Episodes

  • The Beast, the Lamb, and Who Gets Your Allegiance
    Jul 16 2025

    Have you ever been terrified by end-times prophecies based on Revelation? You're not alone. Randy Knie vividly recalls sitting on his parents' bed at 13, trembling as he read a newsletter predicting imminent apocalypse—supposedly decoded straight from Revelation's pages. This traumatic experience mirrors countless others who've either become obsessed with this mysterious biblical book or avoid it entirely.

    But what if Revelation isn't primarily about predicting when the world ends? What if it's actually a revolutionary message about where we place our allegiance in a world of competing powers?

    In this illuminating exploration, Randy unpacks Revelation as "apocalyptic" literature—not meaning catastrophic destruction, but rather an "unveiling" of what's really happening behind world events. Written to persecuted Christians under Roman oppression, Revelation uses coded imagery that would be recognized by believers but missed by authorities.

    The heart of Revelation centers not on fearsome beasts but on "a Lamb that looked as if it had been slaughtered." This unexpected protagonist creates a profound counter-narrative to empire's violent power. Meanwhile, the beasts from sea and earth represent not specific individuals but timeless systems of war, violence, and economic exploitation that demand human allegiance throughout history.

    Most striking is the final battle scene where Jesus appears already covered in blood before the fighting begins—his own sacrificial blood, not his enemies'. This radical inversion challenges popular interpretations of a vengeful warrior Christ and reveals a victory achieved not through domination but through self-sacrifice.

    What does this mean for us today? In a polarized society where political leaders, media voices, and national identities demand our unwavering loyalty, Revelation boldly asks: where does your true allegiance lie? Join us in discovering how this ancient text speaks with surprising relevance to our modern struggles with power, violence, and competing claims on our hearts.

    Support the show

    If you enjoyed this episode, consider subscribing to Madison Church on your favorite podcast platform. Your feedback means the world to us, so please take a moment to leave a review and share the podcast with your friends and family.

    For inquiries, suggestions, or collaboration opportunities, please reach out to us at help@madisonchurch.com.

    For the latest updates and behind-the-scenes content, follow us on social media:

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    New episodes are released every Monday, so mark your calendars and join us weekly!

    If you'd like to support the show, you can make a donation here. Your generosity helps us continue to bring you meaningful content.

    This podcast is intended for general informational purposes only. The views expressed by the hosts or guests are their own and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of Madison Church. Any reliance you place on such information is strictly at your own risk. For detailed information regarding our terms of use and privacy policy, please visit our website.

    Thank you for being part of the Madison Church community! We appreciate your support.

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    43 mins
  • Faithful to the End: Stephen's Martyrdom and Hope
    Jun 30 2025

    What happens when human systems fail us? Where do we turn when justice becomes injustice? Stephen's powerful story provides an answer that still resonates today.

    Standing before a hostile council with false witnesses arrayed against him, Stephen doesn't cower in fear but shines with supernatural radiance – "his face became as bright as an angel's." This first Christian martyr demonstrates what hope looks like when it's anchored not in human systems but in Christ himself.

    The irony is striking: Stephen faces accusations from the "synagogue of freed slaves" – people who had experienced persecution becoming persecutors themselves. His defense doesn't focus on self-preservation but on Israel's long history of rejecting God's chosen leaders. "You have betrayed and murdered the Righteous One," he boldly proclaims, seeing beyond his immediate circumstances to the eternal reality.

    When the council drags him out for execution, Stephen's final words mirror Christ's own: "Lord, don't charge them with this sin." Meanwhile, a young man named Saul watches approvingly – the future Apostle Paul, whose transformation would further demonstrate God's redemptive power.

    Stephen's name (Stephanos in Greek) means "crown," connecting him to every New Testament reference to crowns – from Jesus' crown of thorns to the crown of righteousness promised to believers. His story reminds us that being filled with the Spirit doesn't guarantee comfort but does provide supernatural perspective when systems turn against us.

