Show cover of The Daily Blade: Joby Martin & Kyle Thompson

The Daily Blade: Joby Martin & Kyle Thompson

The Daily Blade, hosted by Pastor Joby Martin of the Church of Eleven22 and Kyle Thompson of Undaunted.Life, is a short-form devotional show that equips Christians to apply the Word of God to their everyday lives.---Connect with us at communication@coe22.comWant to support this podcast and other work of The Church of Eleven22?Text DONATE to 441122 or visit https://coe22.com/donate---Don't miss the chance to join Pastor Joby & Kyle in person at the 2025 Men's Conference in Jacksonville, Florida — grab your seat at http://mensconference.com

Tracks

Are you living like every day counts in your life or are you passively surviving the ups and downs of life? Check out David Pollack’s latest book, Every Day Counts: Start Where You Are. Use What You Have. Do What You Can.—Identity can feel like a moving target. One day you feel confident, the next day a comment, a look, or a rough moment in the mirror rewrites the whole story. We get honest about why that happens and why building self-worth on other people’s opinions or our own shifting emotions turns life into a roller coaster.We walk through a more durable path: letting God define who we are. That single change answers the deeper question underneath anxiety, comparison, and people-pleasing: whose voice has the right to name you? We talk through what it means to live as a “saint who sins,” and why your design is not an accident you need to explain away, but purpose you can step into with confidence and humility.We anchor it all in Scripture that speaks directly to Christian identity and spiritual security: Romans 8:17 on being heirs with Christ, Ephesians 2:10 on being God’s workmanship created for good works, Colossians 3:12 on being chosen and dearly loved, and 1 John 3:1 on the fact that we are children of God. If you’ve been stuck in self-doubt, approval-chasing, or shame-driven self-talk, this is a short listen with a clear reset.Subscribe for more, share this with a man who needs steadier ground, and leave a five-star rating and review so more men can get equipped for the fight.Support the showWant to connect? Email communication@coe22.com

4/10/26 • 05:08

Are you living like every day counts in your life or are you passively surviving the ups and downs of life? Check out David Pollack’s latest book, Every Day Counts: Start Where You Are. Use What You Have. Do What You Can.—Prayer can feel powerful one day and painfully flat the next, especially when it turns into a rushed list of requests. We talk honestly about that transactional pattern and what changes when we build real rhythms that help us connect with God and actually listen. The aim is simple: create space for stillness so prayer becomes a relationship, not a spiritual drive-through. We share a practical morning prayer habit built around carving out a consistent, nonnegotiable block of time and using an easy framework called the Three R’s: Reflect, Repent, and Repurpose. Reflect pulls God into what happened yesterday through gratitude. Repent names where we fell short and asks God to reshape our hearts. Repurpose invites God into today’s schedule, relationships, and conversations, asking for the right words and the kind of wisdom Scripture promises to give. If prayer has felt boring, repetitive, or hard to sustain, this structure adds clarity without turning it into a script. We also ground the conversation in key Bible verses about prayer and peace, including Philippians 4:6-7 on trading anxiety for God’s guarding peace, 1 Thessalonians 5:16-18 on praying continually with gratitude, Mark 11:24 on faith when we ask, and Hebrews 4:16 on bold access to the throne of grace. If you want a stronger Christian prayer life, a steadier daily spiritual rhythm, and a calmer mind in the middle of real responsibilities, press play. Then subscribe, share the podcast with a friend, and leave a five-star rating and review so more men can get equipped for the fight.Support the showWant to connect? Email communication@coe22.com

