Stephen Davey Sermons

Exhibit B - The Global Flood (2 Peter 2:5)

40 min · 18 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Exhibit B - The Global Flood (2 Peter 2:5)

Descripción

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2353448/fan_mail/new] Most people don’t realize there’s a “half-life” to fame. Even the biggest athletes, actors, and leaders get swallowed by cultural forgetting faster than we expect, and the numbers are humbling. We start there, then follow the thread to a strange exception: Noah. Thousands of years later, his name still lands, and not because it’s cute or comforting, but because it’s tied to a warning the Bible refuses to let the world erase. From 2 Peter chapter 2, we walk through Peter’s courtroom-style defense of God’s coming judgment, where the flood becomes Exhibit B. We talk about why flood accounts show up across cultures, why the Genesis text reads like a global event, and why attempts to shrink it into a regional disaster create bigger problems than they solve. We also tackle the practical objections people raise, from the ark’s size to the animals, and explain why “kind” is not the same as “species” in the argument being made. Then we bring it home. The most haunting detail isn’t the rain, it’s the line that says the Lord shut the door. The ark becomes a picture of salvation, urgency, and trust when obedience looks ridiculous and evidence feels delayed. If you’ve ever wondered what you’re supposed to do with hard biblical claims about judgment and mercy, this is a clear, personal place to wrestle with it. Subscribe for more, share this with a friend who loves big questions, and leave a review to help others find the show. What part of the Noah story challenges you most right now? Support the show [https://app.easytithe.com/App/Form/d39a9be4-01ce-4f82-a3ae-8b860c3ab89e] Discover more wisdom from God's Word: https://www.wisdomonline.org [https://www.wisdomonline.org/]

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77 episodios

Portada del episodio The Final Verdict (2 Peter 2:9-10a)

The Final Verdict (2 Peter 2:9-10a)

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2353448/fan_mail/new] “There’s probably no God. Now stop worrying and enjoy your life.” That slogan sounds freeing until you notice the gamble hidden inside it: probably. We pull on that single word and ask what we ask in every other high-stakes part of life, from flying on a plane to trusting what we consume. If we demand solid confidence for temporary decisions, why would we settle for a shrug when the question is God, accountability, and eternity? We then walk straight through 2 Peter 2:4-10 and land on the anchor verse, 2 Peter 2:9: the Lord knows how to rescue the godly from trials and keep the unrighteous under punishment until the day of judgment. Peter’s argument is not sentimental, it’s evidence-based: God has judged before, and he will judge again. That creates two categories that cut across every status symbol, just like the Titanic boards that read “known to be saved” and “known to be lost.” The question is uncomfortably personal: which column would your name be in today? We also talk about consequences that show up before final judgment, especially in areas our culture calls “safe” and “private.” Peter’s warning about defiling passions, the removal of moral stop signs, and the real physical and emotional fallout of sin leads into a practical close for believers: prayer for leaders, pity instead of rage, purity in a defiant age, and peace rooted in a steady truth that outlasts propaganda and fear. If this helped you think clearly, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review. What part challenged you most? Support the show [https://app.easytithe.com/App/Form/d39a9be4-01ce-4f82-a3ae-8b860c3ab89e] Discover more wisdom from God's Word: https://www.wisdomonline.org [https://www.wisdomonline.org/]

22 de jun de 202643 min
Portada del episodio A Closer Look at Psalm 23

A Closer Look at Psalm 23

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2353448/fan_mail/new] A well-dressed stranger pulls up in an SUV, shows off his tech, counts a flock with confidence and then drives away with the wrong animal. We start there because it’s hilarious, and because it exposes something serious: our world is full of voices that sound smart but do not know us, and they cannot lead us into safety, clarity, or peace. We open Psalm 23 and slow down long enough to hear David’s core claim: “The Lord is my shepherd.” We talk about why that sentence has to be present tense, why it has to be personal, and why the rest of the psalm does not work unless we can say it honestly. From still waters to restored souls, we connect the imagery to what shepherds actually do and what it means for spiritual renewal, anxiety, and the ache for direction in daily life. Then we face the hard terrain: stubborn sheep, hidden parasites, and the valley of the shadow of death. We explore how God makes rest possible, how cleansing is meant to be ongoing, and why death is described as a shadow rather than a final conqueror. We end with the promise that goodness and mercy pursue us and that the destination is not just survival but a forever home with the Lord. Subscribe, share this with a friend who needs steady hope, and leave a review with the line from Psalm 23 that you are holding onto right now. Support the show [https://app.easytithe.com/App/Form/d39a9be4-01ce-4f82-a3ae-8b860c3ab89e] Discover more wisdom from God's Word: https://www.wisdomonline.org [https://www.wisdomonline.org/]

18 de jun de 202636 min
Portada del episodio Exhibit D - The Misery of Mr. and Mrs. Lot

