Explore every episode of the podcast The Daily Blade: Joby Martin & Kyle Thompson
Dive into the complete episode list for The Daily Blade: Joby Martin & Kyle Thompson. Each episode is cataloged with detailed descriptions, making it easy to find and explore specific topics. Keep track of all episodes from your favorite podcast and never miss a moment of insightful content.
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Title
Pub. Date
Duration
#220 - Joby Martin // The Weight Of A Father’s Words
04 Nov 2025
00:06:37
We unpack why a father’s words carry unique weight and how careless speech can wound while wise speech heals. Through Proverbs and the story of Isaac, Jacob, and Esau, we show how to bless children intentionally and repair harm with honest repentance.
• the spiritual weight of a dad’s words • careless speech as a blade versus healing words • death and life in the power of the tongue • shifting from disappointment language to gospel alignment • the permanence of spoken blessing in Genesis 27 • blessing each child without scarcity • practical phrases to build identity and future • using I’m sorry to begin real repair
Before you go, if you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five star rating and review
#219 - Joby Martin // Godly Fatherhood: Kindness, Discipline, And Lasting Influence
03 Nov 2025
00:05:46
We explore why Scripture ties a father’s joy to children walking in truth and how a dad’s tone and habits shape a child’s view of God. We anchor discipline in kindness, move from compliance to relationship, and map practical steps to earn influence that lasts.
• the sword of the Spirit as our frame • 3 John 4 and joy in children’s truth • Ephesians 6 on discipline without provoking • defining exasperation and no-win scenarios • Romans 2:4 and kindness leading to repentance • Jesus teaching us to pray to our Father • fathering for relationship over compliance • repentance as a father’s leadership tool • building influence that outlasts control
Before you go, if you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five star rating and review
#210 - Joby Martin // Why A Godly Husband Puts Her First
21 Oct 2025
00:05:56
We explore what it means to be a godly husband through the lens of mutual submission, rooting marriage in Christlike humility rather than scorekeeping. Philippians 2 reframes love as service and offers practical steps to prioritize your wife’s needs with courage and clarity.
• mutual submission as the core of marriage • friendship as the foundation over romance or money • commitment as the fruit of the gospel, not the root • Philippians 2 humility applied to husbands • rejecting selfish ambition and scorekeeping • serving your wife’s needs with practical steps • modeling love on the cross of Christ • simple actions: apologize, ask, serve, repeat
Before you go, if you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five star rating and review
#120 - Joby Martin // When God Seems Late: Understanding Divine Timing Through Lazarus
17 Jun 2025
00:05:43
God's timing often differs significantly from our own expectations, as demonstrated in the story of Jesus deliberately waiting before helping Lazarus. We explore why Jesus waited two days after hearing about Lazarus's illness and what this teaches us about trusting God even when His timing doesn't align with our desires.
• God's ways and plans are always higher and better than ours • When Jesus heard Lazarus was ill, He deliberately waited two days • Christians don't actually die - we transition from earthly life to eternal life • Jesus allowed Lazarus to die specifically so the disciples would believe • Nothing is ever out of God's control or over His head • The cross is where we look for proof of God's love, not our circumstances • In eternity, we'll understand God's perfect timing fully
If you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five-star rating and review.
#119 - Joby Martin // Why Do Bad Things Happen? 5 Theological Realities
16 Jun 2025
00:06:12
Jesus uses the story of Lazarus in John 11 to teach us why bad things happen even to people God loves. We explore five theological realities that explain pain and suffering in the world.
• The fall of humanity brought forth pain, strife, and suffering as collateral damage • Demonic attacks cause suffering as Satan seeks to steal, kill, and destroy • Our own sinful choices and poor decisions lead to painful consequences • Other people's sinful choices can cause suffering in our lives • Sometimes suffering comes directly from God's hand for his purposes • All suffering ultimately falls under God's sovereign control working for the good of those who love him • Jesus promises that Lazarus's illness will lead to God's glory
If you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five-star rating and review. Stay sharp.
#118 - Kyle Thompson // Titanic Courage: Evangelizing Until the Moment of Death
13 Jun 2025
00:06:25
John Harper, a Scottish Baptist evangelist, became one of Christianity's greatest unsung heroes during the sinking of the Titanic in 1912. His extraordinary sacrifice and unwavering commitment to share the gospel even as the ship sank demonstrates a faith that challenges us to examine our own priorities.
• Harper was a 39-year-old widower traveling with his 6-year-old daughter Annie and his sister to preach at Moody Church in Chicago • After securing his daughter and sister on a lifeboat, Harper chose to remain on the sinking ship to evangelize • Harper gave his life vest to an unsaved passenger saying, "You need this more than I do" • While swimming in freezing waters, Harper moved from person to person asking, "Are you saved?" • Harper's last words were quoting Acts 16:31 to a drowning man: "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and you will be saved" • The story parallels Stephen's martyrdom in Acts 6-7, as both men died with faith-filled words on their lips • These examples challenge us to prepare our hearts to prioritize the gospel even in life's most desperate moments
Share this podcast to help equip other men for the fight and leave us a five-star rating and review.