    Are you facing opposition? Feeling the weight of broken systems? Stephen's witness challenges us to examine where our ultimate hope lies. Not in human institutions, but in "the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus, in the power of the Holy Spirit, in the life-sustaining creation of God."

    Join us as we explore what it means to be a "Pentecost people" – defined not by human approval but by the same Spirit that allowed Stephen to see heaven opened even as stones rained down upon him.

    Support the show

    If you enjoyed this episode, consider subscribing to Madison Church on your favorite podcast platform. Your feedback means the world to us, so please take a moment to leave a review and share the podcast with your friends and family.

    For inquiries, suggestions, or collaboration opportunities, please reach out to us at help@madisonchurch.com.

    For the latest updates and behind-the-scenes content, follow us on social media:

    • Facebook
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    New episodes are released every Monday, so mark your calendars and join us weekly!

    If you'd like to support the show, you can make a donation here. Your generosity helps us continue to bring you meaningful content.

    This podcast is intended for general informational purposes only. The views expressed by the hosts or guests are their own and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of Madison Church. Any reliance you place on such information is strictly at your own risk. For detailed information regarding our terms of use and privacy policy, please visit our website.

    Thank you for being part of the Madison Church community! We appreciate your support.

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    29 mins
  • Church Divided: Overcoming Discrimination with the Holy Spirit
    Jun 30 2025

    When discrimination emerged in the early church, it sparked a revolutionary leadership model that still challenges us today. This message examines a pivotal moment in Acts 6 where Greek-speaking Jewish Christians complained their widows were being overlooked in food distribution by the Hebrew-speaking majority.

    Rather than dismissing these concerns or implementing top-down solutions, the apostles responded with remarkable wisdom. They recognized that the most effective response would come through empowering members of the marginalized community themselves. The seven leaders they commissioned—all bearing Greek names—demonstrate how the early church prioritized cultural competency and representation.

    This passage invites us to reconsider what it means to be "Pentecost people." While many contrast Pentecost with Babel, viewing one as unifying and the other as dividing, closer examination reveals both affirm diversity. At Babel, humanity's uniformity was scattered into beautiful multiplicity. At Pentecost, this diversity wasn't erased but transcended—people heard God's praises in their native tongues.

    Today's church faces similar challenges with discrimination along racial, gender, and sexuality lines. Acts 6 offers a powerful corrective, showing that authentic Christian community doesn't erase differences but empowers diverse voices. The criteria for leadership—being "full of the Spirit and wisdom"—applied equally to those preaching and those distributing food, challenging hierarchical notions of ministry.

    What would change if we followed this model? How might our churches transform if we recognized that sometimes holy complaints reveal places where the Spirit wants to work? Join us as we explore how embracing both cultural and spiritual diversity reflects God's heart for a church where everyone has a vital role to play.

    Support the show

    If you enjoyed this episode, consider subscribing to Madison Church on your favorite podcast platform. Your feedback means the world to us, so please take a moment to leave a review and share the podcast with your friends and family.

    For inquiries, suggestions, or collaboration opportunities, please reach out to us at help@madisonchurch.com.

    For the latest updates and behind-the-scenes content, follow us on social media:

    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • YouTube

    New episodes are released every Monday, so mark your calendars and join us weekly!

    If you'd like to support the show, you can make a donation here. Your generosity helps us continue to bring you meaningful content.

    This podcast is intended for general informational purposes only. The views expressed by the hosts or guests are their own and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of Madison Church. Any reliance you place on such information is strictly at your own risk. For detailed information regarding our terms of use and privacy policy, please visit our website.

    Thank you for being part of the Madison Church community! We appreciate your support.

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    29 mins
  • Costly Obedience: When Following Jesus Means Going Against the Crowd
    Jun 30 2025

    What happens when following Jesus puts you at odds with everyone around you? When doing the right thing costs you something meaningful—comfort, relationships, or future plans? This transformative episode explores the courage of the early church in Acts 5, where ordinary believers faced extraordinary opposition yet remained steadfast in their mission.

