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- 🇳🇬NG · Christianity#933K to 10K
- Per-Episode Audience
Est. listeners per new episode within ~30 days
900 to 3K🎙 Daily cadence·304 episodes·Last published 5d ago - Monthly Reach
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3K to 10K🇳🇬100% - Active Followers
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1.2K to 4K
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On the show
From 14 epsHosts
Recent guests
Recent episodes
Looking And Longing For The Day Of God (2 Peter 3:11-12)
Jun 21, 2026
40m 59s
The Patience of God (2 Peter 3:9)
Jun 14, 2026
37m 42s
When Trouble Comes (James 1:2-4) by Phil Johnson
Jun 7, 2026
51m 11s
God's Perspective on Time (2 Peter 3:8)
May 31, 2026
34m 58s
Comforted by Resurrection Hope (1 Thessalonians 4:13-14)
May 24, 2026
45m 10s
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| Date | Episode | Topics | Guests | Brands | Places | Keywords | Sponsor | Length | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6/21/26 | ![]() Looking And Longing For The Day Of God (2 Peter 3:11-12) | The coming destruction of the present creation is not just a doctrine to believe—it's a call to live differently. In this expository sermon from 2 Peter 3:11–12, Pastor Jim Osman draws out the practical weight of Peter's eschatological teaching and presses it into the conscience of every believer.Peter's concluding exhortations are clear: those who genuinely believe Christ will return are marked by it. First, they are a holy people—set apart in conduct and godliness, fitted for a new creation in which only righteousness dwells. Osman unpacks what that means practically, showing that holiness is not merely a positional reality but a moral pursuit, one that grace both demands and provides.Second, they are a hastening people—those who long for and actively work toward the coming of the day of God. Osman addresses the apparent tension between divine sovereignty and human responsibility head-on. The day is fixed on God's calendar; yet Scripture calls believers to hasten it through holy living, faithful gospel proclamation, and earnest prayer. These are not contradictions—they are the two sides of the same sovereign purpose.If Christ is returning, and Peter insists He is, the only question left is: what kind of people ought we to be? ★ Support this podcast ★ | 40m 59s | ||||||
| 6/14/26 | ![]() The Patience of God (2 Peter 3:9) | Two thousand years feels like a long time to wait. Jim Osman says that's exactly the point.Continuing through 2 Peter 3, Osman tackles the mockers' challenge in verse 4: where is the promise of His coming? Peter's answer comes in two parts, and this sermon focuses on the second: God's patience. Osman walks through what that patience actually means, tracing it back through Exodus, Isaiah, and the Psalms to show that the Old Testament's "slow to anger" God and the New Testament's patient Father are the same God, not two different ones.He works carefully through the Greek behind "slow" in verse 9, distinguishing tardiness from sovereign timing, and uses Habakkuk's own wrestling with delay as a parallel. Then comes the heart of the message: who exactly is God being patient toward? Osman pushes back against a popular reading of "not willing for any to perish," arguing from context that Peter is addressing God's own people, the elect not yet gathered in, not the whole world indiscriminately.The sermon closes with four practical encouragements, including a direct word to anyone listening who has yet to repent. This episode offers a clear, doctrinally grounded answer to anyone wondering why God seems to be taking so long. ★ Support this podcast ★ | 37m 42s | ||||||
