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In this episode, Noah opens with prayer and sets the tone for a deeply personal and spiritually charged message about walking fully with Jesus Christ, crucifying the flesh, and refusing to live under fear, condemnation, or compromise.
Drawing first from John 14:12–14, this message centers on Jesus’ promise that those who believe in Him will do the works He did—and even greater works—because He has gone to the Father and continues to intercede for His people. Noah exhorts listeners to ask boldly in Jesus’ name, to believe for greater things, and to seek a life that glorifies the Father through obedience, witness, and faith.
From there, the episode moves into a broader exhortation on spiritual identity, blessing, endurance, and purification. Noah speaks directly to those who are in Christ—and to those who may be standing at the threshold—urging them not to be overwhelmed at the start of the walk, but also not to remain double-minded. He emphasizes that God does not heap everything on a believer at once. Using Christ’s words about new wine and new wineskins, he frames the discipleship process as one of preparation, strengthening, and gradual transformation. God is patient, but He is also calling His people deeper.
A major thread throughout the episode is the difference between conviction and condemnation. Noah warns against religious performance, image management, and the kind of outward Christianity that looks polished but lacks inward freedom. He argues that many believers remain burdened because they have never truly dealt with known sin, and as a result they live under constant shame, striving, and spiritual instability. In contrast, he points listeners back to the promises of grace, the reality of being made new in Christ, and the importance of purging anything that keeps the conscience defiled.
This episode also carries a strong message about blessing and spiritual authority. Noah declares biblical promises over the listener from the language of Deuteronomy: blessing in the city and in the field, blessing over health, provision, labor, increase, and family. He encourages listeners not to come into fearful agreement with narratives of curse, sickness, lack, or defeat, but instead to speak life, health, and the Word of God over themselves and their households. This is not presented as shallow positivity, but as a call to reject demonic intimidation and stand on the covenant promises of God in Christ.
One of the most powerful sections of the episode is Noah’s testimony. He shares openly about his own past struggles with addiction, homelessness, fear, despair, and spiritual instability. He recalls being at the end of himself—walking in the Phoenix heat with nowhere to go, surrounded by decay and chaos, stripped of pride and options. He describes the early stages of his recovery and return to Christ, including the ways God used unlikely people and hard circumstances to lead him back. He also reflects on the painful but necessary process of sanctification: how God chastens those He loves, how known sin must be confronted, and how true freedom only came when he and his wife finally went “all in” with the Lord.
From there, the episode becomes an appeal to newer believers not to mistake grace for permission, nor discipline for rejection. Noah describes the Christian life as a paradox: God’s yoke is easy and His burden is light, yet the call to holiness is absolute. He urges listeners to work out their salvation with fear and trembling, never making peace with sin, but also never losing sight of the mercy and transforming power of Jesus Christ.
He also addresses modern ministry culture, social media Christianity, and what he sees as performative compassion detached from real spiritual discernment. Rather than celebrating public displays that generate attention without leading people to repentance or genuine freedom, Noah argues for a deeper obedience—one that asks what God is truly saying and doing in a situation, and whether our actions are actually helping people or merely making ourselves feel righteous. His burden throughout is for truth, sobriety, and the kind of discernment that does not bow to appearances.
Near the end of the episode, Noah returns to the subject of identity in Christ. He rejects the idea that a born-again believer should continue defining themselves by filth, failure, or an old nature that has been crucified with Christ. Quoting from Romans and Galatians, he emphasizes that Christ became a curse for us, that transgression has ceased for those under grace, and that the believer must begin to see themselves through the lens of redemption rather than perpetual corruption. At the same time, he warns that those who would use grace as an excuse for sin reveal that they do not understand grace at all.
The episode closes with practical encouragement: write down the things that need to go, bring them before God in fearless prayer, stand in agreement with a believing spouse or trusted brother/sister in Christ, and ask the Lord to uproot every addiction, idol, compromise, and hidden bondage. Noah shares the simple practice he and his wife used—writing prayers down and placing them in a prayer box—and encourages listeners to do the same as an act of surrender and faith.
This is an episode about identity, holiness, blessing, deliverance, and surrender. It is for the weary, the convicted, the newly awakened, and the believer who knows there must be more than religious routine. Above all, it is a call to stop playing games with God, believe what Jesus actually said, and let Him make you new.
This message is brought to you by Vetelemed.com. A Christian company boldly declaring their support of truth and excellency while fearlessly bending to the AGENDA! Vetelemed.com, Uncompromising veterinary care where your pets come first!