#117 - Kyle Thompson // Titanic Courage: The Only Officer to Return
12 Jun 2025
00:05:43
Harold Lowe, fifth officer of the Titanic, demonstrates extraordinary courage by being the only officer to return to the site of the sinking to rescue survivors after the ship went down. His actions parallel Jesus' parable of the Good Samaritan, challenging us to consider whether we merely do what's minimally required or go above and beyond to help others in need.
• Harold Lowe managed lifeboat #14 during the Titanic disaster, saving 63 people initially • Unlike other officers, Lowe returned to the sinking site after redistributing survivors among other boats • His courageous decision resulted in saving four additional men from the freezing waters • Jesus' parable of the Good Samaritan similarly shows someone going out of their way to help • Both the priest and Levite in the parable passed by the injured man, unwilling to get involved • The Samaritan, from a despised group, stopped and provided extensive care at personal cost • The challenging question: "Will we row back into the chaos to rescue who we can?" • True courage often manifests in quiet, determined action rather than grand gestures
If you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five-star rating and review.
#113 - Joby Martin // Five Attributes of a Great Man
06 Jun 2025
00:05:28
We explore five essential attributes of a great man found in Matthew 20, challenging cultural definitions of masculinity with Jesus' counter-cultural teaching on true greatness.
• A great man puts Jesus first, including prioritizing Sabbath rest • A great man knows how to endure suffering that comes from pushing back darkness • A great man lives under authority before expecting to receive authority • A great man serves others rather than seeking positions of prominence • A great man is ransomed by Christ and becomes part of the rescue team for others
If you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five-star rating and review. Stay sharp.
#112 - Joby Martin // Servant Leadership Redefined
05 Jun 2025
00:05:18
Jesus radically redefines greatness through the fourth characteristic we explore from Matthew 20: a great man serves. In stark contrast to worldly leadership that lords authority over others, Jesus calls his followers to a completely different model where true greatness is found in becoming a servant.
• Examining how Jesus confronts the mother of James and John when she asks for positions of honor for her sons • Highlighting Christ's stark declaration about worldly leadership: "It shall not be so among you" • Understanding the difference between using positional authority versus serving from a place of humility • Exploring how we've diluted Jesus's radical call by using "servant leader" terminology while missing true servanthood • Learning from Jesus's personal example in John 13 where he demonstrates true greatness by washing disciples' feet • Recognizing the practical warning: "If serving is beneath you, then leadership is beyond you"
If you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five-star rating and review. Stay sharp.
Our rebellious culture celebrates individualism, but true greatness comes through living under authority, just as Jesus submitted to his Father's will.
• Great men know how to live under authority • Jesus demonstrates submission to the Father in Matthew 20:20-28 • God will not bless rebellion against established authorities • Personal testimony of honoring pastoral authority when planting Church 11:22 • Biblical examples from Matthew 16 and Philippians 2 showing submission precedes authority • Challenge to repent of rebellious attitudes toward authority figures • Cultural celebration of rebellion contrasts with Kingdom values
If you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five-star rating and review.
#209 - Joby Martin // Loving Your Wife Starts With Loving Jesus
20 Oct 2025
00:05:24
We call men to start where Scripture starts: submit to one another out of reverence for Christ, then love your wife as Christ loved the church. Marriage changes when the husband abides in Jesus and the Spirit grows real fruit, not quick fixes.
• sword of the Spirit as our daily weapon • week-long focus on being a godly husband • Ephesians 5 call to sacrificial, sanctifying love • biggest decisions: who is Lord, who is wife • abiding in Christ as the non-negotiable source • fruit of the Spirit over tips and tricks • moving toward Jesus before moving toward your wife • practical repentance, presence, nourishment and cherishing
Before you go, if you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five star rating and review
True greatness in God's kingdom comes through suffering, not worldly power or position. The desire for greatness isn't inherently wrong, but it must be pursued God's way, following Christ's example on the cross.
• Matthew 20 reveals that great men know how to suffer • Direct correlation between suffering endured and responsibility God entrusts • Jesus asked disciples if they could drink His cup of suffering • The "cup" refers to bearing God's wrath that Jesus would endure on the cross • Following Jesus means daily taking up our cross and embracing suffering • Chuck Swindoll: "When God wants to do an impossible task, He chooses an impossible man and crushes him" • James and John did ultimately suffer and were martyred for their faith • If you haven't experienced opposition from the world, you might be going with the flow • A great man endures great pain for Christ and those in his care
#109 - Joby Martin // The Upside-Down Kingdom: Where Servants Become Great
02 Jun 2025
00:05:45
Jesus redefines greatness for his disciples by flipping worldly values upside down and establishing a new kingdom paradigm based on serving others rather than seeking power.
