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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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    • May 20, 2026 LATEST EPISODE
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    Latest episodes from The Bible Provocateur

    Testimony Tuesday: Sister Savannah - Part 2 of 2

    Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2026 34:16 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailLove can look like tenderness, but it can also look like honesty. We sit down with Savannah, a new believer who describes a faith that's learning to hold compassion and accountability at the same time. She shares how empathy, suffering, and a growing love for Scripture shape the way she talks to people, corrects with kindness, and refuses to use flattery as a shortcut to peace.A major turning point is her struggle with the sovereignty of God and the realization that her free will wasn't as “free” as she once assumed. We unpack why God's sovereignty is not a cold doctrine but a lifeline: if God truly rules, then his promises are not wishful thinking. That truth becomes especially personal as Savannah walks through ongoing trials as a single mother, leaning on prayer, Bible reading, and the steady presence of other Christians who remind her she is not alone.We also talk sanctification and the hard surprise of seeing sin more clearly over time, plus the guilt and shame that can follow. The conversation moves into spiritual warfare, staying anchored in the Word, and navigating noisy online spaces like TikTok without getting pulled into confusion. We close with simple, direct gospel clarity and an invitation to keep seeking Jesus.If this encouraged you, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review. What part of faith has been the toughest for you to understand?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    Testimony Tuesday: Sister Savannah - Part 1 of 2

    Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2026 27:54 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailPain has a way of rewriting your story, especially when it starts early. Savannah walks us through a childhood shaped by family upheaval, poverty, sexual abuse, and exposure to violence and addiction, then into adolescence marked by depression, grief, and a growing anger at God. It's not a polished testimony. It's the kind that sounds like real life when nobody is editing the hard parts. Then comes the night that stops you in your tracks: too much weed, a scary movie, crushing paranoia, and a prayer she barely knows how to pray. Savannah describes a bright flash, a wave of peace, and being instantly clear minded, like she's seeing the world with new eyes. She believes that moment is the Holy Spirit breaking through, turning doubt into certainty and fear into faith. If you've ever wondered whether God can meet someone in the middle of a mess, her story gives you a lot to sit with. We also talk about what happens after the “moment” when life is still complicated: an unhealthy marriage, the weight of motherhood, and the shock of an unexpected divorce. Savannah shares how that heartbreak led her to Christian fellowship on TikTok, mentorship that pushed her back to the Bible, and a “trust but verify” approach to discernment that keeps her grounded in Scripture. She even describes quitting vaping abruptly, without cravings, as part of the change God works in her life. If you're navigating trauma recovery, divorce healing, Christian discipleship, or you're simply trying to rebuild faith one step at a time, this conversation is for you. Subscribe for more testimonies and Bible-centered conversations, share this with someone who needs hope, and leave a review with the part that hit you hardest.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "Have You An Arm Like God?" (Job 40/41), Part 5/5

    Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2026 34:07 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailJob wanted answers. He wanted a hearing. And when God finally speaks out of the whirlwind, Job's big move is not a speech, it is silence: “I will lay my hand upon my mouth.” That single turn becomes our springboard for a brutally practical conversation about humility, restraint, and what happens when we talk too much while we're under pressure.We dig into Job 40 to see why God's correction is loving even when it feels intense, then we sit with Job 41 and Leviathan as a picture of strength that puts our fears and egos in their place. Along the way, we connect the dots to Romans 7:24 and the honest cry, “Who will deliver me?” because the deeper issue is not just suffering, it is the heart behind our responses. We also reflect on a Spurgeon line that nails the need beneath the noise: a great need for Christ and a great Christ for our need.Then we bring it into today's world: reactive speech, online bickering, getting baited, and the temptation to defend ourselves until we lose composure. We talk about guarding your heart, choosing measured words, and learning the hard balance between necessary correction and sinful escalation. If you've ever left a conversation thinking, I should have stayed quiet, Job's lesson is for you.Subscribe for the upcoming studies, share this with a friend who's tired of comment wars, and leave a review telling us: when is staying silent the most faithful choice?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "Have You An Arm Like God?" (Job 40/41), Part 4/5

    Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2026 34:18 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailIf you've ever caught yourself talking about God like He's waiting on your permission, you're not alone, and you're not the first. We open with a hard question: why can't we “domesticate” creation, yet we keep trying to domesticate the Creator? From there, we walk straight into Job's confrontation with God and let the text do what it does best, expose human pride and shrink our inflated sense of control.Job 41 becomes the center of gravity as we look at Leviathan and Behemoth, not as trivia, but as God's argument. If no one can subdue these creatures, who can stand before the One who made them? That Creator over creature logic presses on modern assumptions about free will, salvation, and the subtle idea that God “can't move” unless we allow Him. We also connect the theme to Babel's “make a name” impulse and preview how Romans will keep pushing the same fault line between worshiping the created and worshiping the Creator.The conversation turns personal as we talk about the fear of the Lord, the danger of careless speech, and how God's sternness can be a Father's tough love meant for sanctification, not destruction. If a man like Job can err, what does that say about how seriously we should handle doctrine and the words we put in God's mouth? Subscribe for more Bible-driven conversations, share this with someone who wrestles with control, and leave a review telling us what challenged you most.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "Have You An Arm Like God?" (Job 40/41), Part 3/5

    Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2026 34:24 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailGod doesn't answer Job with a neat explanation. He answers with reality. When the Lord points to Behemoth, we hear a thunderous reminder that there are parts of creation we cannot tame, cannot bargain with, and cannot control and that fact is meant to do something to our pride. If a human being can't raise a sword to one creature God made, what business do we have putting God on trial for how he governs the world? We walk through Job 40–41 with a focus on God's sovereignty, providence, and purpose, and we talk honestly about the hardest animal to master: ourselves. The conversation keeps coming back to words, because Job's turning point is not a stronger argument but a quieter mouth. We connect Behemoth and Leviathan to the biblical theme that “out of the mouth the heart speaks,” and why being careful, precise, and humble with our speech is part of Christian discipleship. We also reflect on God's patience throughout Job, including how the early challenge from Satan ends with God restoring Job and proving that Job's future was never out of the Lord's hands. Land and sea, strength and suffering, fear and provision all point to one conclusion: God rules over what he makes, and humility is the only sane response. If this helped you rethink the Book of Job, subscribe for more, share this with a friend who needs steadiness right now, and leave a review with the line that challenged you most.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "Have You An Arm Like God?" (Job 40/41), Part 2/5

    Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2026 34:29 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailGod doesn't answer Job with a pep talk. He answers with weight. Job 40 puts a mirror in front of our pride and asks a terrifyingly simple question: can you do what only God can do, like bring down the proud, judge the wicked perfectly, and rule the world with a clean hand? We sit in that tension and talk about what God is really doing when he confronts Job, not to crush him, but to pull him back into truth about who God is and who we are.That leads straight into one of the most argued topics in Christian theology: can a believer lose salvation? We walk through Adam's original fallibility, why “Jesus gave you the same chance Adam had” sounds plausible, and why it quietly shifts the burden back onto you. Along the way we dig into substitutionary atonement, imputed righteousness, and the claim that Christ bears all sin past, present, and future. If that's true, what sin is left to condemn someone who is truly in Christ, and what does it say about the cross if salvation can be undone?We also call out the soft slogans that reshape God into a safe, human-sized figure: “let go and let God,” “God is a gentleman,” and the habit of treating doctrine like trivia. Job's story warns us about filling God's silence with assumptions, and it invites a more reverent, serious faith rooted in God's sovereignty rather than our self-confidence. If this conversation sharpens you, share it with a friend, subscribe for more, and leave a review with the biggest question it raised for you.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "Have You An Arm Like God?" (Job 40/41), Part 1/5

    Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2026 33:23 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailGod's questions in Job 40 are not gentle, and that is exactly why they matter. When life feels unfair, it is easy to drift from “I don't understand” into “God must be wrong.” We slow down in Job chapter 40 and watch God confront that drift, not to destroy Job, but to restore him to humility, clarity, and trust under God's sovereignty. We read Job's stunning reply, “Behold, I am vile… I will lay my hand upon my mouth,” and talk about what real repentance looks like when you realize you have spoken beyond your place. Then we dig into God's challenge: can Job disannul God's judgment, thunder with God's voice, humble the proud, and crush the wicked with perfect justice? The point is not that Job is worthless, but that only God is fit to govern the world with flawless wisdom and power, especially when suffering makes everything feel chaotic. A major thread is a common Christian mistake: assuming that if God commands something, we must already have the ability to do it. Job 40 pushes the opposite conclusion, that God's demands often expose our inability and drive us to dependence on grace. With insights from the panel, we also explore spiritual growth, discernment, and assurance, how a sincere believer can be wrong and still be God's, and why honesty with God must never turn into condemning His rule. If this conversation helps you, subscribe, share it with a friend who is hurting, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "Him That Reproves God, Let Him Answer" (Job 39), Part 4/4

    Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2026 32:01 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailIf you've ever caught yourself thinking, “God wouldn't do that,” Job 40 has something to say about it. We open with a blunt reminder that lands on the heart: without Christ we can do nothing and without Christ we are nothing. That's not despair, it's clarity and it resets how we talk about salvation by grace alone, spiritual pride, and what it means to live with real dependence on God. From there we move straight into Job 40:1–2, where the Lord challenges Job with a question most of us avoid: are you actually qualified to contend with the Almighty, instruct Him, or reprove Him? We talk about the clay and the potter, why humans argue about God's “fairness,” and how reverence for Scripture should change the way we speak. When God speaks, the goal isn't to win an argument. The goal is humility, silence where we need it, and worship that's rooted in truth. We also tackle a church problem that keeps repeating: rebuilding God in our own image, especially around hard doctrines like election, judgment, and human responsibility. We highlight repentance and faith as supernatural gifts, the necessity of a new heart, and why the infinite gap between God's holiness and our righteousness can't be bridged by decisions, emotions, or effort. We close with practical reflections on discipleship, learning to surrender control, and praying for believers who are suffering around the world. If this conversation strengthens you, subscribe, share it with a friend who needs steadiness, and leave a review so more people can find this Job Bible study and the big themes of God's sovereignty, holiness, and grace alone. What part challenged you most?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "Him That Reproves God, Let Him Answer" (Job 39), Part 3/4

    Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2026 32:01 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailThe most dangerous sentence in a spiritual conversation might be “God wouldn't do that.” We say it when we're hurt, when we're confused, or when the Bible won't fit inside our idea of fairness. But Job 40 forces a different question: if we want to contend with the Almighty, are we actually prepared to answer back when God speaks?We walk through the weight of God's holiness and sovereignty and why that isn't a cold doctrine, it's the only solid ground for joy, peace, and endurance. We talk plainly about what we contribute to salvation (nothing but sin) and why grace alone isn't a religious slogan, it's the only way anyone is saved. Along the way we confront the urge to “instruct” God, the danger of careless talk about Scripture, and why humility often looks like silence when we don't know what we're talking about.The conversation also turns practical: what discipleship should look like, why new believers need patient guidance, and how creation itself exposes our limits and our craving for control. If you've been searching for a deeper Bible study on the Book of Job, Job 40 explained, God's sovereignty, or salvation by grace through faith, this is a sobering but hopeful listen.Subscribe for more, share this with someone who loves Job or struggles with doubt, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway. What's the hardest part for you about surrendering control to God?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "Him That Reproves God, Let Him Answer" (Job 39), Part 2/4

    Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2026 32:11 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailYou ever notice how quickly we want answers from God, while resisting the one thing he keeps calling for: surrender? We sit with Job 39 and let God's questions do their work. The “unicorn” or wild ox becomes a sharp metaphor for what can't be controlled, and it exposes something uncomfortable in us: we demand explanations from the Lord while struggling to govern our own hearts. From that tension, we move straight into the heart of the gospel. We say it plainly and repeatedly because the stakes are eternal: salvation is by grace through faith alone. Not good deeds. Not avoiding bad deeds. Not adding a religious extra that sounds wise online. We talk about justification by faith, why Christ stands in our stead, and why “strength” in the spiritual life is meaningless if it isn't paired with a nature made willing by God. If you've been confused by TikTok theology, pressure to “earn” God's favor, or fear that you haven't done enough, this will clarify what we believe scripture teaches. Then Job's ostrich image takes the conversation into everyday life, especially Christian parenting. The ostrich buries her eggs and doesn't grasp the danger; we ask whether we do something similar when we chase status, money, and busyness while neglecting spiritual instruction for our kids. We also reflect on what a true testimony is really about: not just how life improved, but how God showed us our sin and rescued us from wrath. If this helped you, subscribe, share it with a friend who needs clarity on grace, and leave a review so more people can find the show. What part challenged you most?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "Him That Reproves God, Let Him Answer" (Job 39), Part 1/4

    Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2026 30:43 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailGod doesn't answer Job's pain with a spreadsheet of reasons. He answers with questions and the questions land like thunder. Job 39 takes us into the wild where goats give birth on cliffs, deer calve unseen, and creatures thrive far from human control. We follow God's line of argument and feel the weight of it: if we cannot even track the basics of life in the animal kingdom, what makes us think we are qualified to put God's providence on trial?We dig into the passage section by section, highlighting God's sovereignty over creation and his constant care for what we overlook. The wild donkey becomes a turning point as we talk about human dominion in Genesis, what humanity was entrusted with, and how sin and self-rule shattered our ability to govern even ourselves. That thread brings Job's suffering into sharper focus: sometimes our strongest demand is for an explanation, but our greatest need is a corrected view of God and of our limits.You'll also hear the panel's candid reactions: how this chapter exposes the fantasy of independence from God, why humility is not humiliation, and how the animal world can rebuke our pride while strengthening our trust. If you're searching for biblical teaching on suffering, God's sovereignty, and Christian humility, this conversation will give you language and clarity. Subscribe, share this with a friend who needs it, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    Testimony Tuesday: Audrey Tyson (Part 3/3)

    Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2026 31:57 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailA soft voice can still be a refusal to hear the truth, and we don't want to confuse “nice” with “faithful.” We start by calling out the spiritual marketplace behind prosperity gospel preaching and modern “prophet” culture, then we pivot into something far more personal: Tyson's testimony and the kind of encouragement that lands right where it's needed.We talk about what it looks like to examine ourselves without spiraling into shame, how forgiveness grows out of remembering how much we've been forgiven, and why worth isn't something the world gets to assign. From there, the conversation sharpens around biblical truth and division. We challenge the idea that division is automatically bad by looking at how God separates light from darkness, and we name the real culprit behind destructive division: lies. That leads to a practical discipleship question many Christians avoid, whether we actually take Christ's commands like orders or keep trying to rewrite them to fit our comfort.The night also holds space for healing. A therapy practice of writing to your childhood self becomes a gospel exercise, asking how you'd speak hope to the version of you that endured trauma. We talk about how salvation changes purpose from serving self to serving others, and we share worship, nerves, and the courage to keep showing up with humility. We close by reflecting on why people chase counterfeits when they don't press into the deep things of God, then we end in prayer for boldness, sanctification, and lives that stay at Jesus' feet.If this encouraged you, subscribe, share it with a friend who needs steady truth, and leave a review. What's one line you would write to your younger self today?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    Testimony Tuesday: Audrey Tyson (Part 2/3)

    Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2026 31:48 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailThe prosperity gospel promises control. The real gospel takes it away and somehow gives you something better.We tell the story of how Tyson walked out of Word of Faith thinking and into a Bible-shaped faith, starting with resources like The American Gospel and teachers who won't bend Scripture to fit a moment. Along the way, we talk about why those awkward, repetitive gospel conversations with family matter more than we think. Seeds get planted at holidays, on phone calls, in messy relationships, and God can bring them back years later like puzzle pieces finally clicking into place.This conversation doesn't dodge the hard parts: childhood trauma, looking for counterfeit father figures, and the complicated work of forgiving a parent. Tyson shares what it meant to care for her mother through cancer, keep bringing the gospel even when it was rejected, and then discover a diary entry that brought unexpected closure. If you've ever wondered how to hold truth and tenderness at the same time, you'll feel the tension and the hope here.We also go deep on Reformed theology, the doctrines of grace, total depravity, and the sovereignty of God. We talk about pride, self-protection, anger, and why sanctification can look like a thousand small turns to the Lord. Tyson anchors that growth in 2 Corinthians 3:16: veils lifted, freedom found, and real change “from glory to glory.”Subscribe for more conversations like this, share it with a friend who's sorting through prosperity teaching, and leave a review if it helps. What part of this story challenged you most?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    Testimony Tuesday: Audrey Tyson (Part 1/3)

    Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2026 26:54 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailShe thought she was finally doing life right: Army at 17, law enforcement, marriage, a home, a new baby. Then grief and collapse came fast a child's death in the family, a marriage unraveling under trauma, finding her father dead from opioid addiction, and losing the career she loved. When everything stacked up, Argerie Tyson didn't tell a polished story. She told the honest one.We talk with her about growing up with addiction, violence, and sexual abuse, and how that kind of trauma can twist your sense of trust, safety, and relationships for years. She shares what it was like trying to “fix herself” through self-help and New Age spirituality, why it seemed peaceful at first, and the frightening moment she describes as a glimpse of what separation from God feels like. The turning point is simple and unforgettable: she finds a Bible, calls on the name of Jesus Christ, and the terror lifts.From there, we dig into discernment and doctrine: why she believes witchcraft and the prosperity gospel run on the same engine of works and control, and why the real miracle isn't health, wealth, or a better “manifested” life, but God raising the spiritually dead by grace. If you care about biblical Christianity, spiritual warfare, leaving the New Age, and the sovereignty of God in salvation, you'll find both warning and hope here.Subscribe for more conversations like this, share this with a friend who needs clarity, and leave a review so more people can find it. What part of her journey hit closest to home for you?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: "The Lord Answers Job" (Job 38), Part 5/5

    Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2026 36:04 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailJob is usually sold as a motivational poster about grit. We can't read it that way anymore. The longer we sit with Job 38, the clearer it gets: the headline is God's patience, not Job's. When the Lord finally speaks from the whirlwind, He doesn't hand Job a neat explanation for suffering. He asks questions that expose the limits of human wisdom and at the same time comfort Job with the steady reality of God's rule.We talk through what that means for real Christian life and real pain. Why does God deal with ignorance like a Father and not like an accuser? What do you do with seasons where Scripture feels closed, then suddenly a passage opens years later? We also wrestle with biblical interpretation, including the danger of building doctrine out of silence, and why humility is not optional when the gap between God and man is infinite.Then we bring it where Job ultimately pushes us: creation displays God's glory, and Jesus Christ displays God's mercy. If you're in suffering, the call is not to invent a story God never told you. The call is to know who He is, to trust His sovereignty, and to look to Christ for salvation and steady endurance when the “why” stays unanswered.If this strengthened you, subscribe for more, share it with a friend walking through trials, and leave a review so more people can find these conversations. What part of Job 38 do you most need to hear right now?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: "The Lord Answers Job" (Job 38), Part 4/5

    Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2026 36:04 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailWeather records keep breaking, and it's easy to slip into the belief that the world is either spinning out of control or resting in human hands. We open Job 38 and let God answer that illusion with questions that cut straight through our ego: Who sends rain? Who commands lightning? Why does water fall on wilderness where no one lives? That one detail alone challenges an anthropocentric faith and replaces it with a God-centered view of creation, purpose, and providence.From there we look up. God points Job to Orion, Pleiades, and Arcturus and asks if any human can bind, loose, guide, or set the laws of the heavens. We connect that to something practical and surprising: navigating by the stars. The fixed order sailors rely on is a daily reminder that the universe is not self-made, and that God's design is dependable even when our lives feel anything but stable.Then the questions turn inward: who put wisdom in the inward parts, and who gave understanding to the heart? That launches a clear conversation about Christian theology, God's sovereignty, and why modern arguments about free will often protect our pride more than they protect biblical truth. We close with God's care for lions and ravens, a grounded picture of divine provision that reaches far beyond humans and still somehow includes us.If you want a deeper, sturdier faith rooted in the Book of Job, listen, share this with a friend who wrestles with control, and subscribe and leave a review so more people can find the conversation. What part of Job 38 challenges you the most?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: "The Lord Answers Job" (Job 38), Part 3/5

    Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2026 36:04 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailGod doesn't answer Job with a neat explanation. He answers with creation, with the sea shut behind doors, with the dawn taking its place, with light that exposes what darkness wants to hide. That shift matters when you're living through suffering and everything feels chaotic, personal, and unfair. We walk slowly through Job 38 and ask the question the text keeps pressing: if God sets boundaries for the ocean, what does that imply about the boundaries on affliction, fear, and the “whirlwind” seasons of your life?We also dig into providence and God's sovereignty in a practical way. The point isn't that hardship is painless, or that faith is pretending. The point is that chaos is not independent. God is not scrambling to fight disorder; He handles it, orders it, and stays present inside it. Along the way, we talk about how the morning becomes a living metaphor for hope, spiritual illumination, and moral clarity, and why God's silence should not be mistaken for God's absence.From the depths of the sea to the “treasures” of snow and hail, Job 38 invites us to see God's handiwork everywhere and to speak with humility about what we don't know. We even end with a simple challenge: let everyday weather talk become a doorway to talk about God's majesty and care. If this helped you trust God in suffering, subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: "The Lord Answers Job" (Job 38), Part 2/5

    Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2026 36:04 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailGod finally speaks to Job and it's not the answer any of us expects. Instead of explaining the “why” of suffering, the Lord confronts Job with a sharper gift: reality. We talk through Job 38 and the danger of confusing knowledge with authority, the way human pride can make us talk about God as if we're equal to him, and what it means to be corrected for “words without knowledge” without being crushed by shame.We also sit with a surprising comfort: hearing from God at all. Sometimes we would rather be rebuked than left in silence, because correction can be a sign of love. From “gird up your loins” to the fear of the Lord, we trace how God dignifies Job by engaging him directly, then leads him through creation as a living argument for divine sovereignty. “Where were you when I laid the foundations of the earth?” is not God flexing for sport, it's God restoring proportion.Then the whirlwind turns practical. God sets boundaries for the sea, restrains chaos, and proves that storms only go as far as he allows. We connect that to Jesus calming the water, to the daily choices we make under pressure, and to the hard question underneath Job's pain: has any loss changed the fact that God is still on the throne?If you've ever demanded answers from God, this conversation will challenge you and steady you. Subscribe, share this with a friend who's in a storm, and leave a review telling us: which question from Job 38 stopped you in your tracks?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: "The Lord Answers Job" (Job 38), Part 1/5

    Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2026 35:50 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailGod finally breaks the silence in Job 38 and what He says is not what most of us expect. After chapter after chapter of people trying to explain Job's suffering, we arrive at the moment when the Lord speaks out of the whirlwind and He never tells Job why it happened. No autopsy of pain. No simple moral equation. Just God, present and unmistakably powerful.We slow down and trace the core pattern in God's response: He teaches through questions. The questions are not trivia or word games, they are a mirror that shows Job his limits and shows God's wisdom through creation, providence, and order. We talk about how rhetorical questions can be a form of mercy because they don't merely inform the mind, they re-center the heart. Along the way, our group reflects on how this matches the way Jesus often dealt with people, drawing them to truth through questions that expose what we assume we deserve.The biggest takeaway is the shift from “why is this happening to me” to “who is God.” If you're searching for a Christian perspective on suffering, the Book of Job, Job 38, and the God who speaks from the whirlwind offers something deeper than an explanation: a revelation that produces humility, reverence, and trust. If that tension feels personal right now, you're not alone.Subscribe for more Bible study through Job, share this with a friend who's hurting, and leave a review with your biggest question: when you suffer, do you most want the why or the who?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: "The Potter, The Clay & Reprobation" (Part 5/5)

    Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2026 33:36 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailBarabbas was guilty, and he still walked free. That single detail forces a question most of us would rather dodge: if a pardon is never owed, what does it mean when God shows mercy to some and passes by others? We start there and work carefully through election and reprobation, stressing that reprobation is not God “adding evil” to anyone, but God withholding rescuing grace and letting justice run its course for people already fallen in Adam. We also push back on a soft view of salvation that treats the cross like paperwork. Justice must be served, and that is why the cost matters. Sister May and others underline a central claim: Jesus did not come to make salvation possible, he came to save effectually and he never fails. Not one drop of his blood is in vain. That leads into a vivid picture of effectual calling through Lazarus, where God calls the dead by name and brings real life, not a mere opportunity to choose life. From Romans 9 to the potter and the clay, we talk about humility, assurance, and why gratitude should replace boasting. We also name the uncomfortable implications for man-made religion and any system that makes someone other than God the determiner of destiny. The conversation ends on a sober warning about judgment, a reflection on hell's door being “locked from the inside,” and a closing prayer for perseverance and for persecuted Christians around the world. Subscribe for more Bible study conversations on God's sovereignty, grace, justice, and the gospel, then share this with a friend and leave a review. What part of the discussion challenged you most?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: "The Potter, The Clay & Reprobation" (Part 4/5)

    Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2026 33:39 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailThe moment you assume grace must be “fair,” Romans 9 starts sounding offensive. We slow down and read Paul's potter and clay argument the way it's written: one lump of humanity, no special quality in the clay, and a God whose mercy is free because it isn't owed. That leads straight into the toughest questions Christians ask about election, reprobation, and whether God is unjust.We also unpack predestination without turning it into a cold math problem. The key move is foreknowledge: not bare awareness of future facts, but God's forelove for his people. From that angle, predestination belongs to the beloved in Christ, and “double predestination” collapses under Paul's own distinction between those “fitted for destruction” and those “prepared beforehand for glory.” Along the way we bring it down to earth with a debt-forgiveness analogy that exposes why forgiving some does not create an obligation to forgive all.Then we zoom out to the story of salvation itself. Jesus is not Plan B, the crucifixion reveals real human blindness, and the Barabbas scene shows how pardon can be real even when the guilty go free and the innocent is condemned. If you've wrestled with God's sovereignty, grace, mercy, justice, and what it means to be “condemned already” apart from Christ, this conversation is for you. Subscribe, share this with a friend who loves theology, and leave a review with the question you're still wrestling with.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: "The Potter, The Clay & Reprobation" (Part 3/5)

    Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2026 33:39 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailYou can feel it in your bones when someone tells you, “God did his part, now you do yours.” It sounds fair. It also quietly turns the gospel into a contract. We go back to the Bible's blunt imagery of the potter and the clay and ask a simple question: if God forms us from dust and gives us breath, why would we imagine we contribute the decisive part of our salvation?We walk through Genesis 2, Job's “made me as clay” language, and Paul's teaching in 2 Corinthians 4 that God must shine light into dark hearts so we can see the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ. That “light” is not self-generated motivation. It is sovereign grace. We also talk about the “treasure in earthen vessels” theme and why it is meant to destroy boasting and create real Christian assurance, the kind that steadies you when you think about death, fear, and whether you have done enough.Then we tackle the tension point: obedience. Yes, Christians obey, but we are not saved by our obedience. We are saved by Christ's obedience, credited to us through faith, because “It is finished” means the work is actually done. Finally, we address the doctrine many avoid saying out loud: reprobation, vessels of honor and vessels of dishonor, and why God's sovereign election cannot be discussed honestly without it.If you've ever wrestled with control, surrender, assurance, or works-based salvation, listen through and share it with a friend who needs clarity. Subscribe, leave a review, and tell us: where do you feel most tempted to add to grace?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: "The Potter, The Clay & Reprobation" (Part 2/5)

    Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2026 33:39 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailIf the words “God is sovereign” feel comforting until they touch salvation, Romans 9 has a way of bringing everything to the surface. We sit down with our panel and follow the Bible's potter-and-clay imagery where it actually leads: God forms vessels of mercy and vessels of wrath, and the clay doesn't get a vote. That single truth challenges modern Christian assumptions about free will, fairness, and what we think God “wouldn't do.”Along the way we connect Jeremiah's picture of a marred vessel with Paul's argument that the Creator has rights over his creation, and we read Isaiah 46 as a direct claim that God's counsel stands and he does all his pleasure. We also talk honestly about why people cling to choice language, especially when they're desperate to “convince” someone they love. If salvation depends on our skill, our timing, or our phrasing, the pressure never ends. If salvation is of the Lord, we can witness faithfully while learning to let go of control.We don't dodge the hard phrases, including “vessels of wrath fitted for destruction,” and we ask what that means for assurance and self-examination. A label can't save us, and saying “I'm a Christian” doesn't automatically mean our hearts submit to the God of the Bible. We close by returning to the clay theme in Genesis, reminding ourselves how dependent we really are on the One who formed us from dust. If this conversation challenges you, share it with a friend, subscribe for more, and leave a review that tells us: does God's sovereignty make you resist or rest?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: "The Potter, The Clay & Reprobation" (Part 1/5)

    Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2026 33:18 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailClay doesn't bargain, and Scripture never pretends it does. We take the potter and the clay straight into the deep end of Romans 9, where Paul shuts down the impulse to put God on trial and insists that the Creator has rights the creature does not. If you've ever felt the tension between God's sovereignty and human responsibility, this conversation names that tension clearly and refuses the comfort of vague answers.We walk through Romans 9:20–23 line by line, focusing on the dividing line Paul draws between vessels of wrath and vessels of mercy. From there we connect the dots to total depravity and why the “it's up to you” version of salvation collapses under the weight of the text. The point isn't to make people cynical, but to make grace look like grace: mercy, compassion, election, and effectual calling come from God, not from a hidden spark of moral ability in us.Isaiah reinforces the same message by calling out the upside-down thinking that treats the potter like the clay. Then Jeremiah's potter scenes sharpen the warning: the marred vessel gets discarded, and the broken vessel becomes a picture of judgment that cannot be undone. Along the way we talk about imputed righteousness, what it means to be dead in sin, and why “with men it is impossible” is not an exaggeration but the foundation for hope.If you care about biblical theology, Reformed doctrine, and the hard honesty of Romans 9, listen through and weigh the claims against the text. Subscribe for more, share this with a friend who loves Scripture, and leave a review. Where do you feel the strongest pushback against the potter-and-clay truth?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: "With God Is Terrible Majesty" (JOB 37), Part 3/3

    Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2026 39:24 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailSome of the harshest lines in the Book of Job sound like proof that Job “went too far” until you ask one simple question: who was he talking to? We dig into that distinction and it changes everything. When Job speaks to his friends, he's debating. When Job speaks to God, he's praying, and raw prayer often sounds like complaint before it sounds like peace.We walk through why context matters, how Job's words get mischaracterized, and why God's correction is aimed at Job's response rather than some hidden sin that “earned” his suffering. Along the way we talk about Elihu's role, including places where Elihu appears to misquote Job or exaggerate what Job meant, and why confident theology can still fail a hurting person if it cannot explain affliction with humility.Then the panel gets personal: prayers that include anger, confusion, and big questions, plus the experience of conviction and course-correction mid-prayer. We also explore lament as worship, the fear of the Lord as wisdom, and what it looks like to trust God when He does not explain the plan, only calling us to keep coming back as children to a faithful Father.If you've ever wondered whether God can handle your honest words, this conversation is for you. Subscribe, share this with someone walking through suffering, and leave a review with your answer: what does honest prayer look like for you?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: "With God Is Terrible Majesty" (JOB 37), Part 2/3

    Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2026 39:26 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailSomething is off about the way Job's friends talk. They say true things about God, but Job is still sitting in the dirt with no comfort, no explanation, and no advocate. We pick up in Job 37 and ask the hard question believers still ask in grief, trauma, and loss: why would God allow this, and what do we do when the reason stays hidden?Jonathan is joined by Sister Mariah, Sister Lisa, and Brother Jeffrey to unpack Elihu's speech and the repeated warning about speaking “by reason of darkness.” We explore the difference between sound doctrine and wise care, why the “it must be sin” instinct misses the point of Job's suffering, and how the book shows the limits of human certainty when God has not made the story public. Along the way we connect Job's ache to modern struggles like depression, anxiety, and the pain of unanswered prayers.We also get personal about prayer and authenticity. If God already knows our hearts, what does reverence look like when we're angry, scared, or desperate for God to speak? We close by looking ahead to the moment when God finally answers, not with easy explanations, but with questions that reshape Job's humility and trust.If this challenged you, subscribe, share it with a friend who needs wiser comfort, and leave a review so more people can find it. What's the most helpful thing someone has ever said or done when you were suffering?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: "With God Is Terrible Majesty" (JOB 37), Part 1/3

    Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2026 37:32 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailA thunderstorm rolls in across Job 37 and Elihu treats it like a sermon illustration: God directs lightning to the ends of the earth, commands snow to fall, sends wind and frost, and turns clouds by His counsel. We slow down in the text and let it say what it says about God's sovereignty, providence, and the limits of human understanding. If you've ever searched for clarity in chaos, Job 37 forces a hard kind of humility: creation obeys, and we are not the ones holding the sky in place.But we also press on the uncomfortable gap. Elihu's theology is often accurate and still feels useless to Job's pain. He offers grandeur when Job needs comfort, questions when Job needs companionship, and pressure to “confess” when the story has already shown deeper forces at work. Our panel reacts in real time, weighing Elihu's heart posture and noticing how easy it is to speak truth with no tenderness.From there we widen the lens to biblical counseling and Christian suffering: when someone is depressed, grieving, or crushed, what does it look like to put gospel truths into shoe leather? We talk about silence as love, presence as ministry, and why 1 Corinthians 13 becomes a warning for anyone who wants to help with facts but not compassion. If the Book of Job raises the question “Why is this happening?” we ask the equally practical one: “How should we show up while we wait for God's perspective?”Subscribe for the next chapter as God finally speaks, share this with a friend who cares for hurting people, and leave a review with your answer: what has comforted you most when life made no sense?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "Will God Esteem Thy Riches?" (JOB 36), Part 4/4

    Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2026 31:29 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailElihu's speeches can sound like worship, but they can also feel like a sermon aimed at an open wound. We sat with that tension and argued it out: does Elihu actually accuse Job, or is he doing something “better” than the three friends by framing suffering as correction instead of condemnation? We camped in Job 35:16 and the surrounding logic, because one verse can be both accurate and weaponized, and that difference matters when you're trying to comfort someone in real pain.From there, we zoomed out to what the Book of Job teaches about the way we speak. We talked about how easy it is to hide judgment inside general statements about prosperity, obedience, and God's greatness, and why “right theology” is not the same as a right heart. Several of us connected Job's miserable silence and boils with Jesus' warnings about religious words that sound beautiful while hearts stay far away, and we asked a hard question: are we tending wounds, or just talking?We also explored the bigger backdrop that makes Job so staggering. Scripture hints that God's wisdom is displayed beyond earth, that angelic beings watch and learn, and that faith under suffering may be teaching more than we realize. That reframes endurance, humility, and repentance as public realities in a spiritual sense, even when life feels private and unfair.If you've ever tried to help a hurting friend and worried you might say the wrong thing, this conversation is for you. Subscribe, share, and leave a review, then tell us: when does “truth” stop being helpful and start becoming harm?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "Will God Esteem Thy Riches?" (JOB 36), Part 3/4

    Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2026 31:32 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailThunder, clouds, and changing weather sound like small talk until you realize Elihu is using them to make a towering claim: God actively rules the world. We sit with Job 36:30–33 and trace Elihu's argument that the same creation God uses to feed people can also bring storms, harsh seasons, and judgment. That launches us into the deeper issue behind so many conversations about suffering and the sovereignty of God: if God is truly in control, what is a hurting person supposed to do with that truth? We push on a hard question that shows up in real pastoral care and real friendships. Elihu says many correct things about God's power, wisdom, and providence, but does any of it actually help Job's specific situation? We talk through the difference between knowing doctrine and gaining understanding through affliction, and why reminders of God's greatness can feel hollow when someone is “in the toilet” emotionally. We also weigh whether Elihu is simply defending God or whether he is, in fact, accusing Job of pride, empty talk, and even rebellion, just with a more sophisticated tone than the three friends. Along the way, we challenge arguments from silence, ask what it means to “defend God” while you're suffering, and name the tension between right theology and right timing. If you care about the Book of Job, Christian suffering, biblical wisdom, and the question of why the righteous suffer, you'll find plenty here to think through with us. Subscribe for the next chapter, share this with a friend who loves deep Bible study, and leave a review with your take: is Elihu wisdom, misfire, or both?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "Will God Esteem Thy Riches?" (JOB 36), Part 2/4

    Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2026 31:32 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailSomeone can say a lot of true things about God and still miss the moment completely. That's the question driving our deep dive into Elihu's speeches in the Book of Job: are we hearing wise correction, or a softer form of the same accusation Job's friends keep pressing?We argue through the turning point in Job 32 where the narrator says Elihu's anger is kindled against Job, then trace what that anger produces. On one side, Elihu's theology is strong: God is great, God teaches perfectly, no one can accuse God of wrongdoing, and creation itself displays God's power. On the other side, we keep asking the pastoral question: what does any of that do for Job's actual suffering? If the warning is “don't choose sin in affliction,” is Elihu applying a true principle to the wrong person?Along the way, we bring in Job 33 and Job 36, discuss whether Elihu misquotes Job's words, and explore why a “correct” speech can still feel like blame. If you care about Christian suffering, biblical lament, God's sovereignty, and what wise counsel sounds like in real life, this conversation will sharpen how you read Job and how you speak to hurting people.Subscribe for more Bible-centered conversations, share this with a friend who loves Job, and leave a review. Do you read Elihu as helper or accuser?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "Will God Esteem Thy Riches?" (JOB 36), Part 1/4

    Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2026 31:26 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailJob has friends who can quote true things about God all day long, but Job still sits in ashes with no comfort and no explanation. That's where we camp out as we continue our verse by verse Bible study through the Book of Job, focusing on Job 36 and the speech of Elihu. He's younger, louder, and convinced he's defending God's righteousness with “perfect knowledge” on his side. The problem is not that Elihu only says false things. The problem is what happens when true statements get forced into a neat story that doesn't fit the sufferer.We walk through Elihu's claims about God's power, wisdom, justice, and mercy, then slow down when he reframes suffering and affliction as correction. Is hardship always pointing to sin? Is it discipline meant to open our ears? Or can it be something else entirely? Our group discussion tests Elihu's logic against the full context of Job, including the dangerous idea that obedience guarantees prosperity and that pain proves guilt. Along the way, we talk about transgression, repentance, hypocrisy, and what “humility” really means when someone is already crushed.This is a practical conversation for anyone doing Christian discipleship, pastoral care, or simply trying to make sense of suffering without turning God into a formula. We end by naming the tension Elihu never resolves: Job's real “why” is still unanswered until God speaks. Subscribe for the next part, share this with a friend who loves the Book of Job, and leave a review if this study helps you. What's a “true” spiritual line you've heard that still didn't help in pain?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: Testimony of Bobbi Blankenship (Part 3/3)

