New Podcast Episodes Sundays & Tuesdays

In the fevered corners of online forums and pulpits alike, two verses from the Book of Revelation have long been weaponized: “I know the blasphemy of them which say they are Jews, and are not, but are the synagogue of Satan” (Revelation 2:9, King James Bible) and its echo in Revelation 3:9. For centuries, these… Read more

In an era when the prosperity gospel’s ostentatious promises of wealth and health have drawn widespread condemnation for distorting Christian teaching, a quieter but arguably more insidious threat has entrenched itself within evangelical circles: Calvinism. Rooted in the 16th-century theology of John Calvin and encapsulated in the acronym TULIP — Total Depravity, Unconditional Election, Limited… Read more

Few biblical passages have been as weaponized in American pulpits as James 2:17: “Even so faith, if it hath not works, is dead, being alone.” Preachers invoke it to warn against “cheap grace,” megachurch critics cite it to demand social justice, and prosperity teachers twist it to mandate tithing. Yet a close, contextual reading of… Read more

The intersection of faith and governance has rarely felt more portentous than it does in the fall of 2025 when it comes to American Power. With Pope Leo XIV—born Robert Francis Prevost in Chicago and elevated to the papacy in May—now presiding over the world’s 1.4 billion Catholics from the Vatican, and President Donald J.… Read more

In the polished pews of America’s megachurches and the quiet sanctuaries of small-town congregations, a quiet exodus has long been underway: men, particularly single ones, are leaving. For decades, surveys have painted a stark picture—churches are 61 percent female and 39 percent male, a gender gap unmatched by any major world religion. This disparity isn’t… Read more

In the air-conditioned sanctuaries of suburban America, a phrase has gained currency among certain evangelical circles: “easy-believism.” It is wielded as a cudgel against those who dare suggest that salvation might hinge on a single, decisive act—believing in Jesus Christ as the Son of God. The term implies intellectual laziness, spiritual shallowness, a kind of… Read more

For generations, preachers have thundered from pulpits: “Repent of your sins or perish!” Yet a close reading of the Bible, anchored in the original Greek, reveals a startlingly different picture. The biblical call to repentance is not a demand to clean up one’s life before approaching God. It is a summons to change one’s mind—specifically,… Read more

In the shadow of the Kaaba, the black-draped cube at the heart of Islam’s holiest city, 1.8 billion Muslims bow five times daily, their foreheads pressed to the ground in a ritual of submission. For centuries, this act has been framed as devotion to Allah, the one true God of Abraham. Yet a meticulous examination… Read more

In the Book of Revelation, the “mark of the beast” is not a metaphor, not a microchip, not a vaccine. It is a literal, physical mark placed in the right hand or forehead by a literal, speaking beast that rises from the earth (Revelation 13:11–18). For nearly two millennia, interpreters have searched for a real-world… Read more

In the intricate tapestry of Christian eschatology, few doctrines have sparked as much debate as the timing of the rapture—the moment when believers are said to be caught up to meet Christ in the air. Among the competing views, the pre-wrath rapture theory has gained significant traction in recent decades. Proponents argue that the church… Read more

In the quiet hours before dawn, when theologians debate timelines and pastors comfort anxious flocks, one biblical truth cuts through the noise with surgical precision: Paul’s gospel of grace — the message entrusted to the Apostle to the Gentiles — requires the church to be removed from earth before the seven-year Tribulation begins. This is… Read more

In the glittering facade of Hollywood, where dreams are manufactured and myths take flight, a darker narrative unfolds—one woven from the threads of secret societies, esoteric symbols, and ancient occult philosophies. The historical entanglement between Freemasonry—a fraternal order steeped in ritual, symbolism, and claims of Enlightenment wisdom—and the entertainment industry is no mere coincidence. From… Read more

In the shimmering sprawl of Los Angeles, where the Hollywood sign looms like a secular monument, the influence of the Roman Catholic Church has long cast a shadow as long as the San Gabriel Mountains. From the city’s very founding to the flickering reels of its film industry, the Church’s fingerprints are everywhere, shaping stories… Read more

In an age of spiritual uncertainty, where fear of falling away haunts millions of professing Christians, the Bible offers a message of absolute, unshakable security. Jesus Christ and the Apostle Paul — speaking under divine inspiration — declare that once a soul is genuinely saved by faith in the finished work of Calvary, that salvation… Read more

This deep dive exposes seven false Christs — Mormon, Catholic, Calvinist, Islamic, Hindu, Black Hebrew Israelite, and Progressive — that will damn souls to hell if trusted for salvation. Matthew 24:24 warns: “For there shall arise false Christs… and shall shew great signs and wonders; insomuch that, if it were possible, they shall deceive the… Read more

In a sweeping examination of ancient texts and modern cultural movements, a detailed analysis of the Bible (KJV) reveals a continuous thread linking the contemporary LGBTQ movement to four ancient spiritual phenomena: the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah, the cult of the Babylonian goddess Ishtar, the child-sacrificial worship of Molech, and a deeper pattern of… Read more

In a nation that prides itself on religious tolerance, few topics provoke as much discomfort as the question of whether the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints — commonly known as Mormonism — qualifies as Christianity. To many outsiders, the answer seems self-evident: Mormons speak of Jesus, carry Bibles, and sing hymns. Yet when… Read more

In an era of theological fluidity, where ancient texts are often reinterpreted through modern lenses, a stark warning emerges from the pages of the Bible: to deny the writings and apostolic authority of Paul is to court apostasy — a falling away from the faith once delivered to the saints. This is not a fringe… Read more