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The Bible Provocateur is all about communicating the truth of God's Word to a modern generation. Our unabashed and intelligent approach to presenting the Word of God to this 21st century society will definitely be as provocative as we can possibly make it

The Bible Provocateur

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    • Jun 12, 2026 LATEST EPISODE
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    • 39m AVG DURATION
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    Latest episodes from The Bible Provocateur

    "The Sovereignty of God in Predestination" PART 3/3

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2026 27:35 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan Mail“Jacob I loved, Esau I hated” is one of those Bible lines people either explain away fast or sit with for a long time. We choose to sit with it, because Romans 9 is not a side issue in Scripture it is a direct challenge to the way many of us talk about God's love, God's justice, and how salvation actually happens.We walk through passage after passage that ties salvation to the sovereignty of God and the doctrine of election: mercy that does not depend on human will, a Savior who says “you did not choose me,” and a faith that is “granted.” Along the way, we question a popular modern message that treats “God loves you and has a wonderful plan for your life” as the standard gospel pitch, and we compare that tone to the Bible's own emphasis on sin, mercy, and grace. If you care about Reformed theology, Calvinism, predestination, assurance of salvation, and what it means to be spiritually dead and made alive, you'll hear the core claims laid out plainly.We also tackle the practical pushback: if God chooses, why preach the gospel at all? Our answer is that we preach because we don't know who God will awaken, and because the same God who ordains the end also ordains the means. The goal is not to win a debate but to land on the right kind of gratitude: do we thank God for saving us, or do we thank our free will?If this stirred questions or helped you see Scripture more clearly, subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find the show.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "The Sovereignty of God in Predestination" PART 2/3

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2026 27:37 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailSome Bible arguments fall apart the moment you ask one question: what do you do with the words on the page? We take a hard look at Ephesians 1 and push back on the claim that predestination is “just for the Jews.” Paul is writing to Christians in Ephesus, and he keeps circling the same drumbeat: those who are in Christ are chosen, adopted, and given an inheritance according to the good pleasure of God's will.From there we go straight into the tension people try to avoid. If God “works all things after the counsel of his own will,” what exactly is left out of “all things”? We talk election, adoption, and salvation by grace, but we also deal honestly with the flip side, the reality that not everyone is saved. That leads us into the objections about fairness, free will, and whether a loving God can still judge. We also unpack “vessels of honor and dishonor,” and why Scripture does not ground that distinction in ethnicity but in belief in Christ.We bring in the big texts that shape Reformed theology and Calvinism conversations: “chosen before the foundation of the world,” the book of life language in Revelation, “many are called, few are chosen,” and Romans 8:28-30 with foreknown, predestined, called, justified, and glorified. Along the way, we test popular slogans like “equal opportunity salvation” against what these passages actually say, and we ask what truly makes one person believe while another refuses.If you care about biblical doctrine, God's sovereignty, and the meaning of grace, this one will make you think. Subscribe for more, share the episode with someone who loves debating predestination and free will, and leave a review with the verse you think is hardest to answer.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "The Sovereignty of God in Predestination" PART 1/3

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2026 27:38 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailThe fastest way to expose what we really believe about God is to listen to our gut reaction when a hard doctrine shows up. When someone says, “If that's true about God, I want no part of Him,” we hear more than frustration, we hear a claim of authority. So we slow down and take the objection seriously, then test it against Scripture, logic, and the plain question every believer has to face: whose will actually saved you?We walk straight into predestination, unconditional election, and the sovereignty of God in salvation, including why so many Christians try to limit these passages to Israel alone. Along the way we address common proof texts and tensions, like Ezekiel 33:11 and the claim that election would make God “unloving.” We also deal with the practical pushback: if God chooses, why preach the gospel? We argue that evangelism still matters because God commands it and uses the gospel as the means of bringing His people to faith, even when unbelievers hate the message.Then we open the Bible to the words of Jesus and let them set the frame. John 5 speaks of resurrection to life and resurrection to damnation. John 3 says the one who does not believe is condemned already. That “already” changes everything about how we think of fairness, mercy, and grace. We end with Ephesians 1 and a pointed question about assurance: did Christ die to actually save, or did He only create an opportunity that depends on our free will to complete it?If you care about Calvinism vs Arminianism, Christian doctrine, biblical theology, or simply want a steadier foundation for faith, hit play. Subscribe, share this with a friend who debates free will, and leave a review with your answer: whose will saved you?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    Testimony: "EveySavedByGrace" Part 3/3

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2026 34:55 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailSome stories don't tidy themselves up, and that's exactly why Evie's testimony lands so hard. She takes us from not knowing how to pray to learning prayer in real time with her daughter, then watching the roles flip until her child is the one calling her to pray. Along the way, she shares how Scripture like Psalm 139 became personal, not theoretical, and how God's presence shows up in the rooms and moments that used to feel unredeemable.We also talk about what it means when the gifts you once used in a worldly way become the same tools God uses for ministry. Evie and our group connect the dots between personality, voice, and calling: intensity that once fueled chaos can become bold faith, and music that once chased the spotlight can turn into worship. If you've ever wondered whether your past disqualifies you, this conversation keeps pointing in the opposite direction: God doesn't waste hurts, and he can repurpose everything.Then the conversation turns outward to street ministry, outreach, and meeting women in crisis with truth and compassion. Evie explains how she got connected through Love Life, what a “house of refuge” looks like in a local church, and what it's like to be on the front lines when people spit, yell, and push back. She also gets brutally honest about addiction, shame, and the kind of prayer that stops performing and starts confessing.If you're searching for a Christian testimony about transformation, addiction recovery, prayer, worship, and outreach, hit play. Subscribe, share this with a friend who needs hope, leave a review, and tell us: what part of your story is God still rewriting?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    Testimony: "EveySavedByGrace" Part 2/3

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2026 34:50 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailOne bad pattern rarely travels alone. Evie's story starts with control, quick money plans, and the kind of dominance that can slowly poison a marriage, then spirals into separation, self-destruction, and the frightening sense that she's trapped inside her own mindset. What makes this conversation land is how specific it is: the words she used, the deals she tried to make, the way retaliation felt justified, and the moment she realized she was about to lose everything that mattered.We talk through spiritual warfare without hype, including warnings about “opening doors,” the pain of church confusion, and the hard work of discernment when leaders say and do things that are unbiblical. Evie shares what it was like to step into a church plant that felt totally unfamiliar, admit she didn't know how to pray, and finally hear the gospel in plain language. From there, the change isn't instant or polished. It's gradual sanctification, a slow break from old addictions, and a new hunger for Scripture, hermeneutics, and church history. She even describes an unforgettable encounter with santeria that jolted her toward the seriousness of truth.The back half turns outward: how a transformed life becomes a mission. Evie explains why she calls her work abortion abolitionism, how she offers practical help to women in crisis, and how the local church and the gospel stay central, not secondary. If you care about Christian testimony, marriage restoration, addiction recovery, church discernment, and what real life change looks like over time, this conversation will stay with you. Subscribe, share this with a friend who needs hope, and leave a review telling us what moment challenged you most.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    Testimony: "EveySavedByGrace" Part 1/3

