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Delphi Wesleyan Church

Podcast von Delphi Wesleyan Church

Englisch

Geschichte & Religion

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Digging deeper into Scripture, to understand the Biblical Worldview. In a postmodern world, where truth is relative, we need to relearn the objective truth of the Bible. The Scriptures are just as important, and applicable, today as ever.

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Episode Trusting God Through Joseph’s Story Cover

Trusting God Through Joseph’s Story

## Overview - Sermon focused on Genesis 37–50, especially Genesis 50:20. - Main theme: true freedom comes from trusting God, regardless of circumstances. - Speaker used personal stories, contemporary references, and wordplay to illustrate points. ## Key Points - Genesis 50:20 quoted: "You meant evil against me, but God meant it for good..." as central verse. - Joseph’s life (chapters 37–50) summarized as stages leading to salvation history. - Family favor → sibling treachery → slavery → prison → prophetic elevation → salvation. - World’s perspective vs. God’s perspective: - World sees Joseph as privileged then ruined; focuses on control, revenge, outcomes. - God sees Joseph’s trust and uses circumstances for greater good. - Trust, not outcomes, defines freedom: - Freedom = trusting God amid unfair treatment, loss, or success. - Outcomes belong to God; prayer brings peace, not guaranteed results. - Role of obedience and speech: - Joseph spoke God-given dreams publicly and acted consistently with them. - Christians are ambassadors; must know God’s "policies and plans" (Bible) to represent Him. - Speaking truth in love is required; silence can be a way the devil restrains witness.

5. Juli 2026 - 46 min
Episode Orderly Christian Household Living Cover

Orderly Christian Household Living

## Overview - Sermon on biblical order in marriage, family, and church life. - Main thesis: unity and stability come from being tuned to Christ through submission. - Key biblical texts referenced: Ephesians 5; Matthew 7:24–27; Philippians 2:5–11; John 1. ## Main Points: Being Rightly Ordered - True unity requires being tuned to Christ, not cultural or personal preferences. - God creates order (creation, family, nation); disorder produces chaos. - Analogy: instruments tuned to the same fork; engines out of timing; cake ingredients must be mixed. - Foundation matters: build life and home on Christ (rock) rather than shifting sand. - Matthew 7: wise man builds on rock; foolish man builds on sand. - Submission is central to being rightly ordered. - Submission is a voluntary act of the will, not mere emotion or coercion. - Submit to one another out of reverence for Christ (Ephesians 5:21). ## Biblical Model: The Trinity and Christ’s Example - The Trinity: Father, Son, Holy Spirit — three persons, one essence; distinct roles but one God. - Christ’s submission: - Though fully God, He emptied Himself, became human, served, and obeyed to death (Philippians 2). - Jesus submitted to earthly parents, the Father’s will, the Spirit’s leading, and human authorities. - Submission modeled by Christ is the pattern for human relationships and leadership. ## Marriage And Family Order - Ephesians 5 application: - Wives: submit to your own husbands (qualified: submission not required if husband commands contrary to God). - Husbands: love your wives sacrificially as Christ loved the church and gave Himself up. - Roles and responsibilities: - Husband = head/leader of the home; role is servant leadership, not domination. - Husband’s duty: spiritual leadership, protect, fight for children, lead by example, sacrificial service. - Wife’s duty: respect and submit to her own husband when requests align with God’s Word. - Common errors: - Cultural messages ("you don't need a man", "my truth") undermine biblical order. - Role confusion often causes family breakdown and societal chaos. - Practical encouragement: - Husbands should switch off work roles and serve family at home. - Both spouses must tune to Christ to have harmony. ## Problems When Out Of Order - Consequences: chaos in homes, schools, streets, and nation. - Emotional or self-centered leadership leads to instability. - Many marriages are built on shifting sand (personal desires, cultural norms) and fail during storms. - Parents avoiding spiritual leadership harms children’s faith and future. ## Appeal And Invitation - Urgent spiritual invitation: repent, believe, and be sure of salvation. - Encouragement to those unsure of salvation to come forward and receive forgiveness and restoration. - Call for personal self-examination before taking communion: are we tuned to Christ? ## Key Terms And Definitions - Submission: voluntary yielding to another’s authority out of reverence for Christ. - Servant Leadership: authority exercised through sacrificial service, not domination. - Rightly Ordered: arranged according to God’s design and authority, producing harmony. - Rock (Matthew 7): Christ and obedience to His words as stable foundation. - Shifting Sand: worldly wisdom, emotion, or personal preference as unstable foundation.

