03-25-2026 PART 2: Let’s Learn to Fish: Knowing Truth from Error (A) Podcast Por  arte de portada

03-25-2026 PART 2: Let’s Learn to Fish: Knowing Truth from Error (A)

03-25-2026 PART 2: Let’s Learn to Fish: Knowing Truth from Error (A)

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Section 1

This teaching opens with a powerful call to engage deeply with the Word of God, introducing the idea of “learning to fish” not as evangelism, but as the discipline of searching Scripture for truth. The foundation is laid in 2 Peter 1:20–21, emphasizing that Scripture did not originate from human interpretation but through a partnership between God and man. This reflects God’s ongoing desire for relationship, a plan established even before creation, with Jesus prepared as the Lamb before the foundation of the world. The Bible, therefore, is not merely a human document but a divine collaboration, requiring careful handling and reverence.

Section 2

The message then highlights how easily truth can be distorted through misquotes and cultural sayings that sound spiritual but are not biblical. Familiar phrases like “money is the root of all evil,” “cleanliness is next to godliness,” and “God helps those who help themselves” are exposed as inaccurate or misleading. Even more extreme examples show how groups have twisted Scripture to justify harmful or absurd beliefs. These illustrations reveal a consistent problem: people often repeat what sounds right without verifying it against the Word of God. This misuse is not harmless—it leads to confusion, deception, and ultimately spiritual error when Scripture is taken out of context or altered.

Section 3

The core solution is found in the example of the Bereans in Acts 17:10–11, who examined the Scriptures daily to confirm whether what they were taught was true. They are described as “fishers,” actively searching the Word rather than passively accepting teachings. This section also warns of how even educated voices can misrepresent truth, as seen in the denial of Jesus’ own declaration as the Messiah in John 4:25–26. Scripture itself confirms that some teachings are difficult and can be twisted by the ignorant, leading to destruction (2 Peter 3:16). The conclusion is clear: believers must personally engage with the Bible, testing everything, so they can stand firmly on truth.

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