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2026 30:30 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailA lot of people clean up their past when they talk about change. Evie doesn't. She walks us through a life shaped by instability, gang culture, addiction, and the hunger for street respect that starts way too young. From factory-work survival at home to getting kicked out of school and chasing illegal money, her story shows how quickly “normal” can become dangerous when nobody around you knows the gospel or models peace. Then Puerto Rico introduces another layer: spiritual experiences she can't name, warnings about what's “of God,” and moments that stick with her for years. After losing two brothers, the afterlife question stops being theoretical. Add in a robbery scene that ends with a gun to her head and a magazine dropping in a way she still can't explain, and you can hear the trauma that follows her back home. This is faith and trauma in the same room, not neatly separated. Pregnancy forces a decision she never expected to face, and the one person she calls is the sister who knows Jesus. Evie shares how motherhood, nursing school, and hard work help her rebuild, even as old patterns and quick-money temptations keep calling. Meeting Nick becomes a turning point, and her honest discomfort with charismatic church culture opens a real conversation about discernment, grace, and what transformation actually looks like over time. If you care about Christian testimonies, redemption stories, and what it takes to break cycles, press play. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review with the moment that hit you hardest.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "Identifying Who The Jews Are" (Romans 2:25-29), Part 4/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2026 31:09 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailThe most unsettling question we raise is also the most comforting: what if your salvation doesn't start in time at all? We follow the thread of Christ as the Lamb slain before the foundation of the world and ask what that means for election, atonement, and the way God's people show up in history. If Jesus is truly prepared “before,” then redemption is not built on our effort, our consistency, or our ability to keep ourselves saved. It rests on God's eternal purpose and Christ's finished work. We lean on vivid Scripture anchors and plain-language illustrations, including the parable of the lost coin: lost doesn't mean unowned. That single shift changes how you read being born in sin, being found by grace, and why the gospel is preached broadly while God effectually brings his sheep home. From there, we talk union with Christ as the center of salvation, why communion points to an intimate bond that cannot be severed, and why “in Christ” is worth meditating on when your mind spirals. The episode also tackles the pressure to perform spiritually. We walk through Romans 2 on circumcision of the heart, the difference between outward religion and inward reality, and the kind of “praise” that matters: approval from God rather than people. If you've been measured by Christian formulas, credentials, or reputation, this conversation offers a clearer test grounded in regeneration and the Spirit's work within. If this brought you peace or raised questions, subscribe, share it with a friend who feels weighed down by performance, and leave a review so others can find it. What does the phrase “in Christ” change for you right now?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "Identifying Who The Jews Are" (Romans 2:25-29), Part 3/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2026 36:45 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailA mom asks her own child for baptism, and the request triggers a question many Christians carry quietly: am I even allowed to do this? We start with that vulnerable moment and follow it into a bigger, sharper conversation about Christian baptism, spiritual authority, and why so many churches treat credentials like the real source of power. We don't romanticize it. We talk about fear, obedience, and the strange mercy of realizing God can use you even when you don't feel qualified.From there we take aim at the man-made layers that get stacked on top of simple faith: rules that can't be shown in Scripture, ritual that replaces meaning, and gatekeeping that turns discipleship into a status game. If you've ever been cornered with “What church do you go to?” or made to feel suspect because you don't match someone else's worship process, we explain why that pressure often misses the point. The call is straightforward: open the Bible, ask for chapter and verse, and stop letting people bind your conscience with preferences dressed up as commands.We then dig into Romans 2:28–29 and the “circumcision of the heart” to show why outward marks can't produce inward life. That leads to salvation by grace through faith in Jesus Christ, Christ fulfilling the law, what “It is finished” truly means, and how the atonement is an accomplished work that believers come to understand when faith is given. If you want a Bible-centered reset on baptism, assurance, and living for God's approval rather than human praise, this one will stay with you.Subscribe for more verse-forward conversations, share this with a friend who feels “unqualified,” and leave a review telling us what part challenged you most.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "Identifying Who The Jews Are" (Romans 2:25-29), Part 2/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2026 36:37 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailA single correction can expose a big spiritual problem: do we care more about being right, or about being seen? We open by talking about the humility it takes to admit a mistake and remove something misleading, especially when we're teaching or posting about the Word of God. Truth matters, and so does motive, because the pressure to perform can quietly turn faith into a brand.Then we dig into Romans 2 where Paul dismantles confidence in outward privilege. Having the law, a strong religious history, the right label, or the right community does not rescue a bankrupt heart. We talk about what Paul means when he says someone is not defined by what's outward, and why circumcision of the heart exposes every version of performative religion, from ethnic pride to denominational boasting to spiritual one-upmanship.We also wrestle with a practical question that gets people heated: what makes a church a church? We argue for biblical fellowship centered on the unfiltered gospel and the truth of Scripture, whether believers gather in a building or a home. Finally, we clarify baptism and communion: they are not saving rituals, but they are meaningful acts of obedience and remembrance that point us back to Christ and invite honest self-examination.If you want a clearer, calmer, more biblical way to think about Christian identity, church life, and outward signs, hit play. Subscribe, share this with a friend who needs the reminder, and leave a review telling us what “heart faith” looks like in real life.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "Identifying Who The Jews Are" (Romans 2:25-29), Part 1/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2026 36:40 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailIf you've ever felt tempted to trust a religious label more than a transformed life, Romans 2:25-29 will not let you stay comfortable. We work slowly through Paul's argument that circumcision, the most prized outward marker of covenant identity, only “profits” when it matches real obedience. When the heart is unchanged, the sign becomes empty, and the confidence built on it collapses. That single idea confronts hypocrisy, spiritual performance, and the quiet pride of thinking our affiliation makes us safe.From there, we connect Paul's logic to modern Christian life, especially water baptism. Baptism matters as a public witness, but it cannot create salvation or replace the inward work of the Holy Spirit. We talk about what “circumcision of the heart” means in everyday terms: repentance, living faith, and obedience that flows from a renewed inner life, not from pressure to look the part. Along the way we stress a key gospel theme: justification is not earned by rituals, sacraments, ceremonies, or outward compliance.We also address a problem many Christians face online and in church spaces: people who try to read your heart by inspecting your “fruit” from the outside. Paul's challenge pushes us to examine ourselves first, refuse conscience-binding from self-appointed judges, and anchor assurance in what God actually praises. If this conversation helps you, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find clear Bible teaching on Romans, baptism, and heart transformation.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "The Alpha and Omega, The Almighty" (Rev 1:4-8), Part 4/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2026 38:11 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan Mail“Every eye shall see him” is either true or it isn't, and Revelation 1:7 doesn't leave room for a hidden return. We walk carefully through Revelation 1:7-8 and connect it to Jesus' own words in John 5:28-29 to make a simple case: Christ returns once, the dead are raised once, and everyone faces the same final judgment. No secret rapture. No split schedule of resurrections. Just the public appearing of the King that both comforts the saints and warns the rebellious.Then we slow down on Revelation 1:8 and the titles that change how you read the whole book: Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end, the Almighty. That's not abstract theology, it's a foundation for peace. When Jesus is the Lord of history, suffering is not random, evil is not ultimate, and the church is not called to panic. We also address common end times assumptions tied to dispensationalism and why fear-based prophecy teaching leaves people confused instead of strengthened.Along the way, we touch on symbolic language in the Book of Revelation, including how the 1,000 years and the 144,000 function as signs, and why Revelation often presents repeated cycles rather than a strict chronological timeline. If you want clarity and courage for reading Revelation, press play, then subscribe, share with a friend who feels overwhelmed by end times talk, and leave a review with the biggest question you want us to tackle next.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "The Alpha and Omega, The Almighty" (Rev 1:4-8), Part 3/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2026 38:21 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan Mail“We have access to the Creator of the universe.” That line should change how we pray, how we worship, and how we face fear. We sit in Revelation 1:6 and trace the weight of what Jesus has done: by His blood, He makes the whole church a priesthood and gives us real, confident, 24/7 access to the Father. Not as a spiritual flex, but as communion with the Most High, the privilege at the very center of salvation.We also talk about identity in Christ with practical force. If Christ is King and High Priest, what does it mean to be joined to Him as “kings and priests”? We tease out how this royal priesthood re-frames worship posture, gratitude, service, and purpose. Redemption is not merely personal rescue; it restores covenant fellowship with God for His glory, now and forever.Then we turn to Revelation's bigger storyline: dominion already belongs to Christ. Empires rise, political systems decay, persecutors come and go, but Jesus reigns right now. That leads into Revelation 1:7 and the promise that “every eye will see Him,” a public second coming that challenges the logic of a secret pre-tribulation rapture and invites us back to what the text actually says. If you want clearer Bible study on Revelation, end-times questions, and the practical meaning of grace through faith, this conversation is for you.If this helped you worship with more confidence and less fear, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review. What's one way you want your prayer life to change after hearing this?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "The Alpha and Omega, The Almighty" (Rev 1:4-8), Part 2/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2026 38:17 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailIf one line of Scripture could settle your confidence in who Jesus is, it might be this: “He is before all things.” We slow down and refuse to rush past it, because that phrase is not poetic filler. It is a claim about eternity, authority, and the identity of Christ as the Alpha and Omega, the One who never began and never will end.From Revelation 1:5, we trace the comfort and the shock of John's praise: Jesus loves His people and washes them from their sins by His own blood. We talk honestly about what that means for assurance, for judgment, and for the uncomfortable question of why not everyone is saved. The goal is not speculation, but clarity: if Christ's blood truly cleanses, it cannot be half-effective, and our security cannot rest on our moods, our works, or our track record.Then we tackle a common confusion head-on: baptism and salvation. We affirm water baptism as obedience and public confession, while rejecting baptismal regeneration and any teaching that makes ceremony part of the saving act. Hebrews brings the focus back where it belongs, on the shedding of perfect blood for the forgiveness of sins. Finally, we dig into Revelation 1:6 and the present reign of Jesus: He makes us kings and priests, gives us bold access to God, and calls us to live as “living sacrifices” because His once-for-all sacrifice is still living and effective.Subscribe for more Bible-driven conversations, share this with a friend who's wrestling with assurance or baptism, and leave a review with the question you want us to address next.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "The Alpha and Omega, The Almighty" (Rev 1:4-8), Part 1/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2026 37:05 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailRevelation starts with a greeting that feels almost too simple for a book people treat like a puzzle: grace and peace. That small phrase sets the whole tone, because peace with God does not come from willpower, insight, or survival skills. It comes from grace, given by the God who is, who was, and who is to come. We slow down in Revelation 1:4-8 to show why John opens this way and how that opening prepares the church to endure everything that follows without losing heart. We also unpack the Trinity that shines through the greeting: the Father, the “seven spirits before his throne” as the Holy Spirit in the fullness of his work, and Jesus Christ in his mediatorial glory. From there we focus on the titles John uses for Jesus: “the faithful witness,” “the firstborn from the dead,” and “the prince of the kings of the earth.” If “firstborn from the dead” means Jesus rose never to die again, then his resurrection is not just an event to admire. It is the guarantee that everyone united to him will be raised, which changes how we face suffering, persecution, and even death. Then we press into the implications of Jesus as the prince over the kings of the earth. We talk about Christ's reign right now, why that challenges a delayed-kingdom view of end-times teaching, and how Revelation aims to calm believers who feel whiplash from political headlines. If Christ rules the rulers, we can stay faithful, do our work, and refuse panic. If this reshapes how you hear Revelation, subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave a review so more listeners can find the series. What part of Revelation 1:4-8 lands most strongly for you?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "Teacher, Teach Yourself, Preacher, Preach to Yourself" (Rom 2:17-24), Part 4/4)

