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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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    • Jan 30, 2026 LATEST EPISODE
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    • 1,626 EPISODES


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    Latest episodes from The Bible Provocateur

    LIVE DISCUSSION: "Man Drinks Iniquity Like Water" (Job 15:14-16), Part 4/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 30, 2026 34:58 Transcription Available


    Send us a textWhat if your best qualities are more like moonlight than sunlight—real, beautiful, yet entirely borrowed? We lean into that humbling image to explore why God doesn't place His trust in creatures, even righteous ones, and how that clarifies the difference between holiness that shines and holiness that originates. The conversation threads through Job's story, Eliphaz's hard words, and the subtle ways sincere doctrine can be twisted into a weapon when a friend is in pain.Together we unpack strong biblical language about human depravity—unclean, abominable, filthy—and show how a truthful diagnosis amplifies, not diminishes, the glory of grace. The more clearly we see sin's depth, the more clearly we see Christ's sufficiency. That realism reshapes discipleship: resident sin remains, so we practice daily vigilance, keep our minds renewed, and resist the myth of spiritual autopilot. A listener question opens a careful distinction about heaven being “not pure” in God's sight: it's a contrast of dependence, not a flaw in glory. Even angels stand by grace, not independent moral credit.We also address the pastoral heart of the matter: what it means to bring Scripture as a balm rather than a bludgeon. Eliphaz states true things but misapplies them to accuse Job of “drinking iniquity like water.” We talk about how sin can feel like false refreshment, why living water in Christ displaces those cravings, and how real comfort looks like presence, patience, and prayer—not drive-by proof texts. The episode closes with reflections, gratitude, and a call to keep drawing from the Word and the Spirit as our sustaining stream.If this conversation stirred something in you—about humility, compassion, or a fresh thirst for living water—follow the show, share it with a friend who needs hope, and leave a review so others can find it. Your reflections help us keep these deep, honest dialogues going.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: "Man Drinks Iniquity Like Water" (Job 15:14-16), Part 3/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 30, 2026 35:02 Transcription Available


    Send us a textIf even heaven isn't clean enough for God, where does that leave the rest of us—and what does that mean for raising our kids? We open with the ordinary moments that expose the human heart: a toddler's swat, a child's stubborn no, the instinct to get our way. Then we hold those moments up to the blazing light of Job's questions and the doctrine of total depravity. Not to shame parents or scare kids, but to see clearly why early formation matters and why the antidote can't be found in willpower or better techniques.Together we trace a thread from the nursery to the throne room. Scripture says God puts no trust in saints and that even the heavens are not clean in his sight. That doesn't indict holy angels as sinners; it tells us all creaturely purity is derivative. If God won't stake salvation on the best of his creatures, he certainly won't rest it on our fragile choices. We weigh the competing claims of Calvinism and Arminianism in plain language, asking whether the decisive cause of salvation rests in God's grace or in human decision. The logic of Job pushes us toward a humbling and hopeful conclusion: God acts because we cannot.From there, we bring the theology home. What does “you will be saved, you and your household” mean for parents trying to set the tone of their homes? We talk headship without harshness, boundaries without legalism, and practices that give kids covenantal access to the gospel—daily Scripture, honest repentance, patient correction, and a house shaped by prayer. Parents are stewards, not saviors. The good news is that the God who doesn't trust angels to keep themselves will not trust salvation to us either; he keeps those he saves. That reality quiets panic, fuels courage, and turns everyday moments into training in grace.If this conversation sharpened your vision or encouraged your resolve, share it with a friend, hit follow, and leave a quick review. What's one truth you want to plant in your home this week?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: "Man Drinks Iniquity Like Water" (Job 15:14-16), Part 2/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 30, 2026 35:01 Transcription Available


    Send us a textWhat if the core problem isn't bad choices but a broken nature—and what if the cure is not a cleaner slate but a new heart? We take you from Ezekiel's promise of renewal to Jude's assurance that Christ himself keeps us from falling, weaving Scripture with real stories of family, strongholds, and the quiet battles that shape daily life. The point isn't to minimize sin; it's to recognize why grading it on a curve leaves everyone short of the canyon's edge.We push past the myth of “try harder” religion and show why imputed righteousness is not theological jargon but oxygen for a tired soul. If Christ's perfect life counts as ours, then assurance stops riding the rollercoaster of our habits and starts resting on his finished work. That changes how we parent, how we pray for loved ones, and how we face the moments when we fail and want to hide. You'll hear why Job's sacrifices hint at a deeper truth: Jesus accounted for sin in full—past, present, and future—so repentance becomes a return to love, not a plea for entry.Along the way, we ask hard questions with gentle honesty: Are children born innocent or merely untested? Can anyone bridge the gap to divine holiness by effort? What does it mean to be a new creation rather than an improved version of the old self? If you're wrestling with assurance, striving under spiritual exhaustion, or longing to see renewal in your home, this conversation offers clarity, conviction, and comfort anchored in the Word.If this resonates, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs assurance, and leave a review to help others find these conversations. Your voice helps this community grow.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: "Man Drinks Iniquity Like Water" (Job 15:14-16), Part 1/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 30, 2026 35:01 Transcription Available


    Send us a textWhat happens when a true doctrine is used the wrong way? We dive into Job 15:14–16 and wrestle with Eliphaz's stark claims about human sinfulness, the purity of God, and why no one “born of a woman” can declare themselves righteous. The passage is theologically rich—touching on total depravity, moral inability, and the inevitability of sin—yet the conversation shows how truth can wound when it's misapplied to a suffering friend.Together we unpack the universal scope of “What is man” and the piercing image of “drinking iniquity like water.” If even the heavens are not clean in God's sight, human self-approval crumbles. We trace how this standard exposes a deeper problem than bad behavior: a fallen nature that cannot produce righteousness. That's where grace becomes more than comfort language; it's the only way anyone can stand. We talk candidly about why salvation requires an external initiative from God, how faith is awakened rather than engineered, and why Christ deals not only with our actions but with our nature at the cross.Along the way, we also challenge the subtle errors of Job's friends—equating consensus and age with truth, calling accusation “consolation,” and reading suffering as proof of secret sin. Our goal isn't to soften Scripture but to apply it wisely: to hold firm to God's holiness while extending patience to the afflicted. If you've ever wondered whether doctrine can be both sharp and healing, this conversation offers a map for conviction and compassion to coexist.If this resonates, follow the show, share it with a friend who loves the book of Job, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway so we can keep these deep dives coming.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    (Job 15:7-13) "Were You The First Man Born" Part 4/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2026 37:44 Transcription Available


    Send us a textWhat if the way you read Daniel 9 changes how you see the cross, the church, and your hope? We dive straight into the claim that Daniel's prophecy uniquely vindicates Jesus as the Messiah and explore why detaching the 70th week and pushing it into the future can quietly shift the center of faith from Christ's finished work to an Antichrist-centered storyline. We trace the rise of dispensationalism, test its assumptions against Scripture, and ask the hard pastoral questions: if redemption's key promises are delayed, what did “It is finished” finish? If the church and the Spirit are removed before tribulation, how is anyone saved?From there we turn to the unity of salvation across Scripture. Abraham believed, David walked by the Spirit, and the rock in the wilderness was Christ. One gospel, one Mediator, one people of God. This continuity brings clarity to eschatology and guards us from novelty masquerading as insight. But we also slow down to talk about character and community. Romans 14 calls us to stop condemning each other and to build each other up. Charity is not softness; it is strength under truth. We share practical ways to hear people fully, correct with patience, and become students of the Word who can spot teaching that fractures the story of redemption.We also sit with the ache of divine silence. Using Job's journey and the “teacher is quiet during the test” picture, we talk about how God's silence often signals His nearness and purpose. Even opposition serves a role in God's sovereign plan, as He proves His word in real time and forms a mature, steady people. The conversation closes with prayer, gratitude, and a vision for a church that worships together across generations—children included—holding one another up through trials and controversy alike.If this challenged or encouraged you, share it with a friend, subscribe for future deep dives, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway or question. Your voice helps more listeners find thoughtful, Scripture-centered conversations.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    (Job 15:7-13) "Were You The First Man Born" Part 3/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2026 37:45 Transcription Available


    Send us a textWhat if the most faithful thing you can say to God sounds raw, unfinished, and unpolished? We open the door to Job's ash heap and find a hard, hopeful truth: honest lament is not rebellion. It's the sound of trust when answers feel out of reach. From there, we draw a straight line to today's church—where some try to control consciences, claim special authority, or treat emotion as a threat. We push back, anchoring everything in the sufficiency of Scripture and the conviction that the Bible in your hands is the same Bible in the pulpit.Together, we walk through the misreadings of Eliphaz and friends, who confuse grief with defiance and composure with holiness. We talk about the danger of dishonest silence—the pious hush that keeps us from praying when we most need to—and we offer a better path: speak to God as you are, with a sincere heart that refuses to fake it. We also get practical about church life. Correction is not a performance; it's a shared commitment to truth. Real unity survives scrutiny. It does not demand silence to protect egos.Then we widen the lens. We sit with the unsettling power of God's silence and how it reveals what words often hide. We trace the arc from the ascension to Acts and early persecution, and we reflect on why Scripture remembers saints not for their wealth or status but for victories in suffering. The throughline is simple and strong: revelation is closed, the Word is enough, and God meets honest people who bring him their real selves.If this conversation strengthens your courage to pray honestly, to welcome correction, and to hold to Scripture when God seems quiet, share it with a friend, subscribe, and leave a review telling us where silence has shaped your faith.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    (Job 15:7-13) "Were You The First Man Born" Part 2/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2026 37:46 Transcription Available


