Verse by Verse with Nate

Words That Deny What We Claim To Believe

10 min · 1. juni 2026
episode Words That Deny What We Claim To Believe cover

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📘 Titus Bible Study Guide (follow along with the series) 🎙 Verse by Verse with Nate — Episode 6 Titus 1:13b–16 It is possible to profess faith with your mouth and deny it with your life. That sentence is not pleasant to sit with. But Paul puts it plainly in verse 16, and he doesn’t soften it. He describes people who say the right things and live the wrong ones — whose theology may look correct on paper but is nowhere in evidence in how they actually behave. And here’s the uncomfortable part: Paul is not writing this only about the false teachers in Crete. He is also writing it as a mirror. In this episode, we finish chapter 1 and examine Paul’s warning about the danger of a faith that is spoken but not lived. In this episode we explore: • The difference between professing faith and living it • How behavior reveals what we truly believe • Why adding human rules to grace distorts the gospel • The connection between conscience, purity, and spiritual perception A few verses. A hard warning. A call to examine whether our lives match our confession. All Scripture quoted from the Berean Standard Bible https://bereanbible.com/ [https://bereanbible.com/] 💬 Discussion Questions 1. What actions in a person’s life would you say “deny” God — even if they claim belief? Where do you draw that line? 2. How can someone add human rules to grace — and why does Paul see that as a gospel issue rather than just a preference? 3. Is there a gap between what you say you believe and how you actually live? What creates that gap — and what would it take to close it?

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episode Words That Deny What We Claim To Believe artwork

Words That Deny What We Claim To Believe

📘 Titus Bible Study Guide (follow along with the series) 🎙 Verse by Verse with Nate — Episode 6 Titus 1:13b–16 It is possible to profess faith with your mouth and deny it with your life. That sentence is not pleasant to sit with. But Paul puts it plainly in verse 16, and he doesn’t soften it. He describes people who say the right things and live the wrong ones — whose theology may look correct on paper but is nowhere in evidence in how they actually behave. And here’s the uncomfortable part: Paul is not writing this only about the false teachers in Crete. He is also writing it as a mirror. In this episode, we finish chapter 1 and examine Paul’s warning about the danger of a faith that is spoken but not lived. In this episode we explore: • The difference between professing faith and living it • How behavior reveals what we truly believe • Why adding human rules to grace distorts the gospel • The connection between conscience, purity, and spiritual perception A few verses. A hard warning. A call to examine whether our lives match our confession. All Scripture quoted from the Berean Standard Bible https://bereanbible.com/ [https://bereanbible.com/] 💬 Discussion Questions 1. What actions in a person’s life would you say “deny” God — even if they claim belief? Where do you draw that line? 2. How can someone add human rules to grace — and why does Paul see that as a gospel issue rather than just a preference? 3. Is there a gap between what you say you believe and how you actually live? What creates that gap — and what would it take to close it?

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