• The first sign of kingdom greatness is finding proximity to Jesus rather than pursuing positional power • Jesus never scolded his disciples for wanting greatness, but completely redefined what it means to be great • True greatness begins with kneeling before Jesus and submitting ourselves to him • A great man finds his identity first and foremost in Jesus, not in accomplishments or titles • When Jesus isn't first in our lives, everything else falls out of order • Making Jesus first means prioritizing him in our finances, time, and weekly worship • The Sabbath reminds us to declare that life isn't about us but about Jesus
Share this podcast with other men and leave us a five-star rating and review to help equip others for the fight.
#108 - Kyle Thompson // Jesus Crushed Golgotha and the Serpent
30 May 2025
00:05:43
The journey to Golgotha reveals God's masterful plan of redemption across millennia, connecting Abraham's near-sacrifice, David's victory over Goliath, and Jesus's crucifixion and resurrection at the place of the skull.
• Mount Moriah: Abraham's near-sacrifice of Isaac, stopped by God who provided a substitutionary ram with its head caught in thorns • Battle of Elah: David defeated Goliath and buried his head at "the place of the skull" - Golgotha • Crucifixion: Jesus was executed at Golgotha, wearing a crown of thorns, as the ultimate substitutionary sacrifice • Three key connections: substitutionary atonement, defeat of God's enemies, and conquering the grave • Genesis 3:15 fulfilled: Jesus crushed the serpent's head at Golgotha • Personal application: Jesus's death "counted for you" - believe and be saved
If you have not previously done so, I am compelling you right now to repent of your life of sin and believe in Jesus. And if you have already done that, then it's time you start telling some people about it.
We explore how biblical narratives across thousands of years connect at a single sacred location, Golgotha, revealing God's redemptive plan unfolding throughout history.
• Connection between Abraham's sacrifice on Mount Moriah and David's battle with Goliath • David's confidence in God rather than weapons when facing the Philistine giant • Why David took five stones (Goliath had four brothers) • The buried head of Goliath on Mount Moriah near Jerusalem • How this location became known as Golgotha or "place of the skull" • The significance of this same mountain being where God provided a substitutionary sacrifice for Abraham • Various names for this sacred place: Mount Moriah, Golgoleth (Hebrew), Golgolta (Aramaic), Calvary (Latin), and Golgotha (Greek)
If you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five-star rating and review.
David's journey from shepherd boy to giant-slayer unfolds against the backdrop of God's rejection of King Saul and the anointing of a new king. This dramatic story reveals how a teenager's fierce faith propelled him to confront the massive Philistine warrior who had terrorized Israel's army for 40 days.
• God rejects Saul as king and sends Samuel to anoint one of Jesse's sons • Samuel anoints David, the youngest son who was tending sheep • David serves in Saul's court, playing the lyre to calm the king's tormented spirit • The Philistine army assembles with Goliath, their 9'9" champion, challenging Israel • Goliath mocks Israel and their God for 40 days while the army cowers in fear • David visits his brothers on the battlefield and hears Goliath's blasphemous taunts • Unlike others, David sees Goliath as defying "the armies of the living God" • When questioned by Saul, David recalls killing lions and bears to protect his sheep • David declares the same God who delivered him from predators will deliver him from Goliath
If you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five-star rating and review. Stay sharp.
The story of Abraham and Isaac on Mount Moriah reveals profound foreshadowing of Christ's sacrifice when Abraham discovers a ram caught by its horns in a thicket of thorns—essentially wearing a "crown of thorns" as the substitutionary sacrifice God provided.
• Abraham was commanded to sacrifice his promised son Isaac on Mount Moriah • Isaac was likely a teenager or young adult who willingly submitted to being sacrificed • God stopped Abraham at the critical moment, providing a ram caught in thorns instead • The ram caught by its horns in thorny bushes previews Christ's crown of thorns • This substitutionary sacrifice points to Jesus as the ultimate sacrifice God would provide • Abraham's declaration that "God will provide the lamb" was prophetically fulfilled
Share this podcast to help equip other men for the fight and leave us a five-star rating and review.
We begin our week-long journey to Golgotha by examining its Old Testament foundations in the story of Abraham and Isaac on Mount Moriah. The crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus form the bedrock of Christianity, but understanding their significance requires exploring biblical history that points to this ultimate sacrifice.
• Abram's journey begins in Genesis 12 when God promises to make him a great nation • Abraham and Sarah wait decades for their promised son Isaac, born when Abraham was 100 • Genesis 22 presents Abraham with an unthinkable test: sacrifice his beloved son Isaac • Contrary to popular depictions, Isaac was likely a teenager or young adult during this event • Abraham carries the mental burden of his son's sacrifice for three days • Isaac unknowingly carries the wood for his own sacrifice, asking "where is the lamb?" • This story foreshadows Jesus carrying his cross to Golgotha centuries later
Join us tomorrow as we continue this powerful story and discover what happens when Abraham and Isaac reach the top of Mount Moriah.
