Podcast appearances and mentions of Jim Osman

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Best podcasts about Jim Osman

Latest podcast episodes about Jim Osman

Kootenai Church Morning Worship
Looking And Longing For The Day Of God (2 Peter 3:11-12)

Kootenai Church Morning Worship

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2026 40:59


The coming destruction of the present creation is not just a doctrine to believe—it's a call to live differently. In this expository sermon from 2 Peter 3:11–12, Pastor Jim Osman draws out the practical weight of Peter's eschatological teaching and presses it into the conscience of every believer.Peter's concluding exhortations are clear: those who genuinely believe Christ will return are marked by it. First, they are a holy people—set apart in conduct and godliness, fitted for a new creation in which only righteousness dwells. Osman unpacks what that means practically, showing that holiness is not merely a positional reality but a moral pursuit, one that grace both demands and provides.Second, they are a hastening people—those who long for and actively work toward the coming of the day of God. Osman addresses the apparent tension between divine sovereignty and human responsibility head-on. The day is fixed on God's calendar; yet Scripture calls believers to hasten it through holy living, faithful gospel proclamation, and earnest prayer. These are not contradictions—they are the two sides of the same sovereign purpose.If Christ is returning, and Peter insists He is, the only question left is: what kind of people ought we to be? ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Morning Worship
The Patience of God (2 Peter 3:9)

Kootenai Church Morning Worship

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2026 37:42


Two thousand years feels like a long time to wait. Jim Osman says that's exactly the point.Continuing through 2 Peter 3, Osman tackles the mockers' challenge in verse 4: where is the promise of His coming? Peter's answer comes in two parts, and this sermon focuses on the second: God's patience. Osman walks through what that patience actually means, tracing it back through Exodus, Isaiah, and the Psalms to show that the Old Testament's "slow to anger" God and the New Testament's patient Father are the same God, not two different ones.He works carefully through the Greek behind "slow" in verse 9, distinguishing tardiness from sovereign timing, and uses Habakkuk's own wrestling with delay as a parallel. Then comes the heart of the message: who exactly is God being patient toward? Osman pushes back against a popular reading of "not willing for any to perish," arguing from context that Peter is addressing God's own people, the elect not yet gathered in, not the whole world indiscriminately.The sermon closes with four practical encouragements, including a direct word to anyone listening who has yet to repent. This episode offers a clear, doctrinally grounded answer to anyone wondering why God seems to be taking so long. ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Morning Worship
God's Perspective on Time (2 Peter 3:8)

Kootenai Church Morning Worship

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2026 34:58


The mockers had a question: Where is the promise of His coming? Time had passed. Apostles had died. Nothing had changed. Pastor Jim Osman addresses that question head-on as he works through 2 Peter 3:8 — and the answer is as pointed today as it was in the first century.God does not experience time as we do. He is not encumbered by it, constrained by it, or running out of it. He meets no deadlines, feels no urgency, and is exhausted by no length of years. A literal thousand years is to Him what a single day is to us — not because time is vague or undefined, but because He is eternal and we are not. The delay in Christ's return is no evidence of a failed promise. It is simply a reflection of the unbridgeable difference between the eternal God and creatures made of dust.Drawing from Psalm 90 and Peter's deliberate use of its language, Pastor Osman traces what God's relationship to time actually means for the church — and what it does not mean. He corrects three common misuses of this verse: as an argument for long creation days in Genesis 1, as a framework for end-times chronology, and as a basis for treating the thousand years of Revelation 20 as figurative.The point stands: time has no bearing on the fulfillment of God's Word. His return remains imminent. The only question is whether we are found watching. ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Morning Worship
The Coming Conflagration (2 Peter 3:7&10)

Kootenai Church Morning Worship

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2026 41:34


Climate alarmists have been predicting the end of the world for decades—and getting it entirely wrong. Pastor Jim Osman opens this exposition of 2 Peter 3:7 and 10 by showing why: they begin with the wrong assumptions. God has already revealed how this world ends, and it has nothing to do with carbon footprints or melting ice caps.Peter's answer to the false teachers who denied the return of Christ rests on three characteristics of the coming Day of the Lord. It is certain—God's Word that created the world and judged it by water is the same Word that now reserves it for fire. The present creation stands only because God wills it to stand. When that will changes, it will be instant.It is unexpected—arriving like a thief in the night. Just as the generation of Noah kept eating, drinking, and going about their lives right up until the flood came, unbelievers will be caught entirely off guard when the Son of Man returns. Believers, by contrast, are called to live in anticipation of that day, not dread of it.And it will be thorough. The heavens will pass away with a roar—a Greek word Peter chose because it captures the sound of arrows, crackling flames, and rushing water all at once. The elements themselves will be consumed. Everything will be laid bare before God, with nowhere left to hide.For the believer, this is not a day to fear. Christ has already absorbed the wrath. On the other side of judgment is a new creation—new heavens, new earth, and righteousness dwelling there forever. ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Morning Worship
Creation and Catastrophe (2 Peter 3:5-6)

Kootenai Church Morning Worship

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2026 36:53


The false teachers of Peter's day had a simple argument: things have always continued as they are, so there is no reason to expect a cataclysmic divine judgment in the future. Pastor Jim Osman works through 2 Peter 3:5-6 to show how Peter dismantles that argument—not by predicting the future, but by pointing to the past.Peter's first move is to expose the nature of the false teachers' error. They are not simply uninformed. They willfully overlook what they already know. God displayed His power in creation, speaking the heavens and earth into existence by His Word alone. That same Word sustains all things in being—which means the stability of creation is not evidence that God cannot intervene, but that He has chosen not to yet.Osman draws four lessons from the creation account: God created by divine fiat, God is entirely separate from and not subject to His creation, creation exists only by His will, and Christ Himself holds all things together by the word of His power. Remove His sustaining will and everything ceases to exist.The flood then becomes the decisive counterexample. Peter points to a worldwide, catastrophic judgment that already happened—one that used the very same water present at creation. If God judged the ancient world by water, the present world is reserved for fire. The evidence of that past judgment is visible everywhere, Osman argues, for those willing to see it.For believers, there is refuge from the coming wrath—in Christ alone, who bore it fully. ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Morning Worship
Mocking Mockers (2 Peter 3:1-4)

