• Naming the Unnamed God (Acts 17)
    Apr 6 2026

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    A $500 Porsche sounds like a dream deal until you hear the reason it was priced that way and the punchline becomes a warning: trouble can change what we think is valuable in a single moment. We start with that story, remember how a crisis like COVID reshuffled everyday priorities, and then ask the bigger question behind it all: what happens when God reshuffles the value of everything?

    We walk through Acts 17 and Paul in Athens, a city overflowing with ideas, confidence, and idols. The culture is spiritually curious, but also spiritually anxious, so anxious they built an altar “To The Unknown God” just in case they missed one. Paul uses that opening to proclaim the God they don’t know by name: the Creator of the cosmos and the Lord of heaven and earth. We talk about why Paul begins with creation when his audience doesn’t share Scripture, and how the order of the universe points beyond chance.

    Then the message sharpens to the claim that can’t be safely ignored: Jesus rose from the dead, and that resurrection is God’s assurance that a day of righteous judgment is fixed. That leaves three responses that still show up in every room: mock it, delay it, or believe it. If this stirred questions about faith, meaning, and what really lasts, listen closely and share it with someone who’s still searching, then subscribe and leave a review so more people can find the truth that turns our values right side up.

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    31 mins
  • Why I Trust the Bible and You Can Too! (Part 3)
    Mar 30 2026

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    A barefoot teenager in rural Wales saves for six years and then walks twenty miles to buy a Bible in her own language. That story isn’t sentimental filler, it’s a mirror. If we say we believe the Word of God, do we actually trust it enough to treat it like treasure?

    We follow the thread from Mary Jones to the early church, where Peter is accused of selling “cleverly devised myths” about Jesus. Peter answers with eyewitness truth from the Transfiguration and then makes an even bigger claim: the strongest foundation for Christian faith is not someone’s spiritual experience but the written Word we can read. From 2 Peter 1 to 2 Timothy 3:16, we talk about Bible inspiration, what it means that Scripture is God-breathed, and why Christians have confidence that the Bible is not a man-made religious project.

    Then we get practical and direct. Scripture doesn’t just inform, it forms. It teaches what is right, reproves what is wrong, corrects what is crooked, and trains us to keep walking straight. We also address why that authority puts believers out of step with cultural trends that elevate personal experience as the highest judge. To help you put this into practice, we share a simple Bible study method (observation, interpretation, application) plus concrete tools like study Bibles, commentaries, and expository teaching, along with a challenge to treat the Bible as more than an app.

    If this strengthened your confidence in Scripture, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find it. What’s one habit that would help you treasure God’s Word more this week?

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    46 mins
  • Why Trust The Bible and You Can Too! (Part 2)
    Mar 23 2026

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    Truth sounds harsh until you realize the alternative is chaos. We start with a simple claim you’ve probably heard before: all religions are basically true. It feels inclusive, but it falls apart the moment two beliefs collide. From there, we follow the real reason the Bible keeps getting singled out, critiqued, and re-labeled as “just another sacred book” and why that move is more than academic. It reshapes how we see God, morality, and even accountability.

    We dig into one of the most repeated modern talking points about Christianity: the idea that church councils hid certain books and hand-picked the New Testament to fit an agenda. Using the framework of 2 Peter 1:20-21, we explain why the apostles and prophets are not pushing private opinions, and how the early church recognized Scripture through clear standards of authorship, doctrine, and reception. We also sort through the three categories that usually fuel the “missing books” narrative: the Apocrypha, the so-called lost books, and the later Gnostic gospels that promise secret knowledge under borrowed apostolic names.

    We then zoom out to history and preservation: thousands of New Testament manuscripts, early copies, and why skepticism about biblical texts often uses rules that are rarely applied to other ancient writings. The goal is not to win an argument but to rebuild confidence, because Scripture is meant to function like a lamp in dark places when suffering hits, doubts rise, and culture gets morally foggy. If you’ve ever wondered whether you can trust the Bible, this message is for you. Subscribe, share this with a friend who’s wrestling with doubt, and leave a review with your biggest question about the Bible’s reliability.