If you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five-star rating and review.
#103 - Joby Martin // Do You See the Mat or the Miracle? Choosing Faith Over Criticism
23 May 2025
00:05:58
John 5 challenges us to examine whether we rejoice in God's miracles or criticize them like the Pharisees did when Jesus healed on the Sabbath. The passage reveals how religious leaders missed the miracle by focusing on rule-breaking rather than celebrating a life transformed after 38 years of disability.
• Jesus heals a man who had been disabled for 38 years at the pool of Bethesda • The religious leaders criticize the healed man for carrying his mat on the Sabbath • The mat wasn't a burden but a testimony of transformation • Even when we are faithless, God remains faithful • We must choose to see the miracle, not just criticize the method • Christians often become critical like Pharisees when God works in unexpected ways • Our challenge is to rejoice in God's work even when it doesn't align with our preferences
If you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five-star rating and review. Stay sharp.
#102 - Joby Martin // Making a Difference: Breaking Free from Excuses at the Pool of Bethesda
22 May 2025
00:05:18
Jesus encounters a man at the Pool of Bethesda who had been paralyzed for 38 years, asking him a simple yet profound question: "Do you want to be healed?" The man responds with excuses rather than a direct answer, revealing our human tendency to blame circumstances rather than take responsibility.
• Making excuses versus making things happen in our Christian life • The paralyzed man's excuse-making response to Jesus' offer of healing • Looking to the wrong source for solutions to our problems • Jesus showing extraordinary grace despite the man's complaining • Application to marriage and loving our wives as Christ loved the church • The call to push back darkness and fight for justice in our world • Getting off our mats to fulfill the Great Commission without excuses
Share this podcast with others and leave us a five-star rating and review to help equip other men for the fight.
#101 - Joby Martin // Daring to Be Defined by Christ, Not Your Scars
21 May 2025
00:05:36
Jesus asks a seemingly obvious question at the Pool of Bethesda: "Do you want to be healed?" This profound inquiry reveals that many people don't actually want healing because they've built their identity around their wounds.
• Many resist healing because wounds have become their identity • Some cling to injuries as excuses for destructive behaviors • Others avoid healing because it requires difficult, sustained work • Jesus is the Great Physician who offers true healing • True identity comes from Christ, not from our wounds or scars • Healing may involve both divine intervention and human effort
Bring whatever needs healing in your life to Jesus and dare to walk in the wholeness He offers. If you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast and leave us a five-star rating and review.
#208 - Kyle Thompson // How Would I Fight Against Me?
17 Oct 2025
00:05:47
We walk through a simple but piercing self-assessment—“If I were the devil, how would I fight me?”—and match that strategy with Scripture and the Armor of God. We use coaching analogies to plan resistance, strengthen brotherhood, and move from drift to discipline.
• Word of God as the sword of the Spirit • Core question for self-scouting temptation • Coaching analogies to anticipate attacks • Paul and Peter on Satan’s schemes and vigilance • Practical resistance through Ephesians 6 armor • Faith, prayer, and brotherhood as daily readiness • Applying truth to habits, triggers, and environments
Go out and get your copy of Stand Firm and Act Like Men, becoming the man you were created to be instead of who the world says you are by Joby Martin Before you go, if you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five star rating and review
#100 - Joby Martin // Jesus Meets the "Invalid" and Everything Changes
20 May 2025
00:05:45
Jesus visits the pool of Bethesda by Jerusalem's Sheep Gate, where society's "invalids" gathered, and demonstrates how our true identity comes not from worldly labels but from Christ's validation.
• Sheep Gate was the easternmost gate on Jerusalem's northern wall where sacrificial animals entered • The location was symbolic—people treated like animals gathered at pools near the sheep washing areas • The English word "invalid" literally means "not valid"—revealing how society viewed these individuals • Satan tries to define us by our worst moments, failures, and weaknesses • Condemnation means "unfit for use"—the language the enemy uses against us • Jesus declares we are defined not by our scars but by His scars • In Christ, we are more than conquerors, sons of the Most High King, holy and blameless • Our worth is established because we were bought at a price • Just as the healed man wouldn't return to his mat, we shouldn't return to old identities
If you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five-star rating and review. Stay sharp.
#99 - Joby Martin // Why Jesus Performed Signs, Not Spectacles
19 May 2025
00:05:43
Jesus reveals the true nature of miracles by performing signs that point to God's greater redemptive story, not just displays of raw power. His healing of a man at the Pool of Bethesda demonstrates how miracles often require a step of faith or obedience from those receiving them.