    The apostles, once hiding in fear after Jesus' crucifixion, now boldly performed miracles in the same temple courts where their teacher had been condemned. As their influence grew, so did the resistance from religious authorities. Arrested, miraculously freed, and then arrested again, Peter stands before the high council with a declaration that would redefine authority itself: "We must obey God rather than any human authority."

    Most striking is how these followers responded to suffering. After being flogged—a punishment designed to humiliate as much as hurt—they left "rejoicing that God had counted them worthy to suffer disgrace for the Name." This profound reframing challenges our modern tendency to view hardship as something to avoid or as evidence we're doing something wrong. For the early church, resistance wasn't just expected; it confirmed they were walking in Jesus' footsteps.

    The message speaks directly to our struggles today. Standing firm in your values at work, setting healthy boundaries in relationships, or identifying openly with your faith will sometimes invite opposition. Yet the gospel has always advanced not through comfort but through costly obedience. You don't need to be fearless to follow Jesus—just willing. The same Spirit that empowered the apostles remains available to us as we navigate our own challenging terrain of discipleship.

    Wonder what might happen if we became communities known for choosing obedience over approval? What could God do through people who understand that resistance doesn't mean we're off track, but that we might be right where we need to be?

    Support the show

    If you enjoyed this episode, consider subscribing to Madison Church on your favorite podcast platform. Your feedback means the world to us, so please take a moment to leave a review and share the podcast with your friends and family.

    For inquiries, suggestions, or collaboration opportunities, please reach out to us at help@madisonchurch.com.

    For the latest updates and behind-the-scenes content, follow us on social media:

    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • YouTube

    New episodes are released every Monday, so mark your calendars and join us weekly!

    If you'd like to support the show, you can make a donation here. Your generosity helps us continue to bring you meaningful content.

    This podcast is intended for general informational purposes only. The views expressed by the hosts or guests are their own and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of Madison Church. Any reliance you place on such information is strictly at your own risk. For detailed information regarding our terms of use and privacy policy, please visit our website.

    Thank you for being part of the Madison Church community! We appreciate your support.

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    26 mins
  • Beyond Spiritual Performance: The Path to Authentic Faith
    Jun 12 2025

    What does it truly mean to live a Spirit-guided life beyond Sunday mornings and worship experiences? Through the lens of a profound contrast in the early church, we discover that authenticity matters more than appearance when building genuine spiritual community.

    The story of Acts 4-5 presents us with two portraits: a radically generous community characterized by trust, and a couple whose deception undermines that very foundation. While the early believers reimagined ownership—holding possessions loosely and giving from Spirit-led conviction rather than obligation—Ananias and Sapphira sought the reputation of generosity without its substance.

    This exploration reveals a powerful truth: the early church wasn't just inspired; they were empowered to live differently in everyday choices. Their approach shifted the question from "how much should I give?" to "what do I have that I don't need to keep?" The result was revolutionary—a community where needs were eliminated through preemptive generosity that created systemic change.

    Through Barnabas, we see leadership beginning not with credentials but character—sacrificial actions that surrendered security for calling. In stark contrast, Ananias and Sapphira embody performance, wanting the appearance of radical commitment without actually being committed. Their deception becomes the first internal threat to the church's unity and vitality.

    The message for us is both challenging and liberating: integrity isn't about perfection but truthfulness. It's not having nothing to hide, but choosing not to hide. There's a crucial difference between healthy privacy that protects boundaries and secrecy that protects the ego. The Spirit who empowers is the same Spirit who purifies, forming us into people who live authentically before God and others.

    Are you more concerned with appearing godly than actually surrendering to God? Transformation begins not with flawless performance but with the courage to be real—stepping into the light where God's grace meets you and resurrection life takes hold.

    Support the show

    If you enjoyed this episode, consider subscribing to Madison Church on your favorite podcast platform. Your feedback means the world to us, so please take a moment to leave a review and share the podcast with your friends and family.

    For inquiries, suggestions, or collaboration opportunities, please reach out to us at help@madisonchurch.com.

