Scripture Matters Podcast

Jonathan Sanford & Cliff Thompson

Scripture Matters is a Bible-focused podcast hosted by Jonathan Sanford and Cliff Thompson dedicated to exploring the truth, authority, and life-changing power of God’s Word. Each episode takes listeners deeper into Scripture, addressing honest questions about faith, doubt, and discipleship while demonstrating why the Bible remains the foundation for believing, living, and following Christ today.

Episodes

  1. 6 MAR

    Scripture Matters Podcast - Episode 5 (Chapter 4 - "It Is Finished")

    Three words at 3 p.m. on a dark hill changed the way we breathe, pray, and live: “It is finished.” We open with the weight of the crucifixion and ask a hard question many believers avoid—do we live like the cross is final or like our standing with God is fragile? From there, we move through Scripture with clear eyes and calmer hearts, tracing what the Bible actually promises about full, final, and continuous cleansing in Christ. We examine the myth that some sins outrun grace, then let Acts answer it with surprising mercy—crucifiers forgiven at Pentecost and a persecutor transformed on the Damascus road. We tackle the haunting fear of “blasphemy against the Holy Spirit” and show how context protects tender consciences: Jesus confronted hardened, willful rejection amid undeniable miracles, a setting we can’t reproduce today. That clarity doesn’t soften sin; it stops a misapplied text from crushing sensitive believers. Then we contrast the Old Testament’s yearly coverings with the New Covenant’s once-for-all removal. Hebrews becomes our anchor: one offering, perfected forever, those being sanctified. Christ sits because the work is truly finished—no hidden fees, no backstage invoice, no spiritual tax after the joy. We hold together perfected standing and ongoing growth, and we highlight 1 John’s promise of continuous cleansing while we walk in the light. The result is a faith that repents quickly, worships freely, and serves from gratitude instead of panic. If you’ve carried a quiet ledger in your soul—always counting, never certain—this conversation offers better math: paid in full. Listen, share with someone who needs assurance, and subscribe so you never miss a new episode. If this steadied your heart even a little, leave a review and tell us what truth from Scripture anchored you most today. Support the show

    46 min
  2. 5 MAR

    Scripture Matters Podcast - Episode 4 (Chapter 3 - “Grasping The Depth Of Our Sin”)

    A hallway that won’t end, a shadow that won’t name itself, and a jump scare that gets you every time—fear thrives in the dark. We begin with that image to expose something many of us keep in the shadows: sin, and the way misjudging it either terrifies us or numbs us. From there, we turn on the light of Scripture and walk through a story arc that moves from honesty to hope. We look squarely at sin’s gravity the way the Bible does—Genesis 6, Exodus, Leviticus 10, 2 Samuel 6, Acts 5—and let those moments unsettle easy answers. The point isn’t to crush you; it’s to end the blur. Then we ask the hard question: if sin is this serious, how could anyone stand before a holy God? That opens the door to the law’s true function. Romans 3:20 makes it plain: the law is a mirror, not a medicine. It reveals guilt; it doesn’t remove it. If you’ve ever tied your peace to a “good week” or felt condemned after a stumble, you’ll hear why performance-based assurance can never hold. Everything pivots on two words: but God. Ephesians 2 reframes the whole story. Dead in sin, made alive with Christ—by grace, not momentum. We bring that truth to life with the prodigal son. Watch the Father run, interrupt the bargaining, and restore a son with robe, ring, sandals, and feast. It’s not probation; it’s identity. Then we meet the older brother and name a subtler trap: trusting obedience as currency. The Father’s response—“You are always with me, and all that is mine is yours”—re-centers assurance on relationship, not record. By the end, we’re living from security rather than toward it. Gratitude replaces anxiety. Obedience deepens because love is driving, not fear. Prayer opens. Worship breathes. If you’ve carried quiet doubts—Have I sinned too much? Have I done enough?—this conversation offers a steadier ground: Christ’s finished work. Subscribe, share this with someone who needs rest for their soul, and leave a review to tell us: are you the younger brother, the older brother, or finally coming to the feast? Support the show

    52 min
  3. 5 MAR

    Scripture Matters Podcast - Episode 3 (Chapter 2 - "God Wants You To Feel Sure")