4/9/26 • 05:28

Are you living like every day counts in your life or are you passively surviving the ups and downs of life? Check out David Pollack’s latest book, Every Day Counts: Start Where You Are. Use What You Have. Do What You Can.—Sports gambling is no longer something “other people” do. It’s in your phone, in your feeds, and increasingly in the lives of teenagers and young men who are still learning impulse control, money habits, and identity. We dig into why sports betting has become one of the fastest-growing addictions in America and why that growth is not just a personal issue but a family and discipleship issue too. I also share a real decision point: a chance to make serious money by taking a gambling site as a primary podcast sponsor. The first reaction is the one most of us recognize, trying to justify it as harmless or “not that big of a deal.” From there, we walk through a better path: bringing trusted friends into the conversation and testing the opportunity through a biblical lens rather than through profit, comfort, or comparison to worse sins. Even though the Bible never gives a single verse that says “do not gamble,” it speaks clearly about the heart drivers that often sit underneath gambling addiction and sports betting culture: greed, coveting, the desire for more, and the illusion of quick provision. We look at Luke 12:15, Exodus 20:17, Philippians 2:3–4, and Hebrews 13:5 to talk about Christian stewardship, contentment, and what it means to love your neighbor when your win requires someone else’s loss. If you’ve been wondering how to build convictions in gray areas, this will give you a framework you can actually use. If this helped you, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a five-star rating and review so we can equip more men for the fight.Support the showWant to connect? Email communication@coe22.com

4/8/26 • 05:20

Are you living like every day counts in your life or are you passively surviving the ups and downs of life? Check out David Pollack’s latest book, Every Day Counts: Start Where You Are. Use What You Have. Do What You Can.—Some Bible verses sit quietly on the page until life hits hard enough to make them speak. David Pollack shares a personal, honest reflection on Mark 15:21, the moment Simon of Cyrene is forced to carry Jesus’ cross, and why that single sentence took on new meaning during his wife’s battle with brain cancer. If you’ve ever felt crushed by a burden you didn’t choose, this conversation names that reality without flinching. We talk about what it’s like to carry a cross you didn’t earn, don’t deserve, and don’t want, and how faith looks when the nights get long and the pressure is repetitive. David highlights a detail many people miss: Simon is identified as the father of Alexander and Rufus, a reminder that our kids are watching how we suffer. What we live teaches louder than what we say, and resilience is often formed in the quiet, day-to-day choices of love, patience, and dependence on God. We also get practical about showing up for others. When someone is in a life-changing crisis, “What can I do?” can be hard to answer, so we challenge you to stop asking and start doing: meals, groceries, cleaning, time, presence. This episode is for anyone searching for Christian encouragement, biblical perspective on suffering, and real-world ways to help a hurting family. If it strengthens you, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a five-star rating and review so more men get equipped for the fight.Support the showWant to connect? Email communication@coe22.com

4/7/26 • 05:12

Are you living like every day counts in your life or are you passively surviving the ups and downs of life? Check out David Pollack’s latest book, Every Day Counts: Start Where You Are. Use What You Have. Do What You Can.—The Bible gets dismissed as “someone’s truth” all the time, but what if you treated it like a serious historical claim and a daily guide for real life? Guest host David Pollock steps in to share his story of growing up without faith, opening a Bible with honest questions, and discovering that Scripture can be examined, trusted, and lived. We dig into a simple comparison that reframes everything: you trust history books about presidents and nations, so what changes when you realize the Bible is also a record of events, written across many authors and generations, with a consistent message pointing to Jesus.Then we get painfully practical. David talks about the trap of checking the box with Bible reading, knocking it out in the morning, and walking away unchanged. We unpack the difference between reading for information and reading for transformation, using key passages like 2 Timothy 3:16–17 and Psalm 119 to show why the Word of God is meant to train, correct, and light your path in the middle of real pressure.Finally, one overlooked line in the David and Goliath account hits with fresh weight when you’re a parent. Saul’s question about David’s father becomes a challenge about legacy: who raises a giant killer, and what does it look like to raise kids who carry God’s Word in their hearts and speak it with courage? If this encouraged you, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a five star rating and review so more men get equipped for the fight.Support the showWant to connect? Email communication@coe22.com

4/6/26 • 05:05

We name the daily fight between the flesh and the Spirit and why sheer willpower cannot change what we want. We lay out a simple path to real spiritual growth by feeding the Spirit through habits and community that reshape desire.\n\n• Galatians 5 and the conflict between flesh and Spirit\n• Mortification and vivification as the pattern for change\n• Abiding in Christ from John 15 and the role of pruning\n• Why saying no to sin is not enough without stirred affections\n• Three essentials for walking by the Spirit: God’s Word, God’s presence, God’s people\n• Sermons and Bible study and trusting the Holy Spirit as the true teacher\n• Prayer as a consistent first response and worship as a corporate practice\n• Brotherhood, fellowship, and serving others as a safeguard against isolation\n• The “two dogs” story and the principle of feeding what you want to grow\n\nBefore you go, if you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five star rating and review.Support the showWant to connect? Email communication@coe22.com