    Send us a textWhat if the majority is confidently wrong and the lonely sufferer is closest to the truth? We dive into the book of Job as a mirror for modern faith, wrestling with the gap between knowing the letter and living the Spirit. Job's friends are educated, certain, and united — and still miss the heart of what God is doing through affliction. We unpack why consensus and age don't certify truth, how pride hides inside tidy formulas, and why suffering often becomes the classroom where dependence and discernment actually grow.Together, we challenge a common reflex: treating affliction as proof of secret sin. Instead, we explore how hardship can be a tool for purification and a pathway to wisdom that comfort rarely provides. We map out practical guardrails for testing teachings: demand consistency across Scripture, alignment with God's nature, and a clear confession of Christ's unique role as mediator and advocate. When platforms turn into stages and charisma outshouts clarity, these guardrails keep us anchored to what's real.We also press into hot-button areas like tongues, continuing revelation, and appeals to tradition. Does a doctrine require new revelation? Does it push angels or leaders into roles reserved for Christ? Does it rely on crowd size, celebrity, or age instead of careful exegesis? With a pastor's heart and a Berean's habit, we invite you to trade performative religion for faithful precision. If Job teaches anything, it's that God can elevate a person through suffering long before the crowd notices. Join us, think deeply, and let the Word shape your reflexes. If this resonated, subscribe, leave a review, and share it with someone who's hungry for discernment.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    (Job 15:7-13) "Were You The First Man Born" Part 1/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2026 37:45 Transcription Available


    Send us a textEver been “helped” by friends who seem more eager to win a debate than bind a wound? We walk through Job 15 and watch Eliphaz turn from counsel to sarcasm, challenging Job's integrity with cutting lines about secret wisdom and ancient tradition. That pivot exposes a timeless trap: confusing humility with conformity, and mistaking tidy theology for true care.I unpack why the friends' confidence feels compelling yet harms Job. Their orthodoxy is intact, but the application is off, driven by pride and a need to be right. We talk about how real wisdom makes space for God to teach through trial, not just through inherited formulas. Affliction, received in humility, can reveal facets of God comfort never will; prosperity, when unexamined, can dull dependence and scatter attention. It's a hard word: success can become the bigger snare, while suffering often clarifies the soul.Our panel adds vivid, modern echoes—being called unspiritual for using your mind, told your learning makes you mad, or dismissed as arrogant when you hold to Scripture. We examine how a compromised heart can weaponize correct doctrine, why motives matter as much as arguments, and how to shepherd one another with tenderness. The aim isn't to glorify pain but to recognize how God refines, purges impurities and strengthens resolve when comforts fail us.If you've ever felt misread in your struggle or pressured to confess to fit someone's system, this conversation offers language, courage and comfort. Lean in to a faith that listens, keeps a low heart before God, and lets truth heal rather than harm. If this resonates, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs it, and leave a review to help others find the conversation.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: (Job 14:17-22) "You Sew Up My Iniquity) - Part 3/3

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2026 34:38 Transcription Available


    Send us a textMortality has a way of simplifying what actually matters. We open Job 14 and sit with its hard claim that death cuts our ties to earthly honor and shame, then trace how that truth reframes legacy, ambition, and the way we love our families. Along the way, we tell real stories—praying for prodigal kids, feeling the ache of unanswered hopes, and hearing the quiet challenge to trust God more than our own plans.Together we press into the difference between knowing about Jesus and truly knowing Him. We talk through election, grace, and why faith isn't a badge of superiority but a gift that humbles us. The courtroom picture becomes vivid: good deeds can't dismiss the case against us, but the cross can. That clarity opens space for forgiveness in messy relationships and courage for honest witness without control. We also face the sober arc of dying—pain in the body, mourning in the soul—and the surprising calm many saints display, a “dying grace” that points past our fear to the One who holds us.If you're weary of chasing a legacy that won't matter to you in the grave, this conversation offers a different aim: become a faithful servant of Christ today and leave the outcomes with Him. Pray for those you love, forgive quickly, read Scripture in community, and let God change what you want at the core. Listen, reflect, and share this with someone who needs hope. If this moved you, follow the show, leave a rating, and tell us what question about eternity you want us to tackle next.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: (Job 14:17-22) "You Sew Up My Iniquity) - Part 2/3

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2026 34:43 Transcription Available


    Send us a textWhat if your life is a lease, not a possession—and the One who owns it has already defeated death? We dive into the hard edges of suffering through Job's eyes and follow the thread to the empty tomb, making the case that without the resurrection, faith is noise, but with it, every moment carries eternal weight. This isn't about scare tactics or spiritual posturing; it's about coherence. If Christ rose, justice isn't theoretical, mercy isn't sentimental, and hope isn't wishful thinking.We wrestle with 1 Corinthians 15 and its stark claim that without the resurrection, preaching is pointless and faith is futile. From there, we tackle Daniel 9 and why prophecy must lead us to the Anointed One rather than to speculation that skips over the cross. History isn't a pile of accidents; it's a providential weave where empires rise and fall to serve a single story. When Scripture is read as one book about one Savior, the fog lifts—eschatology stops being a hobby and starts shaping how we live, love, and endure.We also go straight at the heart: sin touches everything, including our most religious moments. Words reveal the soul more than appearances, and the cure isn't polish but repentance and a steady diet of God's Word. Job's realism about death reframes our days: God dismisses his soldiers when their watch is done, and for those in Christ, dismissal is not defeat. That future clarity gives present courage—love people now, speak truth now, and let the resurrection decide how you carry grief, confront error, and pursue joy that suffering can't crush.If this conversation stirred you, share it with a friend, subscribe for more, and leave a review telling us the one question about resurrection or prophecy you want us to tackle next.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: (Job 14:17-22) "You Sew Up My Iniquity) - Part 1/3

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2026 34:47 Transcription Available


    Send us a textWhen even mountains crumble and rocks shift, what chance do our plans have? We dive into Job 14 with a simple but piercing claim: if creation's strongest pillars erode, human pride has nowhere to stand. From that image of mountains to rocks to dust, we trace a line through our daily ambitions, the myth of permanence, and the quiet ways time exposes what we truly trust.We sit with the slow lessons of erosion. Water wears stone not with shock but with patience, and that pattern reframes how we think about delay, judgment, and hope. Mockers measure God by the clock; Job measures us by the landscape. Along the way we bring in lived moments—a jersey in the mail, a neighbor who shows up in the snow—to show how providence interrupts our scripts and teaches gratitude. Creation becomes a tutor, reminding us that stability is granted, not seized.The heart of the conversation centers on hope, justice, and love. Job says God destroys the hope of man—meaning the carnal hopes we build on status, longevity, and control—so he can replace them with a sturdier promise. We talk about the cross as propitiation rather than polish, the reality of wrath and the weight of atonement, and why the resurrection is the kind of permanence erosion cannot touch. The takeaway is both sobering and freeing: hold plans lightly, cling to the One who outlasts time, and be ready today. If this resonates, subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave a review telling us which hope you're rebuilding on God.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: (Job 15:1-6) "Tongue Of The Crafty" - Part 4/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2026 34:07 Transcription Available


    Send us a textIf you've ever felt the tension between comfort and conviction, this conversation meets you where you live. We start with a bold claim: God's perfection never changes, and that unshakable character is the only safe place to put your trust. From there, we challenge assumptions about Christian Zionism and any theology that ties Christian hope to geography, lineage, or a rebuild of sacred places. Christ is the final temple, and He gathers one people from every nation—Jew and Gentile—built together as living stones.We wrestle honestly with history and belief, drawing a clear line between people and mindsets while calling listeners to become students of Scripture rather than passengers of cultural narratives. The message is both corrective and freeing: Abraham's promise points to a worldwide family in Christ, not a narrow destiny on a map. When faith is grounded in Jesus alone, unity expands, worship deepens, and our identity no longer depends on borders or politics.Then the lens narrows to the heart. We talk about personal revival—returning to Bible and prayer with urgency—and confront the counterfeit god of “love without truth.” Real love corrects, warns, and calls us to repentance. Jesus does not negotiate with sin; He leads us out of it. That's why grace must walk hand in hand with truth, shaping a church that can endure dark days with courage and compassion. Along the way, we share real-life care through intercessory prayer for a sister facing surgery, modeling the kind of community that stands together when answers are scarce and fear is loud.Listen for a bracing, hope-filled call to trust God's unchanging character, belong to a global body in Christ, and choose love with a backbone. If this resonates, subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review to help more people find the show—and tell us: where did truth challenge you most today?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: (Job 15:1-6) "Tongue Of The Crafty" - Part 3/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2026 34:45 Transcription Available


    Send us a textWhat if heartfelt lament isn't rebellion but faith under pressure? We trace that question from the fire of Jeremiah and Isaiah to the ash heap with Job, where friends confuse honest grief with crafty speech. Along the way, we share a real story of walking back into church after tension, choosing reconciliation over avoidance, and learning that being wronged doesn't guarantee a righteous response. The thread is simple and demanding: judge speech by truth, not by tone or circumstance.We dive deep into Job 15 and the charge that “your mouth utters iniquity,” asking why people label uncomfortable truths as unloving. The challenge lands on modern ground: believers often police emotion instead of testing claims by Scripture. We also confront selective courage in public theology. If Jesus is Lord, then any system that denies him stands opposed to the gospel; consistency matters more than cultural comfort. That doesn't mean cruelty. It means clarity with humility, even-handed conviction, and a refusal to let sensitivity silence the message.From there we zoom out to the foundation: your doctrine of God directs your reading of the Bible. Start with who God is—holy, immutable, omniscient, omnipotent, sovereign—and hard passages come into focus without bending his nature. “God repented” in Genesis 6 reads as grief, not change. Claims about his will harmonize with his character across the canon. Interpretation is never neutral, so we call for a thick weave of biblical witnesses, testing ideas by the whole counsel of Scripture. The result is a steadier church life: lament without guilt, correction without pride, courage without partiality, and worship anchored in the God who never changes.If this conversation sharpened your thinking or steadied your heart, follow the show, share it with a friend who loves the Book of Job, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway. Your words help others find truth that doesn't flinch.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: (Job 15:1-6) "Tongue Of The Crafty" - Part 2/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2026 34:06 Transcription Available


