Random Exposition Podcasts

  • Hebrews: All About Faith
  • GVF // Grace Valley Fellowship
  • The Sunday Show with Johnny O
  • Acts: An Unfinished Story
  • Romans: The Master Key to Scripture
  • 1 John: The Fruit of Fellowship with Christ
  • The Lighthouse
  • Colossians: Power to Endure with Joy
  • Ephesians: The Calling of the Saints
  • Desert Hills Sermons
  • 1 Corinthians: Epistle to the 21st Century
  • EXPOsed Conferences™ Podcast
  • 2 Corinthians: authentic Christianity
  • Mark: He Came to Serve
  • Matthew: Behold Your King!
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    Hebrews: All About Faith

    Hebrews: All About Faith

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    Since Sep 16, 2018 14:00 UTC

    Hebrews is one of the three New Testament commentaries on a single Old Testament verse:

    > The just shall live by his faith. (Hab 2:4b KJV)

    This is the verse that struck a fire in the heart of Martin Luther, and began the Protestant Reformation 450 years ago. This verse opened the eyes of Augustine, and helped him to become a mighty man of faith, and it is still striking fire in many hearts today. It is expanded and amplified in Romans, Ephesians, and Hebrews Each of these Epistles emphasizes a different aspect of that statement. The book of Romans talks about the just — the justified — those who have been accepted as righteous in Jesus Christ. The just shall live by faith. The book of Ephesians emphasized the words “shall live,” and it tells us about life as a justified person — the walk in the Spirit, the life in Jesus, the life of Christ in us — the just shall live by faith. And finally, the book of Hebrews takes up the last two words, “by faith,” and it shows us how to lay hold of the life by which we are justified.

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    GVF // Grace Valley Fellowship

    GVF // Grace Valley Fellowship

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    Since Jul 22, 2012 04:00 UTC

    Here’s a taste of our Sunday morning sermons. Check us out online at www.gracevalleyfellowship.org or Sunday’s 10:30am at the Phoenixville Area Middle School.

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    The Sunday Show with Johnny O
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    Acts: An Unfinished Story

    Acts: An Unfinished Story

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    Since Aug 20, 2018 14:00 UTC

    Acts is the book that reveals the power of the church. Therefore, when a church begins to dwindle, lose its power, and turn dull and drab in its witness, it needs desperately to get back into the spirit, expectation, knowledge and teaching of the book of Acts. In this book, the principles of the exchanged life — “Not I, but Christ” — is dramatically unfolded. If the book of Acts were taken out of our New Testament, we would never understand the rest of it. It would be like a child with his front tooth missing. When you close the record of the gospels, you see nothing but a handful of Jews in the city of Jerusalem, the center of Jewish life, talking together about a kingdom for Israel.

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    Romans: The Master Key to Scripture

    Romans: The Master Key to Scripture

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    Since Aug 22, 2018 14:00 UTC

    The Epistle of Paul to the Romans is undoubtedly the most powerful human document that has ever been written. It is pure gold from beginning to end. This is the book that lit the fire in Martin Luther’s heart and brought about the Protestant Reformation, changing the history of Europe, as well as the world. This is the book that struck home as John Wesley sat in a little chapel in London listening to Luther’s Prelude to the Epistle to the Romans. Wesley said his heart was strangely warmed as he heard the truths of Romans set forth. There followed, through him, the great evangelical awakening that saved England from the fate of France and arrested the decay of English life, completely altering the history of the world again.

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    1 John: The Fruit of Fellowship with Christ

    1 John: The Fruit of Fellowship with Christ

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    Since Aug 26, 2018 14:00 UTC

    There are two of Jesus’ disciples whom I would particularly like to have known in the days of their earthly life. One is Peter, and the other is John. I like these two men. I am especially impressed by the change that fellowship with the Lord Jesus produced in their lives. This is what intrigues me about these two. Peter, as you know, was erratic, impulsive, brash. As someone has well said, “Whenever Peter enters a scene, it’s always with a thud.” He seems to have a gift for putting his foot in his mouth — he suffered from hoof-in-mouth disease. Yet the Lord made him a steady, stable, dependable rock, as his name implies. He became a rallying point, a gathering point for the Christians in the days of the persecutions which broke out in the first century. It was only because he was with the Lord, and knew the Lord. Most of the change took place after the Lord’s death and resurrection, however, so we do not need to feel that it was the personal presence of Jesus that changed these men. He changed them after he died and rose again, just as he can change us. John was the other one who was dramatically changed by our Lord. He was a young man, the youngest of all the disciples. In fact, many scholars feel that he was a teenager when he first started to follow the Lord. Perhaps he was seventeen or eighteen years of age. Along with his brother, James, he was a hot-headed young man, given to sharp and impulsive utterances with a tendency toward blowing off steam. He was probably a loudmouth, because Jesus nicknamed him Son of Thunder. That was our Lord’s gentle way of labeling John’s problem. He just kept the thunder rolling all the time. So our Lord called both James and John Sons of Thunder. But John became the apostle of love. He was noted for his gentleness and his graciousness and his goodness. He was called “The Virgin.” As far as we know, he never married. There is no record that he ever did. But he was called “virgin” primarily because of the purity of his life. He became a man who was characterized by such an outstanding devotion and love for the Lord Jesus, that all his life he was singled out as the apostle of love.