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2026 27:21 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailIf you've ever watched someone claim God loudly while living the opposite, you already understand why Romans 2 still stings. We walk through Paul's confrontation of religious hypocrisy and ask the uncomfortable question: what happens when our Bible talk becomes a cover for disobedience, pride, or performative faith? Along the way, we connect the dots between privilege and responsibility, and why “knowing the law” is not the same as loving the Lord.We also spend time on the healing side of the gospel. Shame, guilt, and the stain of an old life do not get scrubbed out by “better behavior.” We lean into Isaiah's picture of sins once scarlet becoming white as snow, and the freedom of being made new rather than being defined by former reproach. That sets up Paul's warning in Romans 2:23-24 that hypocrisy doesn't stay personal. When God's people live inconsistently, outsiders don't just judge the person; they end up blaspheming God's name.To keep Paul from sounding like a one-off rant, we trace his argument back to Isaiah 52:5 and Ezekiel 36:20-23, where God promises to sanctify His great name even after His people profane it. From there, our conversation turns practical: legalism inside the visible church, the need to examine our own hearts first, and how believers can respond to growing cultural pressure against biblical teaching without losing the plot. If you care about Christian witness, sound doctrine, and real-life discipleship, this one will challenge you and steady you. Subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review, then tell us what part hit you hardest.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "Teacher, Teach Yourself, Preacher, Preach to Yourself" (Rom 2:17-24), Part 3/4)

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2026 31:58 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailIf you've ever thought, “At least I'm not like those people,” Romans 2 has a way of pulling the rug out. We walk through Paul's blunt, uncomfortable questions about hypocrisy: the person who teaches others but won't apply the same standard inwardly, the loophole mindset that assumes “if nobody saw it, it didn't happen,” and the sobering reality that God sees what we try to keep hidden. From there, we press into the heartbeat of the gospel: salvation by grace through faith, not works-based righteousness and not law-keeping as a rescue plan. We talk about why the “obedience of faith” is really trust in Jesus Christ, the One who obeyed perfectly and offers His righteousness to people who stop negotiating and start believing. If grace feels offensive, that may be the point, because grace dismantles pride and kills self-justification. We also get practical about Christian community and discernment. What do you do with “Christ plus works” teaching and voices that constantly stir contention? We talk wolves among sheep, why boundaries can be love, and why protecting the clarity of the gospel matters. Then we turn to inward idolatry: the subtle worship of the will, and the modern ways we “evangelize” sports, politics, celebrities, and status while staying strangely quiet about Jesus. If this challenged you, share it with a friend, subscribe for more, and leave a review so others can find it. What's the biggest competitor for your attention and your words right now?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "Teacher, Teach Yourself, Preacher, Preach to Yourself" (Rom 2:17-24), Part 2/4)

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2026 31:54 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailYou can have sharp moral instincts, a head full of Bible facts, and a life stacked with religious activity and still be nowhere near obedience. That tension is where we camp out as we work through Paul's argument in Romans: knowing the law is an advantage, but knowledge never justifies, and it never turns into the flawless obedience God requires.We keep coming back to the center: faith in Jesus Christ alone. The Father is pleased with His Son, and the only way into God's family is through Him. That's why being “in Christ” matters so much. We talk imputed righteousness in everyday language, why “grace plus anything” is not a safer gospel, and how works-based salvation quietly insults the finished obedience of Christ.Along the way, we use Jacob and Esau to expose the trap of trusting external privileges, spiritual pedigree, and religious confidence. We also clarify the true purpose of the law: it acts like a mirror that reveals sin and drives us to Christ, not a ladder to climb into God's favor. And we challenge the modern message that says Jesus gets you started but you must “do your part” to stay saved, the mindset that effectively tells Christ, “You missed a spot.”If you've ever felt the pressure of legalism, performance Christianity, or constant self-checking, this conversation aims to replace that noise with a clearer view of Christ's sufficiency. Subscribe for more, share this with a friend who needs relief, and leave a review with the biggest takeaway you heard.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "Teacher, Teach Yourself, Preacher, Preach to Yourself" (Rom 2:17-24), Part 1/4)