| 6/7/26 | ![]() When Trouble Comes (James 1:2-4) by Phil Johnson | Trouble has a strange way of feeling like a curse. Phil Johnson makes the case from James 1:2–4 that for the Christian, it's actually the opposite.Working through one of the earliest letters in the New Testament, Johnson identifies the James who wrote it: not the apostle, but the Lord's half-brother who became the leading elder in the Jerusalem church. From there, he turns to the text itself, "consider it all joy, my brothers, when you encounter various trials," and unpacks why that command isn't naive but deeply theological.Johnson works through the Greek word behind both "trials" and "temptations," distinguishes between testing from God and enticement from the devil, and draws on the suffering of Job and Peter's failure and restoration to show that affliction is never random. It's purposeful, sovereignly governed, and aimed at one outcome: maturity that lacks nothing.Three convictions anchor the message: trouble is a blessing, not a curse; tribulation tests us rather than punishes us; and trials perfect us rather than defeat us. For anyone wrestling w ★ Support this podcast ★ | 51m 11s | ||||||
| 5/31/26 | ![]() God's Perspective on Time (2 Peter 3:8)✨ | God's perspective on timeeternity+3 | — | 2 Peter 3:8Psalm 90+2 | — | timeeternity+3 | — | 34m 58s | |
| 5/24/26 | ![]() Comforted by Resurrection Hope (1 Thessalonians 4:13-14)✨ | griefresurrection hope+4 | Cornel Rasor | Kootenai Community Church1 Thessalonians 4:13-14 | — | griefresurrection+5 | — | 45m 10s | |
| 5/17/26 | ![]() Quieting A Noisy Soul (Philippians 4:5-7)✨ | anxietyfaith+4 | David Forsyth | Kootenai Community ChurchPhilippians 4:5-7 | — | anxietyfaith+5 | — | 45m 36s | |
| 5/10/26 | ![]() The Coming Conflagration (2 Peter 3:7&10)✨ | end timesChristianity+3 | — | 2 Peter | — | end of the world2 Peter+3 | — | 41m 34s | |
| 5/3/26 | ![]() Creation and Catastrophe (2 Peter 3:5-6)✨ | false teachersdivine judgment+4 | — | 2 Peter 3:5-6 | — | false teachersdivine judgment+5 | — | 36m 53s | |
| 4/26/26 | ![]() Mocking Mockers (2 Peter 3:1-4)✨ | mockersreturn of Christ+5 | — | 2 PeterJeremiah+2 | — | mockers2 Peter+8 | — | 41m 29s | |
| 4/19/26 | ![]() Two Stirring Reminders (2 Peter 3:1-4)✨ | Christian eschatologyfalse teachers+3 | — | Kootenai Community Church2 Peter | — | 2 PeterChrist's return+3 | — | 42m 27s | |
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| 4/12/26 | ![]() Suffering with the Saints (2 Corinthians 1:3-7)✨ | sufferingcomfort+4 | — | Kootenai Community Church2 Corinthians | — | sufferingcomfort+5 | — | 46m 31s | |
| 4/5/26 | ![]() Four Resurrection Encouragements (2 Corinthians 4:13-5:10)✨ | resurrectionChristian hope+5 | — | 2 Corinthians 4:13-5:10 | — | resurrectionChristianity+5 | — | 47m 21s | |
| 3/29/26 | ![]() The Day Death Died (2 Timothy 1:8-11)✨ | deathgospel+4 | — | Kootenai Community Church | — | deathgospel+5 | — | 45m 38s | |
| 3/22/26 | ![]() The Wonders of the Word (Psalm 119:97-104)✨ | love for God's lawwisdom from Scripture+3 | — | Psalm 119 | — | Psalm 119love for the Word+5 | — | 39m 35s | |
| 3/15/26 | ![]() Right Back to the Slop (2 Peter 2:21-22)✨ | false teachersapostasy+3 | — | 2 Peter | — | false teachersapostasy+3 | — | 42m 25s | |
| 3/8/26 | ![]() For the Lord: The Foundation and Limit of Christian Submission (1 Peter 2:13-17)✨ | Christian submissioncivil authority+3 | — | Kootenai Community Church1 Peter 2:13-17 | Nero | submissioncivil authority+7 | — | 43m 04s | |
| 3/1/26 | ![]() Enslaved By Error (2 Peter 2:19-20)✨ | false teachersspiritual discernment+4 | — | 2 Peter 2:19-20 | RomeCorinth | false teachersenslavement+5 | — | 37m 27s | |
| 2/22/26 | ![]() Wells Without Water (2 Peter 2:17-18) | False teachers don't just teach wrong things — they ruin people. That's the heartbeat of this passage, and the burden that drives this exposition of 2 Peter 2:17-18.Pastor Jim Osman continues through 2 Peter 2 by turning from the character and condemnation of false teachers to the carnage they leave behind. Using two vivid images from the ancient world — a spring that holds no water and a mist that delivers no rain — Peter exposes exactly what false teachers are, how they speak, and who they target.They are dry springs. They look like sources of life and refreshment, but the traveler who arrives there thirsty walks away more disappointed than before. They are deceptive speakers. Their words sound weighty and profound, but when you pick them up, there's nothing there — arrogant words of vanity dressed up to sound like deep theology. And they are deliberate seducers who don't just stumble into victims. They specifically target new converts — those who have barely escaped a life of error and haven't yet been established in the truth.Jim draws from Paul, Jude, and Jesus, and applies Peter's warnings directly to modern false teaching movements with clarity and pastoral urgency.This episode makes clear that opposing false teachers is not a matter of theological pickiness. It's a matter of love — for the truth and for the people being consumed by these dry springs. ★ Support this podcast ★ | 43m 54s | ||||||
