• Jesus Satisfied Justice
    Feb 1 2026

    We love mercy—but we also long for justice.


    In this RambleCast episode, Dalyn wrestles honestly with a tension we all feel: mercy for me, justice for you. Scripture tells us to love mercy and to do justice—but how can both truly exist without one cancelling the other out?


    This reflection walks through Micah 6:8, the nature of justice, the doctrine of penal substitutionary atonement, and why the cross is the only place where mercy is given without justice being denied. Jesus didn’t eliminate justice—He satisfied it.


    From the pain of personal harm to the fear of judgment, this episode explores why the cross matters not just for forgiveness, but for healing, freedom, and peace. Justice will be done. Mercy has already been given. And neither comes at the expense of the other.


    Raw, unscripted, and rooted in truth—this is a reminder that we don’t have to chase vengeance or live in fear, because Jesus satisfied justice on our behalf.

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    20 Min.
  • Matthew 7:12-14 The Golden Rule & the Narrow Gate
    Jan 30 2026

    As Jesus brings the Sermon on the Mount toward its conclusion, He draws a clear line between the kingdom of God and the way of the world.


    In this verse-by-verse teaching from Matthew 7:12–14, we explore what we often call the Golden Rule—and why it’s far more than a simple moral principle. Jesus isn’t offering a promise of fair treatment or a strategy for social harmony. He’s revealing the heart of the Law: perfect love.


    From there, Jesus moves seamlessly into His warning about the narrow gate and the hard way that leads to life. These aren’t separate ideas. The call to love as God loves exposes the impossible standard we cannot meet on our own—and the grace that makes a way where none existed.


    This episode looks at:

    • Why the Golden Rule reflects God’s perfect love, not human effort

    • How the narrow gate is not about trying harder, but trusting fully

    • Why self-denial is both the hardest and most freeing path

    • How grace empowers what law demands but cannot produce

    The way is narrow. The standard is perfect. And the hope is found in the One who loved perfectly and opened the gate.

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    37 Min.
  • Matthew 7:7–11 A Good Father, Not a Blank Check
    Jan 23 2026

    In this verse-by-verse teaching through Matthew 7:7–11, Jesus’ familiar words—ask, seek, knock—are placed back into their proper context within the Sermon on the Mount.


    Rather than a blanket promise that God will give us whatever we want, this passage answers a deeper question that has been building throughout the sermon:
    How are we supposed to live up to such a high standard?
    How do broken, insufficient people enter the Kingdom—and then actually live as Kingdom citizens?


    Jesus’ answer is not self-effort, spiritual performance, or “name it and claim it” faith. It’s relationship.
    Ask. Seek. Knock.

    This teaching explores:

    • Why this passage is not an abrupt shift, but a natural response to everything Jesus has already said

    • How ask, seek, knock is about entering and living in the Kingdom—not demanding outcomes

    • What it means to trust God as a good Father who gives what we need, not what would harm us

    • Why this passage cannot be used to support Word-of-Faith or prosperity theology

    • How sufficiency, wisdom, and obedience flow from dependence on the Father—not perfection

    This is a promise of access, not entitlement.
    A call to trust, not to manipulate God.
    And a reminder that the grace to walk in truth begins with knowing who your Father is.

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    57 Min.
  • My Missed Presupposition & Why it Matters
    Jan 21 2026

    In a recent Q&A episode, I carefully dismantled someone else’s presuppositions—then realized I had missed one of my own.


    This episode isn’t about settling debates over demons or Genesis 6. It’s about how easily we overlook our assumptions, even when we’re trying to handle Scripture carefully. We’ll talk about confidence, humility, essential doctrines, and why elevating secondary issues to primary ones fractures unity in the body of Christ.


    Confidence is good.
    But only humility keeps it from becoming Plankeye Syndrome.

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    14 Min.
  • Can the Soul Be Taken While the Spirit Remains? ULP Q&A
    Jan 20 2026

    Can Satan claim a person’s soul but not their spirit?


    We slow down and examine the questions beneath the question.

    What does the Bible actually say about the soul and the spirit? Are they separable? Can one be claimed by Satan while the other remains to wander the earth?


    Rather than speculation, this episode looks carefully at thebiblical language, the theological assumptions we often overlook, and why Scripture consistently points us toward the unity of the human person before God.


    Listen in and think it through with me.

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    16 Min.
  • Rethinking Walking in Victory
    Jan 18 2026

    What does it really mean to “walk in victory”?


    In this Ramblecast episode, I reflect on how we often misunderstand victory in the Christian life by projecting our own ideas of comfort, ease, and emotional relief onto it. Using the cross as the lens, I challenge the popular notion that victory always looks like a comeback, a breakthrough, or a sudden change in circumstances.


    Jesus was never losing. Even in betrayal, suffering, silence, and death, He was walking in perfect obedience and unbroken trust in the Father. That wasn’t defeat—it was the plan.


    This episode is an honest, unscripted musing on the victory of the cross, what Jesus actually endured, and how that reshapes the way we understand faithfulness, endurance, suffering, and perseverance today.


    Victory isn’t always about feeling better or seeing things change.

    Sometimes it’s simply not letting go of the Father while you keep walking forward by grace.


    Raw. Reflective. Grounded in the cross.
    Something to think about.

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    13 Min.
  • Matthew 7: 1-6 Plankeye Syndrome
    Jan 16 2026

    “Judge not” is one of the most quoted—and most misunderstood—verses in the Bible. In this verse-by-verse teaching through Matthew 7:1–6, we slow down and let Jesus say what He actually means.


    This passage is not a ban on discernment, correction, or truth. Instead, Jesus exposes self-righteous, hypocritical judgment—the kind that forgets our own need for mercy while holding others to a standard we don’t meet ourselves.


    As we walk through the broader context of the Sermon on the Mount, we see how this teaching flows directly from “Blessed are the merciful” and how Jesus uses vivid (and intentionally humorous) imagery to reveal the danger of spiritual pride. We also explore why mercy and correction are not opposites, why love sometimes requires hard truth, and why discernment must be guided by humility and the Spirit.


    Finally, we wrestle with Jesus’ warning about pearls and pigs—why wisdom is required not just in what we say, but when and to whom we say it.


    This teaching challenges us to remove the plank from our own eye, walk in gratitude for the mercy we’ve received, and help others with truth, gentleness, and love—without compromising the gospel or weaponizing it.

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    1 Std. und 1 Min.
  • What is the Isaiah 51:9 Dragon? ULP Q&A
    Jan 14 2026

    We take a closer look at a vivid and often misunderstood image in Isaiah 51:9: “Was it not you who cut Rahab in pieces, who pierced the dragon?”


    What exactly is this “dragon”? Is Isaiah talking about Satan, a mythological creature, or something else entirely?


    Rather than jumping to assumptions, this episode walks carefully through the text in its biblical, historical, and literary context. We examine the titles used in the passage—the Arm of the Lord, Rahab, and the dragon—and trace how Scripture itself defines them. By comparing Isaiah with other Old Testament passages, including Ezekiel, we uncover how prophetic language, pagan symbolism, and real historical events intersect.


    This episode emphasizes an important principle of biblical interpretation: letting Scripture interpret Scripture, and allowing context to guide meaning—while still acknowledging how Old Testament imagery can point forward in secondary ways without abandoning its original intent.


    If you’ve ever wondered how to approach symbolic language in the Bible without forcing meanings onto the text, this episode will help you think more clearly and biblically.

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    10 Min.