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2026 29:46 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailIf you've ever felt safer because you “know the Bible,” grew up around church, or try hard to live right, Romans 2:17 has a sobering question for you: are you resting in God or resting in the law? We walk through Paul's sharp turn toward his own people and why he frames them as those who are “called a Jew” rather than simply Jews, exposing how a religious name can become a hiding place instead of a mirror. From there, we get painfully practical about legalism, self-trust, and the modern version of boasting in God while quietly boasting in ourselves. We talk about why the law can diagnose sin but cannot cure it, why the weakness isn't in God's law but in human inability, and why “I kept the commandments” collapses under honest scrutiny. The thread that holds everything together is the gospel of grace: Jesus Christ finished the work, fulfilled the law, and his righteousness is credited to the one who believes. That's why Paul's call is obedience of faith, not a lifelong attempt to complete salvation by performance. We also name the everyday reason this is so hard: we live in a performance-based world, and we carry that earn-it mindset into our theology. If receiving a gift feels humiliating, you're not alone, but that struggle may be the very place where God is inviting you into real rest. Subscribe for more deep Bible teaching, share this with a friend who feels stuck in law-keeping, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway or question.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "Hearers and Doers of the Law" (Romans 2:6-12), Part 4/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2026 14:14 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailYour conscience is not just a feeling, it's a witness. We sit with Romans 2:15-16 and follow Paul's logic all the way to the courtroom scene of Judgment Day, where the inner dialogue of “accusing or excusing” becomes part of the evidence. That idea lands hard: Christ won't need to list every charge for us to understand why God's judgment is just, because the conscience has been recording more than we like to admit.We also talk about what makes this judgment complete: God doesn't only evaluate outward actions. He judges “the secrets of men” by Jesus Christ, reaching motives, hidden patterns, and the private sins we assume are invisible. That's why the gospel can't be separated from final judgment. The same message that proclaims salvation also declares the certainty and seriousness of accountability, and it pushes us toward heart-level sanctification rather than surface-level religion.Then we turn to the way Christians speak and live right now. We push back on the flippant, entertainment-first approach that makes Scripture sound like a punchline, because we're not trying to laugh people into hell. At the same time, we make a case for using technology and social media as mission ground, remembering that you don't need a huge following to be faithful. We close with a blunt challenge about spiritual leadership and the silence of men, and we ask what faithfulness looks like in public and in private. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review with your answer: where do you feel the conscience pressing you most right now?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "Hearers and Doers of the Law" (Romans 2:6-12), Part 3/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2026 33:32 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailThe law doesn't negotiate. Romans 2 forces a terrifyingly clean standard: life is promised to the one who obeys perfectly, and the rest of us don't get to hide behind “I agreed with the truth” or “I heard good teaching.” We talk through why knowledge without obedience doesn't protect you at God's tribunal, it increases your accountability, and why the whole point is to strip away false confidence so you finally see the need for justification by faith in Jesus Christ.We also get practical and a little confrontational about modern legalism. If your Christianity is built on selective rule-keeping, identity markers, or man-made standards that police other people's consciences, you're replaying the same error with new branding. We contrast the gospel of Christ, the power of God unto salvation, with the “soft, cuddly gospel” and with religious performances that avoid hard truths about sin, judgment, and the real cost of rejecting God's mercy.Then we dig into Romans 2:14-15 and the doctrine of conscience. Even without the Mosaic law, people still show the work of the law written on their hearts, because the image of God leaves moral awareness behind. That conscience can accuse or excuse, and it becomes a witness that makes us “without excuse,” not a loophole. If you've ever wondered why guilt feels so stubborn, why moral outrage shows up everywhere, or why “being a good person” still feels fragile, this conversation connects the dots.If this helped you think more clearly about Romans, salvation, and what you're trusting, subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find it.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "Hearers and Doers of the Law" (Romans 2:6-12), Part 2/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2026 33:26 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailIf Romans 2:13 sounds like a command to earn your way into heaven, it's supposed to scare you straight. We take on the line “the doers of the law shall be justified” and show why Paul's argument doesn't flatter human effort, it crushes it, so the only hope left standing is Jesus Christ and His righteousness.We also speak plainly about systems of salvation that lean on merit, mediation, or spiritual surplus. When someone claims extra righteousness can be stored, transferred, or applied after death, it quietly says Christ's obedience and sacrifice are not enough. From there we track Paul's insistence that God judges impartially: Jew and Gentile, insider and outsider, religious and irreligious all face the same holy standard. The law doesn't exist to be admired or debated, it exists to reveal what God requires and how far we fall short.Then we get practical: sanctification is real, fruit matters, but none of us can see another person's heart, and “fruit inspection” becomes a shortcut to pride and condemnation. We end by anchoring the gospel in penal substitutionary atonement, rejecting “Plan B” ideas about God's purposes, and pointing to Abraham as the father of many nations by faith. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review. What line in Romans 2 hits you hardest right now?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "Hearers and Doers of the Law" (Romans 2:6-12), Part 1/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2026 32:15 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailThe most dangerous comfort is the one that sounds reasonable: “I didn't know,” or “I had the right background,” or “I'm not as bad as them.” We dig into Romans 2 and Paul's relentless claim that God's judgment is perfectly impartial. Religious privilege does not protect the Jew who has the written law, and moral ignorance does not excuse the Gentile who lacks Moses. God shows no favoritism, and nobody gets to stand behind heritage, culture, or technicalities.From there, we follow the argument that God judges people according to the light and revelation they have received. That includes general revelation through creation and providence, plus the steady witness of conscience. We talk about why “never hearing the gospel” is not a shield from accountability, why sin is still sin, and why greater light brings greater responsibility. If you've been around preaching, Scripture, and clear truth for years, that exposure is not a trophy. It's weight.We also confront the hard edge of the message: God's law demands perfect obedience, and none of us can honestly claim we've met that standard. That's why the gospel matters, why repentance is urgent, and why Christ stands alone as the only truly righteous One. We close by challenging the idea that anyone can store up extra righteousness to hand to someone else, and we point back to Jesus as the only hope.Subscribe for more Romans teaching, share this with someone who leans on excuses, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway: what “light” do you think people most often ignore?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "God Will Render to Every Man..." (Rom 2:6-11), Part 4/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2026 34:48 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailSalvation language can sound familiar while still missing the point. We dig into a provocative claim: the Bible doesn't present conversion as us politely “accepting Jesus” or asking Him into our hearts, but as surrendering to a conquering Lord. That difference isn't semantics. It changes everything about humility, repentance, and what real faith looks like when we stop bargaining and finally raise the white flag.From there, we take on the “if then gospel” that quietly shapes so much modern Christianity: if I do enough, then God will respond with favor, security, and blessing. We talk honestly about where that mindset leads, including fear, fragile assurance, and the exhausting pressure of trying to prove we belong. Then we contrast it with confidence rooted in grace, the finished work of Christ, and the promise that God saves without losing any of His own.The conversation also turns personal and practical through testimony about sanctification: moving from being afraid to speak or serve to praying, “Lord, use me,” and discovering joy in obedience. We explore what “blessed” can mean beyond receiving things, and why being used by God is a gift in itself. Finally, we wrestle with big theological questions that show up in Romans Bible study: judgment according to deeds, God's impartial justice, imputed righteousness, divine sovereignty, and why grace is mercy not entitlement.If you've ever wondered whether you can truly have assurance of salvation, what it means to submit to Christ, or how to think clearly about God's justice, this is for you. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review with the biggest takeaway you're walking away with.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "God Will Render to Every Man..." (Rom 2:6-11), Part 3/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2026 35:13 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailIf you've ever wondered, “What if I mess up and lose my salvation?” you're not alone and that question reveals more than most people realize. We wrestle with the fear behind conditional salvation and put it under the light of Scripture, starting with John 3:18 and its stark, two-path reality: not condemned in Christ or already condemned in unbelief. That clarity forces us to ask whether we're trusting Jesus Christ or quietly trusting ourselves while calling it faith. From there we get painfully practical about why works-based salvation is so common in church culture. We talk about sermons that subtly (or loudly) teach you can fall away, and how that message creates pressure instead of peace. We also press into the doctrine of imputed righteousness: Christ takes all our sin, and He credits all His righteousness to us. If that's true, “I'm saved but it's up to me to stay saved” isn't just stressful, it shifts the foundation away from grace and back onto human performance. Finally, we walk through Romans 2:8-11, including tribulation and anguish, “to the Jew first,” and the bedrock statement that God is no respecter of persons. We even address how some dispensational readings try to narrow “tribulation” into a special timeline, and why Paul's language points to something broader and more searching. If you want a sturdier assurance of salvation, a clearer view of grace versus works, and a God-centered understanding of judgment and mercy, press play. Subscribe, share this with a friend who needs peace, and leave a review with the question you're still wrestling with.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "God Will Render to Every Man..." (Rom 2:6-11), Part 2/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2026 35:08 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailIf you've ever wondered, “What if I'm not really saved?”, you're not alone and you're not weak for asking. We sit down as a group and work through Romans 2 to draw a hard line between salvation and rewards: God's judgment is real, our words and works matter, but Christ's finished work is not a fragile contract that snaps the moment we stumble.We talk about fruit in a way that brings both comfort and clarity. The fruit that marks a believer is the fruit of the Spirit, not a trophy shelf of self-improvement, and perseverance is not perfection. Real endurance includes falling, getting back up, and continuing to seek glory, honor, and immortality because a transformed heart can't fully make peace with sin. We also address assurance of salvation and why the very fear of being lost can signal a living conscience rather than a dead one.From there we dig into why “you can lose your salvation” isn't just a side opinion. We argue it attacks the power of the gospel, the indwelling work of the Holy Spirit, and the meaning of the resurrection as God's declaration that propitiation is complete. Finally, we contrast obedience to truth with the Romans 2 warning about people who “obey unrighteousness,” and we challenge the modern habit of treating truth like something you can customize.If this helped you think more clearly or trust Christ more deeply, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "God Will Render to Every Man..." (Rom 2:6-11), Part 1/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2026 34:58 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailOne sentence from Romans can dismantle a lifetime of excuses: “God will render to every man according to his deeds.” We sit with Romans 2:6–11 and trace the weight of that claim, not as a philosophical idea, but as a personal reality. God's judgment is individual, precise, and perfectly fair, and it does not bend for religious background, church position, education, social standing, or the comfort of comparing ourselves to someone else.We also tackle the question that immediately follows: does this turn Christianity into salvation by works? Our answer is no. Works do not purchase eternal life, but they do reveal what is true about the heart. Deeds function as evidence, showing whether a person remains in rebellion or has been changed by grace. That's why we connect justification by faith with real-life conduct and explain why “faith” that stays barren is not the faith Scripture describes.From there we address the tension many people feel around election, responsibility, assurance, and perseverance. We push back on the idea that election makes people robots, while still insisting that condemnation is tied to our own deeds. We also argue that the grace that saves is the same grace that sanctifies, and we use the contrast between Adam and Christ to explain why true salvation does not end as a temporary second chance.If you care about Romans, Christian theology, assurance, holiness, and the final judgment, this conversation will press you in the best way. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review, then tell us what you think: do you see Romans 2:6 as a warning, a comfort, or both?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "Shall YOU Escape The Judgment Of God?" (Rom 2:1-5), Part 3/3