4/3/26 • 06:38

We dig into Paul’s call to freedom and why maturity means refusing to use our rights as fuel for the flesh. We challenge how we handle conscience issues and how we treat other believers online so our love stays louder than our opinions. • Christian freedom as a gift meant for service • Maturity as asking whether freedom feeds the flesh • Matters of conscience and different convictions • Choosing to build others up with our words • Drinking, self-control and refusing to harm a brother • Love your neighbor as yourself as the core ethic • Online biting and devouring as self-destruction • Unity in Christ without demanding uniformity • Identifying wolves while protecting wounded sheep Before you go, if you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five star rating and review. Support the showWant to connect? Email communication@coe22.com

4/2/26 • 05:57

We open Galatians 5 and listen to Paul’s frustration as false teachers confuse the church and soften the offense of the cross. Then we measure our own speech by Ephesians 4:29 and challenge ourselves to use words that fit the moment and give grace. • Paul’s warning about being hindered from obeying the truth • Why adding works to salvation removes the offense of the cross • Paul’s toughest language aimed at leaders who mislead • The difference between treating wounded sheep and confronting wolves • Ephesians 4:29 as a test for whether our speech corrupts or builds up • Why truth alone is not permission to speak • How occasion, intent, and meaning shape what our words do • A practical audit of our language at work, with friends, and at home Before you go, if you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five star rating and review.Support the showWant to connect? Email communication@coe22.com

4/1/26 • 06:50

We dig into Galatians 5 and Paul’s blunt warning that adding anything to Jesus turns grace into a dead end. We remind ourselves why the gospel has to stay simple because it leaks out of our minds and we drift back to earning. • Judaizers in Galatia teaching Jesus plus circumcision • why adding any requirement implies Christ’s work is unfinished • “severed from Christ” and the seriousness of law based justification • faith as whole trust in Christ’s cross and resurrection • modern works based righteousness through baptism, communion, tongues, confession, penance, or performance • obedience as evidence of salvation rather than a prerequisite • a self check for where we are believing a false gospel • Jesus plus nothing equals everythingSupport the showWant to connect? Email communication@coe22.com

3/31/26 • 05:44

We open Galatians 5:1 and press the question of whether we’re actually living free in Christ or still trapped in a yoke of slavery. We talk about surrender, standing firm, and fighting the pull of sin, self-righteousness, and a culture that sells self-rule as freedom.• reading Galatians 5:1 and defining gospel freedom• Jesus setting us free from sin not just forgiving sin• why self-determination is not the same as freedom• “stand firm” as a fighting posture in the Christian life• rejecting works-based righteousness and performance faith• resisting the bait of the world, the flesh, and Satan• freedom from the penalty, power, and presence of sinBefore you go, if you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five star rating and review.Support the showWant to connect? Email communication@coe22.com

3/30/26 • 05:28

We honor Uncle Kevin’s memory with Psalm 23 and Psalm 116, then share what his life taught us about serving without needing the spotlight. We connect his example to Jesus’ words on greatness and end with a clear invitation to trust Christ by grace through faith. • Reading Psalm 23 and Psalm 116 at a bedside goodbye • Remembering a man who serves through actions, not talk • Choosing to eat last and make sure others are cared for • Seeing everyday humility in work, family, and lifestyle • Hearing Jesus redefine greatness in Mark 10 • Explaining salvation by grace through faith from Ephesians 2 • Urging listeners to give their life to Christ today Before you go, if you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five star rating and review. Support the showWant to connect? Email communication@coe22.com

3/27/26 • 06:19

We read all of Psalm 116 and sit with the line that has carried us through fresh grief: “Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of his saints.” We talk about why God values his people in life and in death, and why Christian sorrow can still be held by real hope. • dedicating the week’s devotionals to Uncle Kevin • reading Psalm 23 and Psalm 116 at a hospital bedside • walking through Psalm 116 and its movement from anguish to trust • focusing on Psalm 116:15 and what it reveals about God’s covenant love • naming the tension between pain for loved ones and joy for the believer • connecting Psalm 116 to Romans 14:8–9 and belonging to Christ Before you go, if you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five star rating and review.Support the showWant to connect? Email communication@coe22.com

