King's Banner Podcast

Justin Hart

Welcome to King's Banner Podcast. We got tired of the same ole answers when we started looking for help when it came to our walks with God. So together we go deeper than most would on topics that most people have heard or were taught but never fully understood. It is our way of simplifying concepts that we may have over complicated throughout our lives. Bringing theology and life experience into each episode.  It is our hope and desire to help you in your Christian walk.

  1. 21h ago

    Community: Back to Basics

    Church potlucks get a bad rap, and honestly, sometimes they deserve it. But a cramped fellowship hall and a shaky casserole table can reveal something we’re starving for: real, embodied Christian community where people actually know each other, share life, and grow up together. We start with the awkwardness of meals after church and end up asking a bigger question: what is “covenant community,” and why does the Bible keep pulling God’s people back to the table?  Along the way, we connect the biblical story of breaking bread, Acts 2, and the command to not neglect meeting together with what we’re watching happen in modern life. We’re more connected online than ever, yet lonelier in our neighborhoods, our churches, and even our homes. We talk about curated identities, convenience as a trap, and why the rise of porn, VR hangouts, and even AI girlfriends is a warning sign that we’re giving up on real relationships.  We also get practical and a little confrontational about “online church” as a lifestyle. Watching sermons can’t replace being known, using your gifts, and sticking with a local body through the mess. And if you’ve been hurt by church, we don’t pretend that’s nothing, but we do challenge the reflex to disappear. Growth takes time, forgiveness takes work, and community is where your sin gets exposed and healed.  If you want faith that actually forms you, start showing up, sit down at the table, and learn how to love the people God put near you. Subscribe for more, share this with a friend who’s been drifting, and leave a review that helps others find the show. Send us Fan Mail Support the show

    49 min
  2. May 28

    Body Soul Spirit

    A lot of people think the Christian life is mainly about trying harder. We don’t buy that, and this conversation with Pastor Justin explains why: if you don’t understand what a person is, you’ll misdiagnose what’s wrong. We walk through biblical anthropology and the trichotomy of body, soul, and spirit, then contrast it with the secular assumptions many of us absorb without noticing. We talk about how Gnostic thinking still shows up today, especially in the way Christians confuse “the flesh” with the physical body. From Colossians to Genesis, we trace the logic of creation, the breath of God, and what actually “died” when Adam and Eve sinned. That leads straight into the meaning of being born again, who your Father is, and why the gospel is not “Jesus makes your life better” but “Jesus makes you new.” Then we get very practical. Using 2 Corinthians 10, we frame spiritual warfare as a battle for belief: strongholds are lies, speculations, and lofty thoughts raised against the knowledge of God. We discuss why recurring sin patterns often persist because we keep protecting a lie, and why repentance is not just saying sorry but changing your mind. We close by calling ourselves to turn the lights on, confront darkness with truth, and pray for real breakthrough. Subscribe for more theology you can actually use, share this with a friend who feels stuck, and leave a review so more people can find it. What’s one thought you need to take captive this week? Send us Fan Mail Support the show

    47 min
  3. May 21

    Calling Out with Colossians

    Jesus doesn’t share the throne, and Colossians refuses to let us pretend otherwise. Justin and Casey talk about why we chose Colossians as a foundational series for our church season, especially in a place where “Christian” can get blended with politics, tradition, or just being a good person. We keep coming back to one claim that keeps cutting through the noise: Christ is supreme, and Christ is sufficient, not as a slogan but as the center of real life.  We dig into the background of Colossae, why Paul writes this letter from prison to people he has never met, and how pressure and hardship tend to invite a buffet of substitute beliefs. From there, we tackle the ideas that still show up today: “Jesus plus” spirituality, free grace theology that downplays repentance, and the old Gnostic instinct to search for God in every experience. Colossians answers with clarity: the fullness of deity dwells bodily in Jesus Christ, and everything we need for salvation and growth is found in him.  We also get uncomfortably practical about modern discipleship: attention spans shaped by reels and constant dopamine, the struggle to read the Bible slowly, and the way church communities fracture over secondary issues when Christ is no longer the priority. We talk truth and empathy, why hiding God is not love, and why a faith that never offends anyone probably is not Christianity at all.  If you want biblical theology that actually presses into daily obedience, this conversation will sharpen you. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review, then tell us what part of Colossians you most want to understand next. Send us Fan Mail Support the show