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2026 32:09 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailGod's patience can feel like a pause button, and that's exactly where many of us get into trouble. We sit in the quiet and start telling ourselves stories: maybe God doesn't see, maybe He won't act, maybe there's time to clean it up later. Working through Romans 2, we challenge that dangerous assumption and ask what God's goodness, forbearance, and long-suffering are actually designed to produce in us.We talk about repentance as more than a one-time moment, and why the “I already repented so I don't need to repent again” mindset can turn into spiritual pride fast. When God gives space, it isn't so we can keep pushing the line. It's mercy meant to change us, soften us, and make us honest about the sin we're still putting to death in sanctification. We also unpack Paul's warning about the hardened, impenitent heart and the sobering idea of “storing up wrath” through ongoing resistance.From there, the conversation gets painfully practical: judging others while ignoring our own guilt, treating different sins like they're different levels of deserving grace, and correcting someone from impulse instead of being led by God. We share a better way to approach it all, starting with self-examination, grieving sin instead of scoring points, and joining hands with a brother or sister to seek the Lord together. If you want a Bible-based, real-life conversation about Christian hypocrisy, grace, repentance, and unity in the church, press play.Subscribe for more, share this with a friend who needs encouragement, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "Shall YOU Escape The Judgment Of God?" (Rom 2:1-5), Part 2/3

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2026 32:10 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailThe quickest way to feel righteous is to find someone else to condemn, but Romans 2 refuses to let that illusion stand. We talk through why we judge so fast, how we project guilt onto others, and why God's judgment is “according to truth” with no distortion or bias. When we skip curiosity and compassion, we turn people into problems and call it holiness, even when we have not paused to examine our own hearts.We also get practical about the sins we love to minimize. We unpack the impulse to rank sin, the “log in your own eye” warning from Matthew 7, and the difference between correction that restores and condemnation that performs. We name how gossip quietly wrecks trust, how envy fuels suspicion, and why public character assassination has nothing to do with Christian love. If we have an issue, we should go to the person, ask questions, and be willing to be corrected ourselves.Then we dig into what we call the three G's: gluttony, greed, and gossip, the most excused sins in modern culture, and we connect them to contentment and identity in Christ. Biblical stories like Judah and Tamar and David hearing “You are the man” show how easy it is to condemn others while missing our own complicity. If you want a Bible study conversation that feels honest, challenging, and hopeful, press play, then subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review. What is one area where you want to judge yourself before judging others?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "Shall YOU Escape The Judgment Of God?" (Rom 2:1-5), Part 1/3