| 2/15/26 | ![]() A Donkey and a Madman (2 Peter 2:15-16) | Jim Osman examines one of the Old Testament's most troubling figures: Balaam, the prophet for hire who tried to curse God's people for money. Though God spoke through him, Balaam was driven by greed and immorality, making him the perfect example of the false teachers Peter warns against. This message walks through Numbers 22-24, answering questions about why God used such a wicked man and what it reveals about false prophets today. Balaam's motives exposed his heart—he loved the wages of unrighteousness and deliberately departed from the right way. His morals led him to scheme against Israel through sexual immorality and idolatry when his curses failed. His madness shows the insanity of pursuing money and sin at the expense of eternal well-being. The talking donkey is the least confusing part of the story. The real issue is how someone can speak truth while living a lie, and what that teaches us about marking and avoiding false teachers whose hearts are trained in greed. If you have Christ and nothing else, you're richer than the wealthiest false teacher. ★ Support this podcast ★ | 42m 04s | ||||||
| 2/8/26 | ![]() Pride and Perversion, Part 2 (2 Peter 2:13-16) | Jim Osman continues his examination of false teachers in 2 Peter 2, focusing on their perversions and moral corruption. Opening with a sobering account of the Mike Bickle scandal and how charismatic leaders failed to discern his true character despite decades of abuse, Osman demonstrates why Peter's warnings remain urgent for today's church. He exposes three defining characteristics of false teachers: they are shameless in their debauchery, sensual in their unrestrained lust, and seductive in how they bait unstable souls. Osman explains how these teachers have eyes full of adultery and hearts trained in greed—applying the same discipline to their wickedness that athletes apply to their sport. He reveals how false teachers exploit people's desires for prosperity, sexual license, and spiritual pride to lure them into destructive heresies. The message includes a passionate call for believers to apply diligence in pursuing holiness and grounding themselves in truth, so they won't become easy marks for those who promise freedom while enslaving others in corruption. Osman shows that when false teachers fall into sexual scandal, it shouldn't surprise us—Peter warned us this is their nature and their consistent pattern throughout church history. ★ Support this podcast ★ | 38m 53s | ||||||
| 2/1/26 | ![]() Pride and Perversion, Part 1 (2 Peter 2:10-13) | Jim Osman returns to 2 Peter 2 with a hard-hitting examination of false teachers and their defining characteristics. In verses 10-13, Peter paints a vivid portrait of those who infiltrate the church with destructive heresies, and Osman carefully unpacks what makes these teachers so dangerous. The passage reveals three striking indicators of their pride: they are insolent in their blasphemy of spiritual beings, irrational like animals driven by instinct, and ignorant of the very subjects they claim to master. Osman draws sobering parallels to modern movements within evangelicalism—from female preachers who defy biblical teaching roles to charismatic "demon slayers" who mock spiritual authorities with reckless presumption. He explains why even holy angels refuse to revile fallen demons, yet these false teachers rush in where angels fear to tread. The message includes practical guidance on identifying these teachers by their specific behaviors and attitudes, showing how Scripture equips believers to mark and avoid those who would lead them astray. Osman's exposition demonstrates that false teachers are not difficult to spot when measured against Peter's clear biblical criteria. ★ Support this podcast ★ | 37m 53s | ||||||