28. Juni 2026 - 54 min
Episode Father's Day Cover

Father's Day

Overview * Sermon focused on biblical roles of fathers, using Genesis 1–3 and Ephesians 5. * Main thesis: Fathers are God-appointed leaders, protectors, providers, and spiritual stewards of the family. * Emphasis on practical responsibility, spiritual leadership, and sacrificial service modeled after Christ. * Genesis 1–3 outlines creation, human identity, and purpose. * God is Creator, transcendent, the source of order and life. * Humans are created in God’s image (Genesis 1:26–27). * God designed order and laws so life and harmony could exist. * God gave man work and stewardship before woman’s creation. * Genesis 2:15: Adam placed in Eden “to work it and to take care of it.” * “Work” (serve) and “take care” (guard, preserve, maintain) are God’s commands. * Spiritual leadership: * Fathers called to be the spiritual head of the home (Ephesians 5). * Responsible to teach children “in the fear and admonition of the Lord.” * Protect family from spiritual harm (the serpent/false teaching). * Protection and provision: * Provide materially for family; scripture warns against failing to provide. * Protect physical safety and intervene when family or children are threatened. * Stewardship and oversight: * Fathers are stewards, not owners, of what God has entrusted. * Attend, maintain, and preserve the spiritual health of the household. * Servant leadership: * Husbands are to love wives sacrificially as Christ loved the church (Ephesians 5). * Leadership must be loving, sacrificial, and humble — not domineering. * Cultural decline linked to absent or ineffective fathers: * Modern examples: youths acting violently, public disorder, and parental disengagement. * Documentary and Kruger Park analogy: mature males (fathers) restoring order to chaotic groups. * Personal illustrations: * School bus driving experience: father presence often correlates with child behavior. * Military aviation example: complex systems require proper laws and roles; breaking laws leads to chaos. * Warning: Scripture’s family order contradicts contemporary cultural narratives that minimize fatherhood. * Serpent tempts Eve; Adam present but silent. * Adam had been given direct command from God; he failed to correct or protect. * Adam’s silence and failure made him accountable (Romans 5: sin entered through Adam). * Key lesson: Fathers must actively resist falsehood and protect family doctrine and conduct. * Mutual submission in Christ (Ephesians 5:21). * Wives: submit to husbands as to the Lord (contextual instruction). * Husbands: called to be head as Christ is head of the church (Ephesians 5:23). * Headship is modeled after Christ’s sacrificial love, not authoritarian control. * Husbands must love sacrificially, serve, and protect. * Practical do’s: * Put family’s spiritual needs first. * Serve and sacrifice daily (parenting tasks, prayer, teaching, safeguarding). * Avoid laziness or entitlement after work; engage actively at home. * Steward: One who manages or cares for what belongs to another (here, God’s creation and family). * Headship: Leadership role given to the husband; framed by sacrificial love and spiritual responsibility. * Servant Leadership: Leading by serving others, modeled on Christ’s self-giving example. * Take Care (Hebrew sense): Guard, keep, watch over, preserve, attend to, maintain. Creation And PurposeRole Of Fathers (Key Responsibilities)Case Studies And Cultural ObservationsGenesis 3: Failure To LeadEphesians 5: Practical Guidance For HusbandsKey Terms And Definitions