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2026 41:20 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailA mother's grief is its own kind of language and Sister Bobby speaks it with honesty, tenderness, and a steady trust in God that stops you in your tracks. We sit with her testimony of losing her daughter Heather, the ache of replaying those moments, and the strange strength that can show up when all you can do is pray. If you've ever wondered what “faith” looks like when life is not getting better, this conversation gives you something real to hold.We also talk through the spiritual questions that rise to the surface in suffering: Do you ever bring complaints to God? How does the book of Job change the way you think about tragedy? Bobby shares the moment she and a friend asked Heather if she was sure about heaven, including the haunting detail of recurring elevator dreams and the relief of hearing a clear confession of faith near the end. Along the way we mention anchor passages that many Christians return to in grief, including Job 1:21 and Jeremiah 29:11, and why Scripture can feel like oxygen when your mind can't find words.The conversation doesn't stay abstract. Bobby opens up about complicated family relationships, learning to love at a distance, and the long road of praying for reconciliation. We ask a direct, personal question, “Who is Jesus to you?” and her answer lands with weight, especially as she describes facing health fears and choosing trust over control. She also shares how she's kept a detailed journal and is working toward turning it into a book so other people walking through child loss, bereavement, and Christian grief support can find hope.If this testimony helps you, subscribe for more, share it with someone who's hurting, and leave a review so more listeners can find these conversations. What part of Bobby's story stayed with you the most?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: Testimony of Bobbi Blankenship (Part 2/3)

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2026 41:24 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailA healthy 26-year-old can become critically ill in a matter of days, and the fallout can last more than a year. We talk with Bobby as she shares the full arc of her daughter Heather's 13-month fight with Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS), from relentless pain and nausea to life on a trach and feeding tube, repeated pneumonia, and the exhausting reality of being transferred again and again through hospitals and nursing facilities. What stays with us is how much of this journey is not just medical, but logistical and moral: discharge pressure, insurance barriers, and the risk of neglect when a facility is understaffed or unclean. Bobby names the moments families dread, finding unsafe conditions, waiting too long for basic medications, and having to push back when professionals insist there is “no other option.” If you care about patient advocacy, nursing home safety, and what long-term caregiving really looks like, this conversation is a hard but necessary listen. We also explore the human side that rarely fits on a chart: depression when loved ones cannot visit often, the terror of losing vision, and the complicated hope that shows up in small wins like getting out of bed, going to church, and shopping for kids even without being able to walk. The ending arrives suddenly with internal bleeding and emergency surgery, and Bobby reflects on grief, faith, and what it means to keep showing up when the outcome is out of your hands. If this story moves you, subscribe for more honest conversations, share this with someone who's caregiving right now, and leave a review so more listeners can find it. What part of Heather's journey do you want to talk about most?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: Testimony of Bobbi Blankenship (Part 1/3)