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    The Lighthouse

    The Lighthouse

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    Since Jul 22, 2011 13:28 UTC

    Expositions from the Bible for spiritual edification and encouragement

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    Colossians: Power to Endure with Joy

    Colossians: Power to Endure with Joy

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    Since Sep 18, 2018 14:00 UTC

    Most of the letters that Paul wrote to the churches were written to those that he had started himself. But he did not begin the church at Rome, nor did he begin the church at Colossae. It is not certain who started the church at Colossae, but it is very likely a man mentioned in certain of Paul’s other letters — Epaphroditus, or, since that was too long a name for even the Greeks to say, Epaphras. He is mentioned in this letter as being from Colossae, and is very likely the one who founded the church. Where he had heard the Gospel we do not know, but he had evidently taken it to his own home town and had begun to proclaim Christ. Out of that proclamation had come the church at Colossae. Epaphroditus had gone to Rome to see the Apostle Paul, who was then a prisoner, carrying with him reports of the church at Colossae. Another man had also gone to Rome to see Paul during his first imprisonment, and he too brought reports of the church at Colossae. So it was to these new Christians who had never met the apostle face to face that Paul wrote the letter from Rome.

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    Ephesians: The Calling of the Saints

    Ephesians: The Calling of the Saints

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    Since Aug 12, 2018 14:00 UTC

    The Epistle to the Ephesians is, in many ways, the crowning glory of the New Testament. But perhaps this letter ought not to be called “Ephesians” for we do not really know to whom it was written. The Christians at Ephesus were certainly among the recipients of this letter, but undoubtedly there were others. In many of the original Greek manuscripts there is a blank where the King James translation has the words “at Ephesus;” just a line where the names of other recipients were apparently to be filled in. That is why the Revised Standard Version does not say, “To the saints at Ephesus,” but simply “To the saints who are also faithful in Christ Jesus…”

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    Desert Hills Sermons

    Desert Hills Sermons

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    Since Jan 30, 2022 19:00 UTC

    Sermons from Desert Hills Church in Phoenix, Arizona. Listen as Dr. Robb Brunansky exposits and preaches the word of God, with this weekly sermon feed.

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    1 Corinthians: Epistle to the 21st Century

    1 Corinthians: Epistle to the 21st Century

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    Since Aug 22, 2018 14:00 UTC

    The first epistle of Paul to the Corinthians is a very, very important letter for us because it so thoroughly captures the problems that we face as moderns living in this modern age. The reason is, of course, that Corinth was the most American city in the New Testament — it was a resort city, the capital of pleasure in the Roman Empire. If you remember your geography you know it was located on the Peloponnesian peninsula, and the conditions under which the Corinthians lived were very much like the conditions under which we live, or to put that the other way, the conditions under which we live today are Corinthian conditions. Corinth was a beautiful city, a lovely city of palms and beautiful buildings, the center of pleasure for the whole empire, and it was devoted to two things — the pursuit of pleasure (largely passion), and of wisdom. It was a Greek city, and its inhabitants loved to philosophize, and they were given to what Paul calls, “the wisdom of words.”

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    EXPOsed Conferences™ Podcast

    EXPOsed Conferences™ Podcast

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    Since Apr 28, 2019 23:00 UTC

    Welcome to EXPOsed Conferences™ Podcast, I’m your host Kristina Daniele, CEM. I have been in the hospitality industry since I began working at the age of 15 and I have been in the Conference Industry for a little over 13+ years on the side of Exhibition & Sponsorship Management and received my CEM (Certification in Exhibition Management) in 2016. I created EXPOsed Conferences™ Podcast to bring conference professionals together on a more frequent basis to discuss the fundamentals of conferences and relevant industry topics. EXPOsed Conferences™ Podcast mission is to connect planners and suppliers of the conference industry while exploring the innovation and the evolution of conferences. Through candid conversations with industry experts as well as your industry peers each episode will expose insider tips and resources of the industry to strengthen and elevate your events.

