Catch On Fire | Bible Teaching & Christian Growth

What Made Jesus Stop for Bartimaeus? - [Mark 10:46-52]

22 min · 2. maj 2026
episode What Made Jesus Stop for Bartimaeus? - [Mark 10:46-52] cover

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Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2541296/fan_mail/new] Do you still believe Jesus can do the impossible, or have you learned to manage your pain quietly? On the Jericho road, blind Bartimaeus refuses to stay silent, and his raw, persistent cry stops Jesus in His tracks. That moment is more than an inspiring miracle story, it’s a blueprint for what real faith looks like when life feels stuck.  We step into Mark 10:46–52 and trace three core truths: Jesus hears desperate prayers, Jesus calls us to leave the old life behind, and opened eyes are meant to lead to discipleship. Along the way, we explore why Bartimaeus uses the title “Son of David,” why the crowd tries to shut him down, and why that single detail of him throwing off his cloak is such a powerful picture of surrender. If you’ve been searching for Christian encouragement, healing prayer, biblical faith, or practical steps for following Jesus, this message keeps it simple and personal.  We also connect the story to other moments where God makes a way when there seems to be none, and we end by challenging you to get specific with God about what you need, then take the next step when Jesus calls. If this stirred your heart, subscribe, share the episode with a friend who needs hope, and leave a review. What impossible situation are you crying out to Jesus about today? Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2541296/support] Catch On Fire Podcasts aims to lead us all into a closer walk with God as we strive to become more like Jesus.

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38 episoder

episode What Abraham Has to Do With Our Faith Today - [Romans 4:9-17] cover

What Abraham Has to Do With Our Faith Today - [Romans 4:9-17]

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2541296/fan_mail/new] What makes someone part of Abraham’s family: bloodline, religious signs, or perfect rule-keeping? We start with that uncomfortable question and let Romans 4:9–17 give the answer. Paul’s logic is sharp: Abraham is counted righteous by faith before circumcision ever happens, and God’s promise stands long before the law of Moses arrives. That timeline matters because it destroys the idea that we earn salvation through heritage, rituals, or moral effort. We talk through the difference between a sign and the reality it points to. Circumcision never created Abraham’s righteousness; it sealed what God had already credited by faith. We bring that forward to today with a direct challenge: baptism, church membership, and spiritual routines are meaningful, but they become dangerous when we treat them like a substitute for repentance and trust in Jesus Christ. Real faith produces real fruit, including a desire to obey God, but obedience follows grace rather than replacing it. Then we zoom out to the bigger contrast Paul makes: promise and grace versus law and works. The law exposes sin and names transgression, but it cannot cure the heart. Along the way we draw from Christian history, from John Wesley’s encounter with Moravians during a terrifying storm to Sundar Singh’s meeting with a man exhausted by self-discipline, and we connect it to Martin Luther’s insistence that justification is God’s free gift received through faith. If you want a clearer view of justification by faith, Abraham’s promise, and what it means to live as Abraham’s children today, listen through to the closing prayer and reflection. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find the hope of grace. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2541296/support] Catch On Fire Podcasts aims to lead us all into a closer walk with God as we strive to become more like Jesus.

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episode What Our Hunger for God's Word Reveals - [1 Peter 2:1-3] cover

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Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2541296/fan_mail/new] Have you ever wondered why your faith feels stalled even though you are doing “the right things”? We start with a piercing line from Scripture: “Taste and see that the Lord is good,” then ask the question that follows you into real life. If you have truly tasted God’s goodness, it will not stay locked in your head. It will reshape what you tolerate, what you desire, and what you pursue.   We open up 1 Peter 2:1-3 and track Peter’s simple, demanding roadmap for spiritual growth and Christian discipleship: put away evil, crave the pure milk of God’s Word, and remember the deeper reason you can do either one. Along the way, we define malice, deceit, hypocrisy, envy, and slander with uncomfortable clarity, including the ways hypocrisy hides behind religious activity and how envy can quietly turn into gossip and backbiting. We also look at the reality of slander faced by Jesus and by believers who live on mission.   Then we shift to appetite. Peter compares our relationship to Scripture to a newborn’s hunger, and the Bible’s language is intense on purpose. If we want spiritual maturity, we need a real craving for Bible study, prayerful reading, and truth that corrects us. We close with stories that highlight the cost and the payoff of growth, a direct invitation to pray for real change, and spoken words of life rooted in God’s promises.   If this message moves you, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find biblical teaching that leads to real discipleship. What is God asking you to put away, and what would it look like to crave His Word again? Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2541296/support] Catch On Fire Podcasts aims to lead us all into a closer walk with God as we strive to become more like Jesus.

