpack the Rich Man and Lazarus, pushing back on the fantasy that hell is a party or that death magically changes a wicked heart. Along the way we use a vivid everyday analogy to picture eternity, talk about doubt and dependence in a walk of faith, and close as a church-like family with prayer for real needs. If you care about Job, divine justice, salvation by grace, and the urgency of repentance, this conversation will stay with you. Subscribe, share this with someone who needs it, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway.

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    32 分
  • LIVE: "His Eyes Shall See His Destruction" (Job 21:17-21), (Part 3/4)
    2026/03/23

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    Hell is not a metaphor in Job’s warning, and we don’t treat it like one. We sit with Job 21 and the unsettling insistence that the wicked will see their own destruction and personally “drink of the wrath of the Almighty.” That single image forces a question many Christians avoid out loud: what are we actually saved from, and why does the gospel feel powerless when we never say it?

    We talk about the wrath of God, eternal judgment, and why delayed justice is not canceled justice. If God is holy, then sin is not cosmetic and the consequences are not temporary. We also push back on preaching that highlights comfort while skipping the cross as the place where wrath is satisfied. “Saved” has content, and we argue it must be front and center: salvation through Jesus Christ alone, not religious effort, not sincerity, not a blended faith that adds extra loyalties.

    Along the way, we challenge popular distractions that pull believers into fear-driven news cycles and prophecy speculation, and we ask whether political tribalism can become a substitute for real discipleship. The goal is not shock, it’s clarity: repent, believe, and speak plainly because eternity is real and time is short. If this conversation sharpened you, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find it.

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    32 分
  • LIVE: "His Eyes Shall See His Destruction" (Job 21:17-21), (Part 2/4)
    2026/03/23

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    Some desires feel holy because they come dressed as “purpose” or “potential” but they can still be a trap. We talk honestly about the fantasy that wealth will fix our hearts, our marriages, and our gratitude, and why that story often ends in more complaining, not more peace. If you’ve ever told yourself “once I get there, then I’ll give, then I’ll serve, then I’ll be thankful,” we press on that assumption and ask what it would actually turn you into.

    A simple moment brings it home: I lose my wedding ring and feel my emotions spike fast, even snapping at my wife for trying to calm me down. That slip becomes a real-time case study in Christian contentment, gratitude, and how quickly possessions can become a spiritual thermostat for our joy. From there, we anchor the conversation in Scripture and move into a focused Bible study on Job 21:19 and the phrase that won’t let go: “He rewards him, and he shall know it.”

    We unpack divine justice, generational consequences, and the difference between a family suffering fallout and a person bearing their own guilt before God. The group wrestles with hard questions about delayed judgment, the reality of hell, and why “they shall know it” clashes with modern ideas like annihilationism. Along the way we connect Job to Ezekiel 18:4, Revelation 14, and Jesus’ account of Lazarus and the rich man to show why accountability is personal and eternal stakes are real. If you care about Christian theology, biblical justice, and living with gratitude in a noisy world, this one will sharpen you. Subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway.

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    32 分
  • LIVE: "His Eyes Shall See His Destruction" (Job 21:17-21), (Part 1/4)
    2026/03/23

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    The hardest question in the Book of Job isn’t whether God is just. It’s why justice can feel delayed while the wrong people seem to win. We camp out in Job 21:17-21, where Job pushes back on his friends’ certainty that the wicked always crash quickly and that suffering automatically proves guilt. That “instant payback” theology sounds clean, but it breaks the moment you look at real life, and it can turn Christians into harsh judges instead of honest witnesses.

    We unpack Job’s language about the “candle of the wicked” as a picture of prosperity, comfort, and public honor, then ask Job’s question the way he intended it: how often do we actually see that candle go out on our schedule? Along the way, we talk about God’s wrath and divine justice without pretending we can map God’s timetable. We also hear from Jeffrey on the difference between temporal reward and eternal reward, and Grace reflects on how God’s love relates even to judgment. A brief live interruption forces a boundary that keeps the conversation anchored in the text and the purpose of biblical teaching.

    We close by tracing Job 21:18 and the image of chaff in the wind, then bring it into today’s world of concentrated wealth and public oppression. If you’ve ever wrestled with Christian suffering, the problem of evil, or the question “why do the wicked prosper,” this conversation will give you clearer categories and steadier footing. Subscribe for more Bible teaching through Job, share this with a friend who needs it, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway.

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    31 分
  • "The Hypostatic Union: God & Christ Jesus" (Part 5/5)
    2026/03/18

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    The moment someone says “Jesus has two natures,” the next question is almost inevitable: does that mean he has two wills? We work through why that claim feels intuitive, where it can go off the rails, and how the hypostatic union keeps us from turning Christ into either a blended third thing or two separate persons sharing a body. Along the way, we translate big theological terms into plain speech, because the goal is not to win vocabulary contests, it’s to confess the Jesus Scripture reveals.

