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HEAT & LIGHT: Bold Christianity

HEAT & LIGHT: Bold Christianity

De: Chris Miser - Believer in Jesus Christ
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The Heat & Light Podcast is committed to helping believers deepen their faith, understand the foundations of Christianity, and live boldly for Jesus Christ in every sphere of life. Hosted by Chris Miser, each episode blends biblical teaching, honest conversations, and practical insight designed to equip Christians who want to follow Jesus with clarity, courage, and conviction. In a culture filled with noise, confusion, and spiritual drift, Heat & Light serves as a steady guide—calling listeners back to Scripture, back to truth, and back to a faith rooted in the life and teachings of Christ. Whether you're growing in your Christian walk, wrestling with hard questions, rebuilding your faith, or simply hungry for more of God, this podcast offers direction, encouragement, and grounded theological perspective. Here, we don't just talk about Christianity—we live it out. We pursue a faith that is active, resilient, and anchored in Christ. Pursue Jesus. Walk in truth. Strengthen your faith. Be Heat and Light.2025 Cristianismo Espiritualidad Ministerio y Evangelismo
Episodios
  • For Such A Time As This (Part 3 of 10) "Risking It All"
    Feb 10 2026
    Risking It All — Faith, Courage, and Renewal

    Let me ask you something as you step into this episode with me:

    When is silence wisdom… and when is it fear?
    And at what point does waiting stop being patience and start becoming disobedience?

    Those aren't just questions for Esther's story — they're questions for your life, right now.

    In this episode of Heat and Light, we walk through the story of Esther, a woman who didn't step into courage immediately. She stepped into fear first. And that matters, because so many of us think courage means not being afraid. Scripture shows us something different.

    Esther was terrified. She knew the law. She knew the risk. She knew that approaching the king unsummoned could mean death. And yet, right in the middle of that fear, we see something powerful happen — not action yet, but renewal.

    Before Esther ever says, "If I perish, I perish," she fasts. She prays. She pauses. She gets right with God.

    That's where I want to encourage you today.

    We often ask, "How do I get more courage?"
    But Scripture keeps pointing us back to a better question:
    "Am I allowing God to renew my mind?"

    Romans 12:2 tells us that transformation doesn't come from pushing harder — it comes from renewal. And renewal isn't instant or superficial. It's a realigning of the heart, the mind, and the will with God. That's what Esther does. That's what Nehemiah does. And that's what we're invited into as well.

    Courage doesn't come from pretending we aren't afraid.
    Courage comes when faith is rooted deeply enough that fear no longer has the final word.

    Esther didn't rush into the throne room. She didn't minimize the danger. She prepared herself spiritually — and then she acted. That's a pattern we can't miss.

    Join the Heat and Light Bible Study Community

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    30 m
  • For Such A Time As This (Part 2 of 10) "Strength Of Heart"
    Jan 26 2026

    Join the Bible Study Online!

    In this episode of the Heat & Light Podcast, Chris continues the For Such a Time as This series by exploring courage through Jesus' parable of the Good Samaritan (Luke 10). Starting with the lawyer's question—"What must I do to inherit eternal life?"—we see how knowing Scripture isn't the same as living it, and how religious responsibility can quietly compete with compassion.

    Chris unpacks the meaning behind key words in the text—especially the priest and Levite who didn't merely "pass by," but actively moved to the opposite side, and the Samaritan who saw the wounded man in a way that led to gut-level compassion and costly action.

    The episode connects this parable to the biblical concept of courage (Hebrew: omets, "strength of heart") and shows how covenantal faith—a real relationship with God—becomes the source of spiritual courage. The challenge is simple and piercing: Do we truly see people the way God sees us? And what would it look like to obey Jesus with no "limits" on compassion?

    Main Points
    1. This series is about biblical characters who reveal faith, courage, inaction, and action.

    2. The Good Samaritan parable exposes the gap between religious knowledge and obedience.

    3. The lawyer seeks an "out" by asking, "Who is my neighbor?" rather than starting with loving God fully.

    4. The priest and Levite "passed by" using a word that implies active avoidance—not accidental neglect.

    5. The Samaritan—an enemy of the wounded man—sees, feels deep compassion, and acts sacrificially.

    6. Courage isn't just bravery; it's "strength of heart" (omets)—inner fortitude that produces outward obedience.

    7. Faith → relationship → courage → compassion in action.

    8. The episode confronts modern barriers to compassion: schedule, safety, reputation, efficiency, finances, emotional limits.