• Miracles in John's gospel are always called "signs" because they point to something greater than themselves • The healing at the Pool of Bethesda involves a man who had been an invalid for 38 years • Jesus performs this healing on the Sabbath, creating controversy with religious leaders • Miracles often happen when people take a step of faith (like the disciples distributing bread, the blind man washing his face) • We can believe in miracles today because God has already performed the greatest miracle—the resurrection • "A miracle is simply when the unexplainable is run over by the undeniable"
What miracle do you need today? Dare to ask Jesus for it, because if the tomb is empty, anything is possible. Share this podcast and leave us a five-star rating and review to help equip other men for the fight.
#98 - Kyle Thompson // God’s Attributes According to Himself: Just
16 May 2025
00:06:22
God reveals seven key attributes of Himself in Exodus 34:6-7, providing a comprehensive self-description that balances divine mercy with perfect justice. We explore the final attribute—God's justice—and how it works together with His compassion, grace, patience, loving-kindness, faithfulness, and forgiveness to form His complete character.
• God's justice requires that sin must be punished • Biblical examples of God's justice include the Fall, the Flood, Sodom and Gomorrah, and the Egyptian plagues • God doesn't show mercy by overlooking sin or compromising His justice • Christ's death on the cross satisfies God's justice while allowing His mercy to flow • The concept of propitiation means Christ's payment fully satisfies the sin debt we owe • No amount of good works can pay our sin debt; only Christ's sacrifice is sufficient • Understanding all of God's attributes gives us a complete picture of His character
If you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five-star rating and review. Stay sharp.
#97 - Kyle Thompson // God’s Attributes According to Himself: Faithful & Forgiving
15 May 2025
00:06:38
We explore God's attributes in Exodus 34:6-7, focusing on His faithfulness and forgiveness as revealed directly by God to Moses. These divine qualities provide a foundation for understanding God's character and how we should respond to others.
• God is faithful, meaning He overflows with truth and always fulfills His promises • God's faithfulness demonstrated through promises to Abraham, Israel's exodus, and David's eternal throne • God's forgiveness covers all types of sin: iniquity (wandering), transgression (rebellion), and sin (missing the mark) • Forgiveness isn't a feeling but a decision to cancel someone's debt • Our willingness to forgive others serves as evidence that we've truly experienced God's forgiveness • Unforgiveness often stems from forgetting the immense debt Christ has already forgiven us • Withholding forgiveness prevents us from experiencing the abundant life God intends
If you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five-star rating and review. Stay sharp.
#96 - Kyle Thompson // God’s Attributes According to Himself: Slow to Anger & Lovingkindness
14 May 2025
00:05:17
God reveals seven attributes of His character in Exodus 34:6-7, providing a powerful description of divine nature through His own words to Moses. We explore four of these attributes: God's compassion, graciousness, patience (slowness to anger), and His unfailing loving kindness (chesed).
• God describes Himself as "slow to anger" – demonstrating incredible patience with humanity • The Hebrew word "chesed" means loyal love or "stubborn love" that persists despite obstacles • God's patience gives us multiple chances and serves as a model for our relationships • Romans 2:4 reveals that God's patience and kindness are designed to lead us to repentance • The Psalms repeatedly celebrate God's loving kindness that "never ceases" and is "everlasting" • God's loving kindness is particularly remarkable when we consider how difficult some people are to love • This divine patience should influence how we parent, lead, and build relationships
If you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five-star rating and review. Stay sharp.
#95 - Kyle Thompson // God’s Attributes According to Himself: Compassionate & Gracious
13 May 2025
00:05:52
God describes seven distinct attributes of himself in Exodus 34:6-7, revealing his true nature and character to Moses after the Israelites' rebellion with the golden calf.
• Compassion is the first attribute God reveals, sharing its root with the Hebrew word for "womb," showing the depth of God's protective care • The word gracious means "to bend or stoop down," illustrating how God actively reaches down to humanity • These attributes appear 12 times throughout the Old Testament, highlighting their significance • God didn't have to renew his covenant with the rebellious Israelites, but chose to show compassion • The parable of the Prodigal Son perfectly illustrates God's compassion and grace • The father in the parable running to his son demonstrates God's eagerness to restore relationship • Understanding God's self-described attributes helps us know his true character
Share this podcast to help equip other men for spiritual growth and leave us a five-star rating and review.
#94 - Kyle Thompson // God’s Attributes According to Himself
12 May 2025
00:06:00
God provides a list of His attributes in Exodus 34:6-7, offering a unique opportunity to understand how He describes Himself. Before revealing His attributes, God established four protective barriers for Moses, demonstrating that while He desires to reveal Himself, our finite nature requires protection from His full glory.
• Understanding God's attributes can be challenging without His direct revelation • The context begins with the Israelites' idolatry with the golden calf in Exodus 32 • Moses interceded for the people after God threatened to destroy them • Moses requested to see God's glory after pitching the tabernacle outside camp • God created four "firewalls" to protect Moses during the divine encounter: • Hiding Moses behind a rock • Covering Moses with His hand • Allowing only a glimpse of His "back" • Descending in a cloud to filter His radiance • God's partial revelation is for our protection, not to frustrate us • Tomorrow's episode will explore God's self-described attributes in Exodus 34:6-7
If you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five-star rating and review.
