Ask Dr. E

Michael Easley

Dr. Michael Easley answers your biblical and theological questions each week. Call or text us at 615-281-9694 or email us at question@michaelincontext.com with your question.

  1. 6D AGO

    Should Grandparents be Discipling Your Kids?

    What role should grandparents play in shaping your child’s faith? And what do you do when their beliefs—or involvement—don’t align with yours? In this episode. Dr. E responds to a parent navigating complicated family dynamics, spiritual differences, and the pressure to ensure grandparents become spiritual influences in their grandchildren’s lives. Dr. Easley offers wisdom, realism, and biblical perspective—reminding parents that their primary calling is to disciple their own children, not fix extended family relationships. The conversation explores honoring parents without forcing spiritual outcomes, setting healthy boundaries, and understanding teens as “free agents” who must ultimately own their faith. Dr. Easley also highlights the often-overlooked influence of youth leaders, mentors, and trusted adults God places in a teenager’s life when family relationships are limited or strained.If you’re parenting preteens or teenagers, navigating blended beliefs, or feeling overwhelmed by family expectations, this episode will bring clarity, peace, and encouragement. Chapters 00:00 – The Question 01:00 – Who Is This Episode Really For? 03:15 – Honor Without Unrealistic Expectations 04:30 – Is It the Parent’s Job to Facilitate Grandparent Relationships? 05:55 – When Protection Comes First 06:45 – Focus on Your Teen, Not the Grandparents 07:55 – Teens Are Free Agents 09:05 – The Role of Youth Leaders and Mentors 10:30 – Investing in Those Who Influence Your Teen 11:50 – Final Encouragement to Parents Key Topics Covered -Grandparents and spiritual influence -Parenting teens with mixed-belief families -Healthy boundaries with extended family -Honoring parents biblically -Discipling preteens and teenagers -Teens as spiritual free agents -Youth pastors and mentors as faith influencers -Letting go of control in parenting -Faith formation beyond the nuclear family Links Mentioned: Larry Fowler: Legacy Coalition on inContext 🎧 Listen to full episodes on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or at michaelincontext.com If you've got a question for Dr. Easley, call or text us your question at 615-281-9694 or email at question@michaelincontext.com.

    14 min
  2. JAN 1

    What Does the Bible Really Say About Supporting Israel?

    Can Christians biblically support the modern nation of Israel—or is that a theological mistake? In this episode of Ask Dr. E, Dr. Michael Easley responds to a viral question about Genesis 12, political leaders quoting Scripture, and whether God’s promises to Abraham apply to Israel today. Dr. Easley explains the Abrahamic Covenant as an unconditional, unilateral promise that unfolds across Genesis 12, 15, and 17. He addresses common misunderstandings about covenant theology, replacement theology, and the belief that the church has replaced Israel in God’s plan. Drawing from Romans 9–11, Judges, Deuteronomy, and biblical history, Dr. Easley shows why God’s land promise remains intact—and why it cannot be dismissed as merely symbolic or political. The conversation also explores how God works through history, governments, and flawed leaders under His providence, reminding listeners to be cautious of “clickbait theology” and oversimplified social media takes. Rather than offering partisan talking points, this episode encourages careful Bible study, theological humility, and a bigger view of God’s redemptive purposes. If you’ve wrestled with questions about Israel, modern politics, and Scripture—or felt confused by online debates—this episode will help you think biblically and clearly. Key Topics Covered -Does the Bible support modern Israel? -The Abrahamic Covenant explained (Genesis 12, 15, 17) -Is the land promise to Israel still valid today? -Covenant theology vs. replacement theology -Romans 9–11 and Israel in God’s redemptive plan -God’s sovereignty and providence in world history -Christians, geopolitics, and biblical interpretation -Political leaders using Scripture correctly or incorrectly -Blessing Israel: biblical meaning vs. modern politics -How Christians should think about Israel today Chapters 00:00 Theological Foundations of Land Promises 02:48 Modern Israel and Biblical Interpretation 05:43 Covenant Theology and Its Implications 08:09 America's Role and Support for Israel 10:59 Geopolitical Realities and Future Perspectives 🎧 Listen to full episodes on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or at michaelincontext.com 👍 Like this video, subscribe, and turn on notifications so you never miss an episode. If you've got a question for Dr. Easley, call or text us your question at 615-281-9694 or email at question@michaelincontext.com.

    15 min
  3. 12/25/2025

    Can Someone Be Truly Saved and Show No Fruit?

