109 questions across 12 episodes. Search, filter, and dig in.
109 questions
What does it mean to say Scripture is 'sufficient'?
How do we know the Bible is actually reliable?
What about the parts of the Bible that seem to contradict?
Is it fair to call the Bible 'inerrant'?
How should we handle passages that feel outdated or offensive?
What role does the Holy Spirit play in understanding Scripture?
Can Scripture be sufficient if we need pastors to explain it?
How do we avoid proof-texting while still using individual verses?
What's the difference between reading the Bible and studying it?
How do we reconcile a loving God with the God of the Old Testament?
What does it actually mean that God is 'holy'?
If God is love, why does He allow so much pain?
Is God's wrath compatible with His love?
How do we understand God's sovereignty without making Him seem controlling?
What does it mean that God is jealous?
Can we really know God's character, or just what He reveals?
How does Jesus change our understanding of who God is?
What's the difference between God being good and God being nice?
How do you explain the Trinity without using a bad analogy?
Where does the concept of the Trinity appear in Scripture?
Why does the Trinity matter for everyday faith?
Is the Holy Spirit a person or a force?
How do Father, Son, and Spirit relate to each other?
Did early Christians believe in the Trinity, or was it invented later?
What heresies about the Trinity still show up today?
How does the Trinity shape how we understand community?
If Jesus is God, who was He praying to?
What actually happened in the Garden of Eden?
Is original sin fair?
Why can't a good God just overlook sin?
What's the difference between sin as an act and sin as a condition?
How does sin affect our relationship with God specifically?
Are some sins worse than others?
What does it mean to be 'dead in sin'?
How does sin distort the way we see God?
Can someone be 'good enough' without dealing with sin?
What evidence supports Jesus being divine?
Did Jesus ever explicitly claim to be God?
How do we handle the passages where Jesus seems limited?
What does the incarnation actually mean?
Why does it matter that Jesus was both fully God and fully human?
How did first-century Jews understand Jesus' claims?
What makes Jesus different from other religious leaders?
How do we respond to scholars who deny Jesus' divinity?
What does Jesus' divinity mean for how we pray?
What is the historical evidence for the resurrection?
How do we respond to alternative theories about the empty tomb?
Why does Paul say our faith is 'in vain' without the resurrection?
What does a resurrected body actually look like?
How does the resurrection change how we view death?
What did the resurrection mean to the first disciples?
How does the resurrection validate everything Jesus taught?
Can you be a Christian and doubt the physical resurrection?
What does the resurrection promise for our future?
Can you define the gospel in one sentence?
Is the gospel just about getting to heaven?
What does 'saved by grace through faith' actually mean?
How do grace and works relate to each other?
What is the gospel's answer to guilt and shame?
How do different traditions define the gospel differently?
Is repentance part of the gospel or a response to it?
What does the gospel say about justice and restoration?
How do we share the gospel without reducing it to a formula?
Who is the Holy Spirit?
What does the Holy Spirit actually do in a believer's life?
How do we know if something is the Holy Spirit or just emotion?
What are the gifts of the Spirit and are they for today?
What does it mean to be 'filled' with the Spirit?
How does the Spirit guide us in decision-making?
Can a Christian grieve or quench the Holy Spirit?
What's the difference between the fruit of the Spirit and the gifts?
How do we pursue the Spirit without becoming weird about it?
Why does God use the church instead of just working through individuals?
What did the early church actually look like?
How do we stay in a church that has hurt us?
Is church attendance really necessary for faith?
What's the difference between the universal church and a local church?
How should the church handle disagreement?
What does healthy church leadership look like?
How do we rebuild trust after church hurt?
What role does the church play in the world today?
What does the Bible say about the security of salvation?
How do we interpret the 'warning passages' in Hebrews?
What's the difference between assurance and presumption?
Can someone walk away from faith and still be saved?
How do Calvinism and Arminianism approach this differently?
What does Jesus mean by 'no one can snatch them out of my hand'?
How should doubt about salvation be handled pastorally?
What role does perseverance play in salvation?
How do we hold tension between God's sovereignty and human responsibility?
If God is good and powerful, why does suffering exist?
Does God cause suffering or just allow it?
How do we comfort someone who is suffering without clichés?
What does the book of Job actually teach about suffering?
Is suffering ever redemptive?
How do we hold faith and lament at the same time?
What does the cross say about God's relationship to suffering?
How do we respond when suffering feels meaningless?
Can suffering actually deepen faith?
What does the Bible say about heaven?
Is heaven a place or a state of being?
What is the new creation and how is it different from 'going to heaven'?
What happens when we die?
Will we recognize people in the new creation?
How does ultimate hope affect how we live now?
What does the Bible say about hell?
How do we talk about eternity without manipulation?
What is the relationship between hope and grief?
How does Revelation end the story that Genesis started?