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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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    • Mar 23, 2026 LATEST EPISODE
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    Latest episodes from The Bible Provocateur

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

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 23, 2026 31:42 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailThe 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.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "His Eyes Shall See His Destruction" (Job 21:17-21), (Part 3/4)

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 23, 2026 31:44 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailHell 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.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "His Eyes Shall See His Destruction" (Job 21:17-21), (Part 2/4)

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 23, 2026 31:44 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailSome 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.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "His Eyes Shall See His Destruction" (Job 21:17-21), (Part 1/4)

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 23, 2026 30:58 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailThe 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.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "The Hypostatic Union: God & Christ Jesus" (Part 5/5)

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2026 32:08 Transcription Available


    Send a textThe 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?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "The Hypostatic Union: God & Christ Jesus" (Part 4/5)

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2026 32:12 Transcription Available


    Send a text“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?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "The Hypostatic Union: God & Christ Jesus" (Part 3/5)

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2026 32:12 Transcription Available


    Send a textIf 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?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "The Hypostatic Union: God & Christ Jesus" (Part 2/5)

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2026 32:12 Transcription Available


    Send a textJesus 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.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "The Hypostatic Union: God & Christ Jesus" (Part 1/5)

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2026 31:20 Transcription Available


    Send a textPeople keep using “hypostatic union” like it's a mic-drop term, then they turn around and define it with a quick Google snippet. We wanted to slow that down and actually do the work: define hypostasis, explain why the church reached for this word, and show how it brings clarity instead of confusion when you're talking about Jesus Christ and the Trinity.We start with the foundational distinction most of the arguments miss: essence versus personhood. Essence answers what God is. Hypostasis answers who God is. From there, we lay out classic Trinitarian theology in plain language: one divine essence and three distinct persons, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Each person is fully God, co-equal and co-eternal, not a “piece” of God and not a lesser form of deity. That framework also helps make sense of prayer and worship language Christians use every day.Then we connect the dots to Christology. The hypostatic union is about Jesus being one person, the Son, with two natures: truly divine and truly human. We also name two errors that still pop up constantly in modern debates: modalism, which collapses the Trinity into one person, and Nestorianism, which effectively divides Christ into two persons. If you've ever struggled to explain “fully God and fully man” without tripping over your words, this one is for you. If it helps, share it with a friend and leave a review, and tell us what theology term you want us to unpack next.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    Water Baptism: A Cause or Effect of Salvation (Part 5/5)

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2026 33:42 Transcription Available


    Send a textBaptism can feel like the line between “saved” and “still not sure” and that fear is exactly why we slow down and follow the Bible's own pattern. We start with Abraham, because Scripture makes a bold point: he's counted righteous by faith before circumcision ever happens. That order matters. It teaches us how to think about signs, seals, and public obedience without turning them into saving works, and it brings real clarity for anyone confused by baptism, assurance, and what it means to belong to Christ.From Ephesians we talk through “one Lord, one faith, one baptism,” then follow the thread to what God actually uses to secure his people: being sealed with the Holy Spirit of promise. That pushes the focus where it belongs in Christian theology, on salvation by grace through faith, not on what we can see, touch, or perform. We also connect the symbolism of Noah's ark to baptism language and make the point plainly: it isn't the water that rescues, it's the ark, and Christ is the true refuge.Questions take us into the toughest territory, Spirit vs water, and what “baptism with fire” means. We unpack how fire can describe the Spirit's refining work in believers while still remaining a warning of judgment for the unrepentant. Then we address pedobaptism and covenant theology, why the new covenant is not a mixed body like old covenant Israel, and why Scripture must outrank every tradition and every famous name.If you've ever wondered whether baptism saves, what “born of water” means in John 3, or how to stay Christ-centered without rejecting obedience, this conversation is for you. Subscribe, share this with a friend who's wrestling with baptism, and leave a review with the question you still want answered.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    Water Baptism: A Cause or Effect of Salvation (Part 4/5)

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2026 33:45 Transcription Available


    Send a textWater baptism is beautiful, commanded, and worth obeying, but we keep running into one hard question: does it save you? We take that question seriously by going straight to the passages that get quoted most often and testing them against the wider story of Scripture. Starting with Noah's ark, we make a simple distinction that changes everything. The water is judgment, the ark is salvation. That becomes a clear way to read 1 Peter 3:21 without turning a physical act into the power source of the new birth. Then we slow down in John 3:5 where Jesus says we must be “born of water and of the Spirit.” We weigh the popular claims, including baptismal water and even “water” as natural birth, and we ask what fits Jesus' own logic that flesh produces flesh while Spirit produces spirit. Along the way we connect the dots to Titus 3:5, James 1:18, and John 15:3, where the Bible speaks plainly about cleansing, regeneration, and renewal through mercy, the Holy Ghost, and the Word of God. The repeated theme is that salvation is a spiritual work God does in us, not a ritual we do for God. We also look at Acts 8 and Simon Magus to show how someone can receive a sign without possessing what the sign points to, and we close with Romans 4 where Abraham is counted righteous by faith before circumcision, with the sign coming afterward as a seal. If you've ever felt pressured by “one more step” theology, or wondered how to honor baptism without turning it into a condition of justification, this conversation will help you build a biblical, gospel-centered answer. Subscribe for more Bible-driven conversations, share this with a friend who's wrestling with baptism and salvation, and leave a review telling us: what do you think “born of water” means?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    Water Baptism: A Cause or Effect of Salvation (Part 3/5)

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2026 33:45 Transcription Available


    Send a textWater baptism gets treated like a switch that turns salvation on and off, but the text doesn't cooperate with that storyline. We slow down and read the hard verses in context, starting with a deceptively small detail: the Greek word “eis.” When baptism is described as “unto” someone or something, we ask whether the Bible is talking about location, cause, or allegiance. That single question changes how passages like Matthew 28:19 and 1 Corinthians 10:2 land, and it helps us stop building entire doctrines on a rushed reading.Acts 10 becomes the clearest case study because it shows the order out loud. Peter preaches the gospel, the hearers believe, the Holy Spirit falls while he's still speaking, and only then does Peter call for water baptism. We connect that pattern to Paul's blunt distinction in 1 Corinthians 1:17 between preaching the gospel and administering baptism, then we address common objections tied to repentance and conversion language.We also tackle the “washing away sins” claim by pairing Acts 22:16 with Romans 10:9–13. The hinge is calling on the name of the Lord, and we reinforce it with passages about the blood of Jesus Christ cleansing sin. Finally, we take on 1 Peter 3:21 and Noah's ark, showing why Peter explicitly rejects the idea that baptism saves by removing physical filth, pointing instead to a good conscience toward God through the resurrection of Jesus Christ.If you've wrestled with baptismal regeneration, Church of Christ proof texts, or what baptism means for salvation by grace through faith, this conversation will give you a clean framework for reading the Bible with the Bible. Subscribe, share this with a friend who loves theology, and leave a review with the verse you most want us to unpack next.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    Water Baptism: A Cause or Effect of Salvation (Part 2/5)

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2026 33:45 Transcription Available


    Send a textActs 2:38 has launched a thousand arguments, and we've heard the confident claim more times than we can count: “No baptism, no forgiveness.” So we slow the whole thing down and ask a simpler question first. What does the New Testament actually present as the saving response to the gospel: getting into water, or repentance and faith in Jesus Christ?We walk through the biblical order we see again and again in apostolic preaching: God-centered gospel proclamation leads to repentance and faith, forgiveness follows by grace, and then water baptism comes as an outward sign of an inward change. Along the way, we tackle the biggest proof text head-on, paying attention to grammar and to a crucial Greek word, “eis,” that can mean “because of” or “in relation to” depending on context. That single detail reshapes how many people read “be baptized for the remission of sins,” turning baptism into an acknowledgement of forgiveness instead of the cause of forgiveness.We also dig into Jesus' own baptism, because people rightly ask, “If Jesus did it, why wouldn't it be required?” We talk about what Christ's baptism accomplishes as a public identification with sinners, the moment where Father, Son, and Spirit are revealed together, and why Christian baptism functions as an announcement of loyalty and union with Christ. We end with needed balance: baptism is a commanded ordinance every believer should want, but rejecting baptismal regeneration protects the heart of the gospel.If this helped you think more clearly about water baptism and salvation, subscribe, share it with someone who debates Acts 2:38, and leave a review. What's the biggest question you still have about repentance, faith, and baptism?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    Water Baptism: A Cause or Effect of Salvation (Part 1/5)