    Can someone truly be saved and show little—or no—fruit? Dr. Michael Easley tackles one of the most misunderstood questions in Christian circles: what fruit actually means in Scripture. Using passages like Matthew 7, John 15, and Galatians 5, Dr. E explains how Jesus’ command to “know them by their fruit” applies to false prophets, not to everyday believers struggling to grow.In this episode, you’ll learn why assurance of salvation is rooted in Christ’s finished work, not in visible performance or moral scorekeeping. Dr. Easley also explores the Lordship Salvation debate, the tension between works and grace, and the danger of “fruit inspection” as a measuring stick for someone’s faith.Whether you’re wrestling with your own assurance, worried about your children’s salvation, or navigating difficult conversations around sin and spiritual growth, this episode brings clarity, comfort, and a biblical foundation for confidence in Christ alone. Key Topics Covered -What Jesus meant by “fruit” in Matthew 7 -How to understand John 15 and the vine metaphor -The fruit of the Spirit vs. fruit inspection -The Lordship Salvation debate (MacArthur vs. Ryrie) -Can a Christian live in sin and still be saved? -How to judge sin without judging salvation -Where true assurance of salvation comes from -Why believers need God’s Word, God’s Spirit & God’s people Chapters 00:00 — Can someone be saved without showing fruit? 01:10 — What Jesus meant by “fruit” in Matthew 7 03:00 — The Lordship Salvation debate 05:00 — Deeds of the flesh vs. fruit of the Spirit 06:20 — Why fruit isn’t proof of salvation 08:10 — Judging sin vs. judging salvation 09:45 — Parents, kids, and “proof of salvation” 11:00 — Where assurance actually comes from 12:20 — God’s Word, God’s Spirit, God’s people 14:00 — Final encouragement If you've got a question for Dr. Easley, call or text us your question at 615-281-9694 or email at question@michaelincontext.com.

    16 min
  4. 12/18/2025

    Is it Possible to Lose Your Salvation?

    Can you lose your salvation? In this episode of Ask Dr. E, Dr. Michael Easley answers one of the most common (and often most anxiety-filled) questions Christians ask. Dr. E walks through key Scriptures, the history behind Arminianism and Calvinism, the Synod of Dort, the TULIP debate, and the difference between eternal security and assurance of salvation.If you’ve wrestled with doubt, struggled with confusing passages like Hebrews 6, or wondered how sin affects your walk with Christ, this episode brings biblical clarity anchored in the finished work of Jesus. Key Topics Covered -Eternal security vs. assurance of salvation -Arminianism vs. Calvinism explained -The Synod of Dort and TULIP -What Scripture says about salvation and sealing -The role of the Trinity in salvation -Understanding Hebrews 6 and “warning passages” -Can a Christian live in sin and still be saved? Chapters 00:00 – Can You Lose Your Salvation? 00:42 – Why This Question Matters 01:10 – Arminianism vs. Calvinism (Quick Overview) 02:00 – Election, Grace, and the TULIP Debate 03:10 – Eternal Security vs. Assurance 04:00 – What the Father, Son & Spirit Each Do in Salvation 04:50 – Key Scriptures on Eternal Security 06:15 – Misused Passages: 2 Peter & Proverbs 06:45 – The Hebrews 6 Debate 08:10 – Can Sin Make You Lose Salvation? 09:20 – Fruit, Works, and Spiritual Maturity 11:00 – What About Christians Living in Sin? 13:00 – Why We Can’t Judge Another’s Salvation 14:10 – Final Encouragement & Next Week’s Question Find more episodes of Ask Dr. E here. If you've got a question for Dr. Easley, call or text us your question at 615-281-9694 or email at question@michaelincontext.com.

    15 min
  5. 12/11/2025

    Can You Be a Christian and Not Go to Church?