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2026 41:24 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailA healthy 26-year-old starts feeling “off,” and within weeks she can't walk, can't swallow, and can't trust her own body. We share a mother's firsthand account of her daughter Heather's 13-month fight with Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS), a rare autoimmune neuropathy that attacks the peripheral nervous system and can lead to rapid paralysis, severe pain, and terrifying complications. This is a story about what GBS looks like in real life, not in a brochure: the confusion at the start, the scramble for answers, and the way everything changes when symptoms accelerate.We also talk honestly about the healthcare system from a family's point of view. You'll hear about repeated hospital visits, discharges that don't match the severity of decline, and the fight to get treatments like IVIG at the right time. We unpack the emotional weight of watching swallowing fail, nutrition drop, and rehab become a daily grind, plus the moments that raised serious questions about basic safety and attentive care. If you've ever had to advocate for a loved one, this conversation will feel uncomfortably familiar.And running through it all is faith: the prayers a parent prays, the fear of praying “the wrong thing,” the surprising people who show up with compassion, and the way hope can coexist with grief. We leave you with practical perspective on patient advocacy and rare disease awareness, and a reminder that caregiving is both relentless and sacred.If this moved you, follow the show, share the episode with someone who needs it, and leave a review so more people can find this story. What part hit you the hardest?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "Where Is God, My Maker?" (Job 35), Part 5/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2026 27:20 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailA man loses everything, stays upright, and still gets challenged by people who swear they're defending God. That's where our Book of Job study lands tonight as we put Elihu under the microscope and ask a question that hits every believer sooner or later: when suffering comes, are we looking at discipline, condemnation, or something we simply cannot decode?We talk through the tension between Job's righteousness and the fact that nobody is claiming Job is sinless. From there, we trace a crucial thread for Christian theology and everyday pastoral care: God does correct Job, but that correction is tied to Job's words after the affliction begins, not as proof that Job's earlier “secret sin” caused the disaster. Along the way we wrestle with imputed righteousness in Christ, the danger of judging someone's heart, and why a confident speaker can say many true things while still landing in an accusatory place.We also zoom out to the bigger problem that every generation repeats: how to hold God's justice together with innocent suffering. Is hardship always a message about what we did wrong, or can it be sanctification, refinement, and a deeper dependence on God? The conversation turns personal as our group shares a prayer request for a loved one in hospice, reminding us that Job is not only a book to analyze but a companion when life hurts.If you've ever wondered how to “suffer well” without pretending you have all the answers, you'll feel at home here. Subscribe for more Bible study conversations, share this with a friend walking through hardship, and leave a review telling us: Is Elihu a wise counselor or a subtle accuser?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "Where Is God, My Maker?" (Job 35), Part 4/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2026 27:23 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailGod feels silent, and Elihu thinks he knows why. We sit with one of the most provocative moments in the Book of Job: Elihu insists that God “will not hear vanity,” and he applies it straight to Job as an explanation for why Job cannot get an answer. That's not a random theological lecture. It's a diagnosis of someone in pain, and it forces a question most of us have asked in darker seasons: if heaven is quiet, is it because something is wrong with my prayer?We walk carefully through what makes Elihu compelling and what makes him dangerous. Some of what he says about humility, sincerity, and pride has real biblical substance, and we agree the principle is true. But we also challenge the way he pins it on Job, a man Scripture presents as faithful under pressure. That tension opens up bigger themes: retributive theology, the temptation to police someone's suffering with tidy answers, and the difference between being condemned and being corrected.Then we turn the lens on us. What is the faithful response when God is not seen and his ways are not understood? We talk about patience, trust, and the moment where honest emotion can slide into confident claims that go beyond our knowledge. If you've ever wondered whether your suffering means punishment, discipline, or simply mystery under God's sovereign care, this conversation will meet you there. Subscribe, share this with a friend who's walking through a hard season, and leave a review, what do you think Elihu gets right and where does he miss the mark?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "Where Is God, My Maker?" (Job 35), Part 3/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2026 27:23 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailIf you've ever felt the quiet pressure of “I did the right thing, so God should reward me,” this conversation will unsettle you in the best way. We're deep in the Book of Job, listening to Elihu, and testing a claim that sounds airtight: human righteousness doesn't enrich God, and human sin doesn't harm him the way it harms other people. That's true, but it's also the seed of a bad conclusion if you use it to explain away suffering or to accuse the hurting.We talk through why God's justice and wisdom are not driven by need, and why God is never “obligated” to pay back good behavior with comfort. Then we ask the big interpretive question: is Elihu actually wiser than Job, or is he repeating the same assumption as Job's three friends with better vocabulary. Along the way we contrast what the friends argue about Job's supposed past and what God confronts when he finally speaks, focusing on Job's words under affliction and the line between ignorance and outright rebellion.We close in Job 35:9–13, where Elihu claims many cries under oppression are not sincere prayer. That pushes us to examine unanswered prayer, motives, and what it means to seek “God my Maker” when life hurts. If you care about biblical theology, Christian suffering, and reading Scripture with clarity, you'll find plenty to think about here. Subscribe, share this with a friend studying Job, and leave a review with your take: is Elihu mostly right or confidently wrong?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "Where Is God, My Maker?" (Job 35), Part 2/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2026 27:23 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailYour friend is suffering and your brain reaches for the quickest explanation: “What did you do?” That reflex sits right under the surface of the Book of Job, and it's exactly what we confront as we talk through Elihu and his surprisingly modern sounding argument. He corrects Job's three friends, but then he rebuilds the same assumption with better vocabulary: Job must be guilty, and God must be responding to that guilt. We slow the whole thing down and ask the one question that makes shallow takes fall apart: what sin did Job commit before the affliction that would justify any of these speeches?From there we dig into the difference between condemnation and correction, and why that distinction can still miss the point if the “evidence” is just a need to defend God's justice. We talk about Romans 11 style warnings, the urge to protect God's goodness by blaming the sufferer, and how easily Christians can confuse standing in innocence with self-righteousness. Job's confidence becomes a window into assurance of salvation, imputed righteousness, and what it looks like to say, without pride, “My righteousness is not my own.”We also get painfully practical: accusations don't just come from enemies, they often come through religious people, and that makes them sharper. We connect Job's friends to spiritual warfare and Satan's role as accuser, then land on a pastoral warning for all of us: be extremely careful when you diagnose another believer's suffering, and lead with compassion, mercy, and humility. If this helped you rethink suffering, assurance, and judgment, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review. Where have you seen “easy answers” do real damage?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "Where Is God, My Maker?" (Job 35), Part 1/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2026 27:16 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailElihu is the kind of speaker who can sound right and still do real damage. We're in the Book of Job, walking through Job 34 and Job 35, and we put Elihu's “sophisticated” critique under a microscope: is he offering wisdom, or is he simply repackaging the same tired accusation with better delivery?We read Elihu's harsh closing lines from Job 34, where he claims Job speaks “without knowledge” and even implies Job is rebellious, then we ask the uncomfortable question: what sin is Elihu actually pointing to? From there we step into Job 35, where Elihu charges Job with saying, “My righteousness is more than God's,” and we slow down to see whether Job ever said anything like that at all.Along the way, our group discussion highlights a problem Christians still face today: true doctrine can be misapplied, and partial truth can become a weapon. We talk about biblical suffering, the difference between integrity and self-righteousness, and why the prosperity-gospel mindset keeps showing up whenever someone is hurting. If you've ever been counseled badly in a hard season, this conversation will give you language, Scripture, and a sober warning about confident voices.Subscribe for more Bible study through Job, share this with a friend who's wrestling with suffering, and leave a review with your take: is Elihu a faithful teacher or a polished accuser?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: "MADE RIGHTEOUS" (2 Cor 5:20,21), Part 5/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2026 31:53 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailIf the gospel really is “the power of God unto salvation,” why do so many Christians live like it saves them halfway and then hands the rest back to their willpower? We lean into a bold claim that should bring deep comfort: salvation is of the Lord, every bit of it, and Christ's finished work is enough to secure God's people all the way to the end.Together with Mariah, Lisa, Vanessa, Michelle, Pat, and Meg, we talk through eternal security and the assurance of salvation with the kind of honesty these questions demand. We address backsliding without pretending it is harmless, and we draw a hard line against “hyper grace” claims that use Jesus as a cover for sin. Along the way we open Philippians and spotlight a grounding truth: the good work God begins, He completes, and even the fruits of righteousness in a believer are produced by Jesus Christ for God's glory.We also push back on the habit of calling uncomfortable doctrines “secondary issues.” We argue for the whole counsel of God, the unity of Scripture across Old and New Testaments, and why systematic theology helps us avoid errors that sound innocent until you trace their implications. If you want clearer faith, steadier peace, and a bigger view of God's power to save to the uttermost, this conversation is for you.If this strengthened you, subscribe, share it with a friend who needs assurance, and leave a review with the verse that anchors your confidence in Christ.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: "MADE RIGHTEOUS" (2 Cor 5:20,21), Part 4/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2026 31:55 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailThe “victim gospel” sounds compassionate, but it quietly swaps the real problem for a safer one. If the main reason to come to Jesus is that life has been hard, then the solution becomes comfort, coping, and a cleaner story about ourselves. We go the other direction and say the quiet part out loud: the reason we need Christ is sin. Not bad breaks. Not lost jobs. Not ruined relationships. Sin against a holy God, and the crushing guilt that follows when God finally lets us see it clearly.From there, we wrestle with what actually happens when someone is born again. We talk about conviction by the Holy Spirit, why “I'm a good person” is such a stubborn lie, and how God sometimes uses affliction to get our attention, not to earn our salvation. We also tackle election, free will, and the fear-driven teaching that you can lose salvation. If Christ only supplies the “materials” and you have to build the house, then righteousness becomes a project and assurance becomes impossible. We argue that Jesus is the Master Builder, and that justification, reconciliation, and sanctification rest on His work, not ours.We finish with a thoughtful question about “choose life” passages like Deuteronomy 30, how context matters, and why reading Scripture through outside systems can mislead us, with a nod to the Luther and Erasmus debate. If you care about the gospel, repentance, assurance, and what it means that Christ “did it all,” this conversation will sharpen you. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: "MADE RIGHTEOUS" (2 Cor 5:20,21), Part 3/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2026 31:55 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailYou can feed the homeless, live clean, and still be miles from God. That's not a slam on charity, it's a confrontation with a bigger problem: sin before a holy Judge and the myth that our works can make us righteous. We dig into imputed righteousness, justification, and why the gospel is not self-improvement with a religious label.We camp in Jesus' words about trees and fruit (Luke 6) and flip a common assumption on its head: fruit doesn't make a tree good; a good tree produces good fruit. That becomes a lens for understanding sanctification, assurance, and why outward “good deeds” can't be the final test of belonging to God. We also connect the dots to Romans 4, Isaiah 45 and Isaiah 54:17 to show how righteousness is “in the Lord” and why God's people are kept by Christ, not by their own willpower.Then we take on the modern obsession with “I made a better choice” theology. With a little satire and a lot of Scripture, we challenge the idea that God is trying His best while human free will decides the outcome. We talk regeneration, effectual calling, 1 John 2 on those who depart, and why we preach not a victim's gospel for people having a rough season, but a rescue from sin, death, hell, and the wrath of God.If this sharpened your view of salvation by grace and eternal security, subscribe, share this with a friend who wrestles with assurance, and leave a review. What part of this message do you resist most, and why?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: "MADE RIGHTEOUS" (2 Cor 5:20,21), Part 2/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2026 31:55 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailIf the idea that you can lose your salvation has ever kept you up at night, we go straight at the question with Bible open and logic turned on. We talk about what it means for the Holy Spirit to dwell in a believer and why a “falling away” story can quietly turn the Comforter into an observer instead of a Keeper. Along the way, we challenge the impulse to preserve friendships by softening the truth, because the stakes are not social comfort but the glory of Christ and the integrity of the gospel.We spend most of our time in Romans 5 and the heart-stopping claim that “while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us.” We dig into justification by faith, imputed righteousness, and the phrase “God who justifies the ungodly,” asking who the ungodly are and what that implies about human will, spiritual ability, and works. We also wrestle with wrath, hell, and substitutionary atonement, because the cross is not a vague provision but an effective act that actually saves.Then we connect the dots to John 6 and the unity of the Father and the Son: all the Father gives will come, and Christ will never cast them out. If Jesus said “It is finished,” we refuse to smuggle in purgatory, self purification, or endurance-as-payment to complete what he already completed. If this conversation sharpened or challenged you, subscribe, share it with someone who needs assurance, leave a review, and tell us: what verse most shapes your view of eternal security?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE DISCUSSION: "MADE RIGHTEOUS" (2 Cor 5:20,21), Part 1/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2026 31:46 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailIf you have ever wondered whether you are truly secure with God, the answer depends on one question: whose righteousness are you standing in? We turn to 2 Corinthians 5:20–21 and follow Paul's logic all the way to its conclusion, because the phrase “made the righteousness of God in him” is not religious poetry. It is a claim about what God does to save sinners who cannot repair themselves, cannot produce perfect obedience, and cannot add even a small finishing touch to Christ's work.We talk through the doctrine of imputed righteousness and the great exchange: Christ is counted as sin for His people, and His obedience is counted to them as righteousness. That is why we challenge the idea that salvation is a shared project where Jesus starts the work and our willpower completes it. If your assurance rises and falls with your performance, you will never have peace. If righteousness is credited by Christ, you finally can.To make it vivid, we connect Genesis 3:21 to the gospel: God makes the covering and God clothes Adam and Eve, a picture of grace that points to Jesus. We also address faith and works through Abel and Cain and land in Romans 4:5, where God justifies the ungodly and counts faith for righteousness “to him that works not.” If you care about salvation by grace alone, faith alone, and the permanence of salvation, this message aims straight at the heart of it.Subscribe for more Bible teaching like this, share this with a friend who is stuck in performance-based Christianity, and leave a review so more listeners can find it. What is the hardest part for you to trust: Christ's finished work or letting go of your need to contribute?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "God Has Taken Away My Judgement" (Job 33:19-33;34), Part 5 of 5