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2026 33:21 Transcription Available


    Send a textWater baptism can feel simple until someone tells you your salvation depends on it. We go straight at the confusion and lay out a clear biblical case for why Christian baptism is a commanded ordinance and a powerful public marker of discipleship, while also being a sign that points beyond itself. If you've ever wrestled with questions like “Do I have to be baptized to be saved?” or “What does baptism actually do?” you'll hear a careful, verse-by-verse approach that keeps the gospel at the center.We contrast two schools of thought: baptism as an outward sign and seal of an inward work of grace, versus baptism as the final step that completes forgiveness. Then we walk into the passages most often used to argue baptismal regeneration, including Acts 2:38, Acts 22:16, and 1 Peter 3:21. Along the way we bring in the broader doctrine of justification by faith alone, showing why Scripture must interpret Scripture, and why the Bible repeatedly ties salvation to faith in Christ rather than any rite performed by human hands.We also look at conversion accounts that clarify the order of events, like Acts 10 where the Holy Spirit is received before baptism, and Acts 16 where “Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ” comes before the immediate step of baptism. To make sense of strong sacramental wording, we explain how the Bible sometimes speaks of a sign as if it were the thing signified, and why baptism ultimately points to a clean conscience toward God through Jesus' death, burial, and resurrection.If this helped you, subscribe, share it with someone debating baptism and salvation, and leave a review with the verse or question you want us to tackle next.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: Foreknowledge/Impeccability of Christ, Part 8/8

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2026 34:43 Transcription Available


    Send a text“If I couldn't reject God, would my love even be real?” That question drives a late-night, high-energy panel conversation that refuses to stay on the surface. We talk about salvation the way the Bible describes it: not as God and the sinner playing tug of war, but as God bringing new life, changing the heart, and producing a real desire to cling to Christ.We dig into key passages on Christian theology and God's sovereignty, including Isaiah 46, Romans 8:28, Acts 15, and Acts 16:14. Lydia becomes a turning point for the discussion: she hears the message, but the Lord opens her heart, and only then does she truly respond. From there, we explore regeneration, conviction of sin, the work of the Holy Spirit, and why “choice” looks different once the heart is made new.Then we tackle the objection almost everyone has heard: “Does that make us robots?” The panel uses everyday analogies from parenting, correction, and dependence to show how love can be genuine even when God moves first. We also look ahead to glorification and heaven, where the ability to sin is gone, and ask what that means for freedom, holiness, and worship right now.If you've ever struggled with free will vs predestination, election, saving grace, or whether God's control cancels human responsibility, press play and think with us. Subscribe for more conversations like this, share it with a friend who loves deep Bible study, and leave a review with your biggest question coming out of the talk.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: Foreknowledge/Impeccability of Christ, Part 7/8

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2026 34:46 Transcription Available


    Send a textSomeone casually says, “Jesus could have sinned,” and the room changes. We're not talking about minor doctrinal quirks or theological hobbyhorses. We're talking about Christ Himself, the virgin birth, the incarnation, and whether the gospel still makes sense if the Savior is even potentially a sinner. We explain why this claim isn't just provocative, it rewires the entire logic of salvation, because only a truly sinless mediator can stand in our place.From there, we slow down and talk about how bad theology often spreads: not because people never quote the Bible, but because they quote it without context. We push for straightforward exegesis that asks what the author means, how the passage works as a whole, and why pulling one verse out of a parable or argument can produce conclusions the text never intended. It's a reminder for anyone doing Christian apologetics, preaching, or online debate that accuracy matters more than volume.Then we pivot to a sincere question many believers carry for years: if God chooses and saves, where does human choice fit, and is love still genuine? We walk through the difference between free will and freedom of choice, why our nature drives our will, and why Jesus says salvation is impossible with man. Regeneration and conversion aren't God “forcing” love; they're God giving new life so our love becomes real. If you're wrestling with God's sovereignty, human responsibility, sanctification, and what it means to be a “new creation,” this conversation will meet you right where you are.Subscribe for more, share this with someone who loves deep theology, and leave a review with the question you still want answered.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: Foreknowledge/Impeccability of Christ, Part 6/8

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2026 34:46 Transcription Available


    Send a textIf God always gets his will, why isn't everyone saved? That question sounds simple until you chase it all the way down into predestination, foreknowledge, “many are called and few are chosen,” and what we really mean when we say salvation is by grace alone. We follow the logic wherever it goes, including the uncomfortable places where human pride wants to sneak back in and take credit for faith.From there, we dig into how the Holy Spirit, regeneration, and effectual calling fit into the salvation story. We talk about justice, mercy, and why “fairness” is a tricky word when the baseline assumption is human sin and moral inability. Along the way we address objections about free will, being a “robot,” and the claim that God's decree is arbitrary, pushing instead toward a view where Christ's work is complete and our confidence rests on what he did, not what we can do.Then the conversation turns explosive: could Jesus have sinned? We debate Hebrews 2, Romans 8:3 to 4, the meaning of “tempted,” and why orthodox Christology says Jesus is fully God and fully man without dividing his natures. We also explain why the impeccability of Christ is not a technical sidebar, but a doctrine tied to worship, assurance, and the very reason Christians say we need a Savior at all.If you care about Christian theology, Reformed versus Arminian questions, biblical interpretation, and the identity of Jesus, this is a must-hear. Subscribe, share this with a friend who loves hard doctrine, and leave a review with your answer: does temptation require the ability to fall?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: Foreknowledge/Impeccability of Christ, Part 5/8

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2026 34:46 Transcription Available


    Send a textIf you've ever heard “God saw you would believe, so He chose you,” this conversation puts that claim under pressure and refuses to let it stay fuzzy. We walk straight into the hardest questions about salvation: Can someone truly lose salvation? If God is omniscient, does He learn anything by “looking down the corridor of time”? And what do we actually mean when we say people have free will?We tease apart a distinction most debates skip: choice is not the same thing as a free will with spiritual ability. Using concrete biblical-style analogies like blindness healed, deafness opened, and bondage broken, we argue that “receiving” salvation is not a human-powered acceptance speech but a work God does in the soul. That takes us into Deuteronomy 30 and the command to “choose life,” where we hold moral responsibility and the universal gospel call together while denying that God's commands automatically imply equal ability in every hearer.Along the way, we vent a little about why so many churches produce confident opinions without deep discipleship, why theological systems get fragmented, and why “I'm led by the Spirit” can become an excuse to avoid careful study. Our anchor is simple: test every teaching against the attributes of God, especially omniscience and immutability, because any view that makes God wait, learn, or adjust is already in trouble.If this helped you think more clearly about predestination, foreknowledge, free will, Arminianism, and the sovereignty of God, subscribe, share this with a friend who loves theology, and leave a review with the question you're still wrestling with.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: Foreknowledge/Impeccability of Christ, Part 4/8

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2026 34:46 Transcription Available


    Send a textPrayer can feel like a lever: pull it hard enough and maybe God will move. We push back on that instinct and ask the sharper question: if God already knows what we need, and if God's will cannot be manipulated, what is prayer actually for? We talk about prayer as real relationship and real interruption, the kind that stops your day, pulls your attention off yourself, and clears your vision so you can recognize God's hand and respond with gratitude instead of anxiety. That takes us straight into the backbone of the conversation: salvation by grace alone. We address the “fairness” objection head-on, why mercy is never owed, and why Christians uniquely “celebrate” Christ's death because the cross is the only reason we have life. From there we work through Romans 8:29–30 and the meaning of foreknowledge, not as God looking through time to learn who will choose Him, but as God's prior love that grounds predestination. Along the way we contrast providence with fatalism, and we test popular claims about free will against passages like Ephesians 2 and the Lazarus picture of spiritual death and new birth. We also get practical: what this theology does to your assurance of salvation, your ability to endure suffering, and your readiness to defend the faith when challenged. Expect straight talk, Scripture-driven reasoning, and a call to deeper study and deeper dependence on God's sovereign grace. If this helped you think more clearly about prayer, providence, and predestination, subscribe, share the show with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find it.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: Foreknowledge/Impeccability of Christ, Part 3/8