Kootenai Church Morning Worship

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2026 41:29


Peter warned the church that mockers would come. Pastor Jim Osman works through 2 Peter 3:1-4, examining the identity, motive, and arguments of those who deny the return of Christ—and why their denial is never as innocent as it appears.Two thousand years have passed since the promise was made. That passage of time is precisely what the mockers weaponize. Their question—"Where is the promise of His coming?"—is not a sincere inquiry. It is a denial dressed up as a question, a pattern Osman traces through Jeremiah, the Psalms, and Malachi. When mockers ask "where is," they are not looking for an answer. They are dismissing the promise altogether.Peter exposes their motive as well as their argument. These men follow after their own lusts, and the connection between their sensuality and their denial of Christ's return is deliberate. Deny the coming of Christ, and you deny the coming judgment. Deny the coming judgment, and there is nothing left to restrain the flesh. Osman draws out three strands of this connection: the removal of accountability, the loss of a purifying hope, and the implicit denial of bodily resurrection.The mockers also argue from uniformitarianism—the assumption that because nothing has changed, nothing will. Osman dismantles this philosophy, shows its influence on secular science, and points to the flood as evidence that God has already intervened catastrophically once before.False teachers are not a surprise. They are a sign. Their presence confirms that the last days are here—and that the Lord is still coming. ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Morning Worship
Two Stirring Reminders (2 Peter 3:1-4)

Kootenai Church Morning Worship

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2026 42:27


Peter opens 2 Peter 3 with two pastoral aims: to stir up the sincere minds of his readers and to call them back to the truth they already know. False teachers in his day were mocking the promise of Christ's return — dismissing it as myth and pointing to the silence of the centuries as proof it would never happen. Peter's answer? Remember what has been promised.In this expository message, Pastor Jim Osman walks through 2 Peter 3:1–4, showing that Peter's first move against the mockers is not an argument — it is a reminder. He reminds his readers of the prophetic testimony of the Old Testament and the apostolic testimony of Jesus and the New Testament writers: Christ is coming back in power, in glory, and in judgment. This promised return is not a footnote — it is referenced in every New Testament book but two, across 300 passages in 260 chapters.Osman also lays out the full outline of chapter 3, setting up a multi-week series: the doubters' derisions (vv. 1–4), the dismantling of their denials (vv. 5–10), and the duties of the disciples in light of Christ's return (vv. 11–18).The return of Christ is comfort for the believer and a sober warning for the unbeliever. Don't let the passage of time dull your expectation. He promised. He does not lie. He is coming. ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Morning Worship
Four Resurrection Encouragements (2 Corinthians 4:13-5:10)

Kootenai Church Morning Worship

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2026 47:21


The Resurrection of Christ is not just a Sunday morning doctrine — it is the foundation that holds up the entire Christian life. In this exposition of 2 Corinthians 4:13–5:10, Pastor Jim Osman draws out four concrete certainties that resurrection hope produces in the life of the believer and the minister of the gospel.First, our testimony is true. Because Christ is risen, Paul could not be silenced — not by beatings, shipwrecks, or the constant threat of death. The same risen Christ who will raise us up guarantees that what we proclaim is not myth but historical fact.Second, our suffering isn't wasted. Paul calls his afflictions "light and momentary" — not because they weren't severe, but because resurrection changes the math. Every trial endured with patient dependence on God is working an eternal weight of glory that no affliction in this life can diminish.Third, our immortality is pledged. This tent we live in will collapse, but God has prepared an eternal dwelling — a resurrected, glorified body fit for the new creation. The indwelling Holy Spirit is the down payment on that promise.Fourth, our service will be rewarded. We will all stand before the judgment seat of Christ, and what is done in this body — every act of obedience, every sin mortified, every sacrifice made — carries eternal weight.This episode is a call to fix your eyes on what is unseen, because resurrection hope is what keeps believers from losing heart. ★ Support this podcast ★

Wretched Radio
Guest Hosts: Justin Peters, Jim Osman & Gabe Hughes | What Makes a Church Healthy?

Wretched Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2026 55:00


Segment 1 • Guest hosts: Justin Peters, Jim Osman & Gabe Hughes • The church must not copy business models or government structures. • Churches chasing worldliness to attract the world lose their distinctiveness. Segment 2 • Baptism and communion aren't rituals—they're visible reminders of the gospel • Worship that entertains people often stops honoring God • Some churches draw crowds—but they're feeding goats, not sheep Segment 3 • Most churches avoid church discipline—even though Jesus commands it • Matthew 18 isn't optional—it's how the church deals with sin • When discipline is ignored, sin spreads—but when it's practiced, the church is purified Segment 4 • Church discipline: loving restoration or something most churches are too afraid to practice? • What happens when someone refuses to repent—and why that changes everything • If your church never confronts sin, is it protecting people… or failing them? ___ Thanks for listening! Wretched Radio would not be possible without the financial support of our Gospel Partners. If you would like to support Wretched Radio we would be extremely grateful. VISIT https://fortisinstitute.org/donate/ If you are already a Gospel Partner we couldn't be more thankful for you if we tried! .

jesus christ church worship healthy baptism churches justin peters jim osman god some wretched radio hosts justin gabe hughes
Kootenai Church Morning Worship
The Day Death Died (2 Timothy 1:8-11)

Kootenai Church Morning Worship

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 29, 2026 45:38


Death haunts everything — every joy, every marriage, every birth. But Pastor Jim Osman opens this exposition of 2 Timothy 1:8–11 with a declaration that cuts through every shadow: death has died.Writing from prison and facing his own execution, Paul calls Timothy to suffer for the gospel rather than retreat from it. His case rests on the gospel itself — a gospel dense with grace from eternity past to eternity future. God granted believers a saving, calling, and predestining grace before the foundation of the world. And He provided a Savior who, through His own death, abolished death and brought life and immortality to light.Christ didn't remove death from existence — He rendered it powerless. The fear that once held humanity in lifelong bondage — the uncertainty, the guilt, the dread of standing before a holy God — has been stripped away. In its place stands the certain hope of resurrection and the unshakeable promise of no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.The gospel is worthy of suffering for. And one day, death itself will be swallowed up in victory. ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Morning Worship
The Wonders of the Word (Psalm 119:97-104)