    Send us a textWhat if the people meant to comfort you become your fiercest critics? We dive into Job's story to expose a pattern that still haunts modern faith communities: confusing usefulness with truth, mistaking grief for rebellion, and calling accusation “defending God.” From the raw opening reflections on human nature and piling on, to Scripture-guided corrections about the aim of instruction being love, we unpack how counsel turns cruel when it ignores the heart of the sufferer and the character of God.I walk through the conversation's pivotal insights: Job's friends judged his words by impact, not accuracy, and equated pain with punishment. We test that reflex against a richer theology of suffering where God refines the righteous and invites bold lament. We also explore why truth stands on its own, even when it comes through flawed messengers, and why grace is never the wrong response when you don't know the whole story. Throughout, we share lived experiences of relational strain and spiritual “pile-ons,” and we name the quiet courage it takes to refuse the hammer and be a healer.This episode is a call to rebuild how we correct, comfort, and carry each other. The body of Christ thrives through unity, not uniformity; empathy, not adrenaline; restoration, not rhetoric. If your theology breaks the wounded, it needs repair. Join us to rethink the “do better” instinct, learn to listen before you label, and rediscover how honest prayer deepens dependence on God. If this conversation helps you see a kinder path forward, subscribe, share with a friend who needs encouragement, and leave a review telling us how you're choosing grace this week.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: (Job 15:1-6) "Tongue Of The Crafty" - Part 1/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2026 34:38 Transcription Available


    Send us a textWhat happens when the people who should comfort you bring the sharpest knives? We step into Job 15 and watch Eliphaz return with a blistering verdict, branding Job's words as “east wind” and dismissing his theology as destructive heat. The clash isn't just about doctrine; it's about how doctrine is used. Are we building up the hurting with truth, or brandishing truth to build our own standing?We walk through the assumptions that fueled Job's friends: the tidy equation of prosperity with righteousness and suffering with secret sin. That formula is seductive because it flatters our need for control. But it collapses under the weight of real life and the witness of Scripture. Job's lament is not rebellion; it is reverent faith under pressure. He clings to God's sovereignty, atonement, and wisdom while his community reads his pain as proof of guilt. Along the way we surface hard questions: Why are some bolder correcting brothers than confronting the world? How does jealousy hide beneath piety? What does compassion look like when the facts are unclear and the wounds are fresh?You'll hear a candid roundtable where we name church hurt without flinching and still call the church to better love. We unpack why misapplied orthodoxy harms, how to discern motives when counsel feels cold, and why true courage comforts first and corrects with care. And we trace the arc toward vindication: God will later affirm Job's words and require his friends to seek his intercession, a sobering reminder that the Lord weighs hearts, not optics.If you've ever been misunderstood while clinging to God, this conversation offers clarity, courage, and comfort. Listen, share it with someone who needs a gentle word today, and if it resonates, subscribe and leave a review so others can find it too.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: (Job 14:7-17) "You Number My Steps" - Part 4/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2026 33:10 Transcription Available


    Send us a textWhat if Job's fiercest question unlocks the strongest assurance? We trace the bold logic: if God numbers our steps, He also watches over our sin—and that changes how we think about mercy, obedience, and whether salvation can be lost. Rather than reading Job as a skeptic in crisis, we hear a believer arguing from God's character toward solid hope.We walk through the language of propitiation and the vivid “sealed bag” image—sins counted, covered, and rendered powerless to condemn. From there, we tackle a hard tension: every sin is seen, yet the same God who sees is the One who keeps. That reframes divine warnings as guardrails, not threats designed to paralyze. Obedience becomes evidence of God's Spirit at work in us, not a self-manufactured badge. Along the way, we confront legalistic add-ons that burden consciences and replace Christ's finished work with spiritual busywork.Personal reflections bring the theology home: being hidden in Christ means God sees the Son's perfect obedience when He looks at His people. We also address the emotional reality of affliction, when it can feel like God is tallying failures, and how Job's hope speaks into that fear. The conversation moves naturally into resurrection confidence—if a man dies, shall he live again?—anchoring perseverance in a future where change is promised and secure. With candid dialogue, Scripture, and prayer, we aim to ground assurance not in our grip on God, but in His grip on us.Listen to be strengthened in assurance, freed from performative faith, and refreshed by the God who keeps what He saves. If this helped you see Job—and Jesus—with new clarity, subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review so others can find the show. How has God's keeping power changed the way you walk today?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: (Job 14:7-17) "You Number My Steps" - Part 3/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2026 33:14 Transcription Available


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    LIVE DISCUSSION: (Job 14:7-17) "You Number My Steps" - Part 2/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2026 33:13 Transcription Available


    Send us a textWhat if a single drop of God's presence could change everything? We follow Job's raw prayer from the ash heap and find a map for our own deserts: thirst that won't quit, faith with no safety net, and a hope that refuses to die. Starting with the image of trees reviving at the scent of water, we face the question Job asks without flinching—where is a person after death—and push past cliché answers to something sturdier.We talk about being sent with nothing in Luke 9 and why that kind of dependence still matters. Then we examine the modern chase for legacy: names on buildings, curated identities, the dream of being remembered. The hard truth lands—most of us are forgotten within a generation or two—but it doesn't end in cynicism. Job shifts the frame. Death looks final on the surface, but he dares to ask God to hide him, keep him, and remember him. That phrasing is loaded with trust. Hidden implies ongoing life beyond the grave. Kept points to protection through judgment. Remembered hints at a set day when God calls us by name. Paired with the thief on the cross and Jesus' promise of paradise today, the picture becomes clear: conscious life after death, rooted in the character of a God who doesn't forget.As the conversation unfolds, we watch Job's belief turn into certainty. Suffering strips away illusions and deepens understanding; questions become anchors. Instead of building monuments to ourselves, we point our families and friends to Christ—the only legacy that lasts. If you've wrestled with grief, felt the pull of ambition, or wondered whether God still sees you, this journey through Job 14 offers a bracing, hopeful answer: you are not lost, you are held, and there is an appointed time yet to come.If this resonated, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs hope, and leave a review so more people can find these conversations. What legacy are you choosing today?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: (Job 14:7-17) "You Number My Steps" - Part 1/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2026 33:10 Transcription Available


    Send us a textA man at the edge of himself reaches for language sturdy enough to hold pain and hope at once. We turn to Job 14:7–9 and sit with the image of a cut-down tree that still carries life in its root, listening for what it says about endurance, God's sovereignty, and the quiet ways the Holy Spirit restores what looks finished. The conversation moves from appointed days and the longing for rest to the stark reality of loss that touches every corner of life—health, family, friendship—and still cannot sever faith from its source.Together we unpack the difference between appearances and vitality: how friends read the surface while God sustains the unseen. Scripture threads through the discussion—Proverbs on the unshakable root of the righteous, Daniel on refining trials, the parable of the sower on roots that outlast heat—to show that resilience is not bravado but dependence. The phrase “through the scent of water it will bud” becomes our compass. Renewal doesn't begin with our strength; it begins with God's presence. Even a hint of living water revives the root, just as the Spirit breathes on a weary heart and stirs new shoots of trust, courage, and obedience.You'll hear candid stories, thoughtful insights, and a clear challenge: stop judging a life by what's above ground. Guard the root. Wait for rain. Let creation preach—trees and winds and seasons pointing to a Maker who ordains times and sends help right on time. If you've felt cut down, take this as a gentle summons to patience and a bold reminder that you are not finished because God is not finished. If the message resonates, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs hope, and leave a review to help others find their way to this conversation.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: "The 7yr Great Tribulation HERESY" (Dan 9:24) - Part 4/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2026 38:28 Transcription Available


    Send us a textWhat if joy isn't the absence of pain but the fruit grown through it? We open the Scriptures and make a hard, hopeful claim: affliction is not a detour from the Christian life; it is one of God's ordinary tools to shape mature disciples. From James' call to “count it all joy” to the witness of Hebrews, we trace how faith is proven in the fire, not padded by comforts. Rather than selling a painless path, we invite you to see trials as the place where dependence on Jesus deepens and endurance becomes beautiful.Together we push back on the urge to escape tribulation and ask whether that impulse fits the pattern of Christ and His body. With John the Baptist as a vivid example of decreasing so Christ might increase, we consider how fulfillment, covenant, and precision in Bible reading steady our hope. You'll hear frank challenges to pre‑trib assumptions, not for controversy, but to encourage a fearless return to the whole counsel of God. The goal is clarity, humility, and courage—letting Scripture lead, even when it confronts our favorite frameworks.What gives this conversation its pulse is the community around it. Friends speak life over a passionate teacher, testimonies surface of minds changed by patient study, and the room turns to prayer—asking God to fill us with boldness, keep our hearts soft, and fix our eyes on the return of Jesus. If you've ever felt intimidated by eschatology, or if suffering has made you question your footing, this is a warm, uncompromising guide back to solid ground. Listen, weigh every claim against the Word, and join us in a simple practice: love the truth, love the church, and keep going with joy. If this resonates, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs courage, and leave a review to help others find these conversations.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: "The 7yr Great Tribulation HERESY" (Dan 9:24) - Part 3/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2026 38:30 Transcription Available