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2026 34:46 Transcription Available


    Send a textIf you've ever heard predestination taught and thought, “So how is that not unfair?” you'll recognize the tension we step into right away. We work through the claim that Christ was “slain before the foundation of the world,” then ask the question nobody can dodge: if God decrees the fall, why is man still responsible? From there, the whole conversation hinges on one crucial distinction most people blur without noticing: justice is not the same thing as fairness. We stay close to Scripture and keep returning to what the Bible says about the human condition. Are people “innocent,” or are we born in sin? What does it mean to be “condemned already” (John 3:18)? And if none are righteous and none seek God, what actually enables faith? We talk regeneration before faith, the reality of spiritual death, and why the gospel is not God doing His part while we finish the job. Romans 9 comes up for a reason: it forces the issue of mercy, not human willpower, sitting at the center of salvation. Then we move to the cross and the scope of redemption. Using John 10, we dig into sheep and goats, what it means when Jesus says He lays His life down for His sheep, and why “purchased with His own blood” points to a salvation that actually accomplishes something, not a mere possibility. We also challenge popular analogies that sound persuasive but quietly import a man-centered view of conversion. If God is sovereign, why preach at all? We close by answering that directly: preaching is God's ordained means to call His people, and Paul's conversion shows how God arrests a person mid-stride and redirects their entire life. Subscribe for more Scripture-driven conversations, share this with a friend who argues about free will, and leave a review with the verse you think best settles the question.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: Foreknowledge/Impeccability of Christ, Part 2/8

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2026 34:46 Transcription Available


    Send a text“Depart from me, I never knew you” is one of the most unsettling lines Jesus ever spoke, and we take it seriously by asking a simple question: what does “knew” mean in the Bible? We argue it cannot mean Christ lacked information, because Scripture says he knows what is in every human heart. Instead, we follow the relational sense of “know” and connect it to Romans 8:29, where “for whom he did foreknow” points to persons, not predictions. From there, the conversation turns into a real-time theological clash over foreknowledge and predestination. If God chose us because he foresaw our faith, does that quietly make belief the decisive difference that earns a promise? We test that claim against the “whom not what” grammar of Romans 8, the full salvation chain (foreknown, predestined, called, justified, glorified), and John 10's insistence that Jesus lays down his life for the sheep. Along the way we tackle hard questions about atonement, election, assurance, and why we reject the caricature of double predestination. We also dig into the lived tension between God's sovereignty and human responsibility. Regeneration, repentance, and the limits of “free will” come into focus, and we use Acts 2:23 and Acts 4:27-28 to show how the crucifixion is both foreordained and morally accountable. If you care about Reformed theology, Calvinism, salvation by grace alone, and what the Bible actually means by foreknowledge, this is a demanding but clarifying listen. Subscribe, share this with someone who loves Romans 8, and leave a review with your take: is foreknowledge relationship or foresight?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: Foreknowledge/Impeccability of Christ, Part 1/8

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2026 34:46 Transcription Available


    Send a textPredestination gets treated like a theological grenade, but we treat it like Scripture treats it: a sober, steady source of assurance. We start with the uncomfortable reality that many Christians argue about predestination without ever defining the word that comes first in Romans 8: foreknowledge. If foreknowledge is just God's foresight, then salvation starts to look like God reacting to what He finds. If foreknowledge is God's prior love and purpose, then predestination becomes God's decisive plan to save, not a prediction based on human behavior.Along the way, we interact with real-time pushback and press one central question: how can God be 100% certain about what will happen? Is the future secure because God decrees and governs providence, or because God simply “knows” without controlling? That question isn't academic. It touches perseverance, confidence, prayer, and whether your salvation rests on God's promise or on the stability of your own will.We read Romans 8:29–30 closely and refuse to let the conversation get dismissed with labels. Paul's language forces clarity: foreknown, predestined, called, justified, glorified. Then we widen the lens with Amos 3:2 and Matthew 7:23 to argue that “know” often signals covenant relationship and saving love, not bare awareness. If Jesus knows every person as Creator, what does it mean when He says, “I never knew you”?If you care about biblical exegesis, God's sovereignty, free will, and assurance of salvation, this is a conversation worth hearing and thinking through. Subscribe for more, share this with a friend who avoids the topic, and leave a review with your biggest question about foreknowledge and predestination.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

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

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2026 34:46 Transcription Available


    Send a textIf you've ever looked at someone's life and thought, “They must be blessed because they're doing well,” this conversation will challenge you in the best way. We start with Job's sharp critique of his friends: they label him wicked because he's suffering, yet they can't explain why many wicked people prosper, stay powerful, and die in comfort. That tension forces a deeper question for every believer: can wealth, health, and stability really prove righteousness, or are we just reading the outside and calling it truth?From there we go straight to Scripture, spending extended time in Isaiah 53 and letting the prophecy interpret our instincts. The Suffering Servant is unimpressive to the eye, despised, rejected, and wrongly assumed to be “smitten of God” and afflicted. That is exactly the trap Job is exposing and it's a trap the modern prosperity gospel keeps rebuilding. We also connect “bruise” language to Genesis 3:15, showing why bruising implies something painful but not permanent, pointing through the cross to the resurrection of Jesus Christ.We end with practical application and comfort: warnings about envy, reminders about God's sovereignty, and Psalm 32's clear promise of forgiveness for the one who confesses. If you want Bible study that deals honestly with suffering, prosperity, and how to avoid shallow spiritual judgments, press play, then share this with someone who needs it and leave a review. What's one way you've seen success mistaken for God's approval?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    'The Wicked Say To God: "Depart From Us" (Job 21:8-16), Part 4/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2026 34:49 Transcription Available


    Send a textIsaiah says “All the seed of Israel will be justified” and we refuse to let that line stay vague. We walk it all the way through Scripture, asking the uncomfortable question it creates: if many in national Israel fell in unbelief, what does the Bible mean by Israel? From the “children of the promise” to Paul's argument in Romans 9–11, we make the case that the true seed of Abraham is defined by union with Christ, not by bloodline, heritage, or national identity. That theological foundation spills into a blunt warning about modern Christian narratives that treat a present-day nation-state and end-times speculation as the center of God's plan. We challenge dispensationalism, the fixation on a rebuilt temple, and the idea that God's future depends on geopolitical loyalty. The thread we keep pulling is simple: the Holy Spirit takes up residence in redeemed people, and the new covenant reality is bigger than borders, buildings, and slogans. Then we turn to Job 21 and the prosperity of the wicked, because real life keeps raising the same protest: why do arrogant people thrive while the faithful suffer? Job's answer is both honest and bracing. The wicked may live long and die quietly, yet their prosperity can fuel a darker creed: “Depart from us” and “what profit is prayer?” We name that mindset as practical atheism and end with Job's corrective about divine providence: their good is not in their hand, and neither is the final reckoning. If this stretched your thinking, subscribe, share it with a friend who wrestles with these questions, and leave a review so more listeners can find the conversation. What do you think “Israel” means in Isaiah 45:25?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    'The Wicked Say To God: "Depart From Us" (Job 21:8-16), Part 3/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2026 34:49 Transcription Available


