Every day brings a fresh headline to fear, fight over, or doomscroll through, but we think a deeper emergency is hiding underneath all of it: a crisis of discernment. When information is endless and confusion is profitable, it gets harder to tell truth from noise and that confusion doesn’t stop at the church door. We talk about how algorithms, influence campaigns, and the rapid rise of artificial intelligence are reshaping what people believe and how quickly they believe it. We also press on an uncomfortable irony: Christians have more access to the Bible than any generation in history, yet many of us read it less. Bible apps, sermons, podcasts, and quick takes can become substitutes for personal engagement with Scripture, leaving our theology thin and our convictions borrowed. To ground this in something concrete, we look at survey findings from a recent State of Theology style project and contrast popular evangelical beliefs with what the Bible actually teaches. Then we open the Word and get specific. Psalm 51:5, Romans 5:18–19, and Ephesians 2:1–3 challenge the comforting idea that people are “good by nature” and instead point to original sin, spiritual deadness, and our need for God’s grace. If you want sharper biblical discernment, stronger theology, and a clearer grip on the gospel in a chaotic age, listen through and stay with us this week. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a rating and review to help equip more men for the fight.Support the showWant to connect? Email
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