    Send us a textWhat if the key to Daniel's 70 weeks isn't a chart, but a person? We open the episode by contrasting the Day of Atonement's yearly cycle with the finality of Christ's once-for-all sacrifice. From there, we move carefully through Daniel 9:24 and its six sweeping promises—finishing transgression, ending sin, reconciling iniquity, bringing everlasting righteousness, sealing vision and prophecy, and anointing the Most Holy—and show how each finds its fulfillment in Jesus. Rather than kicking these gifts into a distant future, we ask what it means for the church today if they are already ours in the gospel.We take a hard look at popular dispensational timelines. How can a “seven-year tribulation” be labeled as such when the first half is defined as peace? Why is “confirming the covenant” treated like “breaking a treaty”? We explore a simpler, Scripture-led reading: roughly three and a half years of Jesus' public ministry to the cross, followed by about three and a half years of apostolic ministry focused on Israel, culminating around Stephen's stoning. That frame clarifies Jesus' “this generation” warnings and the judgment that fell on Jerusalem, without turning prophecy into a puzzle of news headlines.Along the way, our panel shares candid stories of unlearning early assumptions about rapture charts and rediscovering the clarity of the New Testament. The result is both pastoral and practical: a stronger grasp of Christ's finished work, confidence that the new covenant is here, and a calm focus on what truly remains—His return. If you've wrestled with Daniel 9, end-times fear, or the tug-of-war between systems and Scripture, this conversation centers you back on Jesus and His completed redemption.If this challenged or encouraged you, follow the show, share it with a friend who loves Bible study, and leave a review so others can find it. What part of Daniel 9 do you want us to unpack next?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: "The 7yr Great Tribulation HERESY" (Dan 9:24) - Part 2/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2026 38:30 Transcription Available


    Send us a textWhat if the six promises of Daniel 9:24 aren't hanging over the future but were nailed down at Calvary? We take a hard look at the text and walk through Hebrews 9, Romans 5–6, Colossians 2, and Ephesians 2 to ask whether Scripture itself says the work is finished. Our aim is simple: test the claim that Jesus, as mediator of the New Covenant, accomplished the end of sins, made reconciliation for iniquity, brought in everlasting righteousness, sealed vision and prophecy, and was anointed as the Most Holy.We start with the cross as the decisive act. Hebrews says Christ appeared once to put away sin by the sacrifice of Himself, and Romans says He died unto sin once. That means the end of sins is not a future pause in human behavior, but the present end of sin's condemning power for all who believe. From there we trace reconciliation: while enemies, we were reconciled to God by the death of His Son. Add Colossians' declaration that all trespasses are forgiven and the record of debt is canceled, and the picture sharpens—this isn't a plan on layaway. It's already purchased.Then we tackle everlasting righteousness. Paul announces a righteousness revealed now apart from the law, credits believers as righteous through the obedience of the One, and locates this grace in union with the risen Christ. If righteousness is ours now, what future week are we still waiting for? We also address “sealing up vision and prophecy,” centering fulfillment on Jesus' own words that everything written in Moses, the Prophets, and the Psalms concerning Him must be fulfilled. God has spoken to us by His Son, the telos of revelation and the anchor of our assurance.Finally, we consider the anointing of the Most Holy. Jesus reads Isaiah 61, “He has anointed Me,” and Hebrews shows Him entering the true holy place with His own blood. The greater temple is here, and no brick‑and‑mortar project can eclipse the holiness of the Son. Along the way we challenge the assumption of a future seven‑year tribulation, not to provoke for its own sake, but to preserve the glory and sufficiency of the cross. If the gospel did what Scripture says it did, speculation gives way to certainty, and worship deepens.If this conversation sharpened your thinking, share it with a friend, subscribe for more, and leave a review telling us where you stand on Daniel 9.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: "The 7yr Great Tribulation HERESY" (Dan 9:24) - Part 1/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2026 38:30 Transcription Available


    Send us a textProphecy talk gets loud, but clarity lives in the text. We step through Daniel 9:24–27 with a simple aim: honor the timeline, follow the language, and ask whether the seventy weeks point us to Christ's finished work or to a future Antichrist peace deal. Starting from the decree in Ezra 7 (457 BC), we track 483 years to the public appearing of Jesus around AD 26/27, then examine how the final “week” aligns with His ministry, His atoning death, and the inauguration of the new covenant.Together we unpack the six goals in Daniel 9:24—finishing the transgression, ending sins, making reconciliation for iniquity, bringing in everlasting righteousness, sealing vision and prophecy, and anointing the most holy—and show how the New Testament ties each to Jesus. We address the popular “gap theory” that inserts over two millennia between week sixty-nine and seventy, and explain why that move lacks biblical precedent and undercuts the prophecy's purpose. With Jesus' warnings in Matthew 23 as a guide, we connect the dots to the destruction of Jerusalem in AD 70, where sacrifice ceased and the old order gave way to the reality Christ accomplished.If you've heard about a seven-year tribulation, a broken peace treaty, and a future countdown built on Daniel 9, you'll find a careful, Scripture-first alternative here. We focus on the Messiah's covenant, the end of temple sacrifices, and the fulfillment that anchors Christian hope in a finished work rather than a speculative timeline. If this reframes your view of prophecy—or sharpens it—share the episode, subscribe for more deep dives, and leave a review with your biggest question for us to tackle next.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: "Your Days Are Numbered" Job 14:5,6 - Part 5/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2026 38:31 Transcription Available


    Send us a textWhat if being born again is the first resurrection and the thousand years in Revelation 20 describes the age we're living in right now? We dig into that claim with open Bibles and clear logic, asking whether a literal countdown can coexist with Jesus' words that no one knows the day or hour. The conversation challenges popular end-times timelines, not to stir controversy for its own sake, but to re-center our hope on Christ rather than on charts.We walk through Daniel 9 and argue that the seventieth week points to Jesus Himself—His three-and-a-half-year public ministry, His atoning death, and His confirming of the covenant. That reframes the trope of a seven-year tribulation led by a treaty-making Antichrist, a concept that sounds familiar but lacks a firm textual home. Then we track Daniel 2's stone cut without hands, striking during Rome, and connect it to the incarnation and the launch of an unshakeable kingdom. Along the way we explore how Antiochus IV's desecration and the destruction of Jerusalem in AD 70 act as foreshadows—real events pointing beyond themselves to Christ's global judgment and reign.Across it all, we keep Revelation anchored to its true subject: the revelation of Jesus Christ. The church stands on one foundation—the apostles and prophets with Christ as cornerstone—and that foundation does not get rebuilt in a later dispensation. If our interpretations push Jesus to the margins, we've missed the point. Come ready to weigh Scripture with us, question assumptions, and recover the courage and comfort that flow from knowing the King reigns now and His return remains certain and unknowable. If this conversation sharpens you, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review so others can join the study.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: "Your Days Are Numbered" Job 14:5,6 - Part 4/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2026 38:31 Transcription Available


    Send us a textWhat if the core assumption about human freedom is upside down? We open with a disruptive thought: if God cannot sin, lie, or change, calling his will “free” in the neutral, choose-anything sense misses what makes him holy. That reframes how we talk about human free will. If heaven removes the ability to sin, was “freedom” ever the gift—or is the gift a new nature that loves what is good?We follow that thread into the heart of salvation. The moment we say, “I'm in heaven because I chose better,” we drift into quiet boasting—smarter, humbler, more spiritual than others. Scripture cuts that off: with man salvation is impossible, and God grants repentance, faith, and mercy. The picture isn't of neutral souls picking sides; it's of dead hearts made alive. To make it concrete, we lean on Christ's healings: blind eyes didn't debate seeing and dead legs didn't negotiate walking. New life acts by nature. That's not robotic compulsion; that's liberation from slavery to sin into glad obedience.From there we widen the lens to Revelation, not as an anxious timeline but as a symbolic, cyclical portrait of the Lamb's triumph across history. “Signified” means shown by signs, so beasts and marks aren't props for prediction charts. The seven seals, trumpets, and bowls echo each other as parallel angles on God's work. The 144,000 represents the whole church—Jew and Gentile—an innumerable people sealed by grace. We contrast this with rapture-centered readings and show how a salvation-first approach restores awe, clarity, and courage.By the end, the through-line is clear: God raises the dead, grants a new heart, and binds us to righteousness as true freedom. That vision dismantles pride, steadies assurance, and turns Revelation into worship rather than worry. If you're ready to rethink free will, regeneration, and apocalyptic hope around the sovereignty and kindness of God, this conversation will meet you there. Subscribe, share with a friend who loves big questions, and leave a review with the one idea that shifted your view most.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: "Your Days Are Numbered" Job 14:5,6 - Part 3/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2026 38:32 Transcription Available


    Send us a textWhat if fear of death faded because your days were already counted by a good God? We open with the startling comfort that our months are “with” Him, then follow Job's gritty example of faith that argues, pleads, and still rests. This isn't fatalism dressed up as theology; it's intimacy that changes how we face pain. When suffering hits, we learn to pray by God's character—reminding Him of promises, mercy, and patience—not to twist His arm, but to steady our hearts.We also take on a deep question that shapes how you see salvation: does God simply foresee, or does He purpose? We challenge the idea that foreknowledge is mere foresight down time's corridor. If God chooses because we would one day choose Him, grace becomes a response to our virtue. Instead, we argue that foreknowledge is fore-love—God setting His affection before we existed—so He can declare the end because He ordained the means. That's why Job's trust isn't blind; it's anchored. And it's why Lazarus isn't a cute story, but a living parable of regeneration: dead souls don't deliberate; Christ calls and life begins.From there, we press into depravity, free will, and the popular appeal of prevenient grace. If grace only restores a neutral will so everyone gets a “chance,” the cross becomes a provision without a people, and certainty evaporates. The will and its choices aren't identical; a will acts within a nature, and a fallen nature can only choose like a fallen nature. Regeneration is God's initiative, not our momentum. That truth doesn't erase agency; it makes faith possible. Known and held by an unchanging love, we learn to trust on purpose, pray with bold humility, and face our numbered days without dread.If this conversation challenged or comforted you, follow the show, share it with a friend who's wrestling with sovereignty and suffering, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway. Your story might help someone else learn to trust.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: "Your Days Are Numbered" Job 14:5,6 - Part 2/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2026 38:31 Transcription Available