Exhibit D - The Misery of Mr. and Mrs. Lot

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2353448/fan_mail/new] The ground can move under you without you feeling a thing, until one day the map no longer matches reality. We start with literal continental drift and use it as a clear picture of what many of us sense right now: a moral and ethical shift that has accelerated in our lifetime, especially around sexuality, marriage, and the idea that personal feelings get the final word. While culture keeps sliding its reference points, we argue there is still solid ground to stand on: the unchanging character of God and the settled authority of Scripture. We walk through a real-world timeline that shows how fast “acceptable” can flip into “unforgivable,” from Proposition 8 to corporate backlash to the Supreme Court’s redefinition of marriage. Then we talk about the quieter tectonic shift inside churches and denominations, and we ask the uncomfortable question: how do leaders who claim the Bible end up blessing what the Bible forbids? We lay out two common routes, saying the Bible is out of date or saying it has been misinterpreted, and we explain why both approaches eventually replace sola scriptura with social approval. From there we turn to 2 Peter 2:7–8 and the story of Lot in Sodom. Peter’s language is blunt: Lot is righteous, yet exhausted and tormented day after day by what he sees and hears. That passage gives us timeless principles for Christian living in a rebellious culture: your surroundings do not have to rewrite your character, compromise usually erodes slowly, and the answer to sin is not clever management but confession, repentance, and strong community. If you’re trying to navigate cultural change, biblical conviction, and faithfulness under pressure, this conversation will give you language, categories, and next steps. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review. What pressure points are you feeling most right now? Support the show [https://app.easytithe.com/App/Form/d39a9be4-01ce-4f82-a3ae-8b860c3ab89e] Discover more wisdom from God's Word: https://www.wisdomonline.org [https://www.wisdomonline.org/]

9 de jun de 202642 min
Portada del episodio Exhibit C - Sodom and Gomorrah (2 Peter 2:6)

Exhibit C - Sodom and Gomorrah (2 Peter 2:6)

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2353448/fan_mail/new] Pompeii is more than a ruined tourist stop. It’s a frozen moment that asks a live question: what happens when judgment arrives on a day that feels like any other day? We start with Mount Vesuvius and the terrifying speed of destruction, then use that catastrophe as a doorway into 2 Peter chapter 2, where Peter lays out a sober, logical case that God has judged before and will judge again.  From Nero’s Rome to modern America, the temptations sound the same: prosperity, pleasure, and the insistence that we can rewrite the rules without consequences. We walk verse by verse through Peter’s “if…then” argument and focus on Sodom and Gomorrah as a lasting memorial of what happens to the ungodly. Along the way, we address popular objections like “Sodom was only about inhospitality” and “Jesus never spoke about sexual sin,” comparing those claims with the full witness of Scripture and the direct call to repentance.  We also touch on archaeology, including the viral work shared through Expedition Bible, and why physical reminders can’t replace faith but can reinforce the seriousness of God’s warnings. The message doesn’t end in fear. It ends at the cross: real forgiveness, real safety, and a gratitude that lasts forever. If this helped you think clearly, subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find it. Support the show [https://app.easytithe.com/App/Form/d39a9be4-01ce-4f82-a3ae-8b860c3ab89e] Discover more wisdom from God's Word: https://www.wisdomonline.org [https://www.wisdomonline.org/]

1 de jun de 202646 min
Portada del episodio Exhibit B - The Global Flood (2 Peter 2:5)

Exhibit B - The Global Flood (2 Peter 2:5)

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2353448/fan_mail/new] Most people don’t realize there’s a “half-life” to fame. Even the biggest athletes, actors, and leaders get swallowed by cultural forgetting faster than we expect, and the numbers are humbling. We start there, then follow the thread to a strange exception: Noah. Thousands of years later, his name still lands, and not because it’s cute or comforting, but because it’s tied to a warning the Bible refuses to let the world erase. From 2 Peter chapter 2, we walk through Peter’s courtroom-style defense of God’s coming judgment, where the flood becomes Exhibit B. We talk about why flood accounts show up across cultures, why the Genesis text reads like a global event, and why attempts to shrink it into a regional disaster create bigger problems than they solve. We also tackle the practical objections people raise, from the ark’s size to the animals, and explain why “kind” is not the same as “species” in the argument being made. Then we bring it home. The most haunting detail isn’t the rain, it’s the line that says the Lord shut the door. The ark becomes a picture of salvation, urgency, and trust when obedience looks ridiculous and evidence feels delayed. If you’ve ever wondered what you’re supposed to do with hard biblical claims about judgment and mercy, this is a clear, personal place to wrestle with it. Subscribe for more, share this with a friend who loves big questions, and leave a review to help others find the show. What part of the Noah story challenges you most right now? Support the show [https://app.easytithe.com/App/Form/d39a9be4-01ce-4f82-a3ae-8b860c3ab89e] Discover more wisdom from God's Word: https://www.wisdomonline.org [https://www.wisdomonline.org/]

18 de may de 202640 min