Episodes

  • Do Dinosaurs REALLY Disprove the Bible?
    Jan 11 2026

    Do dinosaurs actually disprove the Bible, or do they expose a misunderstanding of what Scripture is trying to say in the first place? This documentary-style theology podcast examines one of the most common modern challenges to biblical faith by exploring the relationship between dinosaurs, science, and Scripture, addressing old earth and young earth creation models, radiometric dating, fossil records, Noah’s flood, and how Genesis 1–2 function as theological narratives rather than scientific timelines, while engaging apologetics arguments used by both Christians and skeptics. Drawing from key biblical texts such as Genesis, Job 40–41, Romans 5, and Ephesians 2, the episode analyzes the meaning of “death” in the Bible, the distinction between spiritual and physical death, Paul’s theology, and how creatures like Leviathan and Behemoth have been interpreted across church history, including scholarly debates over whether Behemoth aligns more closely with sauropod dinosaurs or giant ground sloths, and what those interpretations imply for biblical authority, early church thought, and salvation theology. Rather than presenting a simplistic answer, this episode challenges false dichotomies between faith and science, young earth creationism and evolutionary timelines, Scripture and geology, inviting listeners to reconsider expectations placed on the Bible, understand its purpose within theology, prophecy, judgment, and redemption, and explore how belief in Jesus, Scripture, and biblical truth can coexist with scientific inquiry without undermining the gospel or the credibility of the Bible. Music provided by InAudio (https://inaudio.org). Not sponsored.

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    9 mins
  • Does Paul Contradict Jesus?
    Jan 4 2026

    Does Paul contradict Jesus—or has the debate itself been misunderstood for centuries? In this documentary-style theology podcast episode, we examine one of the most controversial and enduring questions in Christian history by carefully comparing the teachings of Jesus in the Gospels with the writings of Paul in the New Testament, analyzing whether apparent contradictions on salvation, faith, works, law, grace, public teaching, private instruction, judgment, and authority truly undermine Paul’s credibility or instead reveal deeper theological harmony within early Christianity. Drawing directly from Scripture, this episode explores key passages such as Matthew 7, Matthew 5, Matthew 22, John 18, John 3, Mark 4, Romans 3, Romans 6, Romans 10, 1 Corinthians 13, Galatians 2, Acts 20, and Titus 1, while unpacking Greek terminology, historical context, early church dynamics, and the difference between secrecy and private teaching, all without cherry-picking verses or oversimplifying doctrine. Rather than offering shallow apologetics or reactionary skepticism, this episode presents both the strongest arguments used by Paul doubters and the most compelling defenses offered by Christian theology, showing how questions about lawlessness, confession, righteousness, prophecy, love, and fulfillment of the Law intersect with Jesus’ own words and mission, and why these debates continue to shape modern faith, deconstruction, and biblical interpretation today. Music provided by InAudio and Sub Urban — https://inaudio.org and https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KBtk5FUeJbk. Not sponsored.

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    11 mins
  • Do Christians HAVE to Go to Church?
    Dec 28 2025

    Did Jesus ever command Christians to attend church, or has modern Christianity confused structure with obedience? In this documentary-style episode, we examine the theological question of whether Christians are biblically required to “go to church” by tracing the concept of church back to its origins in Scripture, early Christian practice, and the teachings of Jesus himself. Drawing from the Greek meaning of ekklesia, this episode explores how the early church functioned as an assembly centered on shared life, discipleship, and obedience rather than buildings, services, or attendance metrics, while engaging key passages such as Matthew 4:19, Matthew 18:20, Luke 17:20–21, and Titus 1:5 to distinguish between following Jesus and institutional obligation. Through analysis of judgment, hypocrisy, and accountability, the discussion contrasts church at its best—community, shepherding, and transformation—with church at its worst—shame, superiority, and performance-based righteousness—while responding to cultural critiques, including David Goggins’ comments on faith and hypocrisy. This episode also addresses the role of Paul in establishing structure for fragile early communities, clarifying how leadership and order emerged as pastoral care rather than compulsory attendance, and examines how judgment has become one of the greatest stumbling blocks for both believers and skeptics. By integrating biblical theology, apologetics, and early church history, this episode challenges listeners to rethink salvation, discipleship, and the purpose of Christian gathering, asking whether the modern church reflects the life and teachings of Jesus or merely preserves religious tradition. Music provided by InAudio (https://inaudio.org). Not sponsored.

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    8 mins
  • The SHOCKING Truth About Satan
    Dec 21 2025

    Lucifer wasn’t his name—and Satan is not who you think he is. In this documentary-style theology episode, we dismantle the modern myth of Satan by tracing how Scripture actually introduces the figure of the accuser, examining the Hebrew concept of śāṭān in Job 1–2, the poetic taunt of Isaiah 14 and its mistranslation into “Lucifer,” the unnamed serpent of Genesis 3, and the Greek terms Satanâs and diábolos used by Jesus in the Gospels, showing how later theology, translation history, and tradition slowly fused these distinct ideas into a single composite devil figure. Drawing directly from the Bible rather than pop theology, this episode explores how Jesus reframed spiritual conflict, why Satan functions as a role rather than a proper name, how accusation, deception, and truth-without-love operate in human conscience, and why Revelation 12’s dragon imagery belongs to apocalyptic vision rather than an origin story, challenging common assumptions about hell, demons, judgment, salvation, and spiritual warfare. By engaging early biblical texts, linguistic analysis, and theological development across the Old and New Testaments, this episode invites serious listeners interested in Jesus, apologetics, prophecy, early church thought, and biblical contradictions to reconsider whether Satan is a red-skinned rebel ruling hell—or the internal mechanism of accusation that distorts truth, fuels shame, and wages war in the human heart. Music provided by InAudio (https://inaudio.org) and NEFFEX. Not sponsored.