    Send us a textWhat if the most liberating truth isn't that you control your life, but that you don't? We open with the hardest questions—death, loss, and the fate of the most vulnerable—and follow the thread through Job 14 to a surprising place: comfort found in God's sovereignty. Not a cold doctrine, but a steady hand that numbers our days, sets our limits, and holds both the deceived and the deceiver. When Abraham lifted the knife over Isaac, he wasn't denying reality; he was banking on a deeper one—that God raises the dead.From pandemic fears to everyday anxieties about health, risk, and safety, we've all felt the pull to micromanage survival. The counterintuitive relief is this: you will not leave this world a second early or late. That doesn't excuse apathy; it frees you to love people, tell the truth, and live with courage. We wrestle with the idea that shortened lifespans might be mercy that restrains evil, but we keep circling back to Job's point: each life has an appointed boundary, and the inner person is what ultimately endures. That calls for reconciliation with God, a work the flesh can't perform and grace alone accomplishes.The conversation sharpens into two choices—either God is sovereign over man or man is sovereign over himself. There's no middle lane. We talk about the impossibility of self-salvation, the tragedy of refusing grace, and the strange agreement that accompanies judgment. Yet hope runs through the whole thread: like a tree by water, the believer bears fruit in drought because the root is alive. Waiting is often where this becomes real. God's silence can stretch, reasons stay hidden, and still we are invited to trust. Not fatalism, but providence. Not accidents, but appointments. If you've been shouldering the weight of outcomes you can't control, this is a seat to lay them down.If this spoke to you, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs courage today, and leave a quick review to help others find these conversations. What part challenged you most?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: "Your Days Are Numbered" Job 14:5,6 - Part 1/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2026 38:31 Transcription Available


    Send us a textA single line from Job 14 stops us cold: “Who can bring a clean thing out of an unclean?” From there, we trace Job's stark honesty about human frailty—life like a flower cut down, a shadow that passes—and follow the thread to a deeper hope. We lay out why modern optimism about human goodness collapses under the weight of reality, and why that collapse is the doorway to grace rather than despair.We walk through Job's argument in simple terms: if no one can self-purify, then salvation cannot be a DIY project. That's where Christ stands unique. Because Jesus is God in the flesh, he is not trapped by the same unclean stream; he alone can cleanse the unclean and alter the course of human depravity. Our panel brings this from doctrine to street level—conscience, forgiveness, and real change that begins with receiving, not performing.Then we tackle the verse many avoid: our days are determined, our months are with God, and our bounds are appointed. We draw a crucial line between foreknowledge and determination. Job doesn't say God merely knows; he says God sets. That truth can shake or steady you, depending on what you believe about God's character. We argue it steadies: if time is measured by a sovereign and wise Lord, then our urgency has purpose, our limits have meaning, and even grief can be held inside a larger care. Freedom still matters, but it is creaturely freedom—real choices within real bounds, guided by a real King.Along the way, we push back on easy religion that skips hard passages. A God who isn't sovereign can't save, and a salvation that rests on us can't last. By the end, you'll have a clearer map of Job 14, a sharper view of human nature, and a firmer grasp of why only Christ can make the unclean clean. If this conversation sharpens your faith or challenges your assumptions, share it with a friend, subscribe for more deep dives, and leave a review to tell us what moved you.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "Total Depravity According to Job" (Job 14:1-4) - Part 5/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2026 33:32 Transcription Available


    Send us a textWhat if everything you've built could vanish and still not touch the one thing that matters most? We journey through the hard edges of Job and find an unshakable center: wealth can't ransom a soul, but grace can redeem a life from the grave. Along the way, we explore why God allows testing, how divine silence can purify faith, and what it means to see Christ at the heart of suffering.We start by facing the blunt truth about money, legacy, and mortality. Titles fade, estates change hands, and applause ends—but the promise of redemption does not. That tension sets the stage for a deeper question: why would an all-powerful God permit an accuser? The answer we uncover isn't a neat formula; it's a portrait of patience. God gives space for character to surface, for friends to reveal their limits, and for worship to grow in the dark. When God finally speaks in Job, He offers not a debate but a vision of wisdom and power that quiets the soul.From there, we move to the cross, where patience and love take on flesh. We talk about the mystery of the Father's seeming distance and the Son bearing wrath, and how that moment reframes every trial. If Job shows how faith endures, Christ shows how death is defeated. That truth travels into daily life as we pray for healing, reconciliation, protection, and strength within a real—if digital—community. We push back against cynicism about online fellowship, pointing to lives lifted, hearts steadied, and hope renewed as evidence that the church is people, not a platform.If you're hungry for a faith that can stand in silence, survive testing, and anchor your identity beyond wealth and status, this conversation is for you. Listen, share it with a friend who needs courage, and leave a review to help others find their footing in grace.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "Total Depravity According to Job" (Job 14:1-4) - Part 4/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2026 33:36 Transcription Available


    Send us a textIf the thing you cherish most is the very thing keeping you from freedom, would you let it go? We step straight into the tension with a candid look at total depravity, not as a dusty idea but as a diagnosis that explains why behavior tweaks don't heal a broken heart. From a personal story of being crushed over sin to the stubborn question “How do I stop being me?” we uncover why the will cannot lift itself by its own strength and why that realization is the beginning of good news.Together we trace the myth of autonomy from Eden to today's “do what you want” mantra, exposing how the serpent's promise of godlike control still dresses up as spirituality. Scripture becomes our compass: Job's insistence that the clean cannot come from the unclean, Jeremiah's deceitful heart, Isaiah and Paul's “none righteous,” and Jesus' words to Nicodemus that flesh only begets flesh. A vivid moment with Peter's feet reframes the whole journey—unless Christ washes us, we have no share. New birth is not a human decision; it is God breathing life into dry bones and carrying that life forward to resurrection glory.We also face the ache of responsibility, loss, and the cry that life isn't fair. The answer isn't a pep talk about resilience; it's a reset. If strict fairness ruled, we would all be undone. Grace—not fairness—sustains, cleanses, and preserves. That's why prayer matters so deeply: not as a last resort but as the hardest, most essential practice that ties our weakness to God's strength. Through stories of suffering and recovery, we see how affliction awakens truer worship and how God's patience frames the book of Job as much as Job's. If you're exhausted by striving and hungry for something stronger than willpower, this conversation clears the fog and points you to the One who does what we cannot.If this resonated with you, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs hope, and leave a review telling us where grace met you this week.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "Total Depravity According to Job" (Job 14:1-4) - Part 3/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2026 33:37 Transcription Available


    Send us a textWhat if sin's loudest roar is really its last gasp? We explore sanctification as a gift, not a grind—where reconciliation with God is settled by Christ, and the mess that remains becomes the classroom of grace. Through the lens of Job, we face guilt, silence, and struggle with open eyes and honest hearts, pushing back against shallow fixes and false confessions that burden rather than heal.We dig into that razor-sharp line from Job 14:4—“Who can bring a clean thing out of an unclean? Not one.”—and let it dismantle the myth of self-salvation. If we are unclean, we cannot manufacture purity. That's why grace isn't a supplement; it's the source. From there we trace the implications: total depravity, sovereign grace, election, effectual calling, and perseverance. Not as cold labels, but as the living logic of the gospel that keeps Christ at the center and makes real life possible when we feel small, overwhelmed, or unseen.Along the way, we talk about confession as communal medicine, God's discipline as love, and the strange mercy of divine silence—like Jesus waiting for Lazarus—timed to reveal a deeper glory. Job's integrity becomes a model for prayer: tell the truth, reject false guilt, and wait with hope. We hold space for honest lament and real comfort, pointing to the only one who brings clean from unclean—the Lord Jesus Christ.If this resonates, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs courage, and leave a rating and review to help more people find these conversations. What line from Job or the gospels has reshaped your trust in God?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "Total Depravity According to Job" (Job 14:1-4) - Part 2/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2026 33:37 Transcription Available


    Send us a textA flower that rises in beauty, a shadow that slips away—Job's language feels uncomfortably familiar. We sit with that honest picture of human frailty and then follow it to a surprising place: God looks closely at those who fail. Not to crush, but to care. As we unpack Job 14, we talk about the brevity of life, the certainty of death, and why acknowledging human inability is the doorway to real hope rather than despair.Our conversation digs into the need for a mediator and why If you, Lord, should mark iniquities, who could stand? is both a sober question and a gateway to grace. We push back on the viral claim that “Christians can't sin,” clarifying the difference between our secure identity in Christ and our ongoing struggle with sin. Confession is not a denial of the cross; it's a fruit of it. With the lens of justification, adoption, and discipline, we show how the Father's gaze is exact but never cruel. He examines hearts to restore, not to ruin.We also explore the rich imagery of light and shadow. God is light; we cast shadows because darkness remains in us. Yet the promise of glorification means the shadows will not endure. Propitiation—Christ bearing wrath in our place—anchors our hope between the already and the not yet. That hope reframes how we live short, troubled days: surrendered, awake, and purposeful. If life is a mist, then every moment matters, every word should be handled with care, and every claim about faith must align with the truth that sets us free.If this conversation steadied you, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs courage today, and leave a review to help others find it. What verse helps you stand when days feel short and heavy?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "Total Depravity According to Job" (Job 14:1-4) - Part 1/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2026 33:36 Transcription Available


