Episodes

  • Claiming to be God & Having His Power?
    Jun 16 2026

    Disclaimer: Please pardon some of the visual glitches throughout this episode. Something most likely went wrong during the rendering process, and while the video may do a few odd things visually, we hope it isn't too distracting and appreciate your patience.

    Description

    Claiming to Be God & Having His Power?

    Many people eventually grow bored with Christianity's central message: that Jesus Christ won the forgiveness of sins on the cross and continues to deliver that salvation through His external means of grace—His Word and Sacraments. In search of something more exciting, sensational, and personally empowering, some teachers begin making increasingly extravagant claims that subtly (or not so subtly) shift the focus away from Christ and onto ourselves.

    In this episode, we examine statements and teachings from Kenneth Copeland, Tim Ross, and Steven Furtick that move toward self-deification—the idea that believers somehow become divine or possess God's unique attributes. We also offer an honorable mention of Christine Caine and her claims that we possess God's power in such a way that we can use our words to create our own preferred realities.

    Rather than seeking secret knowledge, personal revelations, or divine status, Scripture calls us back to the crucified and risen Christ, who freely gives forgiveness, life, and salvation through His appointed means: the preached Gospel and the Sacraments.

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    44 mins
  • Pt. 2 Which Jesus Do You Worship?
    Jun 9 2026

    Who is Jesus, really? In Part 2 of our series Which Jesus Do You Worship?, we explore the biblical truth that Jesus is not only fully God, but also fully man—two distinct natures united in one Person. He experienced real human weakness, temptation, hunger, sorrow, and suffering, yet remained completely without sin as the perfect Savior.

    Join us as we examine why Christ’s true humanity is essential to the Gospel and what is at stake when we misunderstand who He is.

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    54 mins
  • Which Jesus Do You Worship? Pt. 1
    Jun 3 2026

    A lot of people talk about Jesus, pray to Jesus, and claim to follow Jesus—but are they talking about the Jesus revealed in Scripture? In Part 1 of this 3-part series, The Study Boys examine the many competing claims about Christ throughout history and ask the question Jesus Himself asked: “Who do men say that I am?” Join us as we begin separating the biblical Jesus from the countless counterfeits.

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    56 mins
  • Denying Jesus' Deity/Distorting the Trinity in Plain Sight: Mike Todd & Jonny Chang
    May 12 2026

    In this episode of The Study Boys, FLAME and Lex Lutheran confront several troubling statements made by popular influencers regarding the nature of God, Christ, and the Holy Trinity.

    We examine claims such as:
    • Jesus being a created being
    • Jesus and the Holy Spirit being the same Person
    • the manna from heaven being money
    • and even the shocking statement that “Jesus is a stripper”

    These are not minor theological disagreements. These teachings strike at the heart of historic Christian doctrine and the biblical revelation of the Triune God: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.

    Together, we discuss why these teachings are dangerous, how false doctrine spreads through charisma and influence, and why Christians must recover discernment, theological clarity, and fidelity to Scripture.

    Jude 1:4 warns us:
    “For certain people have crept in unnoticed…”

    False teaching is not always loud, obvious, or outside the church. Sometimes it hides in plain sight.

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    54 mins
  • Losing the Gospel in the Pursuit of Experience: When ‘More’ Means Less
    Apr 21 2026

    In this episode, Lex Lutheran and I wrestle with what happens when our immediate needs and perceived pressures begin to take priority over God’s priorities. When that shift happens, the goalposts move—and what God has actually given to His Church starts to feel secondary, outdated, or even irrelevant.

    We’re seeing a growing trend where Christians prefer a version of the faith centered on feelings, prophetic words, dreams, and mystical experiences—while struggling to see the ongoing relevance of the Gospel itself: the forgiveness of sins, the finished work of Christ, and His continued presence for us in Word and Sacrament.

    We react to Dr. Rod Rosenbladt's "The Gospel For Those Broken By The Church." A well-known message to the hurting Christian—those who have been crushed under heavy doses of law preaching and have rarely, if ever, heard the Gospel clearly delivered. His work exposes just how easy it is to lose the main thing, even in churches that claim to preach Christ.

    Here is the full talk: https://youtu.be/5TJvBxIXLlI?si=DiOJW2-34ZQH3p89
    PLEASE Take a listen---to the whole thing!! Thank us later!!

    We also engage voices—pastors and teachers—who assume that message is old, insufficient, or no longer compelling, and who push for something “more.” But in chasing experience, many have unintentionally displaced the very center: Christ for you.

    This episode is a call to recover what God has actually promised to do for sinners/saints.

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    1 hr and 7 mins
  • Stop Turning Jesus into a Life Coach: The Problem with Self-Help Christianity (Holy Week)
    Apr 7 2026

    In this episode of The Study Boys, Lex Lutheran and Flame dive into a growing trend in modern preaching: using Holy Week as a platform for self-help, personal elevation, and motivational messaging.

    We engage recent examples, including teaching that turns Palm Sunday into a lesson about “humble means” leading to personal destiny, and interpretations of the resurrection that suggest Jesus died so we can avoid physical death—reframing it as mere temporal escape rather than the victory over sin and death.

    But is that what the Scriptures actually teach?

    We walk through what Palm Sunday, Good Friday, and Easter are truly about—not our platform, not our elevation, not our temporal success—but the forgiveness of sins, won for us by Christ and delivered through His Word and Sacraments.

    This episode brings clarity, correction, and comfort, drawing the line between Christ-centered proclamation and man-centered application.

    Christ for you—not a metaphor for you.

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    56 mins
  • False Expectations from "Level Up" Preaching
    Mar 31 2026

    In this episode, Lex Lutheran and I respond to recent teaching from Tim Timberlake, who argues that God wants you to dream bigger, want more, and not be comfortable having less than your enemies, and that believers should draw closer to God for new revelations so they can be elevated. He uses the life of Moses to support this idea, and we take time to examine whether the Bible actually teaches this.

    We talk about how Scripture is often used to promote ambition, elevation, and personal success in ways that the text itself does not support, and why this kind of preaching can become spiritually dangerous. When people are taught to expect things God never promised—promotion, elevation, constant increase—it can lead to disappointment, doubt, and even a crisis of faith when life does not go the way they were told it would.

    We also briefly discuss the recent controversy involving LaRussell and the phrase “heaven-sent,” and how language like that can be misunderstood if we are not careful with how we speak about God’s work in our lives.

    This episode is really about learning the difference between what God has actually promised and what American Christianity often says God promised, and why that distinction matters for real faith, real suffering, and real Christian life.

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    1 hr and 14 mins
  • Sunday Morning: Divine Service or Worship Experience?
    Mar 25 2026

    Not all worship is the same — not because of the instruments, but because of the theology behind it.

    There is nothing inherently wrong with guitars, and nothing inherently holy about an organ. The real question is this: What is going on theologically in your worship service?

    Is worship primarily about what we bring to God — our energy, our emotion, our commitment, our performance? Or is it about what God is giving to us — His Word, His forgiveness, His body and blood, His promises?

    In historic Christian liturgy, the center of worship is not our performance for God, but God’s service to us — through the preached Word, the read Word, the sung Word, and the Sacraments.

    The Church gathers not to give God something He lacks, but to receive from God what we lack.

    That changes everything.

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    1 hr and 6 mins