Kootenai Church Morning Worship

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 22, 2026 39:35


Pastor Jim Osman opens in Psalm 119:97–104 with the psalmist's breathtaking declaration — "Oh, how I love your law!" — and shows what that kind of love actually looks like and what it produces in the life of a believer.This passage divides naturally into two halves, each anchored by a defining affection. The first four verses trace the fruit of loving the Word: wisdom that surpasses enemies, insight that exceeds teachers, and understanding deeper than age and experience. But the psalmist isn't boasting about himself. He's boasting about the Word of God — that one person armed with Scripture is better equipped for life and eternity than the accumulated wisdom of all the world's academics and sages without it.The second half moves from love to its necessary companion: a genuine hatred for every false way. Pastor Osman presses hard on this point — you cannot truly love truth without hating falsehood, and you cannot love God without hating evil. Spurgeon's insight frames it memorably: hatred is a stabbing affection, and the believer who rightly hates sin in himself will attack it, pursue it, and put it to death.The sermon closes with a direct challenge: the blessings of Psalm 119 are not for the lazy or negligent. They are reserved for those who consistently, relentlessly, and faithfully read, meditate on, and obey the Word of God. There is no shortcut to Christian maturity — only one path. ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Morning Worship
Right Back to the Slop (2 Peter 2:21-22)

Kootenai Church Morning Worship

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2026 42:25


Knowledge of the truth is not the same as being changed by it. In this message from 2 Peter 2:21–22, Pastor Jim Osman brings chapter 2 to its sobering close with a warning that cuts close to home — the false teacher and the apostate aren't condemned for what they never knew, but for what they knew and walked away from.Drawing on two of the most vivid images in the New Testament — a dog returning to its vomit and a sow returning to the mire — Pastor Jim traces Peter's animal theme through the entire chapter and shows how each illustration makes the same point: temporary improvement is not the same as a changed nature. A pig cleaned up for the prom is still a pig. An unbeliever who outwardly reforms, speaks the right language, and runs in the right circles can do so convincingly for years. But without a genuine heart change, they will eventually go right back to what they love most.The sermon closes with two sharp summary points: false teachers are a present danger to the church, and they are a cautionary tale for every person sitting in one. Pastor Jim's direct challenge to his congregation — especially young people who grew up in solid churches — is straightforward: why are you here? Has your nature actually been changed, or are you simply assuming the gospel? ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Adult Sunday School
Q/A with Pastor/Elder Jim Osman March 3, 2026

Kootenai Church Adult Sunday School

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2026 41:01


What does it mean that Jesus was truly tempted—yet could not sin? Can God use Satan to accomplish His purposes? Where do our souls come from? And does God still speak apart from the Bible today?In this wide-ranging Q&A, Jim Osman fields questions from the congregation on some of theology's most searching topics. He opens with an extended treatment of Christ's two natures—fully God, fully man in one person—carefully distinguishing between what his divine nature and his human nature could experience, including temptation, exhaustion, and limited knowledge. From there he tackles the origin of the soul, laying out the case for a middle position between strict traducianism and strict creationism. The discussion turns to so-called generational or bloodline curses, where Jim draws a sharp distinction between the biblical truth that sin patterns pass through families and the charismatic error that demonic curses require special renunciation. He also weighs in on how God does and does not speak today, pressing back on the claim that nudges and impressions qualify as divine revelation comparable to Scripture.Throughout, Jim models careful, pastoral reasoning—direct, often funny, and always tethered to the text. Whether you came with questions or not, this episode will sharpen how you think about some of the most foundational questions in the Christian life. ★ Support this podcast ★

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Kootenai Church Morning Worship
Enslaved By Error (2 Peter 2:19-20)

Kootenai Church Morning Worship

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2026 37:27


False teachers don't just get theology wrong — they enslave their followers. In this exposition of 2 Peter 2:19-20, Pastor Jim Osman examines three devastating contrasts Peter draws to expose the destruction false teachers leave in their wake: the contrast between freedom and slavery, between escaping and being entangled again, and between a person's last state and their first.False teachers promise liberation while they themselves are in chains. Enslaved to their own corrupt desires, they traffic in a counterfeit freedom — one that removes all moral restraint and feeds the flesh. Their message is ancient. It's the same lie Satan told Eve in the garden, the same libertinism Paul confronted in Rome and Corinth, the same antinomian spirit behind the sexual revolution. And it still seduces today.Peter's warning cuts deep: those who escape the defilements of the world through a surface-level knowledge of Christ, only to be drawn back in by false teaching, end up worse off than before. Their nature was never changed. They reformed outwardly. But when the false teacher appealed to the flesh that was still very much alive, they were entangled again — and now they head to judgment with more light, and more guilt, than they had before.This passage is a clarion call for discernment. Know the danger. Don't let your guard down. And above all, know the freedom that is real — not the permission to serve your lusts, but the power to deny them. ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Morning Worship
Wells Without Water (2 Peter 2:17-18)

Kootenai Church Morning Worship

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 22, 2026 43:54


False teachers don't just teach wrong things — they ruin people. That's the heartbeat of this passage, and the burden that drives this exposition of 2 Peter 2:17-18.Pastor Jim Osman continues through 2 Peter 2 by turning from the character and condemnation of false teachers to the carnage they leave behind. Using two vivid images from the ancient world — a spring that holds no water and a mist that delivers no rain — Peter exposes exactly what false teachers are, how they speak, and who they target.They are dry springs. They look like sources of life and refreshment, but the traveler who arrives there thirsty walks away more disappointed than before. They are deceptive speakers. Their words sound weighty and profound, but when you pick them up, there's nothing there — arrogant words of vanity dressed up to sound like deep theology. And they are deliberate seducers who don't just stumble into victims. They specifically target new converts — those who have barely escaped a life of error and haven't yet been established in the truth.Jim draws from Paul, Jude, and Jesus, and applies Peter's warnings directly to modern false teaching movements with clarity and pastoral urgency.This episode makes clear that opposing false teachers is not a matter of theological pickiness. It's a matter of love — for the truth and for the people being consumed by these dry springs. ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Morning Worship
A Donkey and a Madman (2 Peter 2:15-16)