    Send us a textWhat if the silence of God feels louder than your prayers? We walk with Job through the final verses of chapter 13 and into chapter 14, where the images are raw and unforgettable: feet in stocks, paths under scrutiny, a life unraveling like moth-eaten cloth. Job remembers days when God guided him; now it feels like he's being watched more than led. Instead of sanding down the tension, we face it head-on and ask why that sense of surveillance can haunt even the faithful.From there, we open Job's stark thesis: man born of woman has few days and they are full of trouble. Not as cynicism, but as sober theology that explains why pain is not an interruption but the environment of our choices. We explore how mortality exposes the deeper wound of human nature, why total depravity is not a caricature but a clear-eyed view of how the will follows the heart, and why moral resolve alone cannot lift us out of ourselves. The conversation challenges the easy formulas of Job's friends and our own—those reflexive ways we read suffering as proof of hidden guilt.Yet the thread of hope holds. Job's language hints at change, a calling, and divine remembrance that refuses to forget his own. We connect that longing to the gospel's claim: without Christ we can do nothing, but with God all things are possible. That means new birth is not a slogan; it is the only way the will gains a new appetite. Along the way, we share vulnerable reflections, practical takeaways for enduring when answers don't come, and the courage to hold integrity when comfort is scarce.If you've ever felt monitored by heaven or pinned by circumstances you can't explain, this conversation offers clarity without cliches and hope without denial. Listen, share it with someone who needs honesty and courage, and if it serves you, subscribe and leave a review so others can find it too.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: "Who Will Plead With Me?" (Job 13:19-26) - Part 5/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2026 33:11 Transcription Available


    Send us a textWhat if the cross closed the heavenly courtroom—but the accusations didn't stop ringing in your ears? We dive into a spirited, respectful debate about Satan's role after Calvary and why the living Christ's intercession still matters for ordinary believers navigating shame, doubt, and spiritual warfare.We start by clarifying terms: atonement is finished, once for all, yet Scripture speaks of a present High Priest who advocates and mediates. One side argues Revelation 12 signals the accuser's eviction from heaven when Christ ascended, ending legal indictments against the saints. The other side points out that Satan's accusing nature persists until his final destruction, which explains the New Testament's warnings and the comfort of a Savior who “ever lives to make intercession.” Along the way we revisit the big storyline—from Babel's scattered nations and the devil's deceit to Jesus binding the strong man and handing keys to his disciples—showing how the gospel unlocks captive peoples.Together we test how to read “accused” in the past tense without flattening the ongoing reality of lies, temptations, and charges that batter the conscience. We distinguish the once-for-all sacrifice from the ongoing ministry of Christ: not a repeat atonement, but a living representation that secures access, preserves assurance, and silences every charge with his righteousness. Job's story threads through our talk as a portrait of suffering and ultimate vindication, reminding us that the Christian life is contested ground, and that our defense is not our performance, but a Person.If you've ever wondered what Jesus is doing for you right now—or felt spiritually “on trial” without words to answer—this conversation will steady your steps. Listen, open your Bible, and join us as we pursue clarity with charity. If this helped you, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs encouragement, and leave a review telling us where you land on the question.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: "Who Will Plead With Me?" (Job 13:19-26) - Part 4/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2026 33:17 Transcription Available


    Send us a textEver felt like pain is payback for your past? We take Job's haunting line—“You write bitter things against me; you make me inherit the iniquities of my youth”—and ask why so many of us default to ledger logic when life hurts. Together we walk through Job's confusion, his silence about any specific offense, and the way guilt tries to resurrect what grace has already buried. The heart of the conversation is pastoral and practical: stop digging up graveyards to explain today's trial. Remember the lessons, not the lurid details, and let the cross decide what your past can say.We also push into a nuanced, Bible-rich dialogue on accusation and advocacy. Does Satan still accuse believers? What changed with Christ's death, resurrection, and ascension? Drawing on Revelation 12 and Hebrews 2, we distinguish between accusations that make noise and verdicts that carry weight. Christ stands as mediator, intercessor, and advocate for a reason—these aren't ceremonial titles but active, present ministries. If accusations couldn't fly, advocacy would be pointless. The comfort is fierce: charges may be voiced, but they cannot stick. That's the difference between condemnation and fatherly discipline.From there, we widen the lens to the binding of Satan and the spread of the gospel to the nations. Christ's victory restricted the enemy's global deception, opening the way for the good news to break beyond Israel and take root among the Gentiles. That framework reshapes how we see suffering now: not as God cashing in old debts, but as refinement within a contested world. Chastening grows holiness, participation shares in Christ's sufferings, and hope learns endurance. If your heart keeps reaching back to old failures to explain new pain, let this conversation re-anchor you in justification, sanctification, and the quiet strength of an Advocate whose word outranks every whisper.If this helped you breathe easier under pressure, share it with a friend, subscribe for more conversations like this, and leave a review to help others find the show. What lie about your past are you ready to lay down today?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: "Who Will Plead With Me?" (Job 13:19-26) - Part 3/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2026 33:16 Transcription Available


    Send us a textWhat do you pray when God feels distant and your heart is breaking? We step into Job's raw plea for clarity—“Make me know my transgression”—and trace why repentance needs revelation, not vague guilt. The conversation stays grounded in honest prayer, the ache of divine silence, and the stubborn hope that communion with God matters more than comfort, reputation, or quick fixes.We unpack how Job refuses to accept secondhand accusations from friends and instead appeals directly to God's judgment and mercy. That move anticipates the gospel's gift of a mediator and models a posture we can practice today: teachable, transparent, and anchored in God's character. Remembering that God called Job “my servant” reframes suffering—not as abandonment, but as a refining season where identity must rest on God's verdict rather than our fears. Along the way, personal stories remind us that silence from someone you love often hurts more than a rebuke and that honest words beat polished prayers every time.The vivid image of a leaf driven to and fro and dry stubble pulls the themes together. Job asks why infinite power would chase what is already broken—an audacious, reverent question that becomes an invitation for God to speak. We talk about resisting the urge to fill in blanks with panic, choosing instead to seek specific truth, ask bold questions, and pursue restored communion. If you've ever felt small before a great God and wondered whether that greatness could also be gentle enough to save, this conversation offers language, courage, and a way back to honest fellowship.If this resonated, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a review to help more listeners find these conversations. What question are you bringing to God this week?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: "Who Will Plead With Me?" (Job 13:19-26) - Part 2/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2026 33:15 Transcription Available


    Send us a textAccusations sting most when they are vague and relentless. We step into Job 13 and feel the weight of a conscience pressed to the edge, then watch Job stake his ground with a line that jolts the soul: silence would be surrender. From there, we pull apart why confidence in innocence is not pride but integrity, and how a believer's assurance rests not in moral polish but in Christ's imputed righteousness.We talk frankly about how assurance can look like arrogance from the outside. When someone says, “I am righteous,” it sounds like a boast—unless you see the cross behind it. We explore that tension with practical clarity: what it means that our sin was laid on Christ and His righteousness was credited to us, and how that verdict shapes the way we speak when we're misunderstood. The goal is not to shout louder but to speak with rootedness—formed by Scripture, sharpened by study, and carried by courage.Job offers a surprising blueprint for conversations that matter. He sets two conditions to remove dread and invites a reciprocal exchange: call and answer, or let me speak and you respond. That posture reframes conflict into a search for truth rather than a brawl for dominance. We share a candid moment of repentance from our own misstep and show how confession rebuilds trust without compromising conviction. If you've felt the knot in your chest when lies go unchallenged—or the ache when your words caused harm—this reflection will steady your heart and sharpen your tongue.Listen if you want biblical courage for hard rooms, practical tools to speak plainly, and a deeper grasp of righteousness that humbles the self and honors Christ. If this resonates, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs strength today, and leave a review to help others find the conversation. What's one term you'd set to make your next tough dialogue honest and fruitful?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: "Who Will Plead With Me?" (Job 13:19-26) - Part 1/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2026 33:15 Transcription Available


    Send us a textWhat if your fiercest critics were your closest friends—and they were wrong? We step into Job 13 where a man stripped of comfort, status, and health orders his cause and says with startling clarity, “I know I shall be justified.” This isn't pride; it's the strength of a conscience aligned with God's character. We unpack how Job's courage grows precisely under affliction, why faith often speaks rather than stays silent, and how integrity can be pleaded without pretending to be perfect.As the conversation unfolds, we examine the anatomy of unproven accusations and why friendly fire cuts the deepest. Each friend represents a different edge—hot words, cold logic, and polished piety—yet none can name a sin. Job refuses to counterattack; instead, he demands a just hearing and turns his face toward the only Judge who matters. Along the way we surface five durable lessons: a well-ordered conscience brings boldness in trial; integrity and perfection aren't the same; God invites honest speech from suffering saints; false charges can wound more than physical pain; and silence is not always submission.We also trace the hidden hand of the real accuser. Satan works through proxies and half-truths, keeping himself veiled while pressing hard on the afflicted. Job's answer is not conspiracy hunting but Godward appeal: “Who is he that will plead with me?” His moral courage is a model for our prayer life—bold, expectant, and rooted in the conviction that the Mediator lives and the Judge is just. If you've been misread, maligned, or tested beyond your strength, this conversation offers ballast for your soul and language for your prayers.If this resonated with you, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs courage today, and leave a review—it helps more listeners find hope in hard places.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: "I Have Ordered My Cause" (Job 13:18) Part 4/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2026 38:31 Transcription Available