    A single question can expose a lifetime of doubt: are you saved? If your first instinct is I hope so, you’re not alone—but that reflex might say more about how you see God than you realize. We walk through Jack Wilkie’s Chapter 2, “God Wants You To Feel Sure” to show why scripture aims to give believers settled confidence, not a lifetime of anxious guesswork. We start with a vivid picture from Who Wants to Be a Millionaire: the pressure of the final answer and the lure of partial winnings. Salvation doesn’t work that way. God doesn’t offer partial peace; he gives a covenant promise. From there, we open the Bible. 1 John 5:13 states the purpose of assurance plainly. Romans 8:1 declares no condemnation now for those in Christ. Ephesians 1:13–14 explains the Spirit’s seal as God’s pledge. Acts 2 reveals early gospel clarity that produces worship, joy, and community. Then we trace assurance backward: Abraham’s credited righteousness, David’s steady voice in Psalm 23 and 32, and God’s self-definition in Exodus 34 as merciful, gracious, and patient. If your picture of God is a harsh grader, scripture invites you to see the helpful teacher and faithful Father. We also face the deeper reason doubt feels safer: it keeps us guarded and in control. But assurance doesn’t weaken repentance; it makes repentance possible. When you know you’re loved, you stop hiding and start growing. Jesus warned the self-righteous, not penitent people who long for certainty. Real assurance fuels holiness because confidence in Christ’s sufficiency turns pride into praise and fear into obedience. Loved people become loyal people. Join us as we move from I hope to I know—not because we’re flawless, but because Jesus is a sufficient Savior and God keeps his covenant. If this conversation helps you rest in God’s promises, subscribe, share the show with a friend, and leave a review to help others find it. What scripture anchors your assurance today? Support the show

    42 min
  4. 5 MAR

    Scripture Matters Podcast - Episode 2 (Chapter 1 - "The Problem Of Doubt")

    A quiet question keeps many believers awake at night: am I really saved, or did I miss something? We take that fear seriously and walk straight into it, using chapter one of Jack Wilkie’s "You Are Saved" as our guide. Jonathan Sanford and Cliff Thompson unpack why faithful Christians still wrestle with assurance, how a late-night conscience can feel louder than Sunday certainty, and what it takes to move from fragile confidence in ourselves to a durable trust in Christ. We start by naming the three questions that haunt so many: what if I die before confessing a fresh sin, what if I forgot one, and what if I’m wrong about something important? From there, we put our weekly worship under the microscope. Hymns like When We All Get To Heaven, Blessed Assurance, and It Is Well With My Soul preach bold theology we eagerly sing—so why do our Monday hearts still hedge? That tension exposes a deeper issue: the subtle shift from Christ-centered assurance to self-centered scorekeeping. Together, we map the pendulum that robs peace—cheap grace on one side, legalism on the other. Cheap grace shrinks repentance and discipleship; legalism builds impossible checklists that end in pride or despair. Luke 18’s rich young ruler and Pharisee illustrate how self-reliance creates either false confidence or crushing doubt, while the tax collector finds justification through humble mercy. We also trace the real cost of doubt: arrested spiritual growth, brittle unity, and fading evangelism. When we lack assurance, we export anxiety instead of good news. The path forward is clear and hopeful. Assurance ends where it must—on Jesus’ finished work. Saying I am saved is not presumption; it’s worship, because it declares his blood is enough. Step off the pendulum. Let your songs align with your weekdays. Grow from milk to meat. And share a gospel that sounds like good news because it comes from a heart at rest. If this conversation helped you breathe easier, subscribe, share it with a friend who needs peace tonight, and leave a review so more people can find the show. Support the show

    31 min
  5. 5 MAR

    Scripture Matters Podcast - Episode 1 (Introduction)

    Ever sat in a room full of believers, nodding along, yet quietly wondering if you really belong? We open our new series by facing that fear head-on: what it means to live with assurance in Christ without slipping into arrogance or performance. Through a vivid story of a child at a perfect Thanksgiving table who still feels out of place, we draw a straight line to the quiet doubts that haunt church pews every week—and why so many of us keep them bottled up. We dig into why polished “Sunday best” personas breed insecurity, and how a checklist approach to faith turns joy into anxiety. Then we turn to the promises themselves. John 8:36 says free indeed. Romans 8:1 declares no condemnation. Ephesians 2:8 anchors us in grace. Colossians 2:13 announces full forgiveness. First Peter names us chosen. If we affirm these verses for others but hesitate to apply them to ourselves, what needs to change? We explore the path from head knowledge to heart trust, showing how assurance grows when we stop tallying our worth and start leaning on Jesus’ finished work. You’ll hear why questions are not unbelief, how humility can say “I am saved” without swagger, and why 1 John 1:7 offers a daily, durable foundation for imperfect people walking in the light. We also outline three groups who will benefit from this journey: the doubter who fears being the exception, the checklist Christian who confuses activity with assurance, and the secure believer who can guide others with patience and clarity. Along the way, we get practical about building a church culture that welcomes honesty, normalizes struggle, and helps everyone rest in the promises they already profess. Subscribe, share with a friend who needs calm in their spiritual life, and leave a review with the verse you lean on when assurance feels thin. Your story might anchor someone else this week. Support the show

    39 min

About

Scripture Matters is a Bible-focused podcast hosted by Jonathan Sanford and Cliff Thompson dedicated to exploring the truth, authority, and life-changing power of God’s Word. Each episode takes listeners deeper into Scripture, addressing honest questions about faith, doubt, and discipleship while demonstrating why the Bible remains the foundation for believing, living, and following Christ today.