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2026 31:47 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailThe most comfortable place to stand is behind a verdict, pointing at someone else's mess. Romans 2 refuses to let us stay there. We walk through Paul's shift from the openly immoral to the morally self assured and feel the weight of a single claim: when I judge another person while doing the same kinds of things, I don't just criticize them, I condemn myself. That's not a call to ignore sin, it's a call to stop pretending we're above it. We talk about the difference between spiritual discernment and hypocrisy, and why “being right” can still be spiritually wrong if the motive is pride. The conversation turns practical fast: examine your own heart, be slow to speak, don't hand your conscience over to other people, and take hard words back to God in prayer so you can respond with integrity. We also lean into a needed corrective for Christian relationships: when someone is caught in sin, the goal is restoration with gentleness, not humiliation, not argument wins, and not public takedowns that breed disunity. Then Romans 2:2 raises the stakes: God's judgment is according to truth. Ours is often partial, based on appearances, and blind to what someone is actually carrying. If you've ever felt the urge to play moral police, or you've been on the receiving end of harsh judgment from people who barely know you, this will help you reset your posture with grace and clarity. Subscribe for more verse by verse teaching, share this with a friend who needs it, and leave a review. Where do you most feel tempted to judge others quickly?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "He Gave Them Up" (Romans 1:18-32), Part 4/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2026 33:46 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailFree will sounds like freedom until you read Romans 1 slowly. We sit with a heavy but clarifying idea: reprobation is not God “making” people sin, but God handing people over to what they demand, removing restraint, and letting choices ripen into consequences. If you've ever wondered why some hearts seem unreachable, why certain debates go in circles, or why culture can call darkness “progress,” this study will press on every one of those nerves.We follow Paul's logic through Romans 1:24 to 32, tracking the repeated phrase “God gave them up” and what it means for idolatry, worship, and moral collapse. We talk about the difference between worshiping the Creator versus serving created things, and why that shift doesn't stay private. When a society celebrates what God condemns and demands approval, the issue is bigger than behavior; it's a picture of disordered love and a mind losing the ability to judge clearly.The conversation ends where it should: with self-examination, gratitude for mercy, and urgency to live and speak the gospel with love and boldness. If you want a serious Romans 1 Bible study that connects doctrine, discipleship, and modern life without pretending the text is easy, come learn with us.Subscribe, share this with a friend who loves Scripture, and leave a review with the moment that challenged you most.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "He Gave Them Up" (Romans 1:18-32), Part 3/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2026 33:53 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailIf you've ever heard someone say, “I'm not afraid of God,” we take that claim seriously and ask what it's really built on. We talk plainly about judgment, justice, and why the fear of the Lord isn't a superstition, it's the natural response to a holy God who does not ignore evil. To make it tangible, we compare our instinct for justice in everyday life with the biblical insistence that God will never be accused of failing to do what's right. We also push back on a popular cultural shortcut: “I like Jesus, I just don't like the God of the Old Testament.” We explain why that division creates a made-up version of God and misses the consistency of His character across Scripture. From there we tackle the “good person” defense, emphasizing salvation by grace, not by works, and why clinging to Christ is the only refuge that actually holds. If you've wrestled with fairness, accountability, or the weight of guilt, this conversation names those questions without softening the edges. Romans 1 becomes our anchor as we trace the deliberate exchange of worship, the downward spiral of idolatry, and the sobering phrase “God gave them up.” We define reprobation as God withdrawing restraint and letting people have what they insist on, then clarify predestination as God's saving choice rather than “double predestination.” We close with practical application around church discipline and why truth-centered fellowship must be protected. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review, what part of Romans 1 do you think our culture most ignores?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "He Gave Them Up" (Romans 1:18-32), Part 2/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2026 33:48 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailSomething about Romans 1 feels almost too direct for modern ears: creation itself makes God's reality plain, and that leaves every one of us without an excuse. We sit with that claim and follow Paul's logic through Romans 1:20-22, where “the invisible things” of God are somehow “clearly seen” through what has been made. That paradox is not a cute wordplay for us. It's a warning, and it's also an explanation for why the world can be surrounded by evidence and still run from the God who stands behind it.We talk about general revelation and why the real problem is not a lack of information but the misuse of what we already know. If the created order points to God's eternal power and divine nature, then the appropriate response is worship, gratitude, and humility, not self-made righteousness and endless excuses. We also explore Romans 1:21 and what happens when people “knew God” but refuse to glorify him: imaginations grow empty, hearts grow dark, and the mind learns to suppress truth while still calling itself “wise.”Then we press into Romans 1:22 and the brutal honesty of Scripture: “Professing themselves to be wise, they became fools.” We connect that to modern pride, the instinct to reject anyone telling us what to do, and the spiritual danger of deception and reprobation, where a person may not even realize what has happened until they stand before a holy God. If you've ever wondered why the name of Jesus provokes such sharp hostility, we get into that too and why the fear of God still belongs in faithful preaching.If this helped you think more clearly about Romans 1, general revelation, and Christian accountability, subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find the conversation.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "He Gave Them Up" (Romans 1:18-32), Part 1/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2026 33:50 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailGod's wrath is one topic most people try to soften, redefine, or dodge, but Romans 1 refuses to let us. We pick up at Romans 1:18 and follow Paul's turn from the righteousness of God revealed by faith to the wrath of God revealed from heaven against ungodliness and unrighteousness. We talk plainly about what wrath is and is not, why it is a present reality as well as a future certainty, and why sin is never just “personal” but always vertical against God and destructive toward other people.From there, we get into the uncomfortable core: people “hold the truth in unrighteousness.” We unpack what it means to cling to an invented version of truth, why pride pushes us to add our own effort to salvation, and why receiving grace feels like receiving charity. We also connect the gospel to God's sovereignty, insisting that saving power is God's work from start to finish, not a project we complete with willpower, moral cleanup, or religious performance.Then we press into suppression of truth as a moral act, not an intellectual glitch. Romans 1:19 says what may be known of God is manifest within, so accountability is grounded in God's revelation, not in our arguments. That shapes how we think about atheism, apologetics, and evangelism: we do not win people by getting stuck in endless debates, we bear down with the gospel and trust God to interrupt the heart.Subscribe for more verse-by-verse teaching, share this with someone who wrestles with grace and pride, and leave a review with the question you want us to tackle next.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "The Testimony of Jesus Christ" (Rev 1:1-4), Part 4/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2026 35:45 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan Mail“Church” can feel like a place you go, a brand you join, or a service you attend. We want to slow that down and let the Bible define its own terms. When the New Testament calls the church the ecclesia, it is using language tied to an assembled people with a public identity, and Scripture keeps reinforcing that identity with words like house, nation, citizens, ambassadors, rule, authority, and kingdom. Once you spot that pattern, passages you've heard for years start sounding like a single story instead of disconnected verses. We walk through a rapid-fire chain of texts, from Hebrews and 1 Peter to Matthew 16 and Ephesians, asking one repeated question: where is the kingdom language? Along the way we talk about “more than conquerors,” Christ leading “captivity captive,” the armor of God, and why “the gates of hell” is not just comfort language but a claim about Christ's unstoppable reign. Then we zoom out to Daniel 2 and 1 Corinthians 15 to see the big arc of history: Christ reigns until every enemy is subdued, with death as the last enemy to fall. We also tackle confusion points that come up fast when you talk about dominion, government, and end-times theology. We draw a bright line between biblical kingdom language and modern dominion theology that pushes a physical takeover of worldly governments. Jesus says his kingdom is not of this world, yet it is still a real kingdom with real citizens and a real “law of faith.” If you've wrestled with dispensationalism, pre-trib assumptions, or how Revelation fits the rest of the Bible, this conversation is built to make you re-read with clearer eyes. If this helped you think more carefully about the kingdom of God, share it with a friend, subscribe for the next study, and leave a review so more listeners can find it. What verse most changed the way you hear the word ecclesia?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "The Testimony of Jesus Christ" (Rev 1:1-4), Part 3/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2026 35:58 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailRevelation starts like a letter, not a puzzle box, and we take that seriously. John writes to seven actual churches, and we talk about why the number seven signals completeness, a message aimed at the whole church across the ages. That one detail creates a huge problem for the common claim that the church disappears from the story early on. If Jesus is addressing his people, we ask, why would the book be structured for an audience that is supposedly already gone? We also get honest about the emotional pull behind end-times systems that promise escape. We talk about suffering, persecution, and the repeated biblical call to endure to the end, because Jesus suffered and told us not to fear the world he already overcame. Then we bring in history and biblical hermeneutics: the pre-tribulation rapture framework is traced to the 1830s with John Nelson Darby and its spread through the Scofield Reference Bible. We question how certain interpretive “rules” entered Bible reading at all, especially when they seem to override the plain sense of a text written to the churches. From there, the conversation turns constructive and practical: what is the church? We dig into the word ecclesia, its roots as an assembly, and how Scripture emphasizes a gathered people rather than a building. We talk about the synagogue as “gathering,” the idea of Christ's kingdom and governance, and why any group centered on Jesus Christ and his Word is a real assembly. If you've ever felt judged for where or how you gather, this will hit home. Subscribe, share, and leave a review, then tell us: what changed in your thinking about Revelation and the church?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "The Testimony of Jesus Christ" (Rev 1:1-4), Part 2/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2026 35:55 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailRevelation gets treated like a codebook for the latest headline and it leaves a lot of Christians either terrified, obsessed, or checked out. We're going the opposite direction. We start where the text starts: Revelation is the revelation of Jesus Christ, and if we don't keep Him as the focus, we're going to misread everything else that follows.We spend serious time in Revelation 1:1–3, especially the promise of blessing for the one who reads, the ones who hear, and the ones who keep what's written. We talk about what “keep” actually means (to guard, preserve, and hold fast), why public reading and shared study matter, and why this book is meant to comfort believers who face real pressure, persecution, and temptation to compromise. Revelation isn't meant to be sealed off for elite commentators or end-times influencers. It's meant for the church.Then we address the big modern assumptions head-on: dispensationalism, a pre-trib rapture escape plan, and the habit of importing ideas into Revelation that aren't there. We argue for a clearer, more biblical eschatology that begins with Christ's exaltation and present reign. The kingdom of God is active now, the conflict is present, and the call is endurance, not escapism.If you've ever wondered why Revelation feels confusing or weaponized, this conversation will help you reset your starting point and read with more confidence, humility, and hope. Subscribe, share this with a friend who avoids Revelation, and leave a review with the biggest “unlearn” you're working through.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "The Testimony of Jesus Christ" (Rev 1:1-4), Part 1/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2026 35:52 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailRevelation gets treated like a strange riddle or an end-times hobby, so we slow down and start where the book starts: “The Revelation of Jesus Christ.” We read Revelation 1:1-3 and lean into the promise that there is real blessing for the one who reads, the one who hears, and the one who keeps what's written. That blessing isn't sentimental. It's meant to shape how we live when the pressure is on. We dig into why the text says the message was “signified” and what that means for reading Revelation as symbolic prophecy. Instead of forcing everything into a literal timeline, we talk about signs, symbols, and the way Revelation draws on the prophetic Scriptures to teach the church to see history from heaven's perspective. Then we move to Revelation 1:2 and the weight of John's role as a faithful witness, recording the Word of God and the testimony of Jesus Christ, not speculation or imagination. From there, the conversation gets practical: Revelation prepares Christians for conflict with the world, false religion, persecution and tribulation, and apostasy that can look religious on the surface. We also challenge popular claims about a pre-tribulation rapture and ask where the “seven-year tribulation” idea actually appears in Scripture. The panel adds strong reflections on readiness to meet Jesus, the urgency of sharing the gospel, and the need for clarity in a world full of noisy teaching. If you want a Revelation chapter 1 Bible study that keeps the focus on Christ and builds endurance, press play. Subscribe, share this with a friend who avoids Revelation, and leave a review with the biggest question you want us to tackle next.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "The Righteousness of God Revealed" (Rom 1:17), Part 4/4

    Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2026 30:22 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailRomans 1:16-17 isn't a warm-up verse for us, it's the doorway into everything Paul is about to build. We slow down and ask the question underneath the question: how is anyone made right with God? The answer is both shocking and relieving. Justification is a legal declaration from God that we are righteous in Christ, and that verdict is received by faith, not earned by effort, discipline, or religious “bartering.” We talk plainly about why deeds can't produce righteousness, why adding anything to salvation turns grace into a wage, and why the gospel stays simple even when we try to complicate it. We also clear up a common confusion: justification and sanctification are not the same thing. Justification is God's once-for-all act that makes us right with him, while sanctification is God's ongoing work in us that produces real change and real fruit. Mixing those two either makes people proud or makes them panic, and neither one is the good news. We also address the reality that believers still wrestle with sin in this life, which is exactly why Scripture speaks of dying daily. Our assurance doesn't come from pretending we're perfect, it comes from trusting the righteousness God has provided in Jesus Christ. Along the way we connect Romans 1 to Romans 9, talk about Christ as the stumbling stone, and keep circling back to the heartbeat line: the just shall live by faith. If this strengthened you, subscribe, share it with a friend who feels stuck in performance, and leave a review so more people can find this teaching. What part of “faith comes by receiving, not achieving” challenges you most?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "The Righteousness of God Revealed" (Rom 1:17), Part 3/4

    Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2026 30:32 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailIf you've ever explained your salvation with a sentence that starts with “I,” this conversation will challenge you in the best way. We dig into a deceptively simple question: does God save because of what we do, or because of what Christ has already done? Using Abraham as our starting point, we talk about imputed righteousness, how God declares the righteous, and why covenant signs never deserve the credit that belongs to Jesus alone. We also tackle water baptism head-on. We affirm baptism as meaningful obedience and a public marker of allegiance to Christ, then draw a bright line between a sign and a Savior. One of the sharpest moments comes as we ask: if water baptism saves, how do you crucify water on a cross, bury it, and watch it rise three days later? That isn't a cheap slogan, it's a reality check that brings us back to the center of the gospel: Jesus shed His blood, Jesus died, and Jesus rose in victory over sin and death. From there we camp out in Romans 1:16-17 and the phrase “from faith to faith,” unpacking why the gospel never transitions into “from faith to works” as the basis of justification. We talk about regeneration, the gift of faith, and how faith excludes boasting because it receives rather than achieves. We even pause to speak tenderly to real struggles like anger and unforgiveness, reminding each other that grace is not theoretical, it's where Christians actually live. If you care about biblical Christianity, justification by faith, and the clarity of “the just shall live by faith,” press play, then subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "The Righteousness of God Revealed" (Rom 1:17), Part 2/4

    Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2026 30:24 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailThe hardest part of grace is not understanding it. It's accepting that we don't get to help. We sit with Romans 1:17 and the line that wrecks human pride: God reveals his righteousness “from faith to faith,” and he justifies the ungodly. That means salvation is not God meeting us halfway after we've become respectable. It's God doing what we cannot do, start to finish, without owing us anything.We talk plainly about the instinct inside all of us to minimize sin or to try to overcome it with personal merit. Then we name the common “add-ons” people attach to the gospel of Christ: circumcision, water baptism, the Mass, appeals to Mary or the saints, and any system that turns faith into a checklist. The moment you add a requirement to the finished work of Jesus, the message stops being the gospel that saves, because it shifts glory away from Christ and back onto us.Along the way, our panel connects Paul's argument to Habakkuk 2:4, explains why true faith is a supernatural revelation by the Holy Spirit, and clarifies what baptism is for and what it is not. We use the thief on the cross and Abraham's circumcision as practical anchors: signs and obedience matter, but they follow salvation rather than create it.If this helped you think more clearly about justification by faith, grace alone, and the righteousness of God, subscribe, share this with a friend who's sorting through “faith plus something,” and leave a review with your biggest takeaway.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "The Righteousness of God Revealed" (Rom 1:17), Part 1/4

    Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2026 30:17 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailRomans 1:16-17 is one of the clearest summaries of Christianity's core claim, and we take it slow on purpose. The gospel isn't a motivational message or a list of religious steps. We argue from Paul's words that it is the power of God unto salvation precisely because something is unveiled inside it: the righteousness of God. We talk about what “not ashamed of the gospel” looks like in real life, then move into the heart of the passage. “The righteousness of God” isn't human morality upgraded or spiritual effort polished up. It is a righteousness that originates with God, is established by God, and is granted to sinners who believe. That pushes back on every form of self-righteousness, whether it shows up as moral improvement, religious ceremony, baptismal confidence, or the quiet belief that our obedience completes what Jesus started. Along the way we connect the dots to big theological themes listeners search for all the time: justification by faith, salvation by grace, Christ alone, assurance, and why human works cannot satisfy divine justice. We also focus on the word “revealed” and why saving righteousness is not discovered by philosophy or speculation, but disclosed by God in the gospel. If you've ever wondered what it really means that “the just shall live by faith,” press play, share this with someone who wrestles with earning God's approval, and subscribe, rate, and review so more people can find the message of Romans 1:16-17.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "Not Ashamed of the Gospel of Christ" (Rom 1:16), Part 4/4

    Play Episode Listen Later May 29, 2026 34:05 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailRomans 1:16 sounds simple until you actually live it: “I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ.” We sit with that line and ask what it really means when fear hits, when people mock, or when we're tempted to stay quiet. Our conviction is direct and non-negotiable: the gospel is not motivational talk or religious trivia. It is the power of God unto salvation, and when we stop preaching it, we stop delivering the very message God uses to save.From there we widen the lens and talk Bible study that actually changes how you read. The gospel is not locked in a few New Testament verses, it's threaded through the whole storyline of Scripture from Genesis to Revelation. We challenge ourselves to look for Christ on every page and even in surprising places like Esther, where God is not explicitly mentioned. If Jesus says the Scriptures testify about him, we want the habit of seeing him everywhere, not only where it feels obvious.We also tackle hard theology with plain speech: election, predestination, God's sovereignty, and the claim that “free will” can become a kind of disbelief when it puts us in the judgment seat over God. Ezekiel 36 anchors the point with God's promise to give a new heart and to work so that his people walk in his ways. We close with encouragement, prayer, and a call to be unapologetically bold while trusting that God does the saving work.If this challenged you, share it with someone who wrestles with Romans 1:16, and leave a review so more listeners can find the show. What part pushed back hardest on you?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "Not Ashamed of the Gospel of Christ" (Rom 1:16), Part 3/4

    Play Episode Listen Later May 29, 2026 34:09 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailThe gospel isn't a set of tips for becoming a better version of yourself. It's power. We start with Paul's claim that believers are God's workmanship, created in Christ Jesus unto good works, and we follow the thread to a conclusion that strips away pride: the first “works” of the new creation are repentance and belief, and even those are not self-produced trophies.From there we dig into effectual calling and why “power of God unto salvation” means something specific. If God's call is effectual, then it actually accomplishes what he intends. That helps explain the difference between hearing words and receiving life, and it keeps us from treating “to the Jew first and to the Greek” as favoritism instead of the historical order of how God unfolded his promise. Along the way we talk about humility, why seeing our lowliness is tied to seeing God's greatness, and how real spiritual “magnification” makes God bigger in our eyes while we stop pretending we're the center.Then we go straight at the controversy: faith as a gift, not a meritorious act, and why the “free will” story can turn into an idol of self-determination that quietly denies grace. We connect election, redemption by the blood of Christ, Jesus coming to do the Father's will, and the beauty of adoption and sonship, including the Spirit that makes us cry Abba, Father. If you've ever felt the tension between modern church culture and the transforming power the Bible describes, this conversation names it clearly.Subscribe for more, share this with someone who's hungry for depth, and leave a review with the one point you most disagree with or couldn't stop thinking about.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "Not Ashamed of the Gospel of Christ" (Rom 1:16), Part 2/4

    Play Episode Listen Later May 29, 2026 34:05 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailThe most offensive thing Paul says might also be the most freeing: the gospel of Christ is the power of God unto salvation. Not a motivational message, not religious self-help, not “good news” that needs our boost, but divine power that brings dead sinners to life. We walk through why Scripture can call the message “foolishness” while also calling it God's strength, and why the world's reaction is often confusion or outright hostility.We also get uncomfortably practical. If faith is a gift, then preaching is not about personality, polish, or winning arguments. It's about proclaiming Christ to people who cannot see unless God opens eyes. That leads straight into justification by faith, Christ's imputed righteousness, and the hard line we keep drawing: the gospel is not Christ plus baptism, not Christ plus tithing, not Christ plus your best effort. Add-ons don't “complete” the gospel, they replace it.Then we go even deeper into Romans 1:16: “to everyone that believes.” We talk election, the order of salvation, and why belief is evidence of God's power already at work rather than the cause of it. We also touch apostasy, false professions, and what it means to become a new creation. If you've ever wondered what the gospel actually is and why it has to be Christ alone, this conversation is for you. Subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review with the biggest question you're still wrestling with.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "Not Ashamed of the Gospel of Christ" (Rom 1:16), Part 1/4

    Play Episode Listen Later May 29, 2026 34:05 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailIf you've ever felt that split-second hesitation to speak up about Jesus at work, with friends, or even in your own family, we get it and we don't let it slide. We camp out in Romans 1:16-17 and take Paul's words seriously: “I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ.” Not as a slogan, but as a diagnostic. When we go quiet, what's actually happening in our hearts, and what does that silence communicate about what we believe the gospel really is?We trace Paul's logic step by step: the gospel is the power of God unto salvation for everyone who believes, and the righteousness of God is revealed by faith. That means the message of Christ crucified and risen is not inspirational content competing with human wisdom. It is God's chosen instrument to save, to deliver from sin's guilt, dominion, and ultimate consequences. We talk about why the world treats the cross as foolish, how social pressure trains us to self-censor, and why “being ashamed” often hides behind respectable excuses.You'll also hear thoughtful push-in from the group. Sister Sean connects shame to pleasing people and the eternal weight of denying Christ. Sister Vanessa highlights that faith itself depends on God's power, not our self-confidence. Brother Rodney shares what it looks like to live this out on the job when conversations get real. If you want a clearer grasp of Romans 1:16-17, biblical salvation by faith, and everyday Christian boldness, this one will steady you.Subscribe, share this with a friend who needs courage, and leave a review with the moment that challenged you most.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "For God Is My Witness" (Rom 1:8-15), Part 4/4)