    Send a textThe wicked can look untouchable: businesses succeed, families seem carefree, parties never stop, and the money keeps multiplying. We sit with Job 21 and ask the question most people are afraid to say out loud: if suffering is supposed to reveal God's displeasure, why do those who disregard Him often appear to thrive?We dig into the difference between prosperity and blessing, and why “relying on wealth” becomes a spiritual trap even for people who claim they are fine. A disruptive caller crashes the conversation with loud self-confidence and a list of possessions, and we use that uncomfortable moment as a mirror: when someone builds an identity on status, what happens to the soul, to humility, and to the fear of God? We also talk about the culture-wide pull of celebrity, politics, and wealth concentration that trains us to admire the very kind of power Job is describing.Then we take a sharp turn into theology and interpretation, wrestling with Christian assumptions about dispensationalism, modern Israel, and how to read key passages in Isaiah alongside Romans 9–11. You may not agree with every conclusion, but you will hear the core challenge repeated: stop judging truth by outcomes and start judging outcomes by Scripture.If this conversation helped you think more clearly about money, suffering, and faith, subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave a review. What part challenged you most?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    'The Wicked Say To God: "Depart From Us" (Job 21:8-16), Part 2/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2026 34:49 Transcription Available


    Send a textThe wicked look untouchable, the faithful feel squeezed, and Job refuses to accept easy answers. We sit with one of the most unsettling themes in the Book of Job: why people who rebel against God can enjoy safety, wealth, long lives, and thriving families while God's own people experience the rod of correction. If you have ever looked at corruption, abuse, or powerful people escaping consequences and thought “where is justice?”, you will recognize the tension immediately.We work through Job's language about the rod of God and connect it to Hebrews 12, where discipline is tied to love and sonship. That raises big questions about what chastening means, what it reveals about relationship with God, and why Christian suffering is not always a sign of failure but can be a tool God uses to cultivate growth. We also push into the meaning of “receiving” salvation, challenging the assumption that redemption is mainly a human decision and highlighting God's initiative in receiving sons through regeneration.The conversation gets practical and urgent as we contrast the temporary prosperity of the wicked with eternal realities. Heaven is described as an eternal rest centered on Christ's glory, while hell is treated as more than a word and more than a metaphor. We also call out prophecy sensationalism and modern claims of visions, tongues, and fresh revelation that imply the Bible is not sufficient. If you care about biblical justice, Christian perseverance, sound doctrine, and the hard honesty of Job, this will stretch you.Subscribe for more, share this with a friend who is wrestling with suffering and justice, and leave a review to help others find the show. What part of Job's argument hits closest to home for you?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    'The Wicked Say To God: "Depart From Us" (Job 21:8-16), Part 1/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2026 34:34 Transcription Available


    Send a textThe fastest way to misunderstand suffering is to treat it like a confession. We open Job 21 by watching Job do something brave and painfully relevant: he refuses to let his friends turn his losses into a courtroom where they act as judge and jury. Their theory is simple and seductive, righteous people prosper while sinners suffer, so Job must be hiding sin. Job answers with a question that still unsettles every neat spiritual formula: why do the wicked live, grow old, and become mighty in power?We read Job 21:8-16 closely and trace Job's description of the wicked's outward prosperity. Their children are established, their legacy continues, their homes look safe from fear, and the “rod of God” doesn't appear to touch them. We talk about what that does to a believer's heart, especially when envy creeps in or when grief makes you wonder if God is against you. We also explore why visible success is not the same as spiritual health, and why outward suffering is not proof of divine rejection.The panel joins in with honest reactions about Job's patience, the cruelty of spiritual overconfidence, and the importance of discernment. If you've ever heard someone explain tragedy with a smug sentence, this conversation is for you. Subscribe, share this with a friend who needs clarity, and leave a review with your answer: what's the most harmful “comfort” you've heard someone offer in suffering?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "Why Do The Wicked Live?" (Job 21:7), Part 4/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2026 37:04 Transcription Available


    Send a textThe question behind Job still lands like a punch: why do the wicked get long lives, power, and peace while the righteous suffer. We start there and refuse to offer a neat, sentimental answer. Instead, we talk about God's providence in affliction, the loneliness of being misunderstood, and the unsettling reality that God's timing can look like silence. What we see in Job is not a weak God, but a patient God who leaves room for repentance and still holds every person accountable.From that foundation, we move into salvation and assurance with zero fluff. We push on free will arguments, responsibility, and what it means to stand before God “without excuse.” Then we tackle a doctrine we believe damages people: the claim that a Christian can lose salvation. If Christ's righteousness is imputed to us, if the Holy Spirit indwells and regenerates, what sin limit makes God's work reversible? We walk through the logic, the Scriptures being appealed to, and why perseverance of the saints is not a license to sin but a refuge for weary believers.We also zoom out to the wider religious landscape and the “faith plus something” impulse that keeps showing up, whether it's rituals, rule keeping, or reshaping who Jesus is. That leads into a blunt critique of dispensationalism, modern Israel prophecy narratives, and end times panic that spikes with every war and election cycle. We argue for plain-text Bible reading over headlines and hype, and we end with prayer and a thoughtful question from someone who says they're teachable about the rapture.If you value serious Christian theology, biblical interpretation, and clear talk about salvation, Israel, and end times claims, listen through and share it with someone who's been rattled by the news. Subscribe, leave a review, and tell us what topic you want us to tackle next.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "Why Do The Wicked Live?" (Job 21:7), Part 3/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2026 37:05 Transcription Available


    Send a textComfort can lie to you. So can success. We sit with a single verse in Job and let it dismantle the reflex to judge a person's spiritual state by what their life looks like on the outside. If someone is thriving, we assume God must be pleased. If someone is crushed by loss, we assume something must be wrong. Job won't let that stand, and neither can we if we're serious about Christian faith and biblical wisdom. We talk through why spiritual maturity learns to receive every circumstance through God's hand, not through the world's label of “good” or “bad.” That takes us straight into God's sovereignty and providence: not a distant God who merely watches events unfold, but a God who orders what he allows, giving believers real confidence that suffering is not meaningless. Along the way, Ashley, Mariah, Candy, and Pat help press the point with honest questions and lived-in application. Then we tackle the “hedge around Job” and what Satan is actually after. The goal is not a cartoonish idea of stealing souls, but provoking a believer to curse God when life feels unfair. If the true hedge is God-given faith and relationship with him, then prosperity is not the protection we think it is, and loss cannot touch what matters most. We close with a practical challenge for how to care for others: when someone's world is falling apart, start with the question that targets eternity, “How is it with your soul?” If you want a Job Bible study that confronts prosperity thinking, reframes suffering, and strengthens everyday discipleship, listen now, subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "Why Do The Wicked Live?" (Job 21:7), Part 2/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2026 37:05 Transcription Available


    Send a textWhy do wicked people get long lives, full bank accounts, and public honor while faithful people suffer in silence? We sit with Job's question and refuse the easy answers. The tension is real: if God is sovereign, then nothing happens outside His decree. If God is holy, then He is not the author of sin. Holding those truths together is where the conversation gets both challenging and comforting.We walk through the difference between saying God “allows” evil and confessing that God ordains all things without being morally guilty. That shift changes how we read Job 1, where Satan cannot touch Job without permission, and it changes how we understand our own trials. We also talk about human choice, desires, and why “what we see” in someone's life can be a terrible measure of what is true about their soul.Then we land on the answer we keep circling back to: God is patient. His long-suffering toward the wicked is not weakness, it is purposeful restraint that magnifies His mercy and leaves no one without excuse. That patience is also a grace to believers who still pray for repentance and still plead the gospel with people who seem untouchable. Along the way, we confront prosperity thinking head-on, asking why we call money and comfort “blessings” but struggle to say the same about illness, loss, and hardship, even when Scripture says all things work together for our good.If this stirred questions or pushed on your assumptions, subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find these Job conversations. What do you think is the hardest part of trusting God's providence when life hurts?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "Why Do The Wicked Live?" (Job 21:7), Part 1/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2026 36:50 Transcription Available


