Fruit of the Foundry

The Most Mysterious Verse in the Bible? - Episode 12

53 min · 20. maj 2026
episode The Most Mysterious Verse in the Bible? - Episode 12 cover

Description

Martin Luther called it the most obscure passage in the entire New Testament. He didn't know what it meant. Neither do we. And that might be exactly the point. In this episode, the guys wade into 1 Peter 3:18 -- 22. Spirits in prison. The days of Noah. The Nephilim. What happened between the cross and the resurrection that nobody talks about? But underneath all the mystery is something that hits a lot closer to home: the guy who thinks he's too far gone. Too much damage done. Too much to be forgiven. This episode is for him.

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18 episodes

episode Embracing Suffering... Wait, Seriously? artwork

Embracing Suffering... Wait, Seriously?

Nobody signs up for suffering. But Peter says don't be surprised when it comes -- and then tells you to rejoice in it. That's either the most absurd thing you've ever heard, or the most freeing. In this episode, James, Dan, and Jake walk through the second half of 1 Peter 4 and ask the question every honest man has thought: what do you actually do with the hard stuff? The argument with your wife at midnight. The kid who's struggling. The conversation you've been putting off for three weeks. They get into why God tests but never tempts, why going numb to avoid the pain also cuts you off from the joy, and what it looks like to find real rejoicing in the middle of a trial -- not after it. If you've ever wondered whether your suffering has a point, this one's for you.

23. juni 202648 min
episode Devil Can't Make You Bad? He'll Make You Busy artwork

Devil Can't Make You Bad? He'll Make You Busy

Jake, Dan, and guest James Sullivan open 1 Peter 4 -- but the real conversation starts around the family dinner table no one is sitting at anymore. Three kids in sports. Choir. Youth group. FCA. A wife trying to figure out who she is again now that the kids don't need her every minute. And somewhere buried in all of it, the question no one is asking: where does the Holy Spirit have space to work? "If the devil can't make you bad, he'll make you busy." That line hits in the middle of a raw conversation about sports schedules, pendulum swings, and an old farmer who took a nap every day from 12:30 to 1:00 -- not because he was lazy, but because his life had a rhythm that left room for something beyond the task list. The sundial. The iPhone. Same war, different weapon. 1 Peter 4:1 -- 11. Arm yourself with the same way of thinking as Christ -- or let the calendar do it for you.

16. juni 20261 h 2 min