    Send us a textStart with the roar of Romans 8 and feel the ground steady under your feet: called, justified, glorified, and held by a love no power can break. From that high ground, we move through the honest ache of Psalm 142 and the stark lessons of Job, asking a tough question many believers tiptoe around: where's the line between self-doubt and doubting God? We lean into it without flinching, because words shape faith and faith shapes lives.We talk about assurance without swagger by rooting it in God's promise, not our performance. Peace with God through Christ (Romans 5:1) sets our status, while perfect peace (Isaiah 26:3) steadies our minds when storms hit. Along the way, we name a common pastoral mistake: treating doubt of God as a badge of authenticity. Instead, we make a sharper distinction—healthy humility doubts self and drives us to depend on the Lord; unbelief doubts God's character or word and corrodes the soul. Job's friends become our caution sign, reminding us how careless counsel can bruise the weak, while the Spirit's sealing anchors our assurance in divine action rather than human feeling.Expect a frank, warm, and Scripture-soaked dialogue about precision in language, the Spirit's role in saving faith, and why “If God said it, I believe it” is not a cliché but a lifeline. We share personal stories, wrestle with tone and motive, and keep returning to the same foundation: Christ intercedes, the Spirit seals, and the Father keeps every promise. If you've wrestled with doubt, assurance, or how to speak truth in love, you'll find clarity, courage, and a path to perfect peace.If this resonated with you, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a review with your takeaway—what helps you hold fast when the waves rise?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: "I Have Ordered My Cause" (Job 13:18) Part 3/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2026 38:34 Transcription Available


    Send us a textCan trust survive the furnace, or does it only truly form there? We step into the tension with Job as our guide and ask a hard question: should Christians treat doubt as normal—or as an enemy to fight? The conversation starts with John the Baptist and quickly moves to the deeper issue beneath every anxious thought: the reliability of God's promises and the authority of His word. When memory fails, faith falters; when promises are rehearsed, assurance grows.Job's story reframes the whole debate. Rather than parading certainty, he orders his cause, stands before the Judge, and seeks vindication. We explore how lament is not unbelief, how sorrow can coexist with steadfast confidence, and why “I believe; help my unbelief” is a cry for rescue, not a celebration of skepticism. Personal testimonies give the theme weight: one believer who has never doubted God; another who wrestled as a new Christian until Scripture steadied her heart. Together, they point to the same foundation—God's character, not our performance.We dig into Hebrews, Romans 8, and the refining paradox of affliction. Trials often harden assurance rather than melt it, driving us to depend on the only One who keeps His word without fail. We also challenge the phrase “all true Christians will doubt,” warning against turning any sin into a credential. Doubt sits with fear and worry in the list of enemies to mortify, not trophies to display. The courtroom imagery returns at the end: God as Judge, Christ as advocate, Satan as accuser, and the believer on the stand with a clear conscience and a stronger hope.If you're tired of treating doubt like a badge and ready to reclaim assurance as worship shaped by truth, this conversation is for you. Listen, share with a friend who needs courage, and leave a review with your take: is doubt a teacher—or a thief?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: "I Have Ordered My Cause" (Job 13:18) Part 2/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2026 38:34 Transcription Available


    Send us a textWhat does faith look like when everything you love is stripped away? We follow Job into the courtroom of suffering where he “orders his cause,” assembles his arguments, and expects vindication—not because he's flawless, but because he knows God is faithful. That conviction challenges a popular pose of feigned humility that sounds meek while quietly doubting the promises of God. We contrast an emaciated spiritual diet with a life nourished by Scripture, prayer, and fellowship, and we ask the harder question: are we strong enough in the truth to stand when pain presses in?We lean into the image of going “all in” on God: Job pushes every chip to the center, staking health, reputation, and future on divine mercy. From there, we unpack why Christian assurance is not arrogance but obedience to the gospel—if God justifies, who can bring any charge? Suffering, rather than excusing unbelief, becomes the furnace that refines trust, establishes resolve, and deepens dependence. We look to Christ's own suffering and advocacy as the ground of unshakeable hope, and we expose the enemy's accusations as powerless against the blood of the Lamb and the word of our testimony.Along the way, we talk practical formation: consistent habits before the storm prepare the heart for the day it breaks. Job's worship didn't start in crisis; it carried him through it. His friends' words echo the Accuser, yet the verdict belongs to God. Step into the throne room with boldness—like Esther—and find grace meeting courage. If you're wrestling with doubt, loss, or spiritual weariness, this conversation invites you to trade performative humility for rooted assurance and to let trials refine, not unravel, your faith.If this resonates, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs courage, and leave a review to help more listeners find these conversations.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: "I Have Ordered My Cause" (Job 13:18) Part 1/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2026 38:33 Transcription Available


    Send us a textWhat if your life fell apart and your closest friends insisted it was your fault? We step into Job 13 and watch a suffering saint refuse easy answers, order his hope, and stand before God with a clean conscience. The famous line—“Though He slay me, yet will I trust in Him”—anchors a larger argument about God's prerogative, human integrity, and the kind of assurance that survives the storm.We unpack how Job distinguishes sincerity from sinlessness, and why that matters for anyone living under whispered accusations. Job invites scrutiny, both from his friends and from God, not to boast but to keep his heart plain. From “I have ordered my cause” to “I know that I shall be justified,” he shows that clarity fuels courage. This isn't self-confidence; it's confidence in God's character. We also tackle the thorny question of boldness: can we approach God too boldly when we don't know everything? Scripture's pattern says come boldly, confess limits, and let God correct what He must—but never retreat from trust.Along the way, we confront a popular but brittle phrase: “losing salvation.” If salvation is God's rescue, its durability rests on His promise, not our mood or track record. That reorders the spiritual life—obedience as fruit rather than root, prayer over platitudes, and a conscience kept clear by grace. For listeners carrying quiet guilt or battered by unhelpful counsel, Job's voice is a guide: examine yourself honestly, anchor your hope in God's word, and refuse the lie that suffering always equals secret sin.If this conversation steadied your heart, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs courage, and leave a review telling us where you're placing your trust this week.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: (Job 13:12-17) "Though He Slay Me" Part 4/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2026 37:59 Transcription Available


    Send us a textWhat happens when faith refuses to blink? We journey through Job 13 with fresh eyes, tracing the path from “Though He slay me, yet will I trust Him” to the startling confidence of “I have ordered my cause; I know that I shall be justified.” Along the way we ask hard, practical questions about gospel witness: not a canned pitch, but a wise word fitted to real people in real moments. Why did Christ have to die for sinners? How do we speak truth as love, with motives clean and hearts steady?We explore the deep coherence of Scripture—how numbers, patterns, and restoration themes in Job hint at a larger fabric—and consider Job as a type and shadow of Christ: suffering, interceding, and misunderstood by those guarding the letter of the law. This isn't trivia; it's an invitation to read attentively, to seek and find, and to let the text train our courage. Faith, we argue, sees beyond the visible world and holds fast to promise when circumstances fray.Our time together moves from the study to the living room and the hospital corridor. We celebrate a family immigration approval that brings long-awaited relief, read Psalm 37 for steadying hope, and pray for a sister facing a medical crisis. Through it all, one theme stands tall: do not fear those who oppose the truth. Learn the whole counsel of God, set your case in order before Him, and speak with clarity and compassion. If love always protects, then truth must sometimes be bold.Listen to be nourished, challenged, and equipped to share the gospel without scripts, to suffer without surrender, and to hope without apology. If this conversation encouraged you, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a review with your insight on Job's “ordered cause.” What do you think he meant, and how does it shape your trust today?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: (Job 13:12-17) "Though He Slay Me" Part 3/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2026 37:59 Transcription Available


    Send us a textWhat does trust look like when comfort disappears and answers don't come? We walk through Job's bold declaration—“Though He slay me, yet will I trust Him”—to uncover a faith that refuses to bargain with God or bow to public opinion. The conversation dismantles transactional promises and prosperity slogans, pointing instead to allegiance rooted in God's character, not in outcomes.Across the table, we trace the thread from Job to Cain and David: mistrust fractures the soul, but falling into the hands of the Lord is both terrifying and completely safe. Job's integrity stands firm when titles, robes, and respect are gone. He won't invent a confession to appease friends or blame Satan for what he knows rests under God's providence. That clarity ushers in a deeper hope—resurrection and salvation beyond suffering—and highlights the perseverance of the saints. Hypocrisy can't stand before divine scrutiny; sincerity and trust do.We also tackle a modern challenge: learning to listen. Job pleads, “Hear my words diligently,” pushing back against the rush to instant answers. True discernment takes patience and Scripture, not pride and impulse. If you're ready to move from comfort-driven belief to a durable trust that outlasts loss, this is a rich, honest journey through courage, worship, and the promise that we cannot ultimately lose. Subscribe, share with a friend who needs hope, and tell us: where is your trust anchored today?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: (Job 13:12-17) "Though He Slay Me" Part 2/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2026 37:59 Transcription Available