    Send a textJob drops a question that still burns today: why do wicked people get to live, grow old, and gain real power? We camp out in Job 21:7 and trace how that one verse exposes a common mistake in Christian thinking, the assumption that suffering is always God's quick payback for secret sin. When Job's friends turn “comfort” into accusation, Job doesn't just defend himself. He challenges the whole system they're using to judge him.We talk through the logic carefully and connect it to everyday life where openly godless people can look healthy, wealthy, and untouchable. Along the way, our panel brings in key Scriptures and lived experience, including the truth that God sends rain and sunshine on both the just and the unjust, and Jesus' story of the rich man and Lazarus that reframes what “prosperity” really means. The thread running through it all is pastoral and practical: you cannot diagnose someone's relationship with God by reading their circumstances.The conversation also warns about something darker: speaking “for God” when you do not actually know what God is doing. That kind of confidence can crush a suffering person and twist theology into a weapon. We close by teeing up a hard follow-up question that touches providence, foreknowledge, predestination, and human responsibility: if God knows who will reject him, why does he let the wicked live at all?If you've ever watched injustice prosper or been judged by your pain, hit play. Subscribe, share this with a friend who needs steadier hope, and leave a review. What would you say to Job's friends?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: Is My Complaint to Man? (Job 21:1-6), Part 4/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2026 37:16 Transcription Available


    Send a textCasual faith is easy to spot. Reverence is harder, because it starts in the gut, not in the performance. We sit with a question that cuts against “cool Christianity”: what does the fear of the Lord actually look like when God is holy, all-knowing, and close enough to expose every motive we try to hide? We talk about the difference between worldly fear that makes you freeze and run, and godly reverence that makes you stand still in awe.From there, we get honest about how entertainment culture can seep into church life and slowly desensitize us. When the gospel turns into something we can trifle with, holiness starts sounding extreme, and obedience gets mislabeled as “works” instead of worship. We wrestle with the ache behind the question, “How do I pursue holiness?” and why dependence matters more than self-powered effort. We also reflect on Jesus' own posture of doing nothing from himself, and what that teaches us about sanctification, the Holy Spirit, and grace-fueled obedience.Then we zoom out to the Book of Job and the problem of suffering. People love to ask why bad things happen to good people, but Job forces another question: why do good things happen to wicked people? We connect Job's friends to the assumptions we still make today, pull in John 9, Psalm 73, and Psalm 37, and sit under the weight of God's providence without pretending we can tie it up neatly. If you're trying to hold onto faith while watching injustice thrive, this conversation is for you.If this helped you think clearly about reverence, holiness, and why the wicked prosper, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review. What's one moment in your life that reshaped how you fear the Lord?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: Is My Complaint to Man? (Job 21:1-6), Part 3/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2026 37:20 Transcription Available


    Send a textThe wicked “win,” the righteous break, and the neat formulas we love fall apart. That is the tension sitting under Job 21, and we lean into it without trying to tidy it up too fast.We talk through Job's agitation with God's providence and why the hardest part of suffering is often the mystery, not the pain. When we do not know what God is doing, speculation rushes in and it can turn toxic fast, especially when friends mistake confidence for wisdom. From there we explore affliction, trials, and persecution as God's trainers, meant to produce holiness, reverence, and a deeper hatred of sin rather than bitterness or self-pity.Then Job turns the tables: if suffering proves you are wicked, how do you explain the prosperity of the wicked? We connect that question to Psalm 73 and to our modern temptation to treat wealth, health, and influence as a spiritual scoreboard. We also bring Jesus into the center of the conversation, because He had nowhere to lay His head and yet He is the beloved Son, exposing how shallow it is to measure God's favor by comfort.We close with Job's plea for silence and seriousness, and with the theme of trembling before God as a missing mark of true Christian holiness. If this helped you think more clearly about Job, Christian suffering, and the prosperity gospel mindset, subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find the show.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: Is My Complaint to Man? (Job 21:1-6), Part 2/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2026 37:20 Transcription Available


    Send a text“Christ died for everyone” sounds simple until you camp out in John 6 and actually follow Jesus' words about who the Father gives Him, who hears His voice, and who He promises to raise on the last day. We walk through why the language of election, predestination, and limited atonement is not a niche debate but a question about what the cross accomplishes and how salvation is applied. We also push back on popular end-times claims that get repeated with confidence but lack clear biblical grounding, and we talk frankly about why the “plain truth of Scripture” can still get rejected in modern Christianity.Then we get practical. If you speak with clarity about hard doctrines, you may get mocked, dismissed, or labeled unloving even when you are trying to be gentle. We wrestle with what it means to value truth more than reputation, how to be slow to speak, and how to avoid the Job's-friends mistake of using Bible verses like a club. The panel also brings up the online world: TikTok lives, moderation, “edifying” conversations, and how easy it is to forget there's a real person behind the profile picture who might be honestly searching for God.We close with Job 21:4 and the heavy comfort of divine providence. Job's complaint is not ultimately with man but with God, and that raises the question every suffering believer eventually faces: if God is sovereign, what do I do with my confusion while I wait for Him to answer? If this helped you think more clearly about the gospel, share it with a friend, subscribe, and leave a review with the biggest question you're still wrestling with.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: Is My Complaint to Man? (Job 21:1-6), Part 1/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2026 37:03 Transcription Available


    Send a textIf you've ever been handed a neat spiritual explanation for your pain, Job 21 is going to feel uncomfortably familiar. We pick up right after Zophar insists that Job's suffering “proves” hidden wickedness, and we slow down to hear Job's first move: not a counterpunch, but a plea. “Hear diligently my speech… let this be your consolations.” It's a devastating line because it exposes how often Christian comfort turns into confident обвинations instead of compassionate presence.From there we dig into what real consolation looks like when someone is under the weight of grief, loss, and God's confusing providence. We talk about patient listening as a spiritual discipline, why silence can be wiser than endless words, and how Job models restraint even while being mocked. If you care about pastoral care, biblical counseling, or simply being a better friend, this passage gives a clear test: do we open our ears first, or do we rush to diagnose?We also tackle a bigger issue Job's friends embody: building an argument without a charge, then calling it truth. That leads into a straight conversation about “arguments from silence” in Bible interpretation, plus a candid dive into doctrines of grace, total depravity, regeneration, and what people mean when they say “free will.” Whether you're sorting through theology or sorting through suffering, the thread stays the same: Scripture should shape our conclusions, and love should shape our delivery.If this helped you think clearly or listen better, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review. What's one sentence you wish someone would have said to you during your hardest season?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "The Wicked Man's Portion" (Job 20:26-29), Part 4/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 10, 2026 33:28 Transcription Available


    Send a textWhat if your suffering isn't proof of guilt but evidence of God's careful love? We step into Job's story and surface a liberating truth that cuts against easy answers: not every blow is payback. Using the friends' accusations as a foil, we show how a partially right theology can become crushing when it's misapplied, and why the gospel refuses to let condemnation define a believer's pain.Together we trace a clear line from Job to Romans 8. If God justifies, who can bring a charge? We unpack chastisement versus wrath, clarifying how the cross forever separates God's people from judicial condemnation. This isn't spiritual spin—it's the logic of imputed righteousness. Christ doesn't return us to neutrality; he clothes us in his own obedience, which means no accusation—human or hellish—carries authority over those in Christ. That assurance doesn't excuse sin; it fuels repentance, resilience, and gratitude in the middle of real loss.Along the way, you'll hear voices from the community, including a brother living through war, reminding us that these truths matter most where life hurts. We talk about trust under pressure, prayer that holds when answers don't come quickly, and how to stand when friends misread your trial. If you've wondered whether God is against you, or felt crushed by spiritual suspicion, this conversation offers solid ground: suffering can correct and mature you, but it cannot condemn you. Your Redeemer lives, and his verdict stands.If this helped anchor your hope, share it with someone who needs courage today. Subscribe for more gospel-centered conversations, leave a review to help others find the show, and tell us: what promise steadies you when life breaks hard?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "The Wicked Man's Portion" (Job 20:26-29), Part 3/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 10, 2026 33:30 Transcription Available