3/26/26 • 04:17

We dedicate the week to the memory of my Uncle Kevin and talk through why Psalm 116 is such a fitting prayer beside a hospital bed. We read the first nine verses and learn how God meets us in anguish, saves the simple, and walks with us through the valley instead of teleporting us out of it. • dedicating the week’s messages to Uncle Kevin’s memory • why Psalm 116 fits moments near death • reading Psalm 116:1–9 and naming distress and anguish • seeing the psalm as thanksgiving rooted in hardship • what “ropes of death” shows about real suffering • calling on the Lord as the turning point • God’s mercy toward the simple when we are brought low • why God stays with us in the valley Before you go, if you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five star rating and review.Support the showWant to connect? Email communication@coe22.com

3/25/26 • 04:25

We read Psalm 23 in the shadow of loss and focus on the part most people skip too fast: the valley. We challenge the idea that God’s best gift is escape and hold tight to the promise that He is with us in the dark. • dedicating these Daily Blade messages to my Uncle Kevin • reading Psalm 23 and reflecting on eternity and comfort • recapping Yahweh as shepherd and God’s provision of rest and renewal • correcting the common misread that God prevents the valley • walking through the valley without fear because God is present • finding comfort in the rod and staff as protection and guidance • seeing God’s provision as a table in front of enemies and an overflowing cup • trusting goodness and mercy to follow us all our days and forever with the Lord Share this podcast around and leave us a five star rating and review.Support the showWant to connect? Email communication@coe22.com

3/24/26 • 05:07

We dedicate the week to Uncle Kevin and share what it’s like to sit beside a hospital bed unsure what to say, then choose to read Scripture anyway. We walk through Psalm 23:1–3 and explain why God’s covenant name, Yahweh, is the foundation for real provision, rest, and restored strength. • dedicating the week of episodes to Uncle Kevin and honoring his life • reading Psalms aloud at the hospital bedside and why that matters in grief • choosing Psalm 23 as comfort near death • explaining “LORD” as Yahweh and the covenant relationship behind the text • unpacking “I shall not want” as divine sufficiency and provision • tracing God’s provision through rest, restoration, leadership, and renewal in verses 2–3 • emphasizing faith as the doorway to experiencing God’s provision Before you go, if you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five star rating and review.Support the showWant to connect? Email communication@coe22.com

3/23/26 • 04:46

We recap Galatians 1 through 4 and pull out action steps that keep us anchored to grace instead of drifting into performance faith. We remind you that you’re not a slave to sin or religion, you’re a son, and that identity changes how you fight and how you obey. • preaching the gospel to ourselves daily so we don’t forget grace • rejecting Jesus plus something thinking and trusting repentance and faith • choosing God’s approval over people’s approval • warring against anything that pulls us away from the gospel • living from sonship not slavery to sin or tradition • working for God because we’re loved not to be accepted Before you go, if you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five star rating and review. Support the showWant to connect? Email communication@coe22.com

3/20/26 • 05:42

We sharpen up on Paul’s use of Abraham’s family story to show the difference between earning God’s favor and receiving God’s promise. We walk from Genesis to Galatians to Jesus and land on the freedom that comes from trusting Christ’s finished work. • Scripture as the sword of the Spirit and our weapon for the fight • Why we do not unhitch from the Old Testament and how it points to Jesus • Paul’s allegory of Hagar and Sarah as two covenants: slavery versus freedom • Abraham’s faith counted as righteousness and God’s promise to bless the world • The danger of impatience and taking matters into our own hands • Why religious activity cannot make us right with God • Salvation by faith in Jesus and the finished work of Christ Before you go, if you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five star rating and review. Support the showWant to connect? Email communication@coe22.com

3/19/26 • 05:59

Paul’s warning in Galatians 4 exposes how quickly we trade gospel freedom for the slavery of paganism or religious performance. We press into Paul’s plea, the cost of telling the truth, and the challenge to become the kind of friend who carries others to Jesus. • Paul’s contrast between knowing God and returning to slavery • The danger of trying to earn salvation through the law • Why Paul “entreats” and what that word reveals about love • The prodigal son’s older brother as a picture of legalism • How God uses suffering and weakness for his glory • Paul’s question about becoming an enemy by telling the truth • How manipulative religious leaders flatter and isolate people • What real shepherding looks like in a gospel-centered church • A personal gut check about caring for others in the church • The “mat carriers” challenge and the path to godly brotherhood Before you go, if you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five star rating and review. Support the showWant to connect? Email communication@coe22.com