Kootenai Church Morning Worship

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2026 42:04


Jim Osman examines one of the Old Testament's most troubling figures: Balaam, the prophet for hire who tried to curse God's people for money. Though God spoke through him, Balaam was driven by greed and immorality, making him the perfect example of the false teachers Peter warns against. This message walks through Numbers 22-24, answering questions about why God used such a wicked man and what it reveals about false prophets today. Balaam's motives exposed his heart—he loved the wages of unrighteousness and deliberately departed from the right way. His morals led him to scheme against Israel through sexual immorality and idolatry when his curses failed. His madness shows the insanity of pursuing money and sin at the expense of eternal well-being. The talking donkey is the least confusing part of the story. The real issue is how someone can speak truth while living a lie, and what that teaches us about marking and avoiding false teachers whose hearts are trained in greed. If you have Christ and nothing else, you're richer than the wealthiest false teacher. ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Morning Worship
Pride and Perversion, Part 2 (2 Peter 2:13-16)

Kootenai Church Morning Worship

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2026 38:53


Jim Osman continues his examination of false teachers in 2 Peter 2, focusing on their perversions and moral corruption. Opening with a sobering account of the Mike Bickle scandal and how charismatic leaders failed to discern his true character despite decades of abuse, Osman demonstrates why Peter's warnings remain urgent for today's church. He exposes three defining characteristics of false teachers: they are shameless in their debauchery, sensual in their unrestrained lust, and seductive in how they bait unstable souls. Osman explains how these teachers have eyes full of adultery and hearts trained in greed—applying the same discipline to their wickedness that athletes apply to their sport. He reveals how false teachers exploit people's desires for prosperity, sexual license, and spiritual pride to lure them into destructive heresies. The message includes a passionate call for believers to apply diligence in pursuing holiness and grounding themselves in truth, so they won't become easy marks for those who promise freedom while enslaving others in corruption. Osman shows that when false teachers fall into sexual scandal, it shouldn't surprise us—Peter warned us this is their nature and their consistent pattern throughout church history.  ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Morning Worship
Pride and Perversion, Part 1 (2 Peter 2:10-13)

Kootenai Church Morning Worship

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2026 37:53


Jim Osman returns to 2 Peter 2 with a hard-hitting examination of false teachers and their defining characteristics. In verses 10-13, Peter paints a vivid portrait of those who infiltrate the church with destructive heresies, and Osman carefully unpacks what makes these teachers so dangerous. The passage reveals three striking indicators of their pride: they are insolent in their blasphemy of spiritual beings, irrational like animals driven by instinct, and ignorant of the very subjects they claim to master. Osman draws sobering parallels to modern movements within evangelicalism—from female preachers who defy biblical teaching roles to charismatic "demon slayers" who mock spiritual authorities with reckless presumption. He explains why even holy angels refuse to revile fallen demons, yet these false teachers rush in where angels fear to tread. The message includes practical guidance on identifying these teachers by their specific behaviors and attitudes, showing how Scripture equips believers to mark and avoid those who would lead them astray. Osman's exposition demonstrates that false teachers are not difficult to spot when measured against Peter's clear biblical criteria. ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Morning Worship
Four Petitions for the Work of the Word (Psalm 119:33-40)

Kootenai Church Morning Worship

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2026 44:26


Jim Osman guides listeners through Psalm 119:33-40, revealing four essential prayers every believer should bring before God regarding His Word. This isn't merely an intellectual exercise—it's a roadmap for spiritual transformation through Scripture. Osman unpacks how the psalmist longed for God to grant understanding that leads to obedience, not just head knowledge. He challenges listeners to pray for hearts genuinely inclined toward Scripture rather than worldly gain.The sermon addresses a crucial tension: our eyes naturally drift toward worthless distractions while our hearts chase empty profits. Osman demonstrates how the Word cultivates genuine fear of God, turning believers from vanity toward what truly gives life. He confronts the reality that many Christians survive on one spiritual meal per week when a daily feast awaits them in Scripture.This message closes with two pointed challenges: commit to regular, systematic Bible reading, and for men, recognize that spiritual leadership begins with personal time in God's Word. Transformation doesn't happen by accident—it requires dependence on God's work through Scripture combined with diligent pursuit of His truth. ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Morning Worship
A Righteous Deliverance (2 Peter 2:05-09)

Kootenai Church Morning Worship

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2026 41:10


Pastor Jim Osman expounds 2 Peter 2:5-9, revealing how God accomplished a righteous deliverance for Noah and Lot amid worldwide judgment. Though Noah stood alone against billions and Lot lived among the wicked Sodom, God preserved both because He knows those who are His. This exposition demonstrates that God consistently distinguishes between the righteous and the ungodly. Believers today can find profound encouragement knowing that a righteous deliverance awaits all who belong to Christ, even as we live vexed by the sensual conduct around us. ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Morning Worship
A Flood And A Fire (2 Peter 2:5-6)

Kootenai Church Morning Worship

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2026 34:41


Jim Osman delivers a powerful exposition examining A Flood And A Fire as two notorious Old Testament judgments that demonstrate God's righteous character. Drawing from 2 Peter 2:5-6, Osman explores how the global flood of Noah's day and the fiery destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah serve as historical evidence of divine justice against sin. A Flood And A Fire reveals that these judgments were historic, global, cataclysmic, just, and yet spared the righteous—Noah with seven others and Lot respectively. The teaching demonstrates that these destructions were not cleverly devised fables but actual historical events intended as examples for those who would thereafter live ungodly lives. Osman emphasizes that God's past judgments validate His future promises, warning that while current judgment is delayed, it is certain—next time not by water but by fire as Second Peter 3 promises. ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Morning Worship
Lessons From Judgment and Deliverance (2 Peter 2:4-10)