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2026 32:24 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailElihu can sound like the voice of wisdom right up until the moment he doesn't. We dig into Job 34 and watch the shift happen in real time: careful-sounding theology about God's justice and sovereignty turns into sweeping claims about Job's heart, Job's words, and Job's supposed rebellion. That pivot forces a question every Christian has to face sooner or later: how do we tell the difference between biblical correction and confident condemnation? We walk line by line through Elihu's closing statements and ask what's actually true, what's implied, and what's simply misapplied. Along the way, we connect the debate to the bigger storyline of the Book of Job and to real life Christian discipleship: why suffering is not a shortcut to judging someone, why “the devil knows Scripture” still rings true as a warning, and why tone can change the spiritual impact of the exact same words. If you care about sound biblical interpretation, spiritual discernment, and speaking truth in love, you'll feel the stakes here. We also talk about the kind of community we're trying to build: people reasoning together, staying objective, challenging ideas without trading insults, and encouraging one another to reread the text with humility. If this helped you think more clearly about Job, Elihu, suffering, and God's sovereignty, subscribe, share this with a friend who loves Bible study, and leave a review. What do you think Elihu got right, and where did he go too far?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "God Has Taken Away My Judgement" (Job 33:19-33;34), Part 4 of 5

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2026 32:24 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailThe Book of Job forces a question most of us want to avoid: what do you say when someone is suffering and you do not know why? We lean into that discomfort by tracing Elihu's speech in Job 34, where he says many things that sound rock-solid about God's sovereignty, God's justice, and God hearing the cry of the afflicted. Then we ask the harder question: what if the doctrine is true, but the application is wrong?Along the way, we compare how Elihu lands compared to Job's three friends. Some of us hear a dangerous confidence that crosses a line, especially when Elihu claims to speak “in God's stead” and when he escalates the accusations against Job. Others admit his tone feels less harsh and his words about God's providence can even comfort someone in pain. That tension opens up a deep discussion about biblical interpretation, the argument from silence, and why God not rebuking someone directly does not automatically equal approval.We also get personal about suffering and counsel, including how God can use unexpected people to pull us back from the ledge and ground us again in Scripture. If you care about Christian discernment, pastoral wisdom, and reading Job without turning it into a simplistic formula for pain, this one will stretch you. Subscribe, share this with a friend who loves deep Bible study, and leave a review with your take: is Elihu a faithful voice or a polished misapplication of truth?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "God Has Taken Away My Judgement" (Job 33:19-33;34), Part 3 of 5

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2026 32:24 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailSupport the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "God Has Taken Away My Judgement" (Job 33:19-33;34), Part 2 of 5

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2026 32:24 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailSomeone shows up late to the conversation, sounds respectful, and then talks like he has the final word. That's Elihu in the Book of Job, and his entrance raises a question that hits close to home: when a person is suffering, are we helping them by explaining God, or are we just protecting our own need to feel certain?We dig into Elihu's speeches in Job 33–34 and debate what's actually happening under the surface. On one hand, he highlights a crucial truth about God's sovereignty: God is greater than man, and God is not required to answer on our timetable. On the other hand, we hear pride, overconfidence, and a dangerous kind of spiritual posture when Elihu talks as if he can speak in God's stead. Along the way, we explore how “good theology” can become misused counsel when it doesn't fit the person in front of you.The conversation turns practical fast. We talk about youthful zeal versus biblical wisdom, why experience matters, and how knowledge without humility can turn correction into noise. We also ask what it means to be “moved to speak” and how to test our motives when we feel compelled to weigh in. If you've ever tried to comfort a friend in pain, felt pressure to have an answer, or been on the receiving end of confident advice that didn't match your reality, this one will challenge you in the best way.If this discussion helps you read Job with clearer eyes, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find these Bible study conversations.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    LIVE: "God Has Taken Away My Judgement" (Job 33:19-33;34), Part 1 of 5

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2026 30:00 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailGod can get our attention with a whisper, but sometimes he uses a storm. We sit in Job 33 with Elihu and follow his claim that God speaks “once, yea twice,” through dreams, night visions, and then through the sharp language of affliction: pain, weakness, loss of appetite, and that awful feeling of getting close to the edge. The question isn't whether suffering hurts. The question is what God might be doing through it.From there, we dig into why Elihu stands apart from Job's three friends. They treat hardship like a math problem that always ends in punishment. Elihu opens another door: suffering as Christian discipline, correction, and restoration. We talk about how that changes the way we judge others, how we interpret our own trials, and how we learn to hear God when life feels loud.Then we slow down on the most hope-filled line in the chapter: “Deliver him from going down to the pit: I have found a ransom.” We explore the themes of mediator, redemption, repentance, and restored righteousness, including how many believers hear foreshadowing of Jesus Christ in Elihu's language. We also debate Elihu's tone, because “I will teach thee wisdom” can land as comfort or as condescension depending on the heart behind it.If you found this helpful, subscribe for more Bible study conversations, share this with a friend walking through a hard season, and leave a review. What do you think God is saying through suffering, and how do you tell the difference between discipline and despair?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "I Am According to your Wish, in God's Stead" (Job 33:1-19), Part 5/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2026 37:02 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailMiracles can comfort, confuse, and divide, sometimes all in the same conversation. We dig into a question many Christians quietly carry: when the Bible talks about signs and wonders, what are they actually for, and should we expect them in the same way today? We walk the biblical timeline from Moses and the giving of the Law, through the long quiet stretches, to Elijah and Elisha, and then to Jesus Christ and the apostles as the New Covenant begins. Along the way, we ask whether miracles mainly function as divine authentication for messengers and messages, and why even undeniable supernatural events don't automatically produce faith. That tension leads to a candid debate: is witnessing a miracle “better” than believing truth from Scripture, and is salvation itself the greatest miracle a person can receive? Then things get real. We hear personal testimonies of healing and talk about how to respect someone's experience while still defining “miracle” with biblical clarity. We also pivot to the Book of Job and Elihu's insight that dreams, warnings, and suffering can be acts of mercy meant to restrain pride, turn us from sin, and preserve life. If you care about biblical miracles, spiritual gifts, discernment, and hearing God without hype, this conversation will challenge you in the best way. Subscribe for more Bible-centered discussions, share this with a friend who loves debating signs and wonders, and leave a review if it helped you think more clearly. Where do you draw the line between God's providence and a true miracle?Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

    "I Am According to your Wish, in God's Stead" (Job 33:1-19), Part 4/5

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2026 37:02 Transcription Available


    Send us Fan MailIf someone tells you they're a prophet or an apostle, what should your first reaction be and why? We dig into that question by walking through Hebrews 1, 1 Corinthians, and Job 33, and by naming the hunger in many Christian circles for something “more” than Bible reading, prayer, and steady preaching. We get candid about how ordinary disciplines can feel boring, and why that boredom is often a signal worth taking seriously rather than a cue to chase spiritual shortcuts.From there, we examine what the Bible actually says prophecy does: strengthen, encourage, and comfort in line with God's already-revealed Word. We contrast submission to Scripture with the posture that claims authority over Scripture, and we talk about how movements built on personal revelation have repeatedly produced confusion and even cult-like structures. Elihu's confrontation of Job helps us wrestle with God's greatness, human limits, and what it means to demand answers from the Lord.We also tackle the hard debate about miracles and spiritual gifts today. What were signs and wonders for in the New Testament? Do miracles save anyone, or do they authenticate a messenger? How should Christians read “when the perfect comes” in 1 Corinthians 13, and what changes once we recognize the sufficiency of Scripture and the Spirit's illumination? If you care about discernment, biblical authority, and a faith that doesn't depend on hype, this conversation is for you.Subscribe for more biblical conversations, share this with a friend who's sorting through spiritual gift claims, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway or question.Support the showBE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!

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