St. Francis of Assisi / Matthew 19:16-26 / Pastor Zane GoggansSupport the show
We begin building an observational outline of Isaiah 45
A discussion about the value of studying the tears in the Psalms
An article claiming to clarify faith may prove how easily we turn it into a word game. We read, analyze, and ask: has defining faith become more confusing than believing itself?
For today’s episode of the Sermon Audio Daily, it is all about fire. Five sermons dealing the topic of fire. Here are the sermons: 1. https://www.sermonaudio.com/se... 2. https://www.sermonaudio.com/se... 3. https://www.sermonaudio.com/se... 4. https://www.sermonaudio.com/se... 5. https://www.sermonaudio.com/se...
Woken by the smell of smoke at 2 a.m., a real fire becomes a living parable of faith tested by flames. This devotional explores how God's refining fire reveals what is genuine and lasting.
In this episode of the Sermon Audio Daily, I give an update on the new radio station added to the platform
The church has been hijacked by politics. In this episode, we confront how evangelical and fundamentalist Christianity became tied to Republicanism—and how that union has corrupted both faith and witness. Using the shocking Politico leak of Young Republican leaders' hateful messages, we contrast their cruelty with Scripture's call to love our neighbor, our enemy, and the truth itself. The Gospel belongs to no party.
For today’s episode of the Sermon Audio Daily , i offer a playlist of sermons on Hebrews 12:18-24. Here are the links for each sermon:1. https://www.sermonaudio.com/se...2. https://www.sermonaudio.com/se...3. https://www.sermonaudio.com/se...4. https://www.sermonaudio.com/se...5. https://www.sermonaudio.com/se...
Are you a steward of God's mysteries? To know God's mysteries is to know the wisdom of Christ that the world does not know. This message is driven by 1 Corinthians 4:1-7 encouraging Christians to maintain the revelation of God's mysteries.
The Psalms are full of tears. In the fifth and final "mapping" episode, we locate every passage that speaks of Sorrow and Brokenness —before we ever explain them. It's a quiet walk through the verses that weep, inviting you to see where sorrow falls and where hope begins.
For this episode of the SermonAudio Daily, we look at a new radio station available through the SermonAudio app.
Send us a textEver wondered why “I can do all things” ends up on coffee mugs but doesn’t feel true when life gets hard? We go straight into Philippians 4:13 and pull the verse back into its original frame: not a trophy verse for personal wins, but a steady promise that Christ sustains us in every condition—plenty or need, honor or insult, calm or storm. The heart of Paul’s claim isn’t self-belief; it’s the living presence of Jesus by the Spirit, forming a strength that shows up as contentment.We walk through the common misunderstanding of treating the verse as a blank check for ambition—and contrast it with Paul’s lived reality of hunger, hardship, and persecution. From there, we connect the dots with Ephesians 3:16–17, where inner strength grows as Christ dwells in our hearts, and 2 Corinthians 12:10, where power is perfected in weakness. Galatians 2:20 then anchors identity: crucified with Christ, no longer I, but Christ in me. When those threads come together, the “all things” becomes less about conquest and more about endurance; less about outcomes and more about faithfulness.Expect clear examples: resisting the pull of materialism when we have plenty, feeding on God’s word when we face lack, and recognizing the quiet blessing of sharing in Christ’s sufferings. The throughline is simple and freeing: contentment is learned by the Spirit, not manufactured by willpower. If you’ve ever felt let down by a slogan faith, this conversation offers a sturdier hope—Christ’s sufficiency as the foundation that holds when everything else shakes.If this resonated, follow the show, share it with a friend, or support the ministry to continue these Scripture-centered conversations. Support the showEmail: nathan@nathandietsche.com
The Psalms are full of tears. In the fourth "mapping" episode, we locate every passage that speaks of Mourning and Lament—before we ever explain them. It's a quiet walk through the verses that weep, inviting you to see where sorrow falls and where hope begins.
In a corner of the SermonAudio library sits a single Lutheran church — Christ the King LCMS in Commerce, Georgia. Check them out here: https://www.sermonaudio.com/br...
Where Do You Go? / Luke 18:1-17 / Zack MikeskaSupport the show
We go back in time and attend a hermeneutics class in 1976
We go back in time and attend a hermeneutics class in 1976