Cranston Bible Chapel

Cranston Bible Chapel

 Welcome to the Cranston Bible Chapel Podcast—Bible teaching from Cranston, Rhode Island. Our desire is to feed God’s people, equip the saints, and build up the church through Christ-centered preaching and practical application. Whether you’re part of our local body or listening from afar, we pray these messages help you know the Lord more deeply and follow Him more faithfully. 

Episodes

  1. May 18

    From Far Off To Brought Near In Christ - Ephesians 2:11-22

    A wall can shape your whole life, especially when you don’t even realize it’s there. We open up Ephesians 2:11-22 and follow Paul’s blunt contrast: once far off, without Christ, without hope, and without God, then suddenly “but now” brought near by the blood of Jesus. The heart of the message is grace, the exceeding riches of God’s grace that saves us first and then sends us into the good works God already prepared, not to earn anything, but because we are made new. From there, we talk about access and peace in plain terms. Jesus does not just bring peace, He is our peace. His cross puts hostility to death, breaks down the dividing wall between Jew and Gentile, and opens a living way into God’s presence. The torn temple veil becomes more than a detail in the crucifixion story, it becomes a picture of what God has done: the barrier is removed from top to bottom, and we can come boldly to the throne of grace because the price has been paid. We also dig into belonging, citizenship, and adoption into the household of God, with Jesus as the chief cornerstone and sure foundation. If you have ever felt like an outsider, this passage speaks directly to that ache, and it also gives a practical next step: “Not my will, but your will be done,” and a simple prayer of surrender that turns into action. Subscribe for more, share this with someone who needs peace, and leave a review telling us what “brought near” means to you.

    44 min
  2. May 18

    Blessed In Christ - Ephesians 1:1-13

    You can be “blessed” in a hundred surface-level ways and still feel empty when the week gets hard. We go straight to Ephesians 1 and camp on the phrase that keeps repeating for a reason: in Christ. That’s where Christian identity gets solid, where shame loses its grip, and where hope stops being wishful thinking and becomes a promise you can stand on. We also zoom out to why church can’t be a solo project. A body works because it stays connected, and the Christian walk grows best when we worship together, pray together, and keep showing up for each other. From Paul’s prison setting to his relentless prayer for wisdom and spiritual sight, we trace how a real relationship with God forms in everyday life, not just in a sanctuary. Prayer without ceasing becomes practical when you start turning ordinary moments into honest conversation with the Lord. Then we unpack the blessings Paul names for believers: chosen before the foundation of the world, made holy and without blame, adopted into God’s family, redeemed through Jesus’ blood, forgiven by grace, brought into unity, and sealed with the Holy Spirit of promise. We talk about what those words mean when you’re carrying regret, trying to forgive, or wondering what your life is for. If you need steadiness, peace, and a clearer sense of who you are, press play. Subscribe, share this with a friend who needs hope, and leave a review that tells us which “in Christ” blessing hit you hardest.

    51 min
  3. Apr 8

    From Cheers to Jeers : Palm Sunday

    A cheering crowd, palm branches in the air, and a humble King riding into Jerusalem on a donkey. Palm Sunday looks like a victory parade, but we can’t ignore where the road leads just days later. We walk through Matthew 21, John 12, Luke 19, and the prophetic picture in Zechariah 9:9 to ask the question the whole city asked: who is Jesus really? We talk honestly about why people followed Jesus then and why people drift now. Some wanted signs and wonders. Others tried to “think” their way into faith. Many simply wanted to belong to whatever was loud and popular. That pressure can create mob mentality, where feelings outrun truth and “Hosanna” can turn into “Crucify him.” We also look at the fear of being rejected, the pull of reputation, and what John 12 says about leaders who believed quietly because they loved the praise of people. The turning point is Jesus’ own diagnosis of the heart through the parable of the four soils. Are we shallow-rooted faith that withers in temptation? Are we thorn-choked by cares, riches, and pleasures? Or are we becoming good soil, soft and responsive to the Word of God? We close with a practical call from Isaiah 40 and Jeremiah 4: straighten what’s crooked, bring pride low, break up fallow ground, and prepare a clear way for the Lord to rule in us now and return in glory. If this message challenges you, subscribe, share it with a friend who needs steady hope, and leave a review so more people can find it. What “soil” best describes your heart today?

    53 min
  4. Apr 8

    The Incarnation And The Promise That God Comes Near

    A God who keeps his distance would be easier to explain, but he wouldn’t be the God of the Bible. We walk through the incarnation of Jesus Christ and why it’s not a seasonal detail but a foundation stone of the Christian faith: the holy Creator comes down to us because we cannot rise to him. Along the way, we connect the big storyline of Scripture to one bold claim: the Lamb of God was not an afterthought. Redemption was planned “from the foundation of the world,” and that changes how we see our worth, our sin, and the cross. We trace the promise through Genesis 3:15, where the “seed of the woman” will crush the serpent, and through Isaiah 7:14, where the virgin birth points to Emmanuel, “God with us.” Then we camp in John 1, where Jesus is called the Word made flesh, full of grace and truth. That’s where the message gets personal: grace does not pretend sin is small, and truth does not leave us without hope. The cross becomes the bridge where God’s justice and God’s love meet in one Savior. We also talk about what the incarnation means on a Monday morning. Hebrews 4 shows Jesus as the great high priest who sympathizes with our weakness because he entered real human life and faced real temptation without sin. Philippians 2 shows him as the servant-king who humbles himself to the point of death, then is exalted above every name. The call is simple and urgent: don’t wait, bow to Jesus daily, and pray honest prayers like “Help, Lord.” If this encouraged you, subscribe for more Bible teaching, share this with a friend who needs hope, and leave a review so more people can find the podcast. What part of “God with us” do you need to believe more deeply today?