    Philippians 2 becomes our key text as we trace Christ being “in the form of God,” equal with God, yet choosing the form of a servant. We talk about “mind,” obedience, and what it means for the Son to lay aside prerogatives without surrendering deity. That discussion naturally opens the door to church history, ecumenical councils, and why old debates still shape how Catholics, Orthodox, and Protestants speak about Christology and the Trinity today.

    The Q&A at the end gets personal and practical: if people argue for two wills, should they also argue for two spirits? How should Christians explain “one God” without collapsing the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit into the same person? And what does all this mean when we pray, worship, and cling to Jesus for salvation? If you want clearer Christian theology, better biblical language, and fewer category mistakes, this conversation will sharpen you. Subscribe, share this with a friend who loves deep doctrine, and leave a review, what’s the hardest Trinity or incarnation question you still have?

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    32 分
  • "The Hypostatic Union: God & Christ Jesus" (Part 4/5)
    2026/03/18

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    “Not my will, but your will be done” is one of the most quoted lines in the Bible and one of the easiest to misunderstand. We sit with that Gethsemane prayer and ask the question hiding underneath it: when Jesus speaks of “my will” and “your will,” are we hearing one will, two wills, or something else entirely? As the conversation unfolds, we keep circling back to what “perfect faith” actually looks like when the cross is real, pain is real, and obedience still doesn’t waver.

    Meg, Jonah, Mariah, Candy, Aaron, and Pat help us work through the big theology words with plain language: the hypostatic union, two natures, and the doctrine known as diothelitism. We talk about why some Christians insist Jesus has both a human will and a divine will, why others emphasize unity of will, and why the most important guardrail is this: there is never any conflict in Christ. If Jesus could will anything contrary to the Father, even in potential, the entire gospel collapses.

    Along the way we connect key passages like Philippians 2:8-9, John 12:49-50, John 14, and Romans 5:19 to the real-life takeaway: sanctification, prayer, and learning submission without treating Jesus like he had a “split personality.” Whether you frame it as one will or two wills, we argue for the same outcome, perfect obedience and a Savior who is truly like us yet without sin. If this stretched your thinking, subscribe, share the episode, and leave a review, then tell us: how do you apply “not my will” in your own walk?

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    32 分
  • "The Hypostatic Union: God & Christ Jesus" (Part 3/5)
    2026/03/18

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    If you’ve ever heard someone say, “Jesus was human, so He could have sinned,” you already know how fast a conversation about the incarnation can go off the rails. We slow it down and get precise about the hypostatic union: Jesus Christ is one person, one hypostasis, with two natures, fully God and fully man. That single claim reshapes how we answer the blunt question, “Who went to the cross?” and why the answer is not “a human part” of Jesus, but Jesus Himself.

    We also walk through key crucifixion language that gets misunderstood, including “My God, My God, why have You forsaken Me?” and John 19:30 where Jesus “gave up the ghost.” We talk about what that phrase is and is not, why it does not mean Jesus “gave up the Holy Spirit,” and how real death and real atonement depend on real humanity without turning the Trinity into a casualty of the cross. Along the way we name common theological errors like Nestorianism and modalism, not to score points, but to show exactly where they distort the Bible’s own categories.

    Then we hit the question that sparks the most debate: will. What do we do with “Not my will, but Yours be done” in Luke 22:42? We explore how Christ’s human submission is genuine while still refusing any conclusion that suggests the Son could will evil, disagree with the Father, or possibly sin. If you want clearer Christian theology, stronger confidence in salvation, and better language for explaining the Trinity and the incarnate Logos, this one is for you. Subscribe, share with a friend who loves deep doctrine, and leave a review. What word or verse causes the most confusion for you when talking about Jesus as God and man?

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    32 分
  • "The Hypostatic Union: God & Christ Jesus" (Part 2/5)
    2026/03/18

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    Jesus is fully God and fully man, but what do we actually mean when we say that and what breaks when we get it wrong? We walk through the hypostatic union in plain language, define hypostasis as personhood, and show why the church rejected Nestorianism so fiercely. Along the way we respond to a modern claim that sounds harmless at first: “Jesus could have sinned in his humanity.” We explain why that idea quietly turns Christ into two acting subjects and why that is not the biblical Jesus.

    From there, we zoom out to the triune nature of God. We talk about why the New Testament often speaks of “God” in a way that highlights the Father while still confessing the full deity of the Son and the Holy Spirit. We also tackle a practical question that almost every Christian asks sooner or later: who do you pray to? Our answer is grounded in inseparable divine action and the unity of the Godhead, while still honoring the distinct personal works Scripture describes.

    We also address the Holy Spirit head-on, because many people treat the Spirit like an impersonal power. We point to personal attributes and actions: the Spirit can be lied to, blasphemed, teaches, and applies Christ’s work to believers. Then we connect the dots to the cross and resurrection, clarifying “who died” and why Scripture can speak of the Father, the Son, and the Spirit raising Christ without contradiction. We close by tying these doctrines to salvation and assurance through John 6 and the promise that Christ loses none of those the Father gives him.

    If this strengthened your doctrine of God, subscribe, share this with a friend who loves theology, and leave a review with the question you still have after listening.

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    32 分