3/18/26 • 06:27

We dig into Galatians 4:6–7 and remind you that only God gets to name you. We talk about the freedom of being adopted as a son and heir through Christ, and why the Spirit in you drives real worship as “Abba, Father.” • reading Galatians 4:6–7 and defining sonship and inheritance • rejecting identity labels rooted in failure, shame, addiction, or past sin • explaining why “sons” language matters for being a firstborn heir • unpacking Trinitarian language and the Spirit’s work in our hearts • defining worship as humility and childlike surrender • showing how your view of God shapes your relationship with Him • calling men to stop living like slaves to sin, the world, the law, or hollow tradition Before you go, if you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five star rating and review.Support the showWant to connect? Email communication@coe22.com

3/17/26 • 06:00

We open Galatians 4 by showing how the law functions like a guardian that exposes sin and leads us to the freedom of the gospel. We trace how Jesus arrives at the fullness of time to redeem us and bring us into God’s family as sons, not just forgiven sinners. • the law as a temporary guardian with a real purpose • the heir and slave contrast and what it reveals about spiritual immaturity • slavery to the elementary principles of the world before Christ • the fullness of time and why Jesus comes exactly when He does • Jesus born of a woman and born under the law and why it matters • redemption explained with the coupon illustration and the cost of the cross • adoption as sons as the often-missed half of the gospel • identity shift from tool or soldier to son in God’s family Before you go, if you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five star rating and review. Support the showWant to connect? Email communication@coe22.com

3/16/26 • 05:52

We confront the claim that conviction is intolerance and argue for tethered masculinity shaped by Scripture, not approval. Daniel 3 anchors the call to stand when culture demands we kneel.• defining tethered masculinity as submission to Scripture• why modern “tolerance” often blesses sin• Psalm 97:10 and hating evil without hatred for people• Daniel 3 as a model of noncompliance to idols• the “even if not” courage of faithful men• refusing cultural pressure, labels, and threats• reflection questions to test your tethered convictionsBefore you go, if you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five star rating and reviewSupport the showWant to connect? Email communication@coe22.com

3/13/26 • 06:03

We test the claim that male strength is a weapon of intimidation and offer a better path: tethered masculinity anchored to Scripture. Through the story of Ruth and Boaz, we show how reverence, awareness, and protection turn power into shelter.• defining tethered masculinity as strength submitted to Scripture• assessing cultural claims about toxic aggression and patriarchal abuse• comparing childhood bullying and villain tropes with virtuous models• walking through Ruth 2 and Boaz’s protective actions• contrasting untethered intimidation with tethered protection• practical reflection questions to anchor strength to God’s willBefore you go, if you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five star rating and reviewSupport the showWant to connect? Email communication@coe22.com

3/12/26 • 05:57

We put “toxic stoicism” on trial and measure cultural claims against Scripture. David’s laments and Jesus’ tears point to a better standard: governed emotions under God, not suppression or chaos.• defining tethered masculinity as submission to Scripture• separating ancient Stoicism from modern stoic traits• examining the cultural claim that stoicism equals suppression• consequences of unprocessed emotions for men• learning lament from Psalm 13• seeing holy grief in John 11 where Jesus wept• practicing governed emotions instead of repression• questions to assess your emotional discipleshipBefore you go, if you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five star rating and reviewSupport the showWant to connect? Email communication@coe22.com

3/11/26 • 05:31

We push back on the claim that masculine leadership is always oppressive by opening Ephesians 5 and tracing the shape of Christlike, sacrificial headship. We define tethered masculinity as authority submitted to Scripture that yields care, order, and flourishing.• the culture’s claim about patriarchy and oppression • where oppression is real when leadership is untethered • Ephesians 5 read in full context for husbands and wives • Christ’s model of sacrifice, service and protection • God’s ordering of the home and its purpose • practical contrasts between untethered and tethered outcomes • reflection questions for men on love and submissionBefore you go, if you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five star rating and reviewSupport the showWant to connect? Email communication@coe22.com