    44 min
  5. Mar 11

    Covenant and Promise

    What if the Old Testament is less a maze of rules and more a map of promises that lead straight to Jesus? We take you on a fast, vivid tour from Eden to David and show how each covenant reveals God’s heart: rescue in our failure, justice in our violence, holiness in our chaos, and hope in our waiting. You’ll hear how God consistently moves first, sets wise boundaries for human flourishing, and invites us to respond with simple, stubborn faith. We start in the garden, where the first broken trust is met with the first promise of a rescuer. With Noah, we uncover why God anchors a violent world in measured justice and marks it with a rainbow. Abraham steps into the unknown and teaches us that faith is not a feeling but a step taken because the Promiser is trustworthy. At Sinai, Israel receives a whole way of life—Sabbath, worship, community justice—so the world can see what it looks like to belong to a holy God. The promise then narrows to David’s line, pointing to a King who would build God’s house and rule without end. All roads converge on Jesus, the true covenant-keeper who bears our penalties, fulfills the law, and opens a way for ordinary people to live in grace. We end with two clear takeaways: become the kind of person whose yes means yes, and when God speaks a promise over you—about forgiveness, rest, or calling—move like it’s true. This is a story that turns theology into traction for everyday life, from marriage vows to Mondays at work. If this journey helped you see Scripture with fresh eyes, share it with a friend, hit follow, and leave a quick review so more people can find the show. Tell us: which covenant most reshaped your view of God’s promises?

    36 min
  6. Mar 3

    What is Sin?

    A floor project gone wrong becomes the doorway into a bigger story: why life looks polished yet feels slippery underfoot. We open with a personal renovation fail and use it as a parable for skipping the foundations that keep us from sliding, then trace the source of the world’s pain back to a pivotal moment in Genesis when trust fractured and the dominoes began to fall—shame, conflict, toil, pain, and death. From there, we build a clear framework from Ephesians 2 that helps us see sin in three layers: the bent we carry in our nature, the choices we make against God’s moral law, and the patterns that grow into chains when desire is practiced long enough. Along the way, we tackle a modern blind spot: the cultural habit of relabeling what God calls harmful. Greed gets dressed up as ambition, selfishness as self-love, lust as liberation, and constant busyness as virtue. We don’t stop at the “dirty” sins; we expose the “respectable” ones that corrode relationships and peace from the inside—people-pleasing, control, bitterness, and the endless scroll that numbs instead of heals. This isn’t about piling on guilt; it’s about getting the diagnosis right so the cure makes sense. When we acknowledge the depth of the problem, we stop placing god-sized hopes on human systems or personalities and start cultivating humility, repentance, and realistic expectations in community. We also slow down on purpose. Before racing to the good news, we sit in the weight of what’s true. The prophets taught us that honest grief clears space for hope to take root. If sin is merely a bad habit, self-help could fix it. If sin is a master we’ve served, we need more than tips—we need rescue. That’s where we’re headed next, but for now we invite you to feel the gravity so grace can land as more than a slogan. If this conversation helped you see your story with greater clarity, share it with a friend, subscribe for the next part in the series, and leave a review with the moment that challenged you most. Your reflections shape future episodes and help others find a firmer footing.

    40 min
  7. Feb 26

    From Creation To Calling: Purpose In A Designed World - Pastor John

    Wonder often begins with a small pause: a bright caterpillar, a quiet snowfall, a sky stitched with stars. We took that pause and followed it into a bigger story—one where design points to a Designer, and the beauty of creation becomes an open invitation to purpose. Rather than settling for chance and drift, we walk through Genesis 1, Romans 1, and Job to ask what our world says about its Maker and what that means for us. We talk candidly about gratitude, pride, and the danger of suppressing truth. If creation carries God’s fingerprints, then humility is wisdom and worship is the only fitting response. From the intricate coordination of rain and rivers to the mystery of the soul, we explore why coherence suggests intention, not accident. Along the way, we press into the difference between a distant “force” and the living Lord Jesus—who stands before all things, holds all things together, and offers eternal life. Purpose comes into focus through imago Dei and calling. Made in God’s image, we are crafted for stewardship and good works, not mere survival. Ephesians 2:10 reframes ordinary days: we are His workmanship, with prepared paths to walk. That means skillfully using our gifts, tending what’s entrusted to us, and letting light shine rather than hiding it. We anchor this with the great command—love God with all you are, and love your neighbor as yourself—because love is where doctrine becomes life. We end with practical steps: map your circles of influence, choose one person to encourage, and take a clear next action toward the good you’re called to do. If design reveals the Designer, then direction begins with devotion—and gratitude turns insight into movement. If this conversation stirred you, subscribe, share it with a friend who needs hope, and leave a review to help others find the show. What’s the one step you’ll take today?

    1h 5m

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
5 Ratings

About

 Welcome to the Cranston Bible Chapel Podcast—Bible teaching from Cranston, Rhode Island. Our desire is to feed God’s people, equip the saints, and build up the church through Christ-centered preaching and practical application. Whether you’re part of our local body or listening from afar, we pray these messages help you know the Lord more deeply and follow Him more faithfully.