Heed The Word

Pastor Ken Davis

Heed The Word is the online Bible teaching ministry of Pastor Ken Davis of Calvary Chapel Southwest Metro, a non-denominational church in Joshua, Texas. We are committed to bringing our listeners the Word of God by simply teaching the Bible simply. It is our hope that these broadcasts will encourage you to believe in Jesus Christ, and to grow as His disciple as you walk worthy of the calling with which we have been called.Our latest episodes are a rebroadcast of our "Heed the Word" radio program.  These episodes were originally broadcast on KDKR.  At that time our church was located in Burleson, Texas though we have since relocated to Joshua.  Additionally, these episodes indicate that CD copies can be ordered, but as they are now available through our podcast, we are no longer offering physical copies of these messages.  It is our continued hope that these Bible teachings are an encouragement to you and we appreciate you joining us here on Heed the Word!

  1. 4 ngày trước

    Luke 24 Unpacked: Repentance, Forgiveness, And Power

    Send us Fan Mail From a priest struck silent to disciples who can’t stop praising, Luke’s story ends with a surge of clarity, courage, and joy—and a mandate that still reaches us. We walk through Jesus opening the scriptures in Luke 24, showing why the cross and resurrection weren’t tragic detours but the plan foretold in the Psalms and fulfilled in Him. That understanding flips the script on two common counterfeits: guilt that stalls at regret and preaching that promises comfort without a cross. Instead, we lean into the real gospel—repentance that turns, and remission that truly sets us free. We talk about the difference between feeling bad and changing direction, how forgiveness cancels debt yet doesn’t erase earthly consequences, and why the church’s message must remain an official communique from the King rather than a self-help slogan. Then we get practical: proclaim and witness. Proclaiming is heralding Christ’s terms of peace to all nations. Witnessing is telling, plainly and personally, what God has done in our lives—mercy given, peace supplied, healing experienced. If that feels daunting, Jesus meets us with a promise: power from on high. The Spirit’s dunamis is not about personality; it is about capacity to do what Christ commands. Finally, we stand with the disciples at the ascension, where blessing, worship, and great joy send them back to the city ready to speak. That arc becomes our map: scripture opened, hearts awakened, message proclaimed, testimony offered, power received. If you’re hungry for a faith that is more than sentiment—and a mission deeper than self-betterment—this conversation will steady your steps. Listen, share it with someone who needs hope, and tell us what step you’re taking today. Subscribe, leave a review, and join us as we keep seeking Jesus and making His good news heard. Support the show

    26 phút
  2. 21 thg 6

    Repentance First

    Send us Fan Mail When the gospel gets reduced to “what do you want from life,” something vital is lost. We walk through Luke 24 and listen as Jesus opens the Scriptures, showing how the Law, the Prophets, and the Psalms pointed to a Messiah who must suffer, rise on the third day, and send His people to preach repentance and the remission of sins to all nations. From the first promise in Genesis to the piercing details of Psalm 22, the throughline becomes unmistakable: the cross was necessary, the tomb is empty, and the message is not ours to edit. We contrast that clarity with the noise of prosperity pitches—messages that soothe but do not save—and unpack why repentance is not a hurdle but a gift. Turning to God with honesty makes room for real forgiveness and a changed life. We explore typology in Joseph’s story, the prophetic cadence of Hosea, and a rapid-fire set of fulfilled Psalms that anchor faith in history, not hype. Then we lean into the commission: we are heralds, not brand managers, entrusted with a King’s communique meant for every city and nation. If you’ve felt let down by a faith that promises comfort on demand, this conversation offers a truer anchor. Suffering no longer signals abandonment; purpose runs through it, and hope stretches beyond it. Join us as we ground our message in Scripture, center it on Jesus, and recover the simple, courageous call to preach repentance and forgiveness. If this resonates, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs clarity, and leave a review to help more people find their footing in the real gospel. Support the show

    26 phút
  3. 18 thg 6

    Why The Messiah Had To Suffer And What That Means For Us

    Send us Fan Mail A knock at the door can change everything. We follow the Emmaus road in Luke 24, where confusion meets clarity and two weary travelers discover why the Messiah had to suffer before glory. Along the way, we look squarely at sin, hear the promise of intercession, and let ancient prophecies do their steady work—moving from theory to trust as pierced hands come into view. This isn’t a foggy spirituality; it’s a faith with flesh and bones, where Jesus breaks bread, opens Scripture, and even eats fish to show He is truly alive. We also talk about evidence and probability without losing sight of the heart. Zechariah and Micah point forward with surprising precision, and we consider Peter Stoner’s conservative math to illustrate just how improbable it would be for one person to fulfill even a small set of messianic prophecies by chance. But numbers alone don’t save; fellowship does. Recognition dawns at the table, and burning hearts become running feet as joy sends the disciples back to Jerusalem to share what they’ve seen. From there, we get practical and personal. Grace forgives, yet holiness matters. When we try to live in sin, God’s loving discipline meets us, not to crush us but to call us home. The simple counsel stands: when conviction comes, run to God, not from Him. Revelation’s promise still stands for believers who have kept Jesus on the porch—open the door and dine with Him. If you’re hungry for assurance, longing for joy, or ready to move from hearsay to encounter, join us for this deep, warm, and challenging journey through Luke 24. If this spoke to you, subscribe and share the show, leave a review to help others find it, and invite someone who needs hope to listen next. Support the show

