Épisodes

  • Bible Study Genesis Part 3-In the Beginning, God...
    Feb 24 2026

    In this lesson we begin a sharp focus on the famous first few words that open this Book of Beginnings and look straight at a world-shaking claim: there was a true beginning, and God stood before it and brought it into being. Those four words—“In the beginning, God”—become a lens for everything that follows and a challenge to how we think about time, science, and meaning.

    We share why we call Genesis the setup book, how it leans into the rest of Scripture, and why the start of all things can feel harder to picture than resurrections or multiplied loaves. Along the way, we draw a sharp line between good science and cultural scientism. We affirm the beauty of research done with humility, recall how figures like Kepler and Newton sought to understand God’s handiwork, and push back on modern tendencies to treat scientific consensus as unquestionable dogma. The goal isn’t to score points; it’s to keep each tool in its proper place, letting empirical inquiry describe mechanisms while Scripture reveals purpose, authorship, and ultimate origins.

    From there we follow a simple thread of logic: if God acted at the first instant, He necessarily existed before it. That means God is not a part of the system He created but the cause of the system itself. This raises brave, human questions—Where was God “before” space? Why did He choose to begin the beginning? Can finite minds handle the idea of true nothing?—and we model how to ask them without fear or cynicism. You’ll hear why some answers remain beyond reach, why that is not a failure of faith or reason, and how those limits actually form a wiser starting point for study, worship, and life.

    If you’re ready to approach Genesis with fresh eyes and a steady mind, join us. Subscribe and share this episode with a friend who loves big questions.

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    22 min
  • Bible Study Romans Part 3-Doulos
    Feb 24 2026

    What if the most important word in Paul’s introduction isn’t “apostle,” but “doulos”? We open Romans by slowing down on the very first phrase and uncover how a single Greek term—often softened to “servant” in the English translations—actually declares total allegiance to Jesus as Master. That shift in language changes everything: how we read Scripture, how we see ourselves, and how we understand the authority and joy that flow from being bound to a good King.

    We walk through the text, read the first seven verses as one sweeping sentence, and trace why Paul packs his identity, calling, and message into that opening. Drawing from respected lexicons and scholars, we show that doulos means slave—one bound or pledged to serve—and we explain why Paul would not have chosen a lighter term because he meant nothing less. Then we set the word inside its ancient world: royal courts where bonded attendants exercised real authority while remaining wholly owned by the monarch. In that light, “slave of Christ” becomes a title of dignity and mission, not humiliation, especially when joined to “called to be an apostle” and “separated to the gospel of God.”

    From there we lean into the heart-level implications. Christian slavery is voluntary, born of love, and it leads to freedom from sin and self. If Jesus is our Master, we stop negotiating the terms of discipleship and start obeying with gladness. We consider how this identity grounded Paul’s credibility with the Roman church that hadn’t met him yet, and why it still grounds our witness today. The takeaway is both simple and demanding: let Scripture define the relationship, embrace the bonds of love, and live as those sent under the King’s authority.

    If this study sharpened your view of Romans and stirred fresh devotion to Christ, subscribe, share the episode with a friend. Leave a quick review to help others find the show. Your words encourage us and extend this conversation to those who need it.

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    27 min
  • Bible Study Romans Part 2-Once Saul, Now Paul
    Feb 23 2026

    A single chapter. A sweeping claim. Romans 1 opens by announcing a gospel promised long ago and proven in the resurrection, then turns the mirror on us with a fearless account of how humanity trades the Creator for created things. We read the text aloud and walk through Paul’s opening moves: why he isn’t ashamed of the gospel, how God’s righteousness is revealed by faith, and why God’s wrath exposes our exchanges.

    We share why our study method matters—whole-chapter reading, careful context, and trustworthy commentaries—because shortcuts blur what Paul clarifies. From there, we trace the thread that ties the church to Israel’s story. Christianity doesn’t replace Judaism; it fulfills God’s promise to bless all nations through Abraham. That truth steadies Jewish believers in the first century and confronts a stubborn myth today: God’s people are special, not exclusive. The table widens in Christ, and the root still holds.

    Paul’s own journey adds weight. Saul of Tarsus, trained in law and tradition, becomes Paul the servant and apostle set apart for the gospel of God. Whether his name shift served mission or marked transformation, his calling is clear: preach Christ where confusion reigns. We apply that clarity to modern drift—when churches trade Scripture for spectacle or soften holiness under the banner of grace. Saved by grace does not mean free to sin; it means free to obey. The just shall live by faith, and living looks like worshiping the Creator, loving truth, and refusing the easy exchange.

    Join us as we begin Romans with humility and courage. Subscribe and share this episode with a friend who loves Scripture.