21. Juni 2026 - 53 min
Episode Perseverance Cover

Perseverance

## Overview - Sermon on Revelation chapters 20 and 21, focusing on perseverance and readiness for Christ’s return. - Central question repeated: "Will you be there?" — asking who will share in the first resurrection. - Main theme: perseverance (enduring patiently until the end) as essential for final salvation and reigning with Christ. ## Key Scripture Readings - Revelation 20:1–15 — Satan bound for a thousand years; first resurrection; final judgment; lake of fire. - Revelation 21:7–8 — Promise to the victorious; list of those consigned to the second death. - Matthew 24:9–13 — Warning about persecution, apostasy, deception; “the one who stands firm to the end will be saved.” - Matthew 25:1–13 — Parable of the ten virgins; importance of readiness and perseverance. - Ephesians 6:10–20 — Put on the full armor of God; spiritual warfare. - 1 Timothy 4; 2 Peter — Warnings about false teachers and doctrines of demons. - 1 Corinthians 11:23–26 — Institution of the Lord’s Supper; remembrance until Christ comes. ## Main Points - Revelation 20 overview: - An angel binds Satan and throws him into the abyss for 1,000 years. - The righteous (including martyrs) participate in the first resurrection and reign with Christ. - After the thousand years Satan is released briefly, gathers Gog and Magog, but is defeated and thrown into the lake of fire. - Final great white throne judgment; death and Hades thrown into the lake of fire. - Two resurrections: - First resurrection: righteous, blessed and holy, not subject to second death; will reign with Christ. - Second resurrection: unrighteous judged at the great white throne; consigned to the lake of fire if not in the book of life. - Perseverance as a central biblical theme: - Majority of New Testament books warn believers to endure persecution and trials. - Perseverance is required, not optional; salvation involves growth and endurance. - Many will be deceived or fall away; believers must be spiritually prepared. - Readiness and spiritual discipline: - Parable of ten virgins: some were ready (wise) and some unprepared (foolish); door shut on the unready. - Spiritual life requires sustained nourishment: prayer, Scripture, sacraments, fellowship. - Warning against complacency, comfort, indifference, and lukewarmness. - Spiritual warfare and deception: - Christians face schemes of the devil and spiritual forces of evil. - False teachers and doctrines of demons threaten believers, especially in latter days. - Church responsibility: nurture new believers (like caring for infants) to help them grow and withstand trials. ## Key Terms and Definitions - First Resurrection: Resurrection of the righteous to reign with Christ for a thousand years. - Second Death: The lake of fire; eternal judgment for the unrighteous (Rev 20, Rev 21:8). - Perseverance/Endurance: Continued faithfulness under trial until Christ returns. - Great White Throne Judgment: Final judgment where the dead are judged according to deeds. - Mark of the Beast: A mark required for commerce under the beast’s control; refusal implies persecution. ## Practical Applications - Self-examination: Test hearts for complacency, apathy, or indifference; repent and recommit. - Spiritual disciplines: Regular Bible reading, prayer, participation in church and sacraments. - Community responsibility: Churches must nurture new believers, provide discipleship, and protect the vulnerable. - Watchfulness: Live prepared, as in the parable of the ten virgins; readiness matters more than mere profession. - Resist deception: Be wary of false teachers and doctrines; ground yourself in Scripture.

14. Juni 2026 - 47 min
Episode Christ as Warrior-King and Judgment Cover

Christ as Warrior-King and Judgment

## Overview - Lecture focused on Revelation 19:11–21 and its theological implications. - Main themes: Christ as warrior-king, justice and mercy of God, human responsibility, repentance, and final judgment. - Purpose: Help students understand how the revelation of Christ’s return fits with God’s character and human accountability. ## Key Passages Read - Revelation 19:11–21 (summary) - Vision of heaven opening; rider on a white horse called Faithful and True. - Rider judges with justice, wages war, eyes like blazing fire, many crowns. - Robe dipped in blood; name: the Word of God; King of kings, Lord of lords. - Armies of heaven follow, wielding a sword from his mouth, ruling with an iron scepter. - Angel calls birds to the “great supper” to eat the flesh of the defeated. - Beast and false prophet captured and thrown into the lake of fire; rest killed by the sword from the rider’s mouth. ## Main Topics and Points - Revelation’s Purpose - Revelation = revelation of Jesus Christ (Rev. 1:1). - Its goal: show servants what must soon take place and call for heed and obedience (Rev. 1:3). - The Paradox: Christ as Loving Savior and Righteous Judge - Same Jesus who died for sinners returns as righteous judge and warrior. - God’s love includes justice; patience is extended for repentance but has limits. - The first coming was atonement; the second coming is judgment. - Just War and Justice - Topic framed by question: Is there such a thing as a just war? - Historical reference: Crusades presented as attempts to defend persecuted Christians (speaker’s view). - Biblical picture: Christ wages a just war against persistent, unrepentant evil. - Characteristics of the Returning Christ (from Rev. 19) - Faithful and True: faithful to covenant promises and people. - Judge and Warrior: executes justice and wages war against evil. - Eyes like blazing fire: omniscient, piercing vision of truth and sin. - Many crowns: supreme authority over all rulers. - Robe dipped in blood: interpreted by most scholars as the blood of those judged. - Sword from mouth / iron scepter: authoritative word and firm rule. - Title: King of kings and Lord of lords. - Human Responsibility and Accountability - Freedom to choose implies responsibility and eventual accountability. - God’s patience aims at repentance; persistent rejection leads to judgment. - Warnings to churches in Revelation 2–3 show rewards for victory and consequences for failure. - Examples of failure: cowardice (taking mark of the beast), tolerance of false teaching, worldliness, and indifference. - The Final Judgment Scenes - Gathering of armies against Christ, defeat of beast and false prophet. - Two cast alive into lake of fire; others killed by sword from Christ’s mouth. - Bird imagery: vultures gather for the great supper—symbol of total defeat and exposure. - Universal scope: all social classes—free and slave, great and small—face judgment.

7. Juni 2026 - 59 min
Super gut, sehr abwechslungsreich Podimo kann man nur weiterempfehlen
Super gut, sehr abwechslungsreich Podimo kann man nur weiterempfehlen
Ich liebe Podcasts, Hörbücher u. -spiele, Dokus usw. Hier habe ich genügend Auswahl. Macht 👍 weiter so

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