    9. The parable ultimately mirrors the gospel: Christ sees us, pays the price, and cares for us "forever."

    Key Takeaways
    • Seeing is spiritual. The Samaritan "saw" in a way that moved him internally, not just visually.

    • Avoidance can be an action. Sometimes disobedience is intentional "crossing to the other side."

    • Compassion costs. The Samaritan gives time, money, inconvenience, and ongoing commitment.

    • Religious knowledge can become a shield. It's possible to quote Scripture while resisting obedience.

    • Real courage is heart-strength. Biblical courage is internal fortitude anchored in relationship with God.

    • Limits reveal discipleship pressure points. Where you cap compassion often shows what you fear or value most.

    • The Good Samaritan points to Jesus. He doesn't help temporarily—He commits covenentally.

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    29 m
  • For Such A Time As This (Part 1 of 10) "A Lions Heart"
    Jan 23 2026
    Heat & Light Bible Study Community Faith, Courage, and God's Timing

    This Bible study explores the story of David and Goliath with a focus on how faith, courage, and action are revealed through Scripture and lived out in relationship with God. Rather than treating faith as passive belief, this study invites us to see faith as faithfulness—active trust expressed through obedience.

    Together, we will read key passages from 1 Samuel, consider historical and biblical context, and reflect on how God works through willing people who step forward in courage. Throughout this study, we will continually return to one central question: How does a real relationship with God shape the way we act?

    Scripture often places God's people in moments that demand courage. David's story reminds us that courage is not fearlessness, but obedience in the face of uncertainty.

    "For such a time as this…" (Esther 4 : 14)

    Reflection:

    • Where do you sense God calling you to step forward in faith right now?

    • What fears or hesitations tend to hold you back?

    David Steps Forward

    As we read 1 Samuel 17, we notice that while others hesitate, David speaks and acts. He does not wait for permission, nor does he minimize the danger. He steps forward with confidence rooted in his relationship with God.

    Scripture Focus:
    1 Samuel 17 : 31–37

    Reflection:

    • Who steps forward in this story, and who holds back?

    • What motivates David to act when others remain silent?

    What Faith Really Means

    The Bible's understanding of faith goes deeper than belief. In Scripture, faith is tied to faithfulness—steadfast trust, practiced obedience, and covenant relationship. David's confidence is not rooted in optimism but in a history of walking with God.

    Scripture Focus:
    1 Samuel 17 : 37
    Hebrews 10 : 22–23

    Reflection:

    • How does the biblical meaning of faith differ from how faith is often described today?

    • Where do you see faith expressed through action in David's life?

    "I Will" and "He Will"

    David speaks boldly about what he will do and what the Lord will do. This reveals a partnership—God working through human obedience rather than apart from it. David prepares, trains, chooses his tools carefully, and steps into the battle trusting God to deliver.

    Scripture Focus:
    1 Samuel 17 : 45–47

    Reflection:

    • Where do you see both human responsibility and God's power at work in this passage?

    • What has God already equipped you with to take faithful action?

    Covenant Strengthens Courage

    Immediately after David's victory, Scripture shows us a covenant relationship between David and Jonathan. Courage does not grow in isolation. Faith is strengthened through relationship—with God and with others who walk alongside us.

    Scripture Focus:
    1 Samuel 18 : 1–4

    Reflection:

    • How does relationship shape courage and faith?

    • Who supports and strengthens your walk with God?

    Living It Out

    David's story challenges the idea that God acts while we stand on the sidelines. Instead, Scripture shows us faith that moves, courage that steps forward, and action that flows from trust in God.

    Final Reflection:

    • How are faith, courage, and action connected in your own life?

    • What step of obedience is God inviting you to take this week—at home, work, or in your community?

    Closing Thought

    Faith is not passive.
    Courage is not accidental.
    Action flows from walking with God.

    For such a time as this.

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    34 m
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