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    30 min
  • Bible Study Romans Part 1-Introduction
    Feb 23 2026

    Start with a study through Genesis, open a second front in Romans, and watch the gospel come into sharper focus. We walk through why this letter to the Romans matters for new believers and curious skeptics alike: its trusted authorship, its striking choice of Greek, its first-century timing, and the real tensions inside the church at Rome that still echo in our communities today. This letter isn’t some dry, abstract lecture; it’s a strategic guide meant to establish faith, clarify doctrine, and unite a diverse body around Christ.

    We trace Paul’s credibility as a firsthand leader in the earliest church and explain how language served the mission. Writing in Greek gave Paul precision and reach, turning a local letter into a portable curriculum for the growing Christian world. Dating Romans to around AD 58 places it within a generation of Jesus and inside a city reshaped by Claudius’s expulsion and the return of Jewish residents. That backdrop—Gentiles filling the pews, Jewish believers reentering the fellowship—sets the stage for Paul’s patient, forceful case: righteousness as a gift, justification by faith, grace that saves and transforms, and God’s sovereignty in election.

    We also open the door to the 1st Century Church at Rome’s origin story—likely sparked by Pentecost pilgrims rather than an apostolic founder—which helps explain leadership gaps and why Paul felt compelled to write before he could visit. Along the way, we preview how, in this letter, Paul engages the Old Testament with depth and care, from Abraham and David to Jacob and Esau, showing that the new covenant isn’t a break from Israel’s story but its fulfillment in Christ. If you’ve ever wondered how the gospel holds a fractured church together, Romans offers hard-won clarity and hope.

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    34 min
  • Bible Study Genesis Part 2-A Book of Introductions
    Feb 20 2026

    What if the most important clue to reading Genesis isn’t hidden in obscure debates but in the way the story chooses its details? We open our study by reframing Genesis as the foundation of redemption, where brevity and depth are deliberate signals of purpose. Chapters 1–11 race through vast stretches of time with spare strokes, then chapters 12–50 slow to a near-biographical pace as Abraham steps onto the stage and covenant takes center stage. That shift isn’t an accident; it’s how Scripture tells us what matters most.

    Across this conversation, we pull together a clear, high-level overview of Genesis: creation and the first humans, the rise of sin and its consequences, The Flood and its aftermath such as the emergence of nations. Then we narrow the lens to the family through whom blessing is promised to all families of the earth. Along the way, we highlight the “first mentions” that shape the whole Bible—Sabbath rooted in creation, marriage as a creational gift, sacrifice as a pointer to mercy, labor, culture, languages, cities, and the stubborn reality of sin. Rather than chasing every curiosity Genesis does not answer, we follow the story it insists on telling: God binds himself to people through covenant and moves history toward redemption.

    We also explore how good storytelling works—why leaving out certain facts protects the message—and apply that to our expectations of ancient Scripture. You’ll hear classic insights from trusted commentators, a practical analogy that makes the timeline contrast stick, and a preview of how the Son of God is already present in Genesis under titles and appearances that foreshadow the Gospel. If you want to read the Old Testament with clarity, this is your on-ramp: simple, focused, and anchored in the text’s own priorities.

    Join us, subscribe, and share this study with a friend who’s curious about the Bible’s beginnings.

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    30 min
  • Bible Study Genesis-Part 1, Just Getting Started
    Feb 20 2026

    We’re opening Genesis not as a relic, but as the living ground that carries the weight of Christian hope. If Ephesians (our last study) gave us the shape of doctrine, Genesis gives us the soil and timbers—the people, promises, and patterns that explain why the New Testament rings true.

    We dig into why so many believers feel distant from the Old Testament and how that gap formed across traditions. Then we clear the fog with a plain-language tour of the text’s world: Hebrew as the original voice, Aramaic as the street tongue, and Greek as the bridge that carried Scripture through the Septuagint into the first-century ear. You’ll hear why the title “Genesis” matters, what “Beresheth”, the word the ancient Jews used for this Book, means in Hebrew, and how Jesus and the apostles drew from the Greek wording familiar to their audiences.

    From there, we set expectations that honor the design of Scripture. Genesis is history, but not an encyclopedia. It is a careful, purposeful selection that preserves the line of promise and the character of God. Genesis’ narrative cadence, genealogies, place names, and events lay a foundation rather than provide trivia. Using a builder’s basement analogy, we make the case for patience: the early digging looks odd until the house stands, and then every hard, slow step proves essential.

    Throughout the study of this FASCINATING Book we invite you to look for Christ from the beginning—promise, sacrifice, blessing to the nations—and to let patience reshape how you read. The goal isn’t to win arguments with skeptics; it’s to listen well, follow the story, and let the vision speak in its appointed time. Bring a curious mind and a willing heart. Subscribe, share this with a friend who’s wary of the Old Testament and above all, LEARN something.

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    21 min