Kootenai Church Morning Worship

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2026 42:07


Jim Osman examines how judgment and deliverance work together throughout biblical history. Peter uses three powerful examples of judgment and deliverance: the angels who sinned, the flood of Noah, and Sodom and Gomorrah. These historical accounts demonstrate God's consistent pattern of executing judgment while delivering the righteous. Through judgment and deliverance, believers learn that God has a proven track record of punishing wickedness and rescuing those who trust Him. Understanding these examples of judgment and deliverance encourages Christians to live righteously while confidently expecting both God's coming judgment on the wicked and His gracious deliverance of the faithful. ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Morning Worship
Unto Us Is Born A Savior (Isaiah 61:1-2)

Kootenai Church Morning Worship

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 25, 2025 19:38


Jim Osman delivers a powerful exposition of Isaiah 61:1-2, exploring the prophetic announcement that unto us is born a Savior who would bring deliverance from sin. This Christmas message examines how Jesus perfectly fulfilled Isaiah's prophecy, demonstrating that he was born a Savior anointed by the Spirit to proclaim good news to the afflicted and liberty to captives.Osman carefully traces how Christ's mission centers on preaching the gospel of salvation by Yahweh's grace rather than political liberation or social reform. The teaching emphasizes that Jesus was uniquely born a Savior—sent to heal the brokenhearted, proclaim freedom to prisoners of sin, and announce the favorable year of the Lord. Through meticulous exegesis, Osman shows how this passage reveals the Savior's divine commission, his Spirit-empowered ministry, and the good news of redemption he came to proclaim.This exposition demonstrates that Christ was born a Savior specifically to accomplish spiritual salvation, fulfilling Old Testament scripture and bringing hope to those enslaved by sin through the transforming power of God's grace. ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Morning Worship
Unto Us Is Born A Sacrifice (Isaiah 52:13-53:12)

Kootenai Church Morning Worship

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2025 47:58


Jim Osman delivers a powerful exposition of Isaiah 52:13-53:12, examining the prophetic portrait of the Messiah who was born a sacrifice for humanity's sin. This message explores the dual nature of Christ's mission—living and dying as a man while simultaneously living and dying for men as their substitutionary sacrifice. Osman traces the biographical pattern revealed in Isaiah's prophecy: Christ's pre-existent glory, his humiliation through suffering and death, and his ultimate exaltation.The teaching emphasizes that Jesus was born a sacrifice, destined from eternity to bear the iniquities of many and make intercession for transgressors. Through careful exegesis, Osman demonstrates how Isaiah prophesied the Servant's physical suffering, the marring of his appearance beyond recognition, and his voluntary submission to God's will. This Christmas message reveals that Christ was uniquely born a sacrifice—not merely to live among us, but to die for us, accomplishing the redemption that only a perfect, sinless substitute could achieve for guilty sinners. ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Morning Worship
Unto Us Is Born A Sovereign (Isaiah 9:6)

Kootenai Church Morning Worship

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 14, 2025 42:44


Born A Sovereign, the child of Isaiah 9:6 comes as humanity's perfect King, fulfilling Old Testament prophecies of the Davidic ruler. Jim Osman examines how Christ was Born A Sovereign, uniting full humanity with complete deity in one person who knows our frailties yet possesses divine authority. This King was Born A Sovereign to establish an everlasting kingdom characterized by peace, justice, and righteousness. Isaiah declares the government rests upon His shoulders as Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Eternal Father, and Prince of Peace. Born A Sovereign from David's line, Christ will rule from Jerusalem, crushing rebellion while blessing His people with unprecedented prosperity and security. The kingdom increases without end, secured not by human effort but by the zeal of Yahweh of Hosts. Therefore, believers can rejoice with confident gladness because Christ was Born A Sovereign who came first to redeem sinners and returns to reign forever, giving His people the kingdom that the Father delights to bestow. ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Morning Worship
Unto Us Is Born A Son (Isaiah 7:14; 9:6; 11:1)

Kootenai Church Morning Worship

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2025 41:00


Jim Osman expounds Isaiah's prophecy of a virgin bearing a son, revealing God's plan for the Messiah's incarnation. Isaiah 7:14 describes a virgin bearing a son named Immanuel, fulfilled 750 years later when Mary conceived by the Holy Spirit. This virgin bearing a son demonstrates Christ's true humanity united with deity—two distinct natures in one person. Without ceasing to be fully God, the eternal Son became something He had never been: flesh, veiling His glory to dwell among us as the virgin bearing a son, accomplished redemption.  ★ Support this podcast ★

god jesus christ holy spirit isaiah 7 isaiah 9:6 jim osman genesis 3:15 isaiah 7:14
Kootenai Church: Special Sermons
A Psalm of Thanksgiving (Psalm 100)

Kootenai Church: Special Sermons

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2025 35:00


Jim Osman expounds Psalm 100's call to give joyful thanks to Yahweh through robust, enthusiastic worship. Believers offer joyful thanks to Yahweh because He created us and redeemed us as sheep of His pasture. This joyful thanks to Yahweh flows from meditating on His works and nature—His goodness, loving-kindness, and faithfulness enduring forever. We enter His gates offering joyful thanks to Yahweh, welcomed from pasture to palace, serving Him by blessing His name and proclaiming His unchanging mercy.  ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Morning Worship
A Psalm of Thanksgiving (Psalm 100)

Kootenai Church Morning Worship

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2025 35:00


Jim Osman expounds Psalm 100's call to give joyful thanks to Yahweh through robust, enthusiastic worship. Believers offer joyful thanks to Yahweh because He created us and redeemed us as sheep of His pasture. This joyful thanks to Yahweh flows from meditating on His works and nature—His goodness, loving-kindness, and faithfulness enduring forever. We enter His gates offering joyful thanks to Yahweh, welcomed from pasture to palace, serving Him by blessing His name and proclaiming His unchanging mercy.  ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Morning Worship
The Greed and Exploitation of False Teachers (2 Peter 2:3)

Kootenai Church Morning Worship

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2025 40:18


 Jim Osman exposes the greed and exploitation of false teachers who use plastic words to merchandise believers. These deceivers appeal to covetousness while masking sensual desires and avarice behind fabricated doctrines. The greed and exploitation of false teachers manifest through fraudulent ministries that prey on vulnerable souls, promising prosperity while extracting wealth. Peter warns that certain judgment awaits these false teachers who exploit others through greed, making contentment the essential defense against their deceptive schemes and plastic words.  ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Morning Worship
The Seduction and Lust of False Teachers (2 Peter 2:1-3)