    Can you be a Christian and not go to church? In this short Ask Dr. E episode, Dr. Michael Easley walks through Hebrews 10:19–25 to explain why the Christian life is designed to be lived together. Salvation is rooted in faith alone—yet the “one another” commands throughout the New Testament show why spiritual growth, encouragement, accountability, and service flourish inside the local church. Whether you're struggling with church hurt, drifted after the pandemic, or wondering if community is optional, this episode offers clarity and grace rooted in Scripture. Key Topics -Why church attendance isn’t what saves you -How Hebrews 10 shapes the Christian’s call to gather -The three exhortations: Draw near, Hold fast, Stir up -Why the “one another” life requires a local body -How your gifts matter to your church—and why you matter to them Chapters 00:00 – Why This Question Matters 00:25 – Can You Be a Christian and Not Go to Church? 01:00 – Post-Pandemic Drift & Distrust of Churches 01:45 – Hebrews 10:19–25 Explained 02:35 – Draw Near: Access Through Christ 03:10 – Hold Fast: Hope Anchored in Our High Priest 03:55 – Stir Up One Another: Love & Good Deeds 04:40 – What “Stimulate One Another” Really Means 05:20 – Why You Can’t Live the Christian Life Alone 06:10 – “Not Forsaking Gathering Together” in Context 07:05 – The Power of the One-Another Commands 08:00 – Church vs. Mere “Community” 08:45 – Why the Local Church Needs You 09:20 – A Loving Push: Get Back to Church 🎧 Listen to full episodes on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or at michaelincontext.com If you've got a question for Dr. Easley, call or text us your question at 615-281-9694 or email at question@michaelincontext.com.

    10 min
  6. 12/04/2025

    Will There Be Beaches in Heaven?

    What does Revelation mean when it says there will be “no longer any sea”? Does this mean no beaches in heaven? No oceans? In today’s episode of Ask Dr. E, Dr. Michael Easley explains the biblical symbolism of the sea, the continuity between this earth and the New Heaven and New Earth, and why the glory of Christ will overshadow every earthly landscape we imagine. We look at Genesis, Revelation 20–21, millennial views, and the tension between literal and symbolic imagery. Most importantly, Dr. E reminds us that eternity will be physical, joyful, purposeful, and more beautiful than anything we cling to now. 📌 Key Topics: – What the “sea” represents in Genesis and Revelation – Why Revelation 21 says “no more sea” – Whether heaven will have beaches, oceans, and landscapes – What life will be like in the New Heaven and New Earth – Why Christ’s presence will overwhelm every earthly desire 00:00 – Will there be beaches in heaven? 00:33 – The symbolism of the sea in Scripture 01:18 – “No longer any sea” in Revelation 21 02:10 – Context of the Millennium and New Earth 03:05 – Will there be landscapes, seasons, stars? 04:22 – Physicality and activity in eternity 05:30 – Why Christ’s glory eclipses earthly beauty 06:18 – Could there be rivers, trees, beaches? 07:04 – What we know and what we don’t 07:45 – Final encouragement Find more episodes of Ask Dr. E here. If you've got a question for Dr. Easley, call or text us your question at 615-281-9694 or email at question@michaelincontext.com.

    9 min
  7. 11/20/2025

    Should You Take The Bible Literally?

    Should You Take The Bible Literally? Q: I have a friend who has recently grown in their Christian faith, and part of that growth has been a new belief and interest in the Bible. However, this has led them to taking the scripture so literally that they now strongly believe that the earth is flat.  They cite Isaiah 11:12– the four corners of the earth. Psalm 104:5– being set on immovable “foundations” (it will not totter). And Genesis 1:6–8– having a solid firmament. The core of their argument: “If Scripture is God’s Word and perfect, why reinterpret it to fit modern science? Shouldn’t we interpret science through the Bible—not the Bible through science?” Summary What happens when someone reads the Bible too literally? In this episode, Dr. E responds to a listener’s question about a friend who believes the earth is flat—because “the Bible says so.” Dr. E unpacks why context matters in interpretation, using hermeneutics—the grammatical, historical, literal, and theological principles that guide faithful reading. While Scripture is perfect and true, hyper-literalism can distort its meaning when genre, audience, or idiom are ignored.  Dr. E explains that phrases like “the four corners of the earth” or “the eyes of the Lord” are poetic or symbolic, not scientific. God’s Word reveals the truth about Himself and His creation—but it’s not meant to be a physics textbook. This episode helps believers discern when to take Scripture literally and when to understand it figuratively, so that we honor both the authority and intent of God’s Word. Takeaways Good hermeneutics keeps interpretation faithful, not fanciful. The Bible uses poetic and symbolic language to reveal truth. “Four corners of the earth” reflects language, not geography. Hyper-literalism can miss the heart of what God intends to teach. Scripture is sufficient for faith—not a science textbook. Context, audience, and theology must guide every interpretation. Find more episodes of Ask Dr. E here. If you've got a question for Dr. Easley, call or text us your question at 615-281-9694 or email at question@michaelincontext.com.

    14 min
4.8
out of 5
69 Ratings

About

Dr. Michael Easley answers your biblical and theological questions each week. Call or text us at 615-281-9694 or email us at question@michaelincontext.com with your question.

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