    Send a textStart with a hard question: if sin tastes sweet, why does justice feel so bitter? We walk straight into that tension, tracing a line from the fall to a fixed day of judgment and the scriptural claim that calamity can be an appointed heritage. The language of portion and inheritance reframes suffering and accountability—not as cosmic roulette, but as measured justice under a sovereign God who gives precisely what is due.From there we take on a claim many avoid: Jesus is king right now. Not a future monarch waiting in the wings, but a present ruler who conquered at Calvary and sits at the right hand of God. We look at the worship of the magi, the placard on the cross, and the testimony of Hebrews to argue that denying His current reign repeats yesterday's unbelief. If He reigns, then we are not spectators of an unfinished story—we are citizens of His kingdom today, summoned to live under His authority with clear eyes and steady hearts.We also address the millennium and the meaning of a thousand years in Revelation, urging a symbolic, apocalyptic reading that resists the churn of headline-driven prophecy. The kingdom is within and among us; the King rules now, and He alone will end the age in a way no newspaper can predict. That steadies our imagination in a world eager to baptize every conflict as a final sign. Instead of fear, we offer vigilance. Instead of hype, hope. And at the center of it all, a call to trade the delicacy of sin for the better heritage of grace—life, glory, and a home in the household of God.If this conversation sharpened your perspective, share it with a friend, subscribe for more, and leave a review telling us where you land on Christ's present kingship. Your voice helps others find the truth.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "The Wicked Man's Portion" (Job 20:26-29), Part 2/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 10, 2026 33:30 Transcription Available


    Send a textWhat if the loudest pain in someone's life isn't a verdict but a test of faith—and a test of our wisdom too? We examine Zophar's polished theology in Job 20 and ask whether his case against Job reveals insight or a dangerous leap from general truth to personal accusation. When Scripture says the wicked person's wealth “shall flow away” in the day of wrath, does that mean every sudden loss signals hidden sin, or are we confusing God's appointed judgment with our snap judgments?We follow the thread from Job to Genesis, unpacking the phrase “in the day” as more than a timestamp. It signals a certainty in God's timing, an appointment only God sets. That insight reshapes how we read suffering, prosperity, and providence. It also confronts our habit of using outcomes as proof: successful equals blessed, ruined equals wicked. By walking through the logic of Zophar, we reveal how true statements turn harmful when applied without context, compassion, or evidence. We contrast this with the furnace story in Daniel, where the faithful endure while their oppressors fall, showing that pain can refine rather than condemn.Along the way, we spotlight Job's posture under pressure—his endurance, his questions, and his refusal to curse God even when friends push for a confession that fits their narrative. We talk honestly about Satan's strategy to weaponize partial truths through well-meaning voices, and how wisdom without love can still wound. The conversation points us back to Christ as the only lasting security, since prosperity alone cannot shield anyone from judgment or guarantee peace.If you've ever been misread in your worst season—or been tempted to “explain” someone else's suffering—this is a timely listen. Join us as we trade quick verdicts for discernment, pair theology with mercy, and let God own the calendar of justice. If the episode resonates, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review to help others find the show.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "The Wicked Man's Portion" (Job 20:26-29), Part 1/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 10, 2026 33:09 Transcription Available


    Send a textWhat if the words are true but the target is wrong? We walk through Job 20:26–29 and sit with Zophar's fierce claims about the fate of the wicked—stored darkness, a fire not blown, heaven revealing hidden iniquity, and earth itself rising up in opposition—then we ask the hard pastoral question: what happens when accurate doctrine is applied to the wrong person. Using vivid language from the text, we explore how Scripture portrays judgment as deliberate rather than accidental, personal rather than mechanical. “A fire not blown” becomes a window into divine justice that doesn't rely on human bellows, and “all darkness… hid in his secret places” challenges the idea that delay equals escape. Along the way, we wrestle with the communal fallout of sin—how consequences reach a household—and why private spaces are not safe havens for public harm.We also tackle the unsettling claim that creation itself testifies against unrepentant evil. When heaven exposes and earth opposes, “random” setbacks suddenly look like wake-up calls, not coincidences. That changes how we read our frustrations and how we speak to others in pain. The crucial correction surfaces: these verses rightly describe the lot of the wicked, but Zophar is wrong to hang them on Job. That misfire becomes a modern warning for counselors, friends, and leaders—handle sharp truths with discernment, humility, and love.If you've ever wondered how to tell the difference between firm conviction and harmful certainty, this conversation offers categories, Scripture, and examples that keep justice and mercy in tension. Join us as we think aloud about sin, exposure, providence, and the hope that grace is a miracle given, not a wage earned. If this helped you see the text more clearly, subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave a review to tell us what stood out.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: God Casting the Fury of His Wrath (Job 20:20-25), Part 5/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2026 33:16 Transcription Available


    Send a textWhat if your first thought in a friend's crisis is the wrong one? We dig into Job's relentless cycles and discover why repetition is a mercy, not a mistake: it trains our instincts to slow down, listen well, and speak with care. The friends sound biblical, yet they miss Job by a mile—because truth without context becomes a weapon. We trace how assumptions grow when evidence is thin, why tidy formulas like “suffering equals guilt” fail the righteous, and how to ask better questions before we offer answers.Walking verse by verse through Job 20–21, we explore a bracing theme: the wicked feast until the bill arrives. Appetite swells, satisfaction vanishes, and judgment interrupts the party. That warning doesn't invite smugness; it invites sobriety and hope. We talk about readiness not as spotless performance, but as a life bent toward holiness—hating sin, loving Jesus, and adjusting our speech to heal, not harm. Trials, we argue, are the furnace of sanctification, not the proof of scandal, and the way we stand with the suffering reveals what we truly believe about God.Along the way, the group shares last-word takeaways, celebrates answered prayer, and renews a commitment to biblical precision. We discuss why context beats proof-texts, how stewardship of words matters when conversations travel far beyond the room, and we close by praying for a divided nation to be made steady, humble, and united under truth. If you've ever wondered how to be a better friend in the fog of pain—or how to let scripture correct your instincts before your instincts correct someone else—this conversation will sharpen your heart and your tongue.Enjoy the study, share it with your group, and if it helps you think and love more clearly, subscribe, leave a review, and tell us the one insight you're taking into your next hard conversation.RISE RADIOEach week we discuss some of the most important issues we face in our society today.Listen on: Apple Podcasts SpotifySupport the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: God Casting the Fury of His Wrath (Job 20:20-25), Part 4/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2026 34:05 Transcription Available


    Send a textGrace that holds. Judgment that's real. Hope that doesn't blink. We walk straight into the tension many avoid: if God calls, does He fail? If salvation is a gift, why do some harden their hearts? We explore effectual calling with clear-eyed honesty, showing why the assurance of Christ finishing the work fuels humility, not pride, and urgency, not apathy. The gospel is not a soft option; it's the only lifeline that makes sense of a holy God, a broken world, and a Savior who actually saves.From there we tackle a topic culture loves to mock: hell. Not sensationalism, not scare tactics—clarity. We talk about separation from God's common grace, why eternal judgment has no early release, and how the law exposes our need down to the level of thought. You either stand clothed in Christ's righteousness or stand alone. That distinction is not abstract theology; it's the difference between peace and terror when life ends. Along the way we address modern claims that “hell is conquered” in a way that empties judgment. Scripture speaks otherwise, and we show why truth and love are never rivals when souls are at stake.Anchored by vivid passages in Job 20, we trace the imagery of inevitable justice: evade one weapon and another finds its mark; wounds go deep; terror closes in. We're candid about the pull of feelings over texts, then bring the conversation back to a simple, urgent call: seek Christ now. Not tomorrow. Not when it's convenient. The Mediator stands ready, the cross is enough, and mercy is offered to the contrite.If you value thoughtful, Scripture-shaped conversations about salvation, wrath, grace, and real hope, this one's for you. Listen, share with a friend who needs clarity, and leave a review to help others find the show. Then tell us: what truth challenged you most today?RISE RADIOEach week we discuss some of the most important issues we face in our society today.Listen on: Apple Podcasts SpotifySupport the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: God Casting the Fury of His Wrath (Job 20:20-25), Part 3/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2026 34:05 Transcription Available