    26 phút
  4. 14 thg 6

    How Ancient Prophecies Point Straight To Jesus And Reshape Our Doubts

    Send us Fan Mail Start with heartbreak on a dusty road and end with a burning heart. We retrace the Emmaus conversation in Luke 24, where two confused disciples voice their pain and Jesus answers by opening the Scriptures. Instead of platitudes, he offers a guided tour from Moses through the Prophets that shows why the Messiah had to suffer before entering glory—and how that plan was written long before the cross. We dive into the text with care. Psalm 22 reads like field notes from Golgotha: pierced hands and feet, unbroken bones, and soldiers casting lots for a seamless tunic—then John 19 records those very details. Isaiah 53 moves from substitution to vindication, describing a righteous servant who bears iniquity, intercedes for transgressors, and yet “prolongs his days.” Zechariah adds the future gaze toward the pierced one, pairing sorrow with coming restoration. Threaded through is a pastoral reminder: when accusations rise, Christ himself speaks for us. He knows suffering firsthand and meets us in ours. For the curious and the skeptical, we bring in Peter Stoner’s probability work as a thoughtful frame: even eight messianic prophecies converging in one person points to odds around 10^17. Numbers alone do not create faith, but they challenge the “just coincidence” shrug and invite a closer look at Scripture’s coherence. Along the way, we talk about what it means to “go farther” with Jesus—how he’s always ready to walk beyond our current comfort, if we ask him to stay. If you’re hungry for a clear, text-anchored exploration of messianic prophecy, biblical theology, and practical hope, this conversation is for you. Listen and share with someone who’s wrestling with doubt or seeking deeper confidence in the gospel. Subscribe, leave a review to help others find the show, and tell us: which passage most strengthened your faith today? Support the show

    26 phút
  5. 11 thg 6

    Raised To Live: Why The Resurrection Matters

    Send us Fan Mail Doubt doesn’t evaporate with wishful thinking; it breaks when reality walks through a locked door. We follow that turning point from Luke 24 into a sweeping look at why the resurrection sits at the very center of Christian faith—and why it still remakes lives today. We unpack the disciples’ initial disbelief and the bold courage that followed, connecting their transformation to eyewitness encounters with the risen Jesus. With Paul’s concise summary in 1 Corinthians 15, we weigh the historical witness of hundreds, the legal force of corroboration and the startling honesty of Scripture. Then we press the stakes: if Christ is not risen, preaching is empty and faith is futile; if he is risen, forgiveness is real, hope is durable and death is dethroned. From there we move into Romans 10, 5 and 6 to show how belief with the heart and confession with the mouth flow into a new way of living. Justified by faith, we have peace with God; baptized into Christ, we die to sin and rise to walk in newness of life. The old habits that once ruled give way as we present our bodies as instruments of righteousness, trading the wages of sin—death—for the free gift of God—eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord. When suffering presses in, Romans 8:28 steadies us with the promise that all things work together for good for those who love God and are called according to his purpose. If you’re wrestling with doubt, craving solid reasons for hope or hungry for change that lasts, this conversation meets you with clarity and courage. Listen, share with a friend who needs hope and leave a review to help others find the message. Subscribe for more verse-by-verse teaching that grounds your faith and fuels your life. Support the show

    26 phút
  6. 11 thg 6

    Two Walkers Meet Jesus And Learn Why The Cross Had To Come Before The Crown

    Send us Fan Mail Grief can make even a sunrise look gray, and that’s exactly where two followers found themselves as they left Jerusalem after the crucifixion. We walk that same road with them and a mysterious Stranger who asks a disarming question, listens to their heartbreak, and then opens the Scriptures to show why the cross had to come before the crown. What unfolds is a vivid, step-by-step journey from disappointment to clarity, from fog to fire, as the story of redemption is traced from Genesis 3:15 through Psalm 22 and into an empty tomb. We revisit the raw details of the Passion—betrayal, scourging, the cry of forsakenness—and confront the true cost of forgiveness. The message challenges a common mistake: expecting the Messiah of immediate victory while ignoring the Messiah of necessary suffering. By starting at Moses and the Prophets, we highlight how God’s plan always included a wounded conqueror who defeats death by passing through it. Along the way, we explore why hope deferred hurts so much, why Jesus invites us to say what He already knows, and how Scripture reshapes a broken narrative without erasing the pain. You’ll come away with a grounded understanding of Luke 24, practical insight for seasons when God feels hidden, and renewed confidence that biblical prophecy anchors faith when emotions sway. We also share how to keep your heart from growing dull—by letting the whole counsel of God kindle conviction and comfort, and by recognizing Christ’s presence in ordinary moments like a shared meal and an opened Bible. If you’ve wrestled with unmet expectations or a faith that feels dim, this conversation offers a faithful, Scripture-rich way forward. If this encouraged you, subscribe, leave a review, and share it with someone who needs hope today. Tell us: which Scripture most rekindled your heart? Support the show