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    9 mins
  • The REAL Problem With Religion
    Dec 14 2025

    Most people don’t follow truth—they follow comfort. In this documentary-style theology podcast episode, we examine the real problem with religion by dismantling the modern assumption that belief itself equals truth, exploring how psychological comfort, repeated ideas, and emotional safety can slowly replace reality, especially in matters of God, faith, salvation, and judgment. Using Scripture and philosophical reasoning, this episode traces how untested beliefs shape our image of God, how sentimental ideas like “God just wants me to be happy” or “love is all that matters” emerge, and why love without truth collapses into self-deception while truth without love becomes cruelty, drawing directly from the teachings of Jesus in John 14:6 and John 15:5–10 to show that biblical love is inseparable from obedience, reality, and alignment with what is actually true rather than what merely feels right. We explore core theological themes including sin, moral consequences, exclusivity claims of Christ, free will, religious contradictions, apologetics, and why competing worldviews—Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism, and atheism—cannot all be true simultaneously, while addressing how modern Christianity often avoids judgment, repentance, and prophecy in favor of comfort-driven belief systems that crumble when confronted with reality. This episode is an invitation to examine faith honestly, wrestle with Scripture, and confront the uncomfortable possibility that truth demands change, asking whether we are willing to seek what is real even when it costs us our assumptions, our comfort, or our feelings, because belief will not shape reality—reality will shape us. Music provided by InAudio (https://inaudio.org). Not sponsored.

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    9 mins
  • The SHOCKING Origin of Demons
    Dec 7 2025

    The origins of demons are far stranger and more theologically important than most Christians realize. This episode investigates the shocking ancient context behind Genesis 6, the “sons of God,” the Nephilim, and the Watchers, tracing how Second Temple Judaism, the Book of Enoch, and early Christian thought shaped the earliest understanding of demonology. We examine why the Bible never defines demons, why first-century believers already knew what they were, and how ancient Jewish literature—Enoch, Jubilees, apocalyptic texts, and Qumran traditions—provided the framework the New Testament assumes. We explore the meaning of bene ha’elohim, the hybrid identity of the Nephilim, the Flood narrative, divine judgment, the spiritual corruption attributed to the giants, and Enoch’s explicit claim that demons are the disembodied spirits of the Nephilim rather than fallen angels. We also trace how early church fathers preserved this interpretation until the fourth and fifth centuries, when figures like Augustine rejected the angelic view of Genesis 6 and reshaped Christian theology for the next 1,500 years. This episode is a deep dive into biblical studies, early church history, origins of evil, supernatural worldview, salvation, and the tension between Jesus’ first-century context and later doctrinal developments, designed for listeners seeking rigorous exploration of Scripture, ancient manuscripts, and theological truth. Music provided by InAudio (https://inaudio.org). Not sponsored.

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    12 mins
  • Aaron Abke is LYING to You!
    Nov 30 2025

    What if the real danger to your faith isn’t doubt—but the teachers shaping it? In this episode, we investigate Aaron Abke’s claims about Paul, the early church, and biblical authority, examining whether his accusations align with Scripture or distort it. We break down key arguments from his video on Kay Podgee, analyze the theological debate around Paul’s apostleship, and explore the doctrines of salvation, judgment, revelation, and biblical inspiration through passages like John 3:16, Acts 9, Acts 22, Deuteronomy 19:15, Matthew 24, and Matthew 7. This documentary-style deep dive confronts claims of contradictions between Jesus and Paul, looks at the early church witnesses who affirmed Paul’s ministry, and exposes how context, hermeneutics, and confirmation bias shape modern interpretations of Scripture. If you’ve wrestled with doubt, questions about biblical reliability, or challenges raised by modern spiritual influencers, this episode offers a grounded, historically informed, and theologically rigorous response rooted in apologetics, New Testament scholarship, and the teachings of Jesus. Whether you’re a believer seeking clarity or someone exploring Christianity from the outside, this investigation will challenge assumptions, address deceptive interpretations, and defend the integrity of the biblical text. Music provided by InAudio (https://inaudio.org). Not sponsored.

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    12 mins
  • You Were LIED To About Hell!
    Nov 23 2025

    What if the fire of hell isn’t torture… but transformation? In this episode, we explore what Jesus, the prophets, and the early church actually taught about judgment, the afterlife, and the fire of God. We break down the meaning behind the Greek words aionion, kolasis, and aidios, and ask whether “eternal fire” means endless torment or a temporary, purifying judgment. Using Scripture from the Gospels, Paul’s letters, Revelation, and Old Testament prophecy, we compare modern Christian doctrines about hell with historical theology and early church beliefs. If you’re looking for a deeper Bible study on hell or a clearer understanding of what Jesus really said about salvation, wrath, and divine justice, this episode will challenge everything you thought you knew. Music provided by InAudio (https://inaudio.org). Not sponsored.

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    14 mins