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    40 mins
  • Why I Trust the Bible and You Can Too Part 1
    Mar 16 2026

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    A single lecture in a college classroom can shake someone’s faith for years. We start with a story that hits close to home: a respected Christian student hears that the “wrong books” made it into the Bible, the “real books” were hidden, and church power plays invented the faith. His conclusion is blunt and painful: he no longer trusts the Bible, and he walks away. That moment sets up the big question we tackle head-on: is the Bible a human document shaped by agendas, or a trustworthy Word from God?

    From there, we open 2 Peter 1 and follow Peter’s response to the accusation that Scripture is myth. He points to what he saw and heard at the Transfiguration, then he goes further and calls the prophetic Word “more fully confirmed” than even his unforgettable experience. We slow down over 2 Peter 1:20–21 to clarify what it actually means: not that regular people are forbidden to read or interpret the Bible, but that the message did not originate in human will. Men spoke from God as they were carried along by the Holy Spirit, which is why Christians speak about biblical inspiration, authority, and reliability.

    We also get practical about why you can trust the Bible’s credibility, walking through evidence like New Testament manuscript support, archaeology, internal unity across centuries, and the Bible’s record of prophetic accuracy. Then we address the canon question with clarity, including why the Council of Nicaea did not choose the 27 books of the New Testament and how early believers recognized what God had already given. We close with two heart-level reminders: we love the Bible because we love its Author, and we want more than information, we want real transformation.

    If this helped you think more clearly about Scripture, subscribe, share this with a friend who has doubts, and leave a review telling us what question you want us to tackle next.

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    35 mins
  • Divine Guidance Through a Dismal Swamp
    Mar 9 2026

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    A swamp is no place to wander without a guide. We open with the Great Dismal Swamp—its stagnant waters, hidden paths, and sudden dangers—and follow Peter’s bold claim that the world can feel just like that: murky, forbidding, and full of pitfalls. The answer, he says, is not a thrill of new experiences but a steady lamp: the prophetic word. We walk through Peter’s defense in 2 Peter 1, where he contrasts his unforgettable moment on the Mount of Transfiguration with something even more reliable than sights and sounds—the written Scripture that outlives every critic and survives every age.

    Together we explore why attacks on Christianity so often zero in on the Bible’s trustworthiness, from the serpent’s “Did God really say?” to modern campaigns to erase Scripture from public view. We look at the preservation of the Old and New Testaments, the witness of manuscripts and history, and the irony of efforts to silence the Word only amplifying its reach. Along the way, we share stories from global listeners tuning in where owning a Bible risks everything, and we reflect on how a book others fear can become the light we keep closest.

    Then we get practical. Peter urges us to pay attention—to bring the Word near—because a lamp only helps those who hold it. We talk about Scripture shaping identity, ethics, work, and hope when culture drifts in confusion. And we lift our eyes to the promise that the lamp is not the sunrise but the sign that dawn is coming: the morning star rising, Christ returning, darkness scattering. Until that day, we keep the lamp lit, step by step, confident that the path ahead is clear enough for faithful feet.

    If this conversation steadied your steps, share it with a friend, subscribe for more, and leave a review with the verse that lights your way.

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    36 mins
  • An Explosion of Light from Another World
    Feb 16 2026

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    Some messages sparkle while quietly bending the truth. We step into the tension with Peter, who faced charges of “clever myths” for proclaiming that Jesus is the Son of God and will return to reign. Instead of retreating, he reaches back to the mountain where heaven’s brightness broke through. There, the veil of Christ’s humanity lifted and uncreated light flooded the scene—garments blazing, presence overwhelming—while a voice from the Majestic Glory said, “This is my beloved Son, with whom I am well pleased.”

    We unpack why Peter chose the Transfiguration as his anchor point, and how that single moment silences today’s claims that the kingdom is a myth. The mountain offers more than spectacle; it is prophecy fulfilled and promise previewed. Moses and Elijah stand beside Jesus, signaling the Law and the Prophets converging in the Messiah. Their conversation about his “exodus” ties the cross, resurrection, and ascension into one seamless mission. For listeners bombarded by modern “revelations” and charismatic personalities, this episode lays out a clear path: test every message by Scripture’s meaning, not the messenger’s magnetism, and measure every claim against the eyewitness and earwitness record.