    Play Episode Listen Later May 27, 2026 29:12 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailIf Christian community is supposed to feel like family, why do so many conversations turn into crossfire? We slow down and get honest about what “mutual faith” really means: encouragement that flows both directions, leaders who are strengthened by the people, and believers who can ask hard questions without being brushed off. We also challenge the reflex to treat truth like a weapon, especially in online spaces where responding to every attack can swallow your entire day.From there we bring it down to street level with a surprisingly personal angle: the road rage test. When tempers flare, we remind ourselves that we have no idea what someone has lived through today. That thread leads to Job and the danger of using Bible words to accuse instead of comfort. We also look at Jesus' long suffering with Judas as a gut check for our patience, compassion, and spiritual maturity.The second half turns into a focused Bible study on Romans 1:13-15. We walk through Paul's desire to visit Rome, the providence of God in his hindrances, and why delays do not cancel calling. Paul's “debtor to all” mindset highlights the universal scope of the gospel: one message of Jesus Christ for every people group, without favoritism or special tiers. If you care about Christian encouragement, unity in the body of Christ, and practical gospel ministry, this conversation will sharpen you. Subscribe, share with a friend who needs steadiness, and leave a review with the biggest takeaway you heard.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "For God Is My Witness" (Rom 1:8-15), Part 3/4)

    Play Episode Listen Later May 27, 2026 29:18 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailIf you've ever walked away from a Christian debate online feeling dirty, tense, or weirdly proud, we get it. We sit with Romans 1:10-12 and ask a sharper question than “Who's right?” What is my heart doing while I speak the truth, and do I actually want the person in front of me to be helped? We talk about Paul's pattern of prayerful ministry and why real gospel work is sustained by intercession, not just constant activity. Paul requests a “prosperous journey,” yet he submits every plan to the will of God, and we unpack what that teaches about desire, surrender, and trusting God with outcomes. Then we challenge the modern “prosperity gospel” mindset by redefining prosperity as spiritual alignment with God's purpose, not comfort, clout, or cash. From there, we lean into Paul's longing to strengthen believers and to be mutually encouraged by them. That raises uncomfortable but necessary topics: the pull of personal convenience, the temptation to treat apologetics as entertainment, and how easily truth becomes one-upmanship when love is missing. We also confront the myth of the “undercover Christian,” the danger of hiding the gospel, and the power of confession and mutual faith to build a healthier church culture that doesn't default to tearing people down. If you're hungry for Christian discipleship that's grounded in Scripture, honest about motives, and focused on the gospel of Jesus Christ, press play. Subscribe, share this with a friend who lives in comment sections, and leave a review with the one line you needed to hear most.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "For God Is My Witness" (Rom 1:8-15), Part 2/4)

    Play Episode Listen Later May 27, 2026 29:05 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan Mail“You cannot be unbirthed.” That's the kind of statement that either offends you or frees you, and we lean all the way into what it means. We start with the new birth and the permanence of being God's child, then get honest about the social cost of a changed life. When your desires shift toward serving Jesus Christ, people won't always get it, and you still have to live faithfully inside that tension. From there, we ask a simple question with a big reach: what is the gospel to you beyond proclamation? The answers land in everyday Christian living and discipleship: putting your lamp on the lampstand, letting your hands and feet testify, loving enemies, staying slow to speak and quick to listen, and refusing to give glory to the flesh. We talk about the peace that surpasses understanding, including what it looks like to hold steady at work when you have every reason to snap back, and how trust in God shows up in money matters, work issues, and family conflict. We also spend time in Romans with Paul's picture of service that is inward and sincere, not an exhibition or a performance. That leads into prayer, care for hurting people, and the hard but hopeful work of laying burdens down and obeying by faith when God brings His Word to remembrance. If you want practical encouragement for living the gospel, not just talking about it, this conversation is for you. Subscribe, share with a friend who needs comfort, and leave a review. What part of your life do you need to lay at the feet of the cross today?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "For God Is My Witness" (Rom 1:8-15), Part 1/4)

    Play Episode Listen Later May 27, 2026 29:10 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailYour faith can't stay invisible forever and Paul says that's a feature, not a bug. We open Romans 1:8-9 and trace Paul's tone before he tackles the controversial, weighty parts of Romans. What stands out first is gratitude: Paul thanks God through Jesus Christ, reminding us that every approach to God is mediated by Christ and every faithful conclusion should end in Christ's glory. That pastoral warmth is not filler. It's how Paul prepares the church to receive hard truth with trust, clarity, and love.From there, we explore a line that should unsettle and encourage us at the same time: the Roman believers' faith is “spoken of throughout the whole world.” We talk about authentic Christian faith as something with inherent vitality, the kind that produces a reputation without chasing attention. Then we press into the uncomfortable question of anonymity. If we don't want to be known, how will Christ be known through us? The conversation challenges the idea of the “secret Christian” and asks what faithful witness looks like without turning into performative spirituality.Romans 1:9 shifts the focus to Paul's inner life: serving God “with my spirit” and praying “without ceasing.” We ask what it means to live in the sphere of the gospel, not just repeat gospel words. A panel discussion brings it down to everyday discipleship, conviction, and dependence on God's power, and we acknowledge the paradox of suffering: sometimes the gospel's goodness is felt most clearly when life hurts most, even when relationships get strained because of our faith.If this helps you think more clearly about gospel-centered living, subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find our Romans Bible study.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "Separated Unto The Gospel Of God" (Romans 1:1-7), Part 4/4

    Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2026 31:59 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailIf God calls someone to salvation, can that call be ignored, resisted, or canceled out by human will? We take that question straight into Romans 1:6-7 and follow the logic where it leads: if God's call is truly effectual, it actually accomplishes what God intends, which is why the “God calls everyone the same way” claim collapses into universalism.We also untangle a confusion that shows up all the time in Christian conversations: the outward call versus the inward call. The outward call (often called the general call) is the public gospel message that goes out broadly through preaching and witness. The inward call is the Holy Spirit's work that makes a spiritually dead person truly hear, believe, and follow Christ. Along the way we connect Romans 10:17, John 10:27, and even the Lazarus account to show how God's command doesn't just invite, it creates the response.Then we tackle the “fairness” objection head-on. If all of us are responsible for our rebellion, God is not obligated to save anyone, and mercy can't be demanded like a paycheck. We close by zooming back out to Paul's words about being beloved of God, called to be saints, and blessed with grace and peace, and we talk about why “from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ” matters for the deity of Christ.Subscribe for more Romans study, share this with a friend who's wrestling with these doctrines, and leave a review with the question you still can't shake.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "Separated Unto The Gospel Of God" (Romans 1:1-7), Part 3/4

    Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2026 32:10 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailIf you've ever heard someone say, “Yes, you're saved by grace, but you stay saved by obedience,” we slow that claim down and test it against Romans 1:5. We keep coming back to Paul's phrase “obedience to the faith” and ask what kind of obedience the gospel actually demands. Is it commandment keeping as a condition for justification, or is it the ongoing posture of trusting Christ's finished work?We also zoom out to the mission behind Romans. Paul writes to the epicenter of the ancient world, a place where the nations converge, and we connect that to why the gospel is meant to spread rapidly and publicly. Along the way we talk about Paul's background in Tarsus, his readiness to engage competing philosophies, and how God's providence shapes a messenger for a global message.Then we hit the nerve: the one “missing piece” many people never name clearly, imputed righteousness. If God's standard is perfection, and if one stumble makes us guilty of the whole law, then “additional obedience” cannot repair guilt or complete salvation. We walk through why Christ's obedience is counted as ours, why Galatians says righteousness cannot come through the law, and why mixing grace with merit doesn't strengthen Christianity, it replaces it.If this conversation sharpens your assurance or challenges your assumptions, subscribe, share this with a friend who needs clarity on faith and works, and leave a review with the biggest takeaway you're still thinking about.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

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