Kootenai Church Morning Worship

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2025 38:08


Jim Osman examines the seduction and lust of false teachers through 2 Peter 2:1-3, warning believers against dangerous deceptions. False teachers operate in a symbiotic relationship with followers who desire teachings that justify their lusts, while teachers gain platforms, money, and power. Peter warns that many will follow their sensuality, thereby maligning the way of truth. These unbelievers are driven by unrestrained immorality, marked by sensuality throughout Scripture.The Charismatic movement provides the largest environment where such teachers flourish, promoting unbridled emotionalism and doctrinal looseness. The antidote requires believers to live above reproach, making the gospel convincing through transformed lives rather than bringing reproach upon Christ's name. ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Adult Sunday School
Q&A with Pastor/Elder Jim Osman - November 16, 2025

Kootenai Church Adult Sunday School

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2025 43:19


Jim Osman addresses pressing questions in a Q&A covering evangelical concerns and biblical faithfulness. Topics include The Gospel Coalition's theological drift, the modern deliverance ministry movement undermining Scripture's sufficiency, and the Seven Mountain Mandate infiltrating evangelicalism. Osman examines distinctions between essential and non-essential doctrines, female pastoral roles, biblical canon formation, and King James Only errors. He emphasizes that sufficiency of Scripture remains the central battle within evangelicalism today, as experiential theology displaces confidence in God's Word.Questions AskedWhat is the current state of The Gospel Coalition?What do you think about Al Mohler, Mark Dever, and Ligon Duncan's return to Shepherd's Conference?What issues within evangelicalism today should we be on guard against, especially for our children?How do you have a conversation with an unbeliever about God's sovereignty and evangelism?How important is a church prayer chain?What is the Seven Mountain Mandate and its connection to Turning Point USA?Are you a Christian nationalist?What resources would you recommend about how we got our Bible and why certain books were included in the canon?What is your position on female pastors in the church?How do you argue with people who are King James Version (KJV) only?Are there different shades of false teachers, and what about believers who fall into sexual sin like Steve Lawson?What camp would Solomon fall into - believer or unbeliever?What's the difference between Paul's response to the Judaizers in Galatians versus those who preached the gospel with false motives in Philippians? ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Morning Worship
The Doctrine, Desires, and Doom of False Teachers (2 Peter 2:1-3)

Kootenai Church Morning Worship

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2025 44:14


Jim Osman examines false teachers through an exposition of 2 Peter 2:1-3, warning believers against three critical dangers. False teachers secretly introduce destructive heresies into the church, not announcing their deception but creeping in quietly while using Christian language and claiming orthodox beliefs. These false teachers promote destructive doctrines that damn unbelievers and render Christians useless and unfruitful. Their depraved desires are marked by sensuality, and their deserved doom brings swift destruction upon them.Believers must beware lest they be deceived by their teachings, seduced by their lusts, or exploited by their greed. The sermon emphasizes that sound doctrine and godly character must go together, as false teachers lack both biblical authority and moral integrity, thereby exerting a destructive influence. ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Morning Worship
False Teachers Among You (2 Peter 2:1-3)

Kootenai Church Morning Worship

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 2, 2025 34:12


Peter warns believers that false teachers among you will secretly introduce destructive heresies into the church. Jim Osman introduces 2 Peter 2:1-3, explaining how this chapter connects with Peter's teaching on Scripture's sufficiency in chapter 1 and the apostolic witness in chapter 3. Throughout Israel's history, false prophets arose among God's people, leading them astray from the truth. Similarly, false teachers among you will deny the Master who bought them, bringing swift destruction upon themselves. Many will follow their sensuality, thereby maligning the way of truth. In their greed, these deceivers will exploit believers with false words. Peter uses Scripture's harshest language to describe false teachers among you because their deceptive doctrines, depraved desires, and deserved doom pose the greatest threat to Christ's church. Believers must remain vigilant, identifying false teachers among you by examining their teaching, character, and the judgment Scripture promises them. ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church: Special Sermons
Four Reformation Gospel Truths (Ephesians 2:1-10)

Kootenai Church: Special Sermons

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2025 43:43


Jim Osman examines four Reformation gospel truths essential for understanding God's glorious grace in Ephesians 2:1-10. These biblical truths expose the fundamental divide between Protestant and Catholic theology. First, man is spiritually dead in trespasses and sins, enslaved to the world, Satan, and fleshly lusts, unable to please God or work toward salvation. Second, God demonstrates His rich mercy by making spiritually dead sinners alive in Christ through sovereign grace. Third, salvation comes by grace alone through faith alone, not by works, leaving no room for human boasting. Fourth, good works follow salvation as evidence, not as a means of earning favor with God. ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Morning Worship
Four Reformation Gospel Truths (Ephesians 2:1-10)

Kootenai Church Morning Worship

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2025 43:43


Jim Osman examines four Reformation gospel truths essential for understanding God's glorious grace in Ephesians 2:1-10. These biblical truths expose the fundamental divide between Protestant and Catholic theology. First, man is spiritually dead in trespasses and sins, enslaved to the world, Satan, and fleshly lusts, unable to please God or work toward salvation. Second, God demonstrates His rich mercy by making spiritually dead sinners alive in Christ through sovereign grace. Third, salvation comes by grace alone through faith alone, not by works, leaving no room for human boasting. Fourth, good works follow salvation as evidence, not as a means of earning favor with God. ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Morning Worship
A Sure Word, Part 2 (2 Peter 1:19-21)