#93 - Kyle Thompson // Yeah, That’s Not What That Means - Matthew 5:38-39
09 May 2025
00:06:03
We examine one of Christianity's most misunderstood teachings: Jesus' command to "turn the other cheek," revealing why this verse doesn't prohibit self-defense as commonly believed.
• Part of our "Yeah, That's Not What That Means" series covering misapplied scriptures • Matthew 5:38-39 refers to verbal slights, not physical assaults requiring self-defense • The "right cheek" reference indicates a backhanded slap, symbolizing insult rather than attack • Jesus referenced Old Testament laws that limited punishment to be proportional to crimes • Multiple Bible passages support self-defense, including Jesus telling disciples to buy swords • Nehemiah 4 shows God's people armed while rebuilding Jerusalem's walls • Christians should absorb minor offenses in love, but aren't required to endure physical attacks
Don't keep the Daily Blade a secret. Share it around with the men in your life. If you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five-star rating and review.
#92 - Kyle Thompson // Yeah, That’s Not What That Means - Romans 8:28 & Jeremiah 29:11
08 May 2025
00:05:30
The second episode in our "Yeah, That's Not What That Means" series tackles two commonly misinterpreted Bible verses: Romans 8:28 and Jeremiah 29:11, revealing how prosperity preachers have twisted these passages to falsely promise believers guaranteed success and material prosperity.
• Clarifying that Jeremiah 29:11 was specifically addressed to Jewish exiles in Babylon, promising their restoration after 70 years • Examining the full context of Jeremiah 29:10-14 to understand God's specific historical promise • Breaking down Romans 8:28 alongside verses 29-30 which define what "good" God works toward • Explaining that God's ultimate purpose is conforming believers to Christ's image, not guaranteeing worldly success • Highlighting how the biblical narrative consistently shows Christians will experience suffering rather than constant prosperity • Encouraging proper scriptural interpretation that considers historical context and complete passages
Stay tuned for tomorrow's episode covering one of the most annoyingly misapplied passages in the entire Bible – particularly relevant if you're a pacifist.
#91 - Kyle Thompson // Yeah, That’s Not What That Means - Philippians 4:13
07 May 2025
00:05:26
We're exploring commonly misunderstood scriptures in our series "Yeah, That's Not What That Means," tackling Philippians 4:13 and revealing its true context as a teaching about contentment rather than personal achievement.
• Philippians 4:13 ("I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me") is frequently misused as motivation for personal success • The verse appears on merchandise and in sports facilities across the Bible Belt • When read in context (Philippians 4:10-13), Paul is actually discussing contentment in all circumstances • Paul's life included extreme highs (education, privilege) and lows (imprisonment, beatings, shipwrecks) • The strength mentioned comes from Christ living in us (Galatians 2:20), not from personal willpower • True application is about stepping aside so Christ's strength can work through us • Tomorrow's episode will address the prosperity gospel
If you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five-star rating and review.
We draw a hard line between a dulled version of church that sidelines men and a sharper, biblical call that forms men into sacrificial servant leaders. Scripture sets five clear pillars for men—identity, dominion, protection, provision, and headship—and we lay them out with urgency and clarity.
• the Word as a weapon that shapes men • why many church environments lose men • five pillars of biblical manhood from scripture • strength redeemed as service and sacrifice • how churches can disciple men toward weight-bearing roles
Share this podcast around and leave us a five star rating and review
#90 - Kyle Thompson // Yeah, That’s Not What That Means - Luke 17:1-2
06 May 2025
00:05:19
We dive into another commonly misunderstood scripture, Luke 17:1-2, where Jesus uses the terrifying image of drowning with a millstone to warn against causing spiritual stumbling.
• Exploring the fifth installment in our series "Yeah, That's Not What That Means" • Clarifying that "little ones" refers to people young in their faith, not just children • Explaining how the Greek word "skandala" means temptations or stumbling blocks • Understanding Jesus's warning about causing new believers to sin • Challenging mature believers to clear paths rather than create obstacles • Encouraging new believers to protect themselves from negative influences
If you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five-star rating and review.
#89 - Kyle Thompson // Yeah, That’s Not What That Means - Matthew 7:1-3
05 May 2025
00:05:31
The most misapplied verse in Scripture might be Jesus' words on judging others, as Christians and non-Christians alike quote "Do not judge" without understanding its true context. When properly understood, Jesus wasn't prohibiting all judgment but was warning specifically against hypocritical judgment that ignores our own failings while criticizing others.
