• The Calling of the Disciples: What Luke 5:1–11 Teaches Us Today
    Nov 29 2025

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    Luke 5:1–11 is one of the most powerful stories of calling, faith, and obedience in the New Testament. In this episode of Catch On Fire Podcasts, we explore the Miraculous Catch of Fish and how Jesus transformed ordinary fishermen into world-changing disciples.

    In this podcase we’ll break down the passage verse by verse, explore the historical and biblical context, and uncover what Jesus meant when He told Peter to “launch out into the deep.”

    Whether you feel stuck, tired, discouraged, or unsure of what God is calling you to do next, this passage reveals how one act of obedience can shift your entire destiny.

    In this teaching, you’ll learn:

    -Why Jesus chose fishermen to be His first disciples

    -The cultural meaning behind fishing and empty nets

    -What Peter’s obedience teaches us about faith

    -How God can use our failures for His purpose

    -What “fishers of men” really means

    If you’re ready to grow in discipleship, understand Scripture more deeply, and strengthen your walk with Christ, this teaching is for you.

    A weary fisherman, a crowded shoreline, and an unlikely command: push into deep water. That’s where the story turns. We open Luke 5:1–11 and watch Simon Peter move from expertise to surrender, from empty nets to a catch so large the boats threaten to sink. Along the way, we trace a larger thread running through Scripture and history: God meets people where they are, invites them to try again where they’ve failed, and turns simple obedience into overflow.

    We share how Luke’s gospel highlights the outsider and why this scene is more than a fishing tale—it’s a pattern for modern discipleship. You’ll hear vivid accounts that echo the same rhythm: Saul encountering Christ on the road and becoming Paul; Elizabeth Fry stepping into Newgate Prison and launching reform; Elijah and the widow of Zarephath discovering provision in famine; Naaman laying down pride for a simple path to healing; Amy Carmichael welcoming Preena into safety; and C. T. Studd exchanging applause for a life on mission. Each story spotlights a clear progression: a word from God, a step that defies convention, and a result that reshapes purpose.

    We also get practical. We talk about how to invite Jesus into your daily work, how to discern when you’re being asked to cast again, and how to prepare your “nets” through prayer, Scripture, community, and generosity. And when the catch comes, we discuss why abundance requires partners and humility. Most of all, we sit with the moment Peter shifts from calling Jesus Master to calling him Lord, and how that shift still humbles, heals, and sends us today.

    If this message stirred you, share it with a friend, subscribe for future episodes, and leave a review so others can find these conversations. Where is Jesus asking you to push into deep water this week?

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    Catch On Fire Podcasts aims to lead us all into a closer walk with God as we strive to become more like Jesus.

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    53 mins
  • 3 Steps To Answered Prayer - Matthew 15:21-28
    Nov 22 2025

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    Discover the powerful story of the Canaanite woman in Matthew 15:21–28, a passage where Jesus praises her great faith and persistence. This teaching explores why Jesus seemed to reject her at first, and what her response reveals about humility and perseverance.

    In this podcast you will learn:
    • The meaning and context of Matthew 15:21–28
    • Why Jesus tested the woman’s faith
    • The significance of her bold, persistent request
    • What her story teaches us about prayer, humility, and spiritual desperation
    • How her faith can inspire our walk with God today.

    A desperate mother. A silent Savior. A breakthrough that changed everything. We explore one of Scripture’s most surprising encounters—Matthew 15:21–28—and uncover a simple, potent framework for prayer that actually shapes outcomes and deepens discipleship. The Canaanite woman’s journey reveals how to ask clearly, persevere when heaven seems quiet, and hold a believing posture that honors God’s holiness and mercy.

    We start by setting the scene: why Matthew’s Gospel emphasizes the kingdom, why Jesus travels into Gentile territory, and how cultural tensions amplify the risk this woman takes. Her approach to Jesus—naming him “Lord, Son of David”—is not small talk; it’s a confession of faith that aligns her request with God’s character. From there, we break down the three steps: making specific asks consistent with God’s will, persisting day by day when the answer tarries, and believing that even a crumb of grace from the Master’s table is enough to heal what seems unhealable.

    The episode weaves biblical exegesis with lived stories: Gladys Aylward guiding 94 children through war-torn China, an iron axe head rising on the Jordan, a paralytic standing at Bethesda, and unexpected provision that arrives right on time. Each story lifts a different facet of faith under pressure—courage, clarity, endurance, and the audacity to keep knocking. We don’t offer formulas; we offer a way of praying that is relational, reverent, and resilient, grounded in who Jesus is and how he loves across borders, traditions, and timelines.

    If you’re hungry for a prayer life that moves beyond vague hopes to God-centered petitions, this conversation will sharpen your focus and lift your confidence. Ask specifically. Keep asking. Believe God’s timing and power. Then tell us what you’re praying for next. Subscribe, share this episode with someone who needs hope today, and leave a review to help others find these messages of faith and courage.