Kootenai Church Morning Worship

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2025 38:36


Jim Osman examines 2 Peter 1:19-21 to reveal why Scripture stands as a sure word for believers. Building on the Protestant Reformation principle of Sola Scriptura, Osman demonstrates that Scripture's authority rests not on human interpretation or church tradition, but on its divine origin through the Holy Spirit. The exposition shows that Scripture's meaning is determined by God Himself, not by individual readers or ecclesiastical authorities. Peter contrasts true prophetic revelation with false prophecy, emphasizing that no prophecy came by human will but by men moved by the Holy Spirit who spoke from God. This ensures Scripture is inspired, inerrant, and authoritative.Unlike modern charismatic movements that claim to teach prophetic skills, true biblical prophecy originated entirely from God's initiative, not human desire or training. Osman challenges believers to recognize Scripture as a sure word—God's living voice speaking directly to them today. The passage affirms that what God intended to communicate through the prophets is precisely what was written, making Scripture trustworthy, dependable, and sufficient for life and godliness. ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Morning Worship
A Sure Word, Part 1 (2 Peter 1:19-21)

Kootenai Church Morning Worship

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2025 38:16


In 2 Peter 1:19-21, the apostle Peter presents a sure word that believers can depend upon completely. As Peter approaches the end of his earthly ministry, he directs his readers not to apostolic successors or church tradition, but to the prophetic Word of God. This passage reveals that Scripture's testimony is absolutely dependable—more certain than even eyewitness accounts. Peter describes God's Word as a lamp shining in a dark place, illuminating dangers and guiding believers until the day dawns and the morning star rises. The prophetic word encompasses the entire Old Testament and New Testament revelation, all anticipating Christ's return in glory. Unlike cleverly devised myths, Scripture provides a sure word that is fixed in meaning, divine in origin, and utterly reliable. Believers do well to pay attention to this lamp, clinging to its light in a murky world filled with errors and false teaching, until Christ returns to usher in the messianic age. ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Adult Sunday School
Q&A with Darrell Harrison and Jim Osman - September 21, 2025

Kootenai Church Adult Sunday School

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 21, 2025 49:10


Darrell Harrison engages in a compelling Question and Answer session moderated by Jim Osman, addressing critical cultural and theological issues facing the church today. This discussion explores Islam's growing threat to Western civilization, the false narrative that Wokism is dead, and the dangerous infiltration of cultural Marxism into evangelical churches. Harrison challenges Christians to understand their enemies by studying Islamic history, Marxist ideology, and progressive political movements. Questions Include:What has happened in your life since you were here in 2022? Bring us up to speed.A couple of weeks ago, Charlie Kirk was assassinated. What are your thoughts on the sentiment that "if you go to church this Sunday and your church doesn't mention Charlie Kirk, find a new church"?You talk about Islam being a threat to the church or to America today. You think it's the most significant threat we face? Why? How long has that been the case, and what started that?Is there anything particular in American civil life in the last 50 years that you think has accelerated that drift? The election of any one specific person, for instance?Wokism, DEI—it seems that with Trump 2.0, that is on the retreat. Do you agree with that assessment or not?My last question: White guys like me are not allowed to say the word nigger or nigga. How do you suggest that we as Christians handle this so that we can get past this, get over this, get beyond it?Some people say that the Crusades were evil. What's your response to that?What resources can we use to educate ourselves on cultural Marxism and how it's infiltrating the church? ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Morning Worship
Eyewitnesses to Majesty, Part 2 (2 Peter 1:16-18)

Kootenai Church Morning Worship

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2025 37:41


Pastor Jim Osman explores how Peter became an eyewitness to majesty during Christ's Transfiguration, using this divine encounter to refute false teachers who denied the second coming. In 2 Peter 1:16-18, the apostle defends Christ's return through personal eyewitness testimony and Old Testament prophetic revelation. The Transfiguration in Matthew 17 provided Peter, James, and John with a preview of Christ's kingdom glory. Therefore, when false teachers claimed Christ's return was merely "cleverly devised myths," Peter responded as eyewitnesses to majesty who personally witnessed the divine glory accompanying His second coming. Furthermore, this eyewitness account encourages believers that they will share Christ's glory while warning unbelievers of coming judgment. The Christian faith rests not on fabricated stories but on reliable eyewitnesses to majesty who recorded what they experienced. Consequently, Peter's testimony provides unshakeable evidence that Christ will return in power and glory. ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Morning Worship
Eyewitnesses to Majesty, Part 1 (2 Peter 1:16-18)

Kootenai Church Morning Worship

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 24, 2025 38:04


Pastor Jim Osman expounds on how Peter defends the doctrine of Christ's second coming by appealing to his experience as one of the eyewitnesses to majesty. When false teachers dismissed Christ's return as cleverly devised myths, Peter countered by referencing the transfiguration, where he, James, and John were eyewitnesses to majesty displayed on the holy mountain. This powerful event provided undeniable proof that Christ's parousia—his second coming in power and glory—is sure.Peter argues that the apostles were not following fabricated fables but were genuine eyewitnesses to majesty who saw a preview of Christ's coming kingdom. The connection between denying Christ's return and moral compromise becomes clear as Peter demonstrates how false teachers' rejection of the second coming leads to licentious living. At the same time, believers who embrace this hope as eyewitnesses of majesty are motivated toward godliness and holy conduct. ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Morning Worship
Remember What You Know (2 Peter 1:12-15)

Kootenai Church Morning Worship

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2025 33:16


In his final recorded words, the apostle Peter emphasizes the critical importance for believers to remember what you know about biblical truth. Throughout 2 Peter 1:12-15, Peter demonstrates that we are forgetful people who need constant reminders of eternal truths. Studies show that we forget 50-80% of what we hear within 24 hours, making it essential to remember what you know through regular reinforcement. ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church: Special Sermons
Identified With Christ (Romans 6:1-7)

Kootenai Church: Special Sermons

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 10, 2025 52:31


Being identified with Christ reveals the profound spiritual reality that water baptism symbolizes for believers. When Christians are identified with Christ, they participate in His death, burial, and resurrection through God's sovereign choice and the Spirit's transformative work. Those identified with Christ receive eternal blessings secured through Christ's substitutionary work on their behalf. Believers identified with Christ cannot continue living in sin because they have died to sin through their union with Christ. Being identified with Christ means God treats believers as if they personally accomplished Christ's righteous work, granting them His perfect righteousness and eternal life. ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Morning Worship
Identified With Christ (Romans 6:1-7)

