The Providence Podcast
Friendship Series: Ecclesiastes Speaker: Chris Oswald Sunday Morning Date: 5th July 2026 Passage: Ecclesiastes 4:7-12 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Ecclesiastes+4%3A7-12&version=ESV]
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194 episodios
Friendship
Narcan for the Soul
Narcan for the Soul Series: Ecclesiastes Speaker: Chris Oswald Sunday Morning Date: 28th June 2026 Passage: Ecclesiastes 1:1-4:16 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Ecclesiastes+1%3A1-4%3A16&version=ESV] ------------------- The sermon's controlling metaphor comes from Narcan, the opioid antagonist that displaces drugs from brain receptors and jolts an overdosing person back to consciousness. The preacher argues that Ecclesiastes functions analogously as spiritual intervention — God's instrument for displacing the world's intoxicating false promises with hard reality. The sermon opens by framing Ecclesiastes through the parable of the sower: those choked by thorns represent people who have received the gospel but whose fruitfulness is arrested by the cares, riches, and pleasures of life. Ecclesiastes is God's tool to pull those thorns. Two key Hebrew words anchor the exegesis. Hebel (vanity) carries the sense of evaporation — things here today, absorbed and gone tomorrow. Yitrôn (gain) is an accounting term meaning what remains after all the taxes of toil, entropy, and futility have been levied. The Preacher's repeated question — "what does man gain?" — is essentially asking whether the ledger ever balances. The sermon identifies four "shots" of Narcan the Preacher administers: (1) death is universal and indiscriminate, wisdom and folly alike; (2) the returns on labor are unpredictable and will pass to someone who may squander them; (3) the seasons change without your consent; and (4) even the capacity to enjoy what you've achieved is God's gift, not your own — meaning you can accomplish everything you set out to accomplish and still be incapable of enjoying it. The second movement introduces the Preacher's limits via progressive revelation. Writing under partial disclosure, he lacks a clear architecture of eternity — he knows judgment is coming but does not have the full picture of life after death. Jesus, the greater Solomon (Matt. 12), supplies what the Preacher could not: he made the trail system the Preacher explored, sees the telos of all things, and knows what every pleasure is actually capable of bearing. The closing section addresses mimetic desire through Ecclesiastes 4:4 — the observation that most toil is driven by envy of a neighbor, not original desire. Girard's category is invoked: most people inherit their values by watching others, never interrogating where those desires came from. The gospel answer is not self-invention (you can't escape mimesis) but redirected imitation — "Follow me." Jesus is simply honest about the fact that you will imitate someone, and he invites that imitation toward himself. The sermon closes at the Lord's Table. The Preacher says to enjoy the fruit of your toil; the Christian life, however, begins by enjoying the fruit of his toil. The communion elements — eat and drink — are God's appointed means of remembering the curse-bearing labor of Christ, the thing that makes all other enjoyment intelligible and secure.
Ecclesiastes - Vapor, vanity, and the gift of God
Ecclesiastes - Vapor, vanity, and the gift of God Series: Ecclesiastes Speaker: Chris Oswald Sunday Morning Date: 21st June 2026 Passage: Ecclesiastes 1:1-12:14 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Ecclesiastes+1%3A1-12%3A14&version=ESV]
They Might Be Giants? A Discussion of Genesis 6
They Might Be Giants? A Discussion of Genesis 6 Speaker: Chris Oswald Podcast Date: 19th June 2026 ------------------- From angelic rebellion to demon-possessed despots, the Genesis 6 account of the Nephilim is undeniably bizarre. But beyond the intrigue, what enduring truth did the New Testament authors want us to grasp? This podcast explores the diverse interpretations of this passage, revealing how the apostles use it to teach about the dangers of transgressing God-given boundaries and to celebrate Jesus' triumph over all spiritual forces.
Eschatology You'll Actually Use
Eschatology You'll Actually Use Series: 1 Peter Speaker: Chris Oswald Sunday Morning Date: 7th June 2026 Passage: 1 Peter 4:7-5:11 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1+Peter+4%3A7-5%3A11&version=ESV] ------------------- "The end of all things is at hand" — and Peter means it changes everything about how we think and how we live. This closing message in the series finds a suffering church standing as tulips in the snow: the first evidence of a new creation already breaking in. We're called to participate in it now — through prayer kept as a privilege, through love and hospitality that cover a multitude of sins — and, when the fire comes, to entrust our souls to a faithful Creator.
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