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By Bryan Nash and JD Souder
The podcast currently has 122 episodes available.
In this series finale, the Devotional Doctors discuss our future hope in resurrection. We can trust that, experiencing a death like Christ's, we will also have a new life like Christ's. Hope is a peculiar thing - it is a steadfast anchor, but it is also forward-looking toward the as-yet unseen. We can also concede that there is much that we simply do not understand and cannot anticipate. Bryan uses the imagery of a sailboat to describe the uncertainty that the future holds, as we adjust our sails in response to the winds of change. The Doctors also sign off for Season 5, and express their hope for the future resurrection of the podcast!
For more about us, visit www.devotionaldoctors.com or www.facebook.com/devotionaldoctors. You can reach us by email at [email protected].
Our theme music is "Honey Bee" by Kevin MacLeod (https://incompetech.com).
License: CC BY (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
So how does the Scriptural story of resurrection connect to us today? In this episode, JD and Bryan revisit the discussion of resurrection through the Old and New Testaments, and see how Acts and the epistles lay a framework for the church as people of the resurrection. While we look forward to the final resurrection, there is also a sense in which the Christian life is already a new creation. By faith and the deeply symbolic act of baptism, we are transferred from death into glorious life. We also meditate on the language of "already and not yet", and how Christians participate in new creation as rulers and conquerors over the powers of death. Listen in for good tidings in the resurrection that is yet to come, and is already in the world.
For more about us, visit www.devotionaldoctors.com or www.facebook.com/devotionaldoctors. You can reach us by email at [email protected].
Our theme music is "Honey Bee" by Kevin MacLeod (https://incompetech.com).
License: CC BY (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
Originally preached by Bryan Nash on February 21, 2021, at Eastview Church of Christ.
For more about us, visit www.facebook.com/devotionaldoctors or www.devotionaldoctors.com. You can reach us by email at [email protected].
Our theme music is "Honey Bee" by Kevin MacLeod (https://incompetech.com).
License: CC BY (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
For this, and more sermons from Bryan, visit http://www.eastviewcoc.com/sermons?title=&y=0&se=0&sv=0&sp=53
In this continuation of our series on resurrection, Bryan and JD consider the “otherness” of Jesus’ resurrected body. He continues to bear the scars of the cross, but his resurrection body is also one of kingly glory. And, lest we forget, bodies don’t just naturally resurrect themselves. So what makes the resurrection of Jesus Christ so special? And how does the “otherness” of Jesus help us understand “otherness” in our own resurrection, in the light of Romans 8 or 1 Corinthians 15? There is comfort in our hope of reunion and resurrection. Listen, and hope for the glory to be revealed in us in the coming resurrection!
For more about us, visit www.facebook.com/devotionaldoctors or www.devotionaldoctors.com. You can reach us by email at [email protected].
Our theme music is "Honey Bee" by Kevin MacLeod (https://incompetech.com).
License: CC BY (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
Jesus Christ arose from the dead! As Christians, we may take that revolutionary statement for granted. Jesus was bodily raised; his resurrected body walked, and breathed, and even ate breakfast! His body was in many ways the same body that hung on the cross and was buried in the tomb. Jesus showed his scars to Thomas and the other disciples. But the gospels are not intended as an analytical, forensic report. What do we make of such a body? And how can we understand our own bodily resurrection in light of Jesus’? Listen, like, subscribe, and share the message of the hope of resurrection with others!
For more about us, visit www.facebook.com/devotionaldoctors or www.devotionaldoctors.com. You can reach us by email at [email protected].
Our theme music is "Honey Bee" by Kevin MacLeod (https://incompetech.com).
License: CC BY (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
This week, we consider psalms and laments through the lens of resurrection. When Job, David, or other poets cry out to the Lord from a place of despair, God demonstrates care and power to redeem His people. These poems also represent God's care for the suffering of individuals, peoples, and even all creation. We have spoken before about lament as part of a healthy emotional spectrum; when resurrection is in the picture, we can understand lament as a plea for life out of death. In this podcast episode, we also trace through Psalm 116, to weigh death and suffering against hope, and question how the death of the saints could be precious.
For more about us, visit www.facebook.com/devotionaldoctors or www.devotionaldoctors.com. You can reach us by email at [email protected].
Our theme music is "Honey Bee" by Kevin MacLeod (https://incompetech.com).
License: CC BY (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
Originally preached by Bryan Nash on February 7, 2021, at Eastview Church of Christ.
For more about us, visit www.devotionaldoctors.com or www.facebook.com/devotionaldoctors. You can reach us by email at [email protected].
Our theme music is "Honey Bee" by Kevin MacLeod (https://incompetech.com).
License: CC BY (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
For this, and more sermons from Bryan, visit http://www.eastviewcoc.com/sermons?title=&y=0&se=0&sv=0&sp=53
This week on the Devotional Doctors podcast, JD responds to a set of recent listener questions. As we continue to consider God's holistic care for humanity as bearers of the divine image, what do we do with the problem of evil? Certainly, the righteous suffer. Sometimes chronic illness wracks the body, in apparent tension with growth of the spirit. So is the human experience connected in a holistic way, or not? In this short episode, JD provides some discussion for the following questions:
How strict is man's holistic connectedness?
Does God have a purpose in apparent disconnectedness?
Does chance play a role?
If God cares about the well-being of the holistic man, would He ensure that?
For more about us, visit www.facebook.com/devotionaldoctors or www.devotionaldoctors.com. You can reach us by email at [email protected].
Our theme music is "Honey Bee" by Kevin MacLeod (https://incompetech.com).
License: CC BY (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
Last week, we looked at how prayer and healing are connected in James 5. In today's podcast episode, the Devotional Doctors reflect on the confession of sin. When we admit weakness or sin, what does that do for our relationship with God, or with others? Whom is confession really intended to benefit? We discuss how confession plays an important part in the "diagnosis and treatment" of our spiritual ills, and how this contributes to a lived-out faith in Jesus Christ. And we consider some advice for both vulnerability and healthy discernment in private or public confession. May God grant us the humility to confess our needs!
For more about us, visit www.facebook.com/devotionaldoctors or www.devotionaldoctors.com. You can reach us by email at [email protected].
Our theme music is "Honey Bee" by Kevin MacLeod (https://incompetech.com).
License: CC BY (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
The podcast currently has 122 episodes available.