Kootenai Church Morning Worship

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 10, 2025 52:31


Being identified with Christ reveals the profound spiritual reality that water baptism symbolizes for believers. When Christians are identified with Christ, they participate in His death, burial, and resurrection through God's sovereign choice and the Spirit's transformative work. Those identified with Christ receive eternal blessings secured through Christ's substitutionary work on their behalf. Believers identified with Christ cannot continue living in sin because they have died to sin through their union with Christ. Being identified with Christ means God treats believers as if they personally accomplished Christ's righteous work, granting them His perfect righteousness and eternal life. ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Morning Worship
Kept From Stumbling (2 Peter 1:10-11)

Kootenai Church Morning Worship

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2025 39:19


Jim Osman examines 2 Peter 1:10-11, revealing how believers can never stumble spiritually through diligent virtue cultivation. Moreover, spiritual diligence provides three essential blessings: salvation assurance, preservation from moral failure, and triumphant kingdom entrance. Additionally, pursuing moral excellence, knowledge, and self-control keeps Christians from becoming theological shipwrecks like false teachers. Therefore, those who never stumble spiritually through faithful obedience receive abundant entrance into Christ's eternal kingdom with varying degrees of reward. ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Morning Worship
Making Election Sure, Part 2 (2 Peter 1:10-11)

Kootenai Church Morning Worship

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2025 44:09


Jim Osman continues his exposition of 2 Peter 1:10-11, explaining the believer's assurance of election and calling. This passage highlights the spiritual diligence required to cultivate assurance of election by adding godly virtues to faith. Grounding his teaching in the doctrines of divine calling and sovereign grace, Pastor Jim confronts common misconceptions about election and encourages believers to pursue a life of holiness. The assurance of election is both a humbling and comforting truth for God's people. ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Morning Worship
Making Election Sure, Part 1 (1 Peter 1:10-11)

Kootenai Church Morning Worship

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2025 43:31


Jim Osman unpacks 2 Peter 1:10-11 in this sermon on making election sure. He exhorts believers to pursue spiritual diligence by cultivating Christian virtues, thereby confirming their calling and election. Making election sure offers assurance of salvation, steadiness in faith, and a confident entrance into Christ's eternal kingdom. Osman's message clarifies that assurance is both possible and desirable for Christians who walk in holiness and trust in Christ alone. ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Morning Worship
A Tale of Two Christians (2 Peter 1:8-9)

Kootenai Church Morning Worship

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2025 37:23


Jim Osman contrasts the diligent and the negligent believer in this powerful exposition of 2 Peter 1:8-9. He explains how a fruitful Christian life grows through consistent effort rather than relying on shortcuts or quick fixes. Those who pursue godly virtues with diligence experience a fruitful Christian life marked by usefulness and growth, while others risk becoming spiritually blind and forgetful of God's grace. ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Morning Worship
Eight Fruitful Virtues, Part 2 (2 Peter 1:5-7)

Kootenai Church Morning Worship

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 29, 2025 41:14


In this message, Jim Osman continues his exposition on eight fruitful virtues from 2 Peter 1:5-7. Focusing on perseverance, godliness, brotherly kindness, and love, he explains how growth in these areas requires effort and the grace of God. Osman emphasizes the necessity of practicing the eight fruitful virtues with intentionality, highlighting that Christian maturity and usefulness are deeply rooted in these qualities. ★ Support this podcast ★

Christian Podcast Community
4 Questions to Help You Discern False Teachers

Christian Podcast Community

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2025 64:41


In this episode, we dive into 4 biblical questions to identify false teachers, grounded in the doctrine of Sola Scriptura. Learn how to evaluate teachers by asking: Do they submit to Scripture's authority? Do they believe Scripture is sufficient? And do they proclaim the true Gospel and contend for the faith? Drawing from key Bible passages like 2 Timothy 3:16, Ephesians 4:14, and 1 Corinthians 2:2, this guide equips you to guard your faith against false teachings that draw our attention away from Christ. This video offers practical, Scripture-based ways to discern teachers so that you can avoid those who teach contrary to God's word.May this episode expose the false teaching entering the church and bring glory to God. T.E. Interview with Jim Osman: https://youtu.be/RGpP-PgIrkg?si=X599ikAV6qXmIVI8To access the podcast, blog, and other resources go to the Thoroughly Equipped website @ ⁠ttew.org⁠ Follow me on Facebook & Instagram:https://www.facebook.com/TEWMelbaToast ⁠⁠https://www.instagram.com/thoroughlyequipped316/ ⁠ Christian Podcast Community: ⁠ Christianpodcastcommunity.org⁠ Striving For Eternity Ministries: https://strivingforeternity.org/To watch Thoroughly Equipped with no ads subscribe to the podcast/channel at https://lets.church/channel/ThoroughlyEquipped

Stansberry Investor Hour
How to Make Money on Spinoffs and Insider Buying

Stansberry Investor Hour

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2025 61:13


On this week's Stansberry Investor Hour, Dan and Corey welcome Jim Osman back to the show. Jim is the founder and chief vision officer of consulting group The Edge – which helps its clients and investors unlock hidden corporate value from "global special situations." Jim kicks off the show by detailing his new book that's coming out next month. It's targeted at individual investors, giving them more tools to succeed against Wall Street. Jim also discusses the importance of being yourself on social media, staying objective when it comes to investing, and how he finds special situations to profit from – mainly, spinoffs and insider buying. He explains how everyday investors can gain both an analytical edge and a behavioral edge over the markets. But as he warns, gaining such an edge involves doing your own hard work. (1:47) Next, Jim covers what's going on in the markets right now. He says there are a lot of spinoffs happening, but he has found that in the past year, the parent company has provided the best value. Further, he shares how he identifies the best spinoffs, how the future factors into his investment decisions, and why he believes value investing is dead. Jim then names two companies undergoing a spinoff that he finds attractive today, and one that he's keeping on his radar. (19:54) Finally, Jim discusses a recent Forbes piece he penned about Boeing's current problems. The company is hemorrhaging money and doesn't have a visionary leader to right the ship, but spinoffs could be the solution. Jim says Boeing is "really going to have to do something." After, he circles back to – and goes further in depth on – insider buying. And he shares his thoughts on initial public offerings and special purpose acquisition companies. (36:19)