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    http://http://exposedconferencespodcast.buzzsprout.com New Episodes are available every Tuesday and don’t forget to subscribe to the podcast to receive notifications about future episodes.

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    2 Corinthians: authentic Christianity

    2 Corinthians: authentic Christianity

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    Since Sep 7, 2018 14:00 UTC

    Reading through Paul’s second letter to the church at Corinth makes you aware that this is the most personal and emotional of all his letters. It throbs with a sense of the glories of God’s grace. Visiting Corinth on my recent trip was a moving experience for me. There is very little left standing of the original city — it was destroyed by the Romans shortly after Paul’s visit there and has been lying in ruins ever since. Certain temple columns remain, though. as well as the market place and other public areas of the city. They can be clearly discerned, and the actual pavement of the judgment hall of the Roman proconsul is well preserved. It wasn’t hard for me to imagine the Apostle Paul as he came down from Athens into this city which was at the time a center of pleasure, a great commercial city and a city of great beauty, with many, many temples. It had gained a reputation as the center of lascivious worship — the worship of the Goddess of Love. There were some 10,000 prostitutes attached to the temple of Aphrodite and the city lived up, or perhaps I should say, down, to its reputation as a place of sensual pleasure. It represented a sex-saturated society. You can see indications of this in Paul’s letters to the church there. It was easy to imagine the apostle arriving in the dust of the road unknown and unheralded a simple tentmaker by all appearance. Finding two people of the same trade, Aquila and Priscilla, he lived and worked with them, and preached up and down the city streets and in the market places and synagogues. Thus God used him to lay the foundations of the church at Corinth.

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    Matthew: Behold Your King!

    Matthew: Behold Your King!

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    Since Sep 8, 2018 14:00 UTC

    Beginning in the New Testament we move from the realm of shadow, type, and prophecy, into the full sunshine of the presentation of the Son of God. The Old Testament speaks of him on every page, but speaks in shadows, in types, in symbols, and in prophecies — all looking forward to the coming of Someone. You cannot read the Old Testament without being aware of that constant promise running through every page — Someone is coming! Someone is coming! Now, when we open the Gospels, that Someone steps forth in the fullness of his glory. As John says, “We have beheld his glory…as of the only Son from the Father,” (John 1:14 (RSV). I love the Gospels. They are to me one of the most perennially fascinating sections of the Bible. There you see Christ as he is. Remember that what he was is what he is; and what he is is what you have, if you are a Christian. All the fullness of his character and being and life is available to us, and we only learn what those resources are as we see him as he was and is. That is why the Gospel records are so important to us. People often wonder why we have four Gospels. There is a very good reason for this. It is interesting to note that each of these Gospels is a development of an exclamatory statement that is found in the Old Testament. Four different times — and only four times — in the Old Testament there was an exclamatory statement made concerning the Messiah, introduced always by the word behold. In one of the prophets we read, “Behold thy king, O Israel!” In another place we read, “Behold the man!” In a third place we read, “Behold my servant!” In still a fourth place we read, “Behold thy God!” These four statements are amplified and developed in the four Gospels — Matthew, the Gospel of the King; Mark, the Gospel of the Servant; Luke, the Gospel of the Son of man; and John, the Gospel of God, the presentation of the Son of God. These four Gospels give us four aspects of our Lord’s character and person. They are not, strictly speaking, biographies. They are really sketches about the Person of Christ — eyewitness accounts by those who knew him personally, or those immediately associated with them. Therefore, they have the ring of authenticity, and they carry to our hearts that first and marvelous impression that our Lord made upon his own disciples, and then upon the multitudes that followed him. No more amazing character has ever walked among men. As you read the Gospel accounts, I hope something of this fascination breaks upon your own heart as you see him stepping forth from these pages, revealed to you by the Spirit, when you see him as he is. The first book of the New Testament is Matthew, and this is the place where most people start reading the Bible. I think more people begin reading in the New Testament than the Old, therefore, that would make Matthew the most widely read book in all the world. In fact, Renan, the French skeptic, said of this book, “This is the most important book of all Christendom.” He also said, “The most important book that has ever been written is the Gospel of Matthew.” But it has its critics, too. There are those who claim that this book contains nothing but the early legends of the church which grew up around Jesus, that these accounts are not historical, and that this book was not actually written until the fourth century A.D. Therefore, they say, we are uncertain as to how much is really true. Other critics make the claim that this is only one of many gospels that were circulated.

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