| 1/25/26 | ![]() Four Petitions for the Work of the Word (Psalm 119:33-40) | Jim Osman guides listeners through Psalm 119:33-40, revealing four essential prayers every believer should bring before God regarding His Word. This isn't merely an intellectual exercise—it's a roadmap for spiritual transformation through Scripture. Osman unpacks how the psalmist longed for God to grant understanding that leads to obedience, not just head knowledge. He challenges listeners to pray for hearts genuinely inclined toward Scripture rather than worldly gain.The sermon addresses a crucial tension: our eyes naturally drift toward worthless distractions while our hearts chase empty profits. Osman demonstrates how the Word cultivates genuine fear of God, turning believers from vanity toward what truly gives life. He confronts the reality that many Christians survive on one spiritual meal per week when a daily feast awaits them in Scripture.This message closes with two pointed challenges: commit to regular, systematic Bible reading, and for men, recognize that spiritual leadership begins with personal time in God's Word. Transformation doesn't happen by accident—it requires dependence on God's work through Scripture combined with diligent pursuit of His truth. ★ Support this podcast ★ | 44m 26s | ||||||
| 1/18/26 | ![]() A Righteous Deliverance (2 Peter 2:05-09) | Pastor Jim Osman expounds 2 Peter 2:5-9, revealing how God accomplished a righteous deliverance for Noah and Lot amid worldwide judgment. Though Noah stood alone against billions and Lot lived among the wicked Sodom, God preserved both because He knows those who are His. This exposition demonstrates that God consistently distinguishes between the righteous and the ungodly. Believers today can find profound encouragement knowing that a righteous deliverance awaits all who belong to Christ, even as we live vexed by the sensual conduct around us. ★ Support this podcast ★ | 41m 10s | ||||||
| 1/11/26 | ![]() A Flood And A Fire (2 Peter 2:5-6) | Jim Osman delivers a powerful exposition examining A Flood And A Fire as two notorious Old Testament judgments that demonstrate God's righteous character. Drawing from 2 Peter 2:5-6, Osman explores how the global flood of Noah's day and the fiery destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah serve as historical evidence of divine justice against sin. A Flood And A Fire reveals that these judgments were historic, global, cataclysmic, just, and yet spared the righteous—Noah with seven others and Lot respectively. The teaching demonstrates that these destructions were not cleverly devised fables but actual historical events intended as examples for those who would thereafter live ungodly lives. Osman emphasizes that God's past judgments validate His future promises, warning that while current judgment is delayed, it is certain—next time not by water but by fire as Second Peter 3 promises. ★ Support this podcast ★ | 34m 41s | ||||||
| 1/4/26 | ![]() Lessons From Judgment and Deliverance (2 Peter 2:4-10) | Jim Osman examines how judgment and deliverance work together throughout biblical history. Peter uses three powerful examples of judgment and deliverance: the angels who sinned, the flood of Noah, and Sodom and Gomorrah. These historical accounts demonstrate God's consistent pattern of executing judgment while delivering the righteous. Through judgment and deliverance, believers learn that God has a proven track record of punishing wickedness and rescuing those who trust Him. Understanding these examples of judgment and deliverance encourages Christians to live righteously while confidently expecting both God's coming judgment on the wicked and His gracious deliverance of the faithful. ★ Support this podcast ★ | 42m 07s | ||||||
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Chart Positions
2 placements across 1 market.
Chart Positions
2 placements across 1 market.