    For the latest updates and behind-the-scenes content, follow us on social media:

    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • YouTube

    New episodes are released every Monday, so mark your calendars and join us weekly!

    If you'd like to support the show, you can make a donation here. Your generosity helps us continue to bring you meaningful content.

    This podcast is intended for general informational purposes only. The views expressed by the hosts or guests are their own and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of Madison Church. Any reliance you place on such information is strictly at your own risk. For detailed information regarding our terms of use and privacy policy, please visit our website.

    Thank you for being part of the Madison Church community! We appreciate your support.

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    31 mins
  • Ordinary People, Extraordinary Courage: What Happens When the Spirit Moves
    Jun 4 2025

    What does courage look like when following Jesus means facing resistance? Pastor Stephen Feith takes us through Acts 3-4, where we discover that spiritual boldness isn't reserved for the naturally confident or specially trained—it's available to every believer who depends on the Holy Spirit.

    The journey begins with Peter and John noticing a disabled man whom everyone else had learned to ignore. This simple act of seeing someone reveals how spiritual courage often starts: not with grand proclamations, but with compassionate presence in ordinary moments. When healing occurs and crowds gather, Peter redirects attention away from himself and toward Jesus—demonstrating that true boldness points beyond ourselves to Christ.

    Opposition arrives quickly as religious authorities arrest Peter and John for speaking about resurrection. Standing before the same council that condemned Jesus, these "uneducated, ordinary men" speak with astonishing clarity. The authorities recognize they "had been with Jesus"—revealing the true source of their courage wasn't natural confidence but spiritual connection. Most remarkably, after being threatened and released, the early believers don't pray for safety or easier circumstances—they pray for greater boldness to continue speaking truth despite the risks.

    This pattern challenges our typical responses to pressure. How often do we pray to escape difficult situations rather than asking for faithfulness within them? Whether it's initiating a hard conversation, standing for what's right when it's unpopular, admitting our struggles, or extending forgiveness, the Spirit offers not timidity but "power, love, and self-discipline."

    As C.S. Lewis wrote, "Courage is not simply one of the virtues, but the form of every virtue at the testing point." Your courage might actually be the answer to someone else's prayers. Subscribe now to explore how the Spirit activates ordinary people for extraordinary impact in a world that needs the hope only Jesus provides.

    Support the show

    If you enjoyed this episode, consider subscribing to Madison Church on your favorite podcast platform. Your feedback means the world to us, so please take a moment to leave a review and share the podcast with your friends and family.

    For inquiries, suggestions, or collaboration opportunities, please reach out to us at help@madisonchurch.com.

    For the latest updates and behind-the-scenes content, follow us on social media:

    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • YouTube

    New episodes are released every Monday, so mark your calendars and join us weekly!

    If you'd like to support the show, you can make a donation here. Your generosity helps us continue to bring you meaningful content.

    This podcast is intended for general informational purposes only. The views expressed by the hosts or guests are their own and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of Madison Church. Any reliance you place on such information is strictly at your own risk. For detailed information regarding our terms of use and privacy policy, please visit our website.

    Thank you for being part of the Madison Church community! We appreciate your support.

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    25 mins
  • Between Ascension and Pentecost: When Faith Requires Action
    May 13 2025

    The space between Jesus' ascension and Pentecost represents one of the most unique transitional periods in church history. What do you do when your leader has physically departed, but the promised Holy Spirit hasn't yet arrived? This message explores this fascinating moment captured in Acts 1:12-26, revealing how the early disciples navigated uncertainty while preparing for God's next move.

    After Jesus departed, about 120 believers—including the eleven disciples, the faithful women who supported Jesus' ministry, Mary his mother, and even his formerly skeptical brothers—gathered in constant prayer. From this community emerged Peter, the disciple who had previously denied Christ but was now stepping into leadership. His approach to replacing Judas provides a masterclass in decision-making during waiting seasons.