    Send a textJudgment rarely sends a save-the-date. We open with God's faithfulness and move straight into the hard edge of Job 20, where the wicked settle in to savor their winnings and find the sky breaking over their heads. That picture isn't theater; it's a mercy. It shakes us out of spiritual entertainment—prophecy charts, calendar raptures, and vibes that pass for theology—and brings us back to a steady gospel that can bear real life.We draw a firm line: salvation has always come by grace through faith, from the first pages of Scripture to the last. Baptism and communion aren't entry fees; they are gifts to the rescued—public joy in the water and regular grace at the table. At the same time, we warn against shrinking these gifts into options that never land in practice. Real faith loves the ordinances because real faith loves the Lord who gave them. Along the way, we talk about how God shows no partiality—souls are weighed by the same standard, and identity labels won't excuse unbelief when we stand before Christ.The conversation turns personal and urgent. One of us grieves for friends and strangers headed toward ruin, and that sorrow becomes a charge: be a loving nuisance. Ask again, invite again, warn again. Today is the word God uses for repentance, which means grace is near today. We also push for deeper study—context over soundbites, whole-Bible sense over cherry-picked definitions. Words like world carry layers; meaning comes from the passage, not our preferences. If you've worn a thin, playful version of Christianity, it's time to shed it and step into something weighty, glad, and true.Listen for a bracing tour through Job 20, a clear case against sensational doctrines that distract from discipleship, and a hopeful call to practice a serious, joyful faith. If this sparks you to pray, to study, to reach out to someone by name, tell us. Subscribe, share this with a friend who needs courage, and leave a review with one step you'll take today.RISE RADIOEach week we discuss some of the most important issues we face in our society today.Listen on: Apple Podcasts SpotifySupport the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: God Casting the Fury of His Wrath (Job 20:20-25), Part 2/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2026 34:05 Transcription Available


    Send a textCalamity loves the summit. We open the text to a hard truth: when life feels most secure, the fall often begins—not because money or achievement are evil, but because sufficiency tempts the heart to drift. That image of a straitjacket at the peak becomes our guide as we examine how comfort breeds complacency, how trust in wealth grows fragile wings, and why collapse can arrive precisely when applause is loudest.Together we probe a deeper question: what story does our success tell about our souls? We visit Joseph of Arimathea as a rare portrait of faithful stewardship—quiet, costly, Christ-centered—and contrast it with modern scandals where pride, pressure, and power devour the people they promise to protect. The aim isn't outrage for its own sake; it's clarity. If you build on idols, idols collect their due. If you build on mercy, mercy multiplies.Our conversation widens to identity and hope. The people of God are not defined by passports or parties but by grace. The holy nation Peter describes gathers every tribe that trusts Jesus, and no empire can claim or cancel it. From there we set expectations straight: political figures and cultural titans are not saviors. The gates of hell do not prevail against the church, and worldly alliances will eventually betray those who lean on them. So we test our loyalties, trade panic for prayer, and ask better questions about what we finance, who we serve, and how our daily choices preach the gospel.We end where real change begins: repentance and fruit. Love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control are not sentimental extras; they are the public proof that our treasure is in heaven. Want to rethink what you trust, how you steward what you have, and where your true citizenship lies? Press play, share with a friend who needs courage, and leave a review with the one insight you're taking into the week.RISE RADIOEach week we discuss some of the most important issues we face in our society today.Listen on: Apple Podcasts SpotifySupport the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: God Casting the Fury of His Wrath (Job 20:20-25), Part 1/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2026 32:56 Transcription Available


    Send a textThe room goes quiet when Zophar's words land: no quietness in the belly, no lasting gain, calamity right when barns are full. We walk through Job 20 with clear eyes and open Bibles, tracing how a true doctrine about the wicked became a misfire against a righteous man. That tension—truth without wisdom—pushes us to ask harder questions about suffering, ambition, and what actually brings rest to a hungry heart.We unpack the anatomy of appetite: why the belly, as Scripture pictures it, never stops wanting; why more money, more security, and more applause rarely translate into peace; and how “arrival” is a mirage that drains delight even as it grows our to-do lists. The line “he shall not feel quietness in his belly” becomes a mirror for modern life, revealing why our calendars swell while our souls shrink. From there, we tackle the deeper spiritual law embedded in these verses: sin carries its own undoing. Greed consumes its gains. Pride isolates the victor. Exploitation hollows out legacies until “none of his meat be left.”We also refuse the lazy math that equates prosperity with God's favor and pain with hidden guilt. Job's integrity matters here—“The Lord gives and the Lord takes away”—because it reminds us that faith can bless God without gifts. We contrast the rich fool's bigger barns with being rich toward God, showing how abundance becomes a trap when eternity is ignored. And then comes the line that still stings: “In the fullness of his sufficiency, he shall be in straits.” Distress always finds a door into stockpiled life. The answer is not more locks but a new love: Christ reorders desire, anchors joy beyond loss, and grants the quietness no fortune can buy.If this conversation challenged your view of success, share it with a friend, subscribe for more thoughtful, Scripture-centered episodes, and leave a review telling us where you've seen “more” fail to satisfy. Your story might be the bridge someone else needs today.RISE RADIOEach week we discuss some of the most important issues we face in our society today.Listen on: Apple Podcasts SpotifySupport the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "God Shall Cast Them Out of His Belly" (Job 20:12-19), Part 5/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2026 32:48 Transcription Available


    Send a textEver been told there are two separate judgment seats—one for the wicked and a safer one for the righteous? We challenge that comfortable split and unpack Paul's insistence that we must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ. From there, we map a clearer path through a topic that often breeds fear: believers are not re-tried for salvation, but our works are weighed for reward. That means no condemnation, yet real accountability, and a richer vision of grace where crowns reflect Christ's life in us and become gifts we gladly lay down.We also slow down to ask what “the day” actually means. Not a rolling verdict on your week, but the Day of the Lord when Jesus returns and reveals what was built on gold and what was built on stubble. Along the way, we confront the idea of “degrees”—of reward and of torment—without turning eternity into a scoreboard. Think of the thief on the cross: almost no time to produce fruit, yet welcomed into paradise. If that is the mercy at the edge, imagine the generosity of God toward a lifetime of imperfect but faithful obedience, where perfect joy is full for everyone and still honors real faithfulness.Midway, we caution against a study habit that derails many good intentions: cross-referencing so fast that context can't breathe. We share a practical method—understand the passage on its own terms, then connect the dots—and explain why Revelation so often becomes a maze. Finally, we return to Job 20 to expose the thin logic of Zophar's charge that suffering proves guilt. Prosperity is not proof of righteousness, and history's empires—including our own—have often swollen by exploiting the poor. Scripture answers with a sobering image: the wicked swallow riches, and God makes them give them back. Divine justice is not arbitrary; it is exact.If this conversation clarified your view of judgment, reward, and hope, follow the show, share it with a friend who loves tough texts, and leave a review telling us what “the Day” calls you to build.RISE RADIOEach week we discuss some of the most important issues we face in our society today.Listen on: Apple Podcasts SpotifySupport the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "God Shall Cast Them Out of His Belly" (Job 20:12-19), Part 4/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2026 32:51 Transcription Available


    Send a textWhat happens when you reread your past after grace breaks in? We start with a jarring moment: a former rock frontman, once convinced his songs gave voice to pain, discovers he'd been preaching despair, drugs, and self-harm. That confession opens a candid exploration of sin's strategy—how it starts small, earns our loyalty, and ends as a master—alongside the surprising hope the gospel offers when identity shifts from sin to Christ.We move through raw stories of addiction's tunnel vision and the way “private” choices ripple through families and friends. Then we press into Scripture with care: the difference between breaking man's law and offending God, why spiritual words require the Spirit, and how Moses choosing reproach over Egypt still reads like freedom. The heart of the conversation centers on identity and assurance. If believers are said to “not sin,” what does that mean when we still fail? We unpack union with Christ, imputed righteousness, and why there's no condemnation for those who belong to him—without letting holiness fall off the map.The group tackles the Judgment Seat and the often-misread passage on wood, hay, and stubble. We clarify what it means to build on the foundation of Jesus with work that lasts, how motives are tested, and why rewards don't undermine grace. Along the way, we challenge both cheap assurance and anxious striving: salvation is secure, and stewardship still matters. By the end, you'll have a clearer grasp of how sin's lie of hopelessness is broken, why identity in Christ changes how we act and speak, and how to pursue a life that endures the fire with joy.If this conversation gave you language for your own story, share it with a friend, subscribe for new episodes, and leave a review to help others find the show.RISE RADIOEach week we discuss some of the most important issues we face in our society today.Listen on: Apple Podcasts SpotifySupport the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "God Shall Cast Them Out of His Belly" (Job 20:12-19), Part 3/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2026 32:51 Transcription Available