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    Catch On Fire Podcasts aims to lead us all into a closer walk with God as we strive to become more like Jesus.

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    37 mins
  • We Are Called By God - Genesis 12:1-9
    Nov 16 2025

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    In this podcast, we explore God’s call to Abram and what it reveals about His call on our own lives today. Genesis 12:1–9 is the beginning of a remarkable journey—one marked by faith, obedience, promise, and trust. Just as God invited Abram into a future he could not yet see, He invites us to step into His purpose with courage and surrender.

    In this video, we discuss:
    -What it means to be called by God
    -How Abram’s obedience sets an example for us
    -The blessings that follow when we walk by faith
    -How to respond when God calls us into the unknown
    -Practical steps for discerning God’s direction in your life

    Whether you’re seeking clarity, encouragement, or spiritual direction, this message will help you understand how God calls ordinary people to extraordinary journeys.

    What if the next step God asks you to take doesn’t come with a destination, a map, or a safety net? We open Genesis 12 and sit with Abraham at the moment God says “Go,” tracing how trust, obedience, and holy living turn one person’s surrender into blessing for countless others. Along the way, we weave in vivid stories—Jackie Pullinger stepping off a ship into Hong Kong with almost nothing, Florence Nightingale transforming battlefield care, Eric Liddell trading Olympic acclaim for a life poured out in China—to show how the ancient call still reshapes modern streets, homes, and hearts.

    We don’t romanticize the journey. The text is honest about risk, delay, and the cost of partial obedience. Abraham’s detours, Saul’s compromises, and the fallout that follows remind us that clarity from God deserves a whole-hearted yes. Yet the thread of promise holds. God blesses so his people can bless; he forms a pilgrim posture where we pitch tents but build altars—temporary with our plans, permanent with our worship. Bethel, Shechem, and the Negev become more than places; they are signposts that mark encounters with the living God and teach us how to travel light and pray heavy.

    This conversation aims at courage. If you feel late to the start line, remember Abraham at seventy-five. If you feel underqualified, remember the one-eyed preacher who learned to read and ignited Wales. If you feel stuck, take the next faithful step and let God set the route. We close with an invitation to follow Jesus, plus declarations rooted in Scripture to anchor your week. If this stirred you, share it with a friend who needs a nudge of faith, subscribe for more deep dives into Scripture, and leave a review so others can find the show. Your yes might be the blessing someone else is praying for.

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    Catch On Fire Podcasts aims to lead us all into a closer walk with God as we strive to become more like Jesus.

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    52 mins
  • Giving Our Best To Jesus - John 12:1-8
    Nov 9 2025

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    “Giving Our Best to Jesus” looks at Mary’s powerful, extravagant act of worship in John 12:1–8. While others criticized her, Jesus celebrated her devotion. True worship may cost us something, but it always honors Him. Let this message encourage you to give Jesus the best of your time, your heart, your gifts, and your life.

    A house filled with fragrance, a table set in gratitude, and a bold act that looked like waste to some and worship to Jesus. We sit with Mary in John 12 as she breaks open a pound of pure nard and pours it on the feet of Christ, and we ask the awkward, necessary question: what does “giving our best” look like when love costs money, reputation, and control?

    We walk through John’s unique lens on the final week before the cross, where Lazarus reclines as a living sign of resurrection, Martha serves with intention, and the city swells with Passover pilgrims. Along the way, we hold up mirrors from history—Simon of Cyrene pressed into service on the road to Golgotha, Anne Hutchinson crossing an ocean for conscience, Millard and Linda Fuller building dignity one home at a time, Gamaliel’s wise restraint, and Rutherford’s letters forged in exile. Each story reveals the same pattern: costly devotion carries a fragrance that outlasts criticism and reshapes communities.

    Judas’s objection forces a heart check on motives, stewardship, and timing. Jesus’ defense reframes the moment, reminding us that some opportunities come once and must be seized with courage. We talk spiritual integrity, false charity, and the difference between image and love. Then we invite you to respond—through surrender, practical service to the poor, and a personal step of faith that costs you something real. If you’ve been waiting for permission to pour out what you’ve been saving, consider this your nudge. Subscribe, share with a friend who needs courage, and leave a review with your answer to one question: what costly gift are you ready to lay at His feet?

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    Catch On Fire Podcasts aims to lead us all into a closer walk with God as we strive to become more like Jesus.

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    50 mins
  • My Times Are In God's Hands - Psalms 31:13-17a
    Nov 1 2025

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    “My Times Are In Your Hands” explores David’s cry for help and confidence in Psalm 31:13–17. Surrounded by fear and opposition, he chooses trust over panic, faith over fear, and surrender over control. No matter what you’re facing today, God is still in control. Your times, your past, present, and future, rest safely in His hands.