    Peter blended scriptural reasoning (drawing from Psalms), practical wisdom (establishing qualifications for apostleship), communal discernment, and ultimately a willingness to move forward despite incomplete clarity. When faced with two qualified candidates—Joseph called Barsabbas and Matthias—they prayed for guidance and cast lots, trusting God to work through their process.

    This ancient story offers profound wisdom for modern believers navigating their own waiting periods. God rarely offers dramatic supernatural confirmations for every decision. Instead, He invites us to consult Scripture, use sound judgment, seek His guidance through prayer, and then take action. The message is clear and liberating: "Do not sit around paralyzed waiting for a miracle that God never promised would happen."

    Whether you're facing career uncertainty, relationship challenges, or spiritual questions, this teaching will help you discover how to move forward faithfully even when God's specific direction seems unclear. Learn to embrace the grace that allows God to work through your best efforts, even when those efforts are imperfect.

    Support the show

    If you enjoyed this episode, consider subscribing to Madison Church on your favorite podcast platform. Your feedback means the world to us, so please take a moment to leave a review and share the podcast with your friends and family.

    For inquiries, suggestions, or collaboration opportunities, please reach out to us at help@madisonchurch.com.

    For the latest updates and behind-the-scenes content, follow us on social media:

    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • YouTube

    New episodes are released every Monday, so mark your calendars and join us weekly!

    If you'd like to support the show, you can make a donation here. Your generosity helps us continue to bring you meaningful content.

    This podcast is intended for general informational purposes only. The views expressed by the hosts or guests are their own and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of Madison Church. Any reliance you place on such information is strictly at your own risk. For detailed information regarding our terms of use and privacy policy, please visit our website.

    Thank you for being part of the Madison Church community! We appreciate your support.

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    22 mins
  • Embracing the In-Between: Finding God in Life's Waiting Seasons
    May 6 2025

    Have you ever found yourself caught in life's waiting room? That space between where you were and where you're headed, but with no clear roadmap for how to get there?

    In this powerful message on waiting, Pastor Stephen Feith gets refreshingly honest about his own struggles with patience and the tendency to either rush ahead or delay too long. Drawing from Acts 1, we witness the disciples' confusion after Jesus ascends to heaven—standing, staring at the sky, uncertain what to do next. It's a scene that perfectly captures our own spiritual limbo when we're waiting for God's direction.

    The angels' gentle redirection to the disciples echoes into our lives today: "Why do you stand here staring into heaven?" Sometimes our spiritual waiting isn't about God making us wait, but about us avoiding what we already know we should do. We disguise fear as wisdom, hesitation as discernment, and delay as dependence on God.

    Through biblical examples of Abraham, Moses, and Paul, Pastor Stephen demonstrates that faith has never meant having the full picture before stepping out. Instead, God reveals more of the path as we obey what He's already shown us. "Faith isn't about having all the answers," Stephen explains. "Faith is about trusting that God is the answer and stepping forward anyway."

    This message cuts through spiritual clichés to ask the tough question: What clear instruction from God have you been avoiding? Whether it's forgiveness, generosity, service, or speaking truth, your next step of obedience might be simpler than you think. In these in-between seasons, God isn't just preparing your destination—He's shaping you.

    Ready to stop staring at the sky and start walking by faith? Listen now and find the courage to take your next step.

    Support the show

    If you enjoyed this episode, consider subscribing to Madison Church on your favorite podcast platform. Your feedback means the world to us, so please take a moment to leave a review and share the podcast with your friends and family.

    For inquiries, suggestions, or collaboration opportunities, please reach out to us at help@madisonchurch.com.

    For the latest updates and behind-the-scenes content, follow us on social media:

    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • YouTube

    New episodes are released every Monday, so mark your calendars and join us weekly!

    If you'd like to support the show, you can make a donation here. Your generosity helps us continue to bring you meaningful content.

    This podcast is intended for general informational purposes only. The views expressed by the hosts or guests are their own and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of Madison Church. Any reliance you place on such information is strictly at your own risk. For detailed information regarding our terms of use and privacy policy, please visit our website.

    Thank you for being part of the Madison Church community! We appreciate your support.

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    25 mins