• Introduction to "The Daily Blade" podcast with hosts Joby Martin and Kyle Thompson • Kyle shares his background with "country music theology" growing up in Oklahoma • Launch of a new series called "Yeah, that's not what that means" addressing misapplied Scriptures • Matthew 7:1-3 examined in its proper context within Jesus' broader teaching • Explanation of how Jesus was warning against hypocritical judgment, not all judgment • Evidence from John 7:24, Hebrews 5:14, and 1 Corinthians 5:12-13 showing Christians should make righteous judgments • Christians are specifically called to judge those inside the church, not outsiders • Tomorrow's episode will address an often-misunderstood verse about a millstone
The Gospel of John records Jesus' first miracle at a wedding in Cana not simply as a display of power, but as a sign pointing to his redemptive purpose of transforming lives completely.
• Jesus turned ordinary water for Jewish purification into extraordinary wine • This miracle is called a "sign" because it points to something greater than itself • The dirty water represents our lives before Christ • Jesus doesn't just clean the outside (like religion attempts) but transforms us completely • We move from being spiritually dead, blind, and lost to becoming children of God who can see and walk • Christ takes what is broken and presents us as something beautiful to the Father • True transformation comes only through Jesus, not through religious effort
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#87 - Joby Martin // Do whatever He tells you to do
01 May 2025
00:05:16
We explore how miracles often occur on the other side of obedience, using Jesus's first miracle of turning water into wine as a powerful example of faith in action.
• Mary's instruction to the servants: "Do whatever Jesus tells you to do" • The critical question: What is Jesus telling you to do right now? • Jesus asked servants to do things that made no logical sense • Miracles often happen when we step out in faith and obedience • Example from Acts 3: Peter reached out his hand before the lame man was healed • Faith means acting as if you truly believe God is who He says He is • Practical challenge to take action on what God has called you to do
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Mary's advice to the servants at the wedding in Cana—"do whatever he tells you"—may be the best guidance in the entire Bible for followers of Jesus. This simple instruction defines discipleship and guarantees we'll always do the right thing, though not necessarily the easiest.
• The GOSPEL framework helps discern what Jesus is telling us to do • G - Gospel alignment: God's direction always advances the gospel • O - Others: Trusted people often confirm God's voice in our lives • S - Scripture: The Bible is our primary source of God's commands • P - Prayer: Bringing decisions before God through consistent prayer • E - Experience: Past experiences often confirm God's calling • L - Love: Whatever God calls us to do will be driven by love • God never contradicts in personal direction what He has established in Scripture • Some commands are universal for all believers: make disciples, forgive, tithe, love • Sometimes we must "pray, guess, and go," trusting God with outcomes
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We explore the significance of Jesus's first miracle at Cana and his curious response to Mary: "Woman, what does this have to do with me? My hour has not yet come." This statement reveals Jesus's acute awareness of his divine timeline and mission on earth.
• Jesus's focused mission was to fulfill prophecy and become the sacrificial lamb for our sins • The timing of Jesus's crucifixion was not random but precisely planned before creation • Jesus knew his first miracle would start the countdown to the cross • The first century provided perfect conditions for spreading the gospel: Pax Romana, Roman roads, and widespread stability • Jesus arrives at the perfect moment in history and at just the right time in our personal lives • The miracle at Cana marks the beginning of Jesus's public ministry and his journey to the cross
If you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this podcast around and leave us a five-star rating and review. Stay sharp.
#84 - Joby Martin // Bringing Our Anxieties to Jesus
28 Apr 2025
00:06:06
The first of Jesus's miraculous signs offers profound insights on bringing our needs to God, regardless of how small they may seem.
• Jesus performs His first miracle at a wedding in Cana by turning water into wine • Running out of wine at a first-century wedding would have brought severe social shame to the bridegroom • Mary approaches Jesus with this problem despite Him having performed no previous miracles • Mary's actions demonstrate we should bring all our needs to Jesus, even temporary physical ones • Paul instructs believers in Philippians 4:6-7 to counter anxiety by making requests known to God • The promise isn't necessarily changed circumstances but "peace that surpasses all understanding" • We're invited to cast our cares upon God because He cares for us • Instead of carrying burdens that weigh us down, we should carry them to Jesus in prayer
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We explore how John Eldridge's "Beautiful Outlaw" helps us understand Jesus' personality, focusing on his disruptive honesty and what it reveals about his character. Understanding Jesus means embracing his full humanity, including his confrontational nature when addressing religious hypocrisy.
• Jesus had a real personality as both fully God and fully man • We often appreciate Jesus' honesty when directed at others but squirm when it's aimed at us • Jesus confronted the Pharisee about cleaning the outside of the cup while being full of greed inside • The exclusivity of Jesus as the only way to salvation is perhaps his most offensive claim • We must reckon with our sin debt that we cannot pay ourselves • Faith in Christ requires both belief and repentance, not just intellectual acknowledgment
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Using John Eldridge's "Beautiful Outlaw" as our guide this week, we dive into Chapter 4, "Fierce Intention," exploring the passionate personality of Jesus through his temple cleansings.