    Terror on every side is not the end of the story. We open Psalm 31 and follow its echo through time to see how real people faced lions, emperors, prisons, furnaces, and fog with a steady, surrendered trust. David’s confession, “My times are in your hands,” becomes a spine for courage as we connect scripture’s heartbeat with lives that refused to bow to fear.

    We start with the Psalms as Israel’s prayerbook and trace how Psalm 31 surfaces at crucial moments—from Jesus’ final words to Paul’s testimony before Nero. Then we move through history: John Wycliffe insisting the Bible belongs in plain English, William Tyndale translating from the original languages and sealing his work with prayer and blood, and Jonathan Edwards calling hearts to deep conversion during the Great Awakening. Each story shows how faith navigates changing seasons without losing its center.

    Courage gets personal with Harriet Tubman, who memorized scripture and trusted God’s guidance to lead hundreds to freedom, and with George Müller, who funded orphan care through prayer rather than appeals, expecting specific answers from a faithful Father. Along the way, we revisit the three Hebrew boys’ “even if” stance and Isaiah’s assurance during Assyria’s siege to remind us that deliverance belongs to God and obedience belongs to us. We close with a clear invitation to follow Jesus, practical steps for discipleship, and spoken declarations rooted in God’s promises.

    If you need renewed courage, a stronger prayer life, or a fresh reason to trust when the headlines howl, this conversation will steady your heart. Listen, share with a friend who’s in a hard season, and if the message meets you today, follow the show, leave a review, and tell us: where are you placing your times—in your hands, or His?

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    Catch On Fire Podcasts aims to lead us all into a closer walk with God as we strive to become more like Jesus.

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    39 mins
  • We Are Still In God's Holy Plans - Genesis 18:9-14
    Oct 26 2025

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    In Genesis 18:9–14, God reminds Abraham and Sarah that nothing is too hard for Him. Even when circumstances seem impossible and timelines feel long overdue, we are still in God’s holy plan. His promises never expire, His purposes never fail, and His timing is always perfect.

    When hope feels threadbare and timelines mock your prayers, the question that changes everything is simple: Is anything too wonderful for God? We walk through Genesis 18 with Abraham and Sarah, tracing a promise given in impossibility and fulfilled on God’s clock. Along the way, we explore why delays can be holy, how names signal destiny, and what it means when God calls you specifically—by name—into a future that looks bigger than your history.

    We broaden the lens beyond Abraham’s tent. Mary Magdalene moves from torment to first witness of the resurrection because devotion kept her near Jesus when others left. Fanny Crosby, writing thousands of hymns without sight, shows how limitation can become a megaphone for grace. Chuck Colson’s journey from political infamy to global prison ministry proves that even a shattered reputation can be repurposed for mercy. Their stories, alongside Moses, David, and Paul, reveal a pattern: the waiting room is often God’s workshop, where character is forged to carry the very answers we’re asking for.

    You’ll hear how shortcuts complicate what faith clarifies, why our words can guard or jeopardize a promise, and how to live with steady expectation when results are slow. We share practical ways to endure delay—writing the vision, aligning speech, walking in obedience, and staying close to community—so your hope can mature rather than wither. If your heart has grown cautious like Sarah’s laugh behind the tent, let this be the moment you lift your eyes again.

    Subscribe for more scripture-rich encouragement, share this with a friend who’s waiting on a breakthrough, and leave a review telling us the promise you’re holding onto. Your story isn’t over—and neither is God’s promise.

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    Catch On Fire Podcasts aims to lead us all into a closer walk with God as we strive to become more like Jesus.

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    47 mins
  • Soar On Wings Like Eagles - Isaiah 40:27-31
    Oct 18 2025

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    “Soar on Wings Like Eagles” is a powerful reminder from Isaiah 40:27–31 that God restores the weary, strengthens the weak, and uplifts those who trust in Him. No matter what you’re facing, God promises renewal, strength to run without growing weary and courage to rise above adversity. Let this message revive your hope and help you to soar again.

    Isaiah seems to have spent the whole, or the greater part, of his life in the city of Jerusalem. For many years he was the most remarkable figure, and sometimes the most influential man, in that city. Tradition states that he was of royal lineage which would seem to be true as he had easy access to the Kings.

    Isaiah is the preeminent prophet of the Major Prophets. The book of Isaiah is known for sheer lyricism and poetry. In length Isaiah is second only to Psalms. Psalms had multiple authors. Isaiah is the sole author of the book of Isaiah. The New Testament contains more than four hundred references to Isaiah. Isaiah describes in chapter six, how he was called by God in the year that King Uzziah died. Isaiah then proceeded to prophesy for more than forty years. The initial vision of God that is described in chapter six, colored all of Isaiah’s prophecies. The book of Isaiah is unequaled among the prophets in its tremendous vision of God and the glory that is in store for God’s people.