3/10/26 • 05:04

We take on the label “toxic masculinity” and set a clearer standard: tethered masculinity, where a man’s identity and actions submit to the authority of Scripture. We walk through John 2 to show how righteous, restrained aggression serves God’s purposes rather than ego.• definition of tethered masculinity as submission to Scripture• critique of the cultural claim that aggression is toxic• contrast between untethered and tethered strength• Jesus in John 2 as a model of righteous aggression• principles of premeditation, jurisdiction and restraint• questions for self-examination on motive and submission• encouragement to anchor strength in God’s wordBefore you go, if you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five star rating and reviewSupport the showWant to connect? Email communication@coe22.com

3/9/26 • 05:35

We trace Paul’s answer to a hard question: why did God give the Law if salvation comes by faith in Christ. We show how the Law acts as a map and a mirror, then move to our adoption, imputed righteousness, the kingdom call, and unity in Jesus.• purpose of the Law as guardian and guide • Law as map for holy living • Law as mirror exposing sin and need • promise to Abraham fulfilled in Christ • adoption as sons and shared inheritance • imputed righteousness and full gospel • gospel of the kingdom and mission • unity in Christ across all divisionsBefore you go, if you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five star rating and reviewSupport the showWant to connect? Email communication@coe22.com

3/6/26 • 07:27

We trace Paul’s case in Galatians 3 that God’s promise to Abraham centers on Christ and was never annulled by the law. That blessing moves outward, not inward, sending us to be salt, light, and part of the rescue team with Jesus’ presence as our strength.• promise to Abraham fulfilled in Christ• promise precedes the law by 430 years• Genesis 12 blessing aimed at all families• Matthew’s arc from magi to Great Commission• rescued people becoming the rescue team• moving from cul de sac to conduit• Jesus’ presence with us to the endBefore you go, if you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five star rating and reviewSupport the showWant to connect? Email communication@coe22.com

3/5/26 • 05:43

We explore Galatians 3:10–14 and show why salvation cannot be earned, only received by faith in Christ who became a curse for us. We contrast imputed righteousness with performance-based religion and point to the only answer that stands on judgment day.• reading and framing Galatians 3:10–14• curse of the law and the limits of works• acceptance before obedience as the gospel order• salvation as grace through faith, not earning• imputed righteousness versus imparted grace• critique of resume religion and false assurance• the thief on the cross as a model of faith• the Spirit as gift and guarantee• practical freedom that flows from graceBefore you go, if you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five star rating and reviewSupport the showWant to connect? Email communication@coe22.com

3/4/26 • 05:52

We trace Paul’s claim that those who have faith in Jesus are the sons of Abraham, then clarify how Scripture and headlines use the word Israel in different ways. We call listeners to center first-tier faith over secondary politics and to trust the God who keeps promises.• Galatians 3:7–9 read and explained • Faith as the basis for belonging to Abraham’s family • Israel defined as people, land, government, and the faithful • Rejection of antisemitism and call to share the gospel • Significance of Jerusalem and the Mount of Olives in prophecy • Distinguishing governments from God’s covenant promises • Clarifying “all Israel will be saved” as the faithful in Christ • Grafted theology over replacement theology • Salvation by faith alone, not heritage • First-tier doctrines vs secondary political opinions • God’s promises fulfilled in Jesus’ life, death, and resurrectionBefore you go, if you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five star rating and reviewSupport the showWant to connect? Email communication@coe22.com

3/3/26 • 06:34

We walk through Galatians 3:1–6 and confront how a church that began by the Spirit drifted toward rule-keeping. Abraham’s faith becomes our lens to see why righteousness is credited, not earned, and why the finished work of Jesus settles our standing with God.• Galatians 3:1–6 read and unpacked• why Paul calls the Galatians bewitched• faith versus works and the danger of adding• Abraham’s righteousness before the law• clarity on deconstruction and assurance• the gospel summarized from Romans 3:9–26• practical steps to stay grounded in graceBefore you go, if you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five star rating and reviewSupport the showWant to connect? Email communication@coe22.com

3/2/26 • 05:52

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