    26 phút
  7. 7 thg 6

    The Empty Tomb And Why It Matters

    Send us Fan Mail Hope begins where the stone was moved. We walk through Luke 24 and watch the morning unfold: women arrive with spices, find the tomb open, and hear the angels’ bracing words, why seek the living among the dead. From there, we map the eyewitness trail through Matthew and Mark, noting the very human mix of fear, silence, running, and wonder. The detail many overlook becomes a pillar of credibility: women as first witnesses in a culture that discounted their testimony. If someone tried to script a legend, they would never start there. As the story widens, the disciples’ reactions pull us in. Some call the report idle tales, Peter marvels without clarity, and John sees and believes when he notices the folded grave clothes. That spectrum of responses feels familiar because faith often arrives in steps. Then we turn to Paul’s concise case in 1 Corinthians 15: Christ died for our sins, was buried, rose the third day, and appeared to Peter, the twelve, and more than five hundred at once. Paul presses the stakes with rare bluntness—if Christ isn’t risen, faith is empty and sins remain. It’s a bold claim because the resurrection isn’t a metaphor; it’s the backbone of Christian hope. We also confront the historical cost. The same people slow to believe became fearless witnesses, many sealing their testimony with suffering and death. People don’t die for what they know is a lie. The resurrection explains their courage, fuels our forgiveness, and reframes our future: death is not final, meaning is not fragile, and the power that raised Jesus now works in us. Join us as we connect Scripture, history, and lived experience into a clear, compelling case for a risen Christ—and a living hope that holds when nothing else does. If this encouraged you, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review to help others find the show. Support the show

    26 phút
  8. 4 thg 6

    He Died So We Could Live, And That Changes Everything

    Send us Fan Mail A taunt at the cross becomes the hinge of hope: “He saved others; Himself He could not save.” We unpack why that line is not mockery but the heartbeat of the gospel, showing how Jesus’ refusal to come down became the only path for our rescue. Walking through Luke 23, we trace the scene from jeers to a quiet miracle beside Him: one thief moves from contempt to confession, naming his guilt, declaring Christ innocent, calling Him Lord, and asking to be remembered in a kingdom that death cannot stop. We explore the justice and mercy of God meeting at Golgotha. On the cross, sin isn’t waved away; it’s judged. The innocent Son bears our guilt so the guilty can receive His righteousness. That exchange—substitution and imputation—grounds assurance when we stumble and frees us from performative religion. We also address a tension that troubles many: the thief’s same-day welcome into paradise with no baptism or ritual proves salvation is by grace alone through faith alone in Christ alone. The torn veil confirms it: direct access to God is open because the price is paid. From Jesus’ final words to the centurion’s confession, from Joseph of Arimathea’s courage to the promise of abundant life in John 10, we see a Shepherd who lays down His life willingly and will take it up again. The message is urgent but hopeful: while breath remains, grace is near. If you’ve wondered whether you’ve gone too far or waited too long, hear this—there is room in paradise for those who turn and trust. If this resonated, follow and subscribe for verse-by-verse teaching through the Gospel of Luke, share the episode with someone who needs hope, and leave a review to help others find the message. Ready to keep studying and connect with us? Visit HeedTheWord.org. Support the show

    26 phút

Giới Thiệu

Heed The Word is the online Bible teaching ministry of Pastor Ken Davis of Calvary Chapel Southwest Metro, a non-denominational church in Joshua, Texas. We are committed to bringing our listeners the Word of God by simply teaching the Bible simply. It is our hope that these broadcasts will encourage you to believe in Jesus Christ, and to grow as His disciple as you walk worthy of the calling with which we have been called.Our latest episodes are a rebroadcast of our "Heed the Word" radio program.  These episodes were originally broadcast on KDKR.  At that time our church was located in Burleson, Texas though we have since relocated to Joshua.  Additionally, these episodes indicate that CD copies can be ordered, but as they are now available through our podcast, we are no longer offering physical copies of these messages.  It is our continued hope that these Bible teachings are an encouragement to you and we appreciate you joining us here on Heed the Word!