    In this chapter, Isaiah is speaking to God’s people who are in exile in Babylon. These Israelites experienced the destruction of Jerusalem and the Temple in 586 BC. These Jews had lost their homeland and identity and were grappling with deep questions as to whether or not God cared about them. This chapter addresses the deep sense of despair that the exiled Israelites are experiencing and offers a vision of God’s faithfulness, compassion, and power. Isaiah reassures God’s people that this is not the end of the story, God will restore and deliver.

    In this chapter, Isaiah delivers powerful words of comfort and hope. The beginning verse emphatically declares that God is comforting His people. God is declaring that the time of hardship has come to an end, the sin is redeemed and that these exiled Jews will receive from the Lord double for their trouble. The Lord is speaking with tremendous compassion and love to His chosen people, Israel.

    Isaiah then proceeds to paint a vivid picture of restoration. Isaiah prophesies that a highway will appear in the desert, which depicts the seemingly impossibility of the return of the exiles to their homelands. Isaiah speaks of the raising up of valleys and the leveling of mountains, so as to make one smooth continuous highway. This signifies that all obstacles will be removed from the route, and the exiles will have a clear path for their journey.

    In this chapter, Isaiah also contrasts the fleeting nature of human lives with the everlasting and enduring nature of God’s Word. Death is guaranteed for all men. Kingdoms rise and fall but God’s Word remains. As Isaiah so beautifully states, the Word of God stands forever. The Bible has survived centuries where it had to be copied manually by hand. Critics, ever-changing philosophies, and persecution have been a constant throughout the ages. There has been neglect, doubt and disbelief but God’s Word still remains.

    Join Dr. Novella Springette as she does a deep dive into the Scriptures.

    Visit our websites https://catchonfirepodcasts.buzzsprout.com, https://catchonfireministries.org, to learn more about walking closely with J

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    Catch On Fire Podcasts aims to lead us all into a closer walk with God as we strive to become more like Jesus.

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    45 mins
  • Let Me Not Be Ashamed - Psalms 25:1-7
    Oct 12 2025

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    “Let Me Not Be Ashamed” explores David’s heartfelt prayer in Psalm 25:1–7. It is a plea for guidance, forgiveness, and protection from disgrace. When we trust in God, He never lets us be put to shame. He leads us in truth and remembers us according to His mercy, not our past mistakes. Let this message strengthen your faith and anchor your hope in God’s character.

    Psalms, Job, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, Songs of Songs, and Lamentations are known as the poetic Books of the Old Testament. The Psalms are a book of Israel’s prayer and praise. The Book of Psalms consists of 150 individual psalms or compositions. Based on the titles/headings of the psalms, the authors of about two thirds of the Psalms can be identified.

    Seventy-three of the Psalms are associated with David. It is believed that David also wrote some of the approximately fifty psalms that are not associated with any particular person.

    The historical setting of the headings of the psalms provides some information as to when the psalms were composed. Psalms come from a period covering a thousand years of Israel’s history. All the way from Moses (15th century BC, Psalm 90) up to post-exilic times (5th century BC, Psalm 126). The Psalms have a distinct structure and unity. They are divided into five books, mirroring the five books of Moses, and each of these sections ends with a doxology.

    The psalms were the worship material of the Jews and as such were intended to address the needs of people who were coming to worship God from all backgrounds and experiences of life. The psalms are poetry set to music in order to facilitate praise, prayer, and worship. These psalms were sung by the worshippers in the temple similar to how we utilize our present-day hymnals. That is why we say psalms 23 and not psalms chapter 23, as each psalm is a song in its own right. In the same manner, we would say Hymn #45.

    Psalms 25 falls into Book 1 of the psalms and is a member of the class of Psalms that are known as “acrostic / alphabetical psalms.” They are so called because the first word of each verse starts with one of the letters of the Hebrew alphabet. There are only seven such acrostic psalms, and they are psalms 25, 34, 37, 111, 112, 119, and 145. This is the very first of these acrostic psalms. The acrostic pattern was used to lend beauty and form to the psalm.

    Psalms 25 is an individual lament and was written by David, the man after God’s own heart. It is not clear what were the circumstances under which David felt led to write this psalm. David was often in trouble throughout his life. This psalm is a prayer for deliverance, guidance, and forgiveness.

    Join Dr. Novella Springette as she does a deep dive into the Scriptures.

    Visit our websites https://catchonfirepodcasts.buzzsprout.com, https://catchonfireministries.org, to learn more about walking closely with Jesus.

    Support the show

    Catch On Fire Podcasts aims to lead us all into a closer walk with God as we strive to become more like Jesus.

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    48 mins