    Send us a textEver had someone toss a verse at your pain and miss the point entirely? We open Job 13 and sit with a scene that feels uncomfortably familiar: friends with correct theology delivered in the wrong way, and a sufferer asking for silence, space, and reverence. Job names their counsel for what it is—ashes and clay—words that look sturdy until they face real pressure, then drift or crumble. The charge isn't that their ideas are untrue, but that they're misapplied, pride-tinged, and disconnected from discernment.Together we unpack why prosperity is a terrible meter for holiness and why reducing suffering to secret sin is a lazy shortcut that harms the wounded. We lean into the fear of the Lord that makes us slow to speak for God, and we talk about how to turn “stock theology” into targeted care by listening long enough to hear a complete thought. The conversation brings vivid images to life: ash without weight, clay that breaks, and the kiln of the Holy Spirit that fires our counsel so it can hold up under trial.You'll hear practical ways to stop weaponizing Scripture, how to ask better questions before quoting a passage, and why fewer words can carry more weight when they're tempered by prayer and patience. If you've ever been on the receiving end of careless counsel—or worried you've given it—this study offers a path toward wiser, kinder speech that honors God's majesty and serves real people.If this resonated, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs gentler counsel, and leave a quick review so others can find the study. What's one verse you want to apply more carefully this week?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: (Job 13:12-17) "Though He Slay Me" Part 1/4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2026 37:59 Transcription Available


    Send us a textPain doesn't always mean guilt, and blessing isn't a certificate of holiness. We open Job 13 and sit with a hard question: what happens when true words are used in the wrong way? Job calls his friends “physicians of no value” not because they quote falsehoods, but because their counsel lacks weight, context, and love. That tension—between accuracy and wisdom—shapes a wide-ranging, deeply practical conversation.Together we unpack how prosperity became a lazy measure of righteousness, and why Job refuses it. We trace his imagery of “ashes and clay,” revealing how weightless sayings scatter and fragile defenses crack under pressure. The panel brings this into everyday life: online debates that prize performance over care, stock theology that ignores the person in front of us, and the pride that interrupts instead of listens. We talk about the fear of God as a guardrail for speech, the discipline of letting someone finish a thought, and the humble art of choosing a verse that actually meets the wound.The potter-and-clay thread ties it all together. We are fragile until the kiln of the Spirit fires us into something useful; our words are the same. Counsel becomes healing when it is prayed over, contextually applied, and carried with compassion. If you've ever felt bludgeoned by a Bible verse or tempted to reach for your favorite argument instead of real discernment, this conversation offers a better path: hold your peace, listen long, aim true, and let love give your words weight.If this resonated, follow the show, share it with a friend who loves the book of Job, and leave a review with one takeaway you're bringing into your next hard conversation.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "Shall Not His Excellency Make You Afraid?" (Job 13:11,12) - Part 5/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2026 31:58 Transcription Available


    Send us a textWhat if the love of God only makes sense after the law has done its deep work in your heart? We step into that tension with candor and hope, following a thread from Job's restraint to Jesus' encounter with the Rich Young Ruler. Along the way, we challenge the reflex to avoid hard conversations, hide behind busyness, or settle for emotional altar moments that never yield repentance. The goal isn't guilt for guilt's sake—it's clarity, so grace can land with real weight.We talk about letting God go first in conflict, choosing forgiveness over reaction, and storing Scripture like treasure so it becomes the reflex of our speech. A powerful testimony shows how a simple, preemptive hug disarmed resentment and opened the door to apology. From there, we unpack why Jesus magnified the law: to increase conviction and shut down self-justification, making the heart ready for mercy. The Rich Young Ruler wanted eternal life on his terms; Jesus put a finger on the idol. That's the pattern we need today—less mood lighting, more truth in love, more cross before crown.Then we define what it means to be provoked and persuaded. To provoke is to stir up love and good works; to be persuaded is to move from momentary emotion to a settled conviction that reorders choices, habits, and witness. When the word plows the hard ground and persuasion fertilizes it, service becomes overflow rather than pressure. The best compliment to any teacher isn't flattery—it's hearing the truth retold from a changed life. We end with prayer, gratitude, a joyful praise report, and details for our August meetup in Missouri, reminding each other that the gospel takes root in real places among real people.If this resonates, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs courage, and leave a review with the one insight that moved you most. Your words help others discover the conversation and step into truth-filled love.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "Shall Not His Excellency Make You Afraid?" (Job 13:11,12) - Part 4/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2026 32:00 Transcription Available


    Send us a textWhat happens when a viral show cracks open a deeper conversation about God, calling, and courage? We follow that spark into a candid, unfiltered exploration of what it means to live and speak with conviction—on set, at the office, and in every small decision that shapes our witness. We don't trade in slogans or soft edges here. We press into the hard center of the Christian message: why sin is real, why repentance is necessary, and why the resurrection is the hinge of hope and the engine of boldness.You'll hear heartfelt questions from a creative wrestling with being a “kingdom” photographer or videographer, and a powerful reminder that talent is not the same as calling. We talk about how pressure to fit other people's expectations can drain you, and how quiet obedience can sometimes place you in roles you never planned but desperately needed. Then we move from theory to practice with real workplace stories: HR meetings, policy pushback, and the surprising favor that shows up when you choose wisdom with a backbone—being as wise as serpents and gentle as doves.Along the way, we reclaim persuasion as more than clever words. Persuasion means listening, trusting, and obeying the truth we proclaim. It means naming sin and grace clearly, not to shame people, but to point them to the only cure that lasts. And it means refusing to hide our allegiance to Jesus when it's costly, while staying measured, kind, and sharply clear. If you've wondered how to speak up without becoming obnoxious, how to be faithful without becoming timid, and how to use your gifts without idolizing them, this conversation will meet you where you are and send you out stronger.If this resonates, share it with a friend who needs courage today, leave a review so others can find it, and subscribe for more conversations that sharpen your faith and embolden your voice.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "Shall Not His Excellency Make You Afraid?" (Job 13:11,12) - Part 3/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2026 32:00 Transcription Available


    Send us a textWhat if every word you speak travels in two directions—out to people and up before God? That simple insight reframes courage, accountability, and the way we draw lines around reverence in our daily lives. We pull apart the easy myth that “it's just words” and show how speech forms culture on the jobsite, in our homes, online, and in the quiet places of the heart.We get honest about boundaries, sharing why we correct God's name used as a curse and how to do it without becoming combative. From construction crews to family gatherings, you teach people how to speak around you, and that choice becomes witness. We talk about listening for the Spirit's tug, dropping the Moses-style excuses, and matching tone to person: gentle for some, thunder for others, patience for many. The goal isn't noise—Job's friends had plenty of that—but biblical precision. Clean words flow from a clean heart, and the church's credibility begins with its mouth.We also chart how modern faith got soft: sentimental spirituality, entertainment-first worship, and escapist readings that sidestep hard texts and harder duties. Historically, believers were feared for their prayers and respected for their learning; today, the world is often bolder in irreverence than we are in holy fear. We press into what it means to bear Christ's name without vanity—more than avoiding profanity, it's living fruitfully under His authority. For creatives and professionals alike, we explore how to use gifts without compromise, crafting work shaped by truth and love rather than applause.If you've felt the nudge to speak but hesitated, consider this your invitation to change tonight. Subscribe, share this with someone who needs courage, and leave a review with one line you're committing to guard this week.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "Shall Not His Excellency Make You Afraid?" (Job 13:11,12) - Part 2/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2026 32:03 Transcription Available


    Send us a textWhat happens when reverence fades and noise takes over? We follow Job's debate with his friends to expose a modern problem: people can quote true things about God and still misrepresent him. Together we wrestle with how careless speech, pop-platform religion, and the urge to entertain have shaped a culture where the name of Jesus is used more as a punchline than a confession—and how a holy fear of God can reset our words, our witness, and our courage.We unpack why Job's friends were so persuasive and yet so wrong, how assumptions about suffering fuel judgment, and what it means to rightly divide Scripture with humility. You'll hear candid stories from the panel about conviction, public mistakes, and the hard practice of asking forgiveness when our teaching misleads. We talk about speaking truth in the Spirit rather than the flesh, and why tone, timing, and restraint matter as much as accuracy. Reverence doesn't mean silence; it means we confront error without cruelty and defend the honor of Christ without turning faith into spectacle.If quiet time with God feels dull, if Christian spaces feel like a stage, or if you've been burned by confident voices that missed the heart of God, this conversation offers a better way. Recovering fear of the Lord produces careful words, patient correction, and a resilient witness that resists applause and honors Christ openly. Listen, share with a friend who needs encouragement, and if this served you, subscribe, leave a review, and tell us: where do you see reverence needing a comeback?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "Shall Not His Excellency Make You Afraid?" (Job 13:11,12) - Part 1/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2026 31:59 Transcription Available


    Send us a textWhat if our snap judgments about suffering and success are the very things God rebukes? We dive into Job 13 and watch a wounded man push back against friends who wield true doctrine with false aim. Their error isn't in quoting Scripture; it's in using it to confirm their bias, turning outcomes into verdicts and pain into proof of guilt. Job's response restores a crucial line: God judges by his truth, not by appearances, and he sees through the soft tones of partiality that claim to defend him.Walking verse by verse, we unpack how a single word choice shifts the whole argument: Job's “if” functions as “since,” exposing secret favoritism that equates prosperity with righteousness. That tidy formula collapses under the reality of the prosperous wicked and the afflicted faithful. From there, the conversation widens into reverence. Job asks whether God's excellency should not make us afraid—a holy fear that steadies our tongues and sobers our methods. When reverence thins, we start performing faith instead of practicing it, and ministry drifts toward content and clicks. The result is counsel that sounds orthodox yet misses hearts, and a witness that entertains rather than edifies.We explore the pastoral implications for how we speak into pain, how we apply Scripture without weaponizing it, and how believers endure when answers don't come. For Christians, righteousness is not a trophy of outcomes but a gift in Christ, received by faith and guarded by perseverance. That truth frees us to comfort without suspicion and to correct without contempt. Listen for a grounded call to humility, careful speech, and renewed awe before a God who cannot be fooled and will set all things right.If this resonates, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs thoughtful encouragement, and leave a review to help others find these conversations.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

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