    Send a textWhat if the sweet taste you chase is the very thing turning to poison inside you? We pull on a hard thread through Job's fierce metaphors and today's habits—alcohol, gluttony, vaping, and the quiet pride that renames greed as ambition—and reveal how pleasure becomes master, then jailer. Lisa's story cuts through theory: the nights that felt like a blast until they didn't, the moment excess stood over a breaking marriage, and the sober truth that “it gets you” long before you admit it's there.We go deeper than warnings. Confession becomes the hinge of hope—quick, full, open. Not performance, not penance, but the courage to name the deed, mark the dates, and invite scrutiny that loves you enough to say no before the relapse. We talk about why secrecy festers, why people defend their chains as virtues, and how the language of grace grows faint when isolation takes hold. Then we tackle wealth with Job's unsparing image: swallowing riches only to vomit them back out. Prosperity without righteousness cannot hold; sooner or later God casts out what was taken or treasured without truth.Through questions about whether the wicked “know their end,” we map will and nature with Romans 1 in view: apart from new birth, people answer to what they are. That's why we keep telling the truth with urgency and tenderness. Christian liberty is not a license; it's power to recognize sin, resist it with the Word, and rest in Christ who breaks the clasp of bondage. If you're tired of calling poison sweet, this conversation offers clarity, courage, and a path back to life.If this spoke to you, follow the show, share it with someone who needs hope today, and leave a review to help others find it.RISE RADIOEach week we discuss some of the most important issues we face in our society today.Listen on: Apple Podcasts SpotifySupport the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "God Shall Cast Them Out of His Belly" (Job 20:12-19), Part 2/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2026 32:51 Transcription Available


    Send a textWhat if the thing weighing you down is the “spare” sin you keep just in case? We open the door on confession, reconciliation, and the quiet relief that follows honest repentance. Starting with hard, hopeful stories, we talk about making the first move to seek forgiveness—even after months or years—and how that simple act becomes a living witness to what Christ actually changes in us.We walk through Job 20's bracing image of sin “kept under the tongue,” like a tire stored for later. This isn't stumbling; it's strategy. We show how deliberate indulgence forms routines, how even one cherished lust can hollow a soul, and why trying to make a pet sin a mediator with God always fails. From there, we draw a clear line between the righteous and the wicked: Christians still sin, but conviction hurts, humbles, and redirects. That ache is a gift. It trains our reflexes to seek God at the crest of temptation, not merely after the crash. We get practical about cutting triggers, guarding the tongue, and treating neglect—especially neglected reconciliation—as real sin.Psalm 51 becomes our map for a contrite heart: clean me, renew me, restore joy. We push back on spiritual theatrics and keep the gospel simple, because people are starving for mercy, not novelty. The conversation closes with a sobering truth: cherished sin breeds bondage, and bondage declares allegiance. Yet grace meets us here—not to excuse us, but to free us. By exposing our need, conviction magnifies Christ's sufficiency and grows us in holiness with steady, daily steps.If this speaks to you, share it with a friend, subscribe for more honest conversations about sin, grace, and growth, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway so we can keep the dialogue going.RISE RADIOEach week we discuss some of the most important issues we face in our society today.Listen on: Apple Podcasts SpotifySupport the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "God Shall Cast Them Out of His Belly" (Job 20:12-19), Part 1/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2026 32:24 Transcription Available


    Send a textWhat if the sweetest thing in your life is quietly making you sick? We open Job 20:12–19 and follow Zophar's searing imagery of sin as candy on the tongue that turns to venom in the belly. The twist: his theology about secret sin is sharp, but his aim is wrong—Job isn't the villain here. Still, the passage gives us an unflinching map of how temptation works: first imagined, then savored, then swallowed, and finally paid for.I walk through the psychology of hiding sin—how we rationalize, rehearse, and protect what we think comforts us—until peace thins out and conscience grows sore. We talk about the cost that spills beyond the self: when deception and exploitation harm others, restitution belongs in repentance. You'll hear why confession beats concealment, not because exposure is easy, but because truth is the only place healing can breathe. One listener shares a raw testimony of quitting vaping in a single step; others reflect on forgiving old wounds and making amends with people they once wronged.Along the way we ground everything in plain, practical steps: naming patterns without euphemism, inviting real accountability, replacing old loops with life-giving habits, and planning tangible repairs where we've caused damage. We frame obedience not as a checkbox, but as love in motion—the natural expression of a heart reshaped by grace. If you've been rolling something under your tongue, hoping the sweetness lasts, this conversation offers a different feast: courage, clarity, and the kind of freedom that doesn't vanish when the thrill fades.If this spoke to you, subscribe, share it with a friend who needs courage to confess, and leave a review telling us one step you're taking this week.RISE RADIOEach week we discuss some of the most important issues we face in our society today.Listen on: Apple Podcasts SpotifySupport the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: "The Joy of the Hypocrite" (Job 20:4-11), Part 4/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2026 36:55 Transcription Available


    Send a textPain has a way of exposing what we really believe about God and each other. Walking through the tension between truth and mercy in the book of Job, we face a hard question: what happens when you're doctrinally accurate but relationally unkind? We trace how Job's friends—certain of their theology—slip into jealousy, self‑righteousness, and condemnation, turning biblical ideas into blunt instruments. Along the way, we unpack Job 20:11 across translations and show how “sin of youth” versus “youthful vigor” becomes a case study in misreading people through a rigid lens.We share a better path. Instead of diagnosing “hidden sin,” we talk about believing the best, building unity before debate, and taking a friend's pain to God in prayer. Compassion looks like staying quiet longer, admitting “I don't understand either,” and letting the fruit of the Spirit guide our tone. We explore why trying to sit in God's seat—judge, king, priest—always breaks people, and how keeping God on the throne frees us to serve rather than control. This is practical, shoes‑on‑the‑ground discipleship for conversations that actually heal.You'll hear real stories of restraint over retaliation, scripture applied with gentleness, and community showing up with presence, not platitudes. If you've ever been hurt by “help” or struggled to comfort someone in deep loss, you'll find language, perspective, and steps you can use today. Listen, reflect, and share with a friend who needs hope. If this resonated, subscribe, leave a review, and tell us: where have you seen truth used without love—and what restored it?RISE RADIOEach week we discuss some of the most important issues we face in our society today.Listen on: Apple Podcasts SpotifySupport the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: "The Joy of the Hypocrite" (Job 20:4-11), Part 3/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2026 36:56 Transcription Available


    Send a textEver been shut down by “you don't understand the context”? We open with that cultural reflex and pull it apart, showing how appeals to context can clarify truth—or quietly silence it. From there we step into the furnace of Job, where Zophar's confident theology turns into a blade. He calls Job's life a dream that vanishes at waking, flips “joy comes in the morning” into a sentence of judgment, and even drags Job's children into the indictment. The result is a masterclass in how correct ideas can be misused when aimed at the wrong heart.We also wrestle with Jesus' words in John 8:44—Satan as a liar and murderer “from the beginning”—and what that reveals about the origin of evil and the moral landscape of Genesis. Along the way we challenge inherited systems and easy answers, sharing how real growth often means unlearning what we assumed was settled. Several of us admit the hard truth: sometimes we have kicked people when they were down, taking a secret pleasure in being right instead of being loving. That confession reframes the entire debate. Why do we prefer to explain another person's suffering rather than sit with them in it?Through Job's resilience we see what endures when accusations fly: a longing to see the Redeemer and a faith that won't break under scorn. We talk practical comfort—listening before lecturing, praying before pronouncing—and warn how certainty can become cruelty when humility is missing. If you've ever been on either side of that moment, this conversation will challenge your instincts and steady your soul.If this resonated, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs real comfort, and leave a review with one takeaway you'll practice this week.RISE RADIOEach week we discuss some of the most important issues we face in our society today.Listen on: Apple Podcasts SpotifySupport the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

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