By ChurchOfTheLostSheepIn this episode, Noah opens with prayer and sets the tone for a deeply personal and spiritually charged message about walking fully with Jesus Christ, crucifying the flesh, and refusing to live under fear, condemnation, or compromise.
Drawing first from John 14:12–14, this message centers on Jesus’ promise that those who believe in Him will do the works He did—and even greater works—because He has gone to the Father and continues to intercede for His people. Noah exhorts listeners to ask boldly in Jesus’ name, to believe for greater things, and to seek a life that glorifies the Father through obedience, witness, and faith.
From there, the episode moves into a broader exhortation on spiritual identity, blessing, endurance, and purification. Noah speaks directly to those who are in Christ—and to those who may be standing at the threshold—urging them not to be overwhelmed at the start of the walk, but also not to remain double-minded. He emphasizes that God does not heap everything on a believer at once. Using Christ’s words about new wine and new wineskins, he frames the discipleship process as one of preparation, strengthening, and gradual transformation. God is patient, but He is also calling His people deeper.
A major thread throughout the episode is the difference between conviction and condemnation. Noah warns against religious performance, image management, and the kind of outward Christianity that looks polished but lacks inward freedom. He argues that many believers remain burdened because they have never truly dealt with known sin, and as a result they live under constant shame, striving, and spiritual instability. In contrast, he points listeners back to the promises of grace, the reality of being made new in Christ, and the importance of purging anything that keeps the conscience defiled.
This episode also carries a strong message about blessing and spiritual authority. Noah declares biblical promises over the listener from the language of Deuteronomy: blessing in the city and in the field, blessing over health, provision, labor, increase, and family. He encourages listeners not to come into fearful agreement with narratives of curse, sickness, lack, or defeat, but instead to speak life, health, and the Word of God over themselves and their households. This is not presented as shallow positivity, but as a call to reject demonic intimidation and stand on the covenant promises of God in Christ.
One of the most powerful sections of the episode is Noah’s testimony. He shares openly about his own past struggles with addiction, homelessness, fear, despair, and spiritual instability. He recalls being at the end of himself—walking in the Phoenix heat with nowhere to go, surrounded by decay and chaos, stripped of pride and options. He describes the early stages of his recovery and return to Christ, including the ways God used unlikely people and hard circumstances to lead him back. He also reflects on the painful but necessary process of sanctification: how God chastens those He loves, how known sin must be confronted, and how true freedom only came when he and his wife finally went “all in” with the Lord.
From there, the episode becomes an appeal to newer believers not to mistake grace for permission, nor discipline for rejection. Noah describes the Christian life as a paradox: God’s yoke is easy and His burden is light, yet the call to holiness is absolute. He urges listeners to work out their salvation with fear and trembling, never making peace with sin, but also never losing sight of the mercy and transforming power of Jesus Christ.
He also addresses modern ministry culture, social media Christianity, and what he sees as performative compassion detached from real spiritual discernment. Rather than celebrating public displays that generate attention without leading people to repentance or genuine freedom, Noah argues for a deeper obedience—one that asks what God is truly saying and doing in a situation, and whether our actions are actually helping people or merely making ourselves feel righteous. His burden throughout is for truth, sobriety, and the kind of discernment that does not bow to appearances.
Near the end of the episode, Noah returns to the subject of identity in Christ. He rejects the idea that a born-again believer should continue defining themselves by filth, failure, or an old nature that has been crucified with Christ. Quoting from Romans and Galatians, he emphasizes that Christ became a curse for us, that transgression has ceased for those under grace, and that the believer must begin to see themselves through the lens of redemption rather than perpetual corruption. At the same time, he warns that those who would use grace as an excuse for sin reveal that they do not understand grace at all.
The episode closes with practical encouragement: write down the things that need to go, bring them before God in fearless prayer, stand in agreement with a believing spouse or trusted brother/sister in Christ, and ask the Lord to uproot every addiction, idol, compromise, and hidden bondage. Noah shares the simple practice he and his wife used—writing prayers down and placing them in a prayer box—and encourages listeners to do the same as an act of surrender and faith.
This is an episode about identity, holiness, blessing, deliverance, and surrender. It is for the weary, the convicted, the newly awakened, and the believer who knows there must be more than religious routine. Above all, it is a call to stop playing games with God, believe what Jesus actually said, and let Him make you new.
This message is brought to you by Vetelemed.com. A Christian company boldly declaring their support of truth and excellency while fearlessly bending to the AGENDA! Vetelemed.com, Uncompromising veterinary care where your pets come first!