• Jesus cleansed the temple twice – first early in ministry (John 2) and again during his final week (Matthew 21, Mark 11, Luke 19) • The temple cleansing wasn't a momentary outburst but a planned, sustained demonstration of righteous anger • Jesus carefully crafted a whip, caused stampeding animals, overturned tables, and scattered coins • Even in his fierce intention, Jesus showed compassion by telling dove sellers to remove cages rather than harming innocent birds • This powerful, assertive Jesus contrasts sharply with the passive, meek portrayal in many worship songs • We cannot fully worship Jesus seeing only the Lamb and not the Lion • We shouldn't "declaw the Lion of Judah" by ignoring passages showing his fierce side • Being Christlike sometimes means "turning over tables" against corruption and injustice
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We're continuing our exploration of Jesus's personality using John Eldredge's "Beautiful Outlaw," focusing on the fierce intentionality of Christ that's often overlooked in typical portrayals.
• Using Matthew 16:21-23 to introduce Jesus's forceful rebuke to Peter: "Get behind me, Satan" • Examining the context of Jesus's ministry taking place in enemy territory, not just peaceful pastoral settings • Understanding Jesus's response at Lazarus's tomb through the original Greek, which describes him as "snorting with anger like a war horse" • Analysis of Jesus's commanding voice when raising Lazarus—described as loud as a violent storm • Realizing Jesus deliberately chose to command with power and authority rather than using a calm approach • Connecting Jesus's willingness to "get loud" with our own need to be forceful when confronting darkness
Join us tomorrow for part two of "Fierce Intention" where we'll be covering some of our favorite stories in the Bible.
#206 - Kyle Thompson // He Bows Before He Swings His Sword
15 Oct 2025
00:05:30
We trace a straight line from worship to warfare: bow before you swing. Through Joshua 5, Psalm 95, and examples from David, Nehemiah, and Jesus, we show why true manhood begins with submission to God, not martial skill.
• word of God as the sword of the Spirit • the instinct for battle and protection in men • submission as the root of true strength • Psalm 95 and the posture of worship • Joshua 5: encounter with the commander of the Lord’s army • Jericho’s fall after reverence and obedience • models of bowing before acting: David, Nehemiah, Jesus • qualification to wield the sword by yielding to God
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#80 - Kyle Thompson // The Missing Essential - His Personality & Is Jesus Really Playful?
22 Apr 2025
00:07:23
The concept of Jesus having a distinct personality is often overlooked, creating a two-dimensional view that makes him difficult to truly love and connect with. We explore John Eldridge's "Beautiful Outlaw," specifically chapters on Jesus's personality and playfulness, to discover a more complete picture of Christ as both fully divine and authentically human.
• Eldridge describes reading the gospels without Jesus's personality as "like watching television with the sound turned off" • We often reduce Jesus to vague spiritual qualities like "loving and compassionate," making him seem like "a get-well card" • Jesus's playfulness is evident in the Emmaus Road story (Luke 24) where he feigns ignorance about his own death • On resurrection morning, when Jesus could have immediately revealed himself, he chose a playful approach that built to a dramatic revelation • Understanding Jesus's playfulness brings scripture to life and helps us see Christ as a multidimensional person
Join us tomorrow as we continue exploring "Beautiful Outlaw" with a focus on Jesus's fierce intention – one of the most compelling aspects of Christ's character found in scripture.
Kyle Tompson shares how John Eldredge's book "Beautiful Outlaw" transformed his understanding of Jesus by revealing Christ's authentic human personality alongside His divinity.
• John Eldredge is the author of "Wild at Heart," a groundbreaking book on Christian masculinity • Eldredge's lesser-known book "Beautiful Outlaw" explores Jesus' playful, disruptive personality • Many Christians unconsciously view Jesus as "pretending" to be human rather than being fully human • Scripture repeatedly emphasizes Christ's genuine humanity (John 1:14, Hebrews 2:14, Philippians 2:7-8) • Jesus experienced real human emotions and physical limitations (sweating in Gethsemane, hunger during temptation) • Understanding Jesus' humanity and personality allows us to relate to Him more authentically • Tomorrow's episode will explore whether Jesus was truly playful
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Jesus offers Peter a complete spiritual reset by meeting him on the same seashore where he first called him to be a disciple, demonstrating that past failures don't define our future with God.
• The Word of God described as the sword of the Spirit against evil forces • Jesus gives Peter a "do-over" after Peter's three denials • Christ doesn't wait for Peter to get his act together but actively pursues him • We don't need second chances, we need completely new life in Christ • Jesus repeats his original call to Peter: "Follow me" • Our identity is defined by Christ's scars, not our own failures • No sin or mistake disqualifies us from God's purposes • The enemy tries to define us by our past; Jesus defines us by His cross • "There is no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus"
If you want to help equip other men for the fight, share this episode with someone who needs to hear that God isn't done with them.