    We also draw out the hope hidden in the blaze. The Transfiguration does not only reveal who Jesus is; it hints at who we will be. John’s promise that we will be like him becomes tangible as we glimpse future glory—recognizable, immortal, radiant. If you’ve wondered how to spot spiritual counterfeits, how Peter’s testimony strengthens faith, or why the return of Christ remains certain after two millennia, this conversation will sharpen your discernment and lift your eyes. If it stirred your hope, share it with a friend, subscribe for more grounded teaching, and leave a review to help others find the show. What part of the mountain scene changes how you live this week?

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    38 mins
  • More than Myths and Superstitions
    Feb 9 2026

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    What if the biggest spiritual threat isn’t outside the church but already in our language—lucky numbers, “good energy,” and manifesting disguised as faith? We open 2 Peter 1:16 and confront a charge as old as the apostles: that Christianity is just a beautiful myth. From the Book of Jubilees to modern word‑faith formulas, we trace how superstition dresses itself in borrowed Bible verses and then sells control to anxious hearts.

    I walk through Paul’s warnings to Timothy and Titus, why myths flourish inside congregations, and how a Buddhist-flavored “speak it into existence” has been baptized with Christian terms. We contrast that with James’s bracing call to live and plan under “if the Lord wills,” and we name the telltale marks of false teachers—arrogance, greed, and promises of freedom that enslave. Along the way, we look at our own habits: skipped 13th floors, game‑day rituals, and the quiet fear that fate is stronger than the Father.

    Then we turn to Peter’s bold line in the sand: “We did not follow cleverly devised myths.” He’s not pitching comfort; he’s reporting reality. The apostles lost status, safety, and, in many cases, their lives—hardly the perks of a fabricated tale. Their message centers on the parousia, the powerful return of Jesus, a royal arrival that once rattled emperors and still unsettles a world allergic to accountability. That hope doesn’t invite formulas; it invites allegiance, repentance, and rest.

    If you’re weary of spiritual slogans and want clarity rooted in Scripture, this conversation is for you. Come test messages by the Bible, not by charisma. Trade the pressure to manifest outcomes for the peace of trusting a sovereign God. And set your hope not on vibes or luck, but on the King who will appear in power. If this helped you think more clearly, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review to help others find the show.

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    40 mins
  • Remember to Remember!
    Jan 19 2026

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    A university can start with “Truth for Christ and His Church” and end with a mission that never mentions Christ. That same quiet drift can happen to any of us. We open with the cautionary story of the Ivy League and then turn to 2 Peter 1, where an aging apostle sounds an alarm we still need: remember what is true, apply what you know, and refuse the slow undertow that pulls a life off course.

    We walk through Peter’s three anchors for a steady soul. First, application over information: maturity isn’t measured by verses memorized but by habits practiced. Jesus challenged experts who could quote Scripture yet missed obedience. James called Scripture a mirror that demands adjustment, not applause. Second, urgency from brevity: Peter calls his body a tent and his death an exodus, a road out that fuels focus, not fear. When we number our days, we prioritize what matters now—keeping vows, guarding holiness, and waking from spiritual drowsiness. Third, influence over affluence: Peter doesn’t seek to be remembered; he writes so the church will remember “these things.” Real legacy isn’t diplomas and accolades; it is people formed, faith transferred, habits modeled.

    Along the way, we name modern lures, the changing bait of temptation across decades, and the practical guardrails that keep us from drifting—rhythms of Scripture and prayer, accountable friendships, quick repentance, and concrete steps that translate belief into obedience. We end with a candid moment of reflection and prayer, asking what promise needs keeping, what habit needs returning, and what plan needs to be abandoned to stay faithful.

    If this conversation helps you reset your course, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs encouragement, and leave a review to help others find it. Then tell us: what one step will you take today to resist drift and live for what lasts?

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    33 mins