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episode Why Comfortable Christianity Is Dangerous - [1 Peter 1:13-25] cover

Why Comfortable Christianity Is Dangerous - [1 Peter 1:13-25]

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2541296/fan_mail/new] Are you running hard after Jesus or slowly settling into a comfortable faith that never really costs you anything? We open 1 Peter 1:13-25 and let Peter confront us with a clear, demanding vision of Christian living for believers surrounded by a hostile world. The thread running through every verse is urgency: wake up, think clearly, and choose a life that actually looks redeemed. We talk through what it means to “gird up the loins of your mind,” to stay sober-minded and watchful, and to evaluate every idea against the word of God. From there, we fix our hope on future grace, the return of Christ, and the reality that today’s trials are temporary while eternity is not. Along the way, vivid stories and historical examples sharpen the message: what we build our life on matters when everything else can burn, break, or fade. Then the passage tightens into three non-negotiables that shape biblical discipleship and spiritual growth: be holy because God is holy, live as foreigners who are passing through, and love one another sincerely with a pure heart. We explore Christian holiness that is set apart from sin, redemption that cost the precious blood of Jesus rather than silver or gold, and a kind of sincere love “without wax” that holds up in the light. We close with a chance to respond in prayer and speak words of life over your future. If this stirred you, subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find this teaching on 1 Peter, Christian holiness, redemption, and sincere love. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2541296/support] Catch On Fire Podcasts aims to lead us all into a closer walk with God as we strive to become more like Jesus.

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What Following Jesus Really Costs - [Matthew 16:24-27]

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2541296/fan_mail/new] Jesus doesn’t recruit fans. He calls disciples. That difference changes everything, especially when we let Matthew 16:24–27 speak for itself: deny yourself, take up your cross, and follow Him. We walk slowly through what Christian discipleship actually means, not as a church slogan but as a daily commitment to become more like Christ in the way we think, live, love, serve, and surrender. We talk about why “must” matters, how self-denial goes beyond giving up a few comforts, and why taking up your cross is about willing identification with Jesus even when it brings shame, criticism, or misunderstanding. Along the way, we draw from stories and examples that sharpen the point, including Dietrich Bonhoeffer’s costly faithfulness and C.T. Studd’s picture of full-life surrender. Jesus also turns our instincts upside down: trying to save your life can be the fastest way to lose it, while losing your life for Christ is where real life is found. We sit with the promise that Jesus will return in glory, evaluate how we used what God entrusted to us, and reward what was done in faith. That eternal perspective reframes success, ambition, and what we chase day to day. If you’re ready to take an honest look at the cost of discipleship and the hope on the other side of surrender, press play, then subscribe, share, and leave a review. What is one area of your life Jesus is asking you to trust Him with fully? Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2541296/support] Catch On Fire Podcasts aims to lead us all into a closer walk with God as we strive to become more like Jesus.

23. maj 202623 min
episode Why These Men Tore a Hole in the Roof – [Luke 5:17-26] cover

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Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2541296/fan_mail/new] Four friends carry a paralyzed man to a packed house in Capernaum and hit a hard wall: the door is blocked, the room is full, and the crowd will not move. Instead of turning back, they climb to the roof, break through, and lower their friend to the feet of Jesus. That one decision exposes what real faith looks like when access is limited and pressure is high, and it forces an honest question: who are the people around us that will bring us closer to Christ, and are we willing to be that person for someone else? We unpack Luke 5:17-26 through three lenses that shape everyday discipleship. First, we need friends who show up when we cannot move on our own. Second, not everyone in the crowd comes with faith, some come with criticism, unbelief, and a desire to find fault. Third, Jesus meets both spiritual needs and physical needs, and He does it in an order that matters: He speaks forgiveness, then He proves His authority with healing. Along the way, we connect this story to the woman who presses through the crowd to touch Jesus, and we look at how skepticism can sit in the front row while God still works. You’ll also hear faith-building moments from Christian history that remind us God often uses the overlooked, the persistent, and the desperate. If you’re looking for a Bible teaching podcast that’s rooted in Scripture, focused on Jesus, and honest about obstacles, this conversation will strengthen your confidence to keep seeking God for spiritual healing, physical healing, and real change. Subscribe, share with a friend who needs encouragement, and leave a review so more people can find it, what part of your life are you ready to bring to Jesus today?al Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2541296/support] Catch On Fire Podcasts aims to lead us all into a closer walk with God as we strive to become more like Jesus.

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