    45 min
  4. May 7

    Bible Study That Actually Changes You

    You can read the Bible for years and still slide past it like it’s background noise. We feel that tension and we name it: if we’re rushed, we’ll keep living on the same “highlighted” verses while whole books stay closed, confusing, or easy to dismiss. So we slow down and talk about what it looks like to approach Scripture like Jacob approaching God: a real wrestling match, where you expect to be challenged, corrected, and changed. We start with a simple conviction from Psalm 19: God’s Word is not just information, it restores, warns, and reshapes us. From there we get practical about how to read the Bible for depth. We lay out three lenses for Bible interpretation and hermeneutics: lexical and syntactical (words and structure), theological and canonical (how the whole Bible informs the passage), and cultural and historical (stepping into their world without letting “culture” cancel the text). It’s a built-in set of guardrails against eisegesis, reading our agenda into Scripture. Then we put the method to work in John 2, the wedding at Cana. Instead of stopping at “water into wine,” we notice why John calls it a sign, why a wedding matters in the Bible’s storyline, and how faith and obedience show up in the servants’ costly work before they see the miracle. We also talk about tools like commentaries, lexicons, and Blue Letter Bible, why context matters more than quick word studies, and how to keep reading so Scripture interprets Scripture. If you want richer Bible study, clearer doctrine, and a way to read hard passages without dodging them, this one is for you. Subscribe, share it with a friend who’s stuck in the skim, and leave a review with the passage you want to learn how to read better. Send us Fan Mail Support the show

    55 min
  5. Apr 9

    The Screwtape Letters Part Three

    The devil’s best work usually isn’t a headline scandal, it’s the slow drift that makes you shrug at what should wake you up. We wrap our third and final Screwtape Letters conversation by going after the “small” habits that quietly harden a soul: flippancy that turns every serious topic into a joke, and a constant stream of noise that keeps us from silence, prayer, and honest self-examination. If you’ve felt spiritually dulled by content, scrolling, or nonstop entertainment, you’ll recognize the pattern fast.  We talk about distraction as a real strategy in spiritual warfare, especially when guilt makes us dread effective contact with God. That’s when we start wanting “unreal” prayers, quick religious duty, and anything that lets the sleeping worms lie. Then we get blunt about the gap between saying we’re “struggling” and actually fighting, because grace never meant passivity. We also challenge false humility that downplays God-given gifts, delays obedience, and buries responsibility under a mask of piety.  From there, we connect this to everyday faithfulness: working on your marriage by owning your role, rejecting the idea that unhappiness equals grounds for divorce, and remembering marriage as a picture of the gospel. We finish by confronting consumer Christianity, church hopping, and pastors who water down doctrine to keep people comfortable, plus why expository preaching protects the church from dodging the hard texts. If this series helped you, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review so more people find it. Send us Fan Mail Support the show

    54 min
  6. Apr 2

    The Screwtape Letters Part Two

    “Respectable sins” are the ones that don’t get you kicked out of polite company. They’re the habits you can defend, laugh off, and even baptize with Christian language, while they quietly erode your joy, your witness, and your love for God. We keep digging into C.S. Lewis’s The Screwtape Letters and follow the thread from pride to self-justification: why it’s easier to spot sin in someone else than to go to war with it in ourselves. We talk about guilt and shame as check-engine lights, the Puritan practice of vivification and mortification, and what repentance looks like when it’s more than a word you avoid because it feels “negative.” From there we get painfully practical. When do sports, shows, video games, and “neutral” hobbies become idolatry because they reorder your schedule and reshape your soul? What does it mean to build a custom God you prefer rather than submitting to the God of Scripture? We also wrestle with patriotism, Christian nationalism, and the pull of moralism in the culture (including why Jordan Peterson can feel helpful while still leaving out what’s essential). We close with humor as a heart test: dirty jokes, sarcasm, practical jokes, and flippancy can be joy or they can be cover for lust, cruelty, and contempt. If this conversation hits a nerve, share it with a friend, subscribe, and leave a review. What “acceptable sin” is most tempting for you to excuse right now? Send us Fan Mail Support the show

    56 min
  7. Mar 26

    The Screwtape Letters Part One

    If you think spiritual warfare only shows up in dramatic moments, C.S. Lewis would disagree and so do we. This conversation starts with a big announcement: we’re planting a church in Tyler, Texas, and reintroducing the show as the King’s Banner Podcast. From there, we open The Screwtape Letters and let Lewis’ “letters from a demon” expose the everyday strategies that quietly anesthetize Christians. We talk about how a culture addicted to trendiness and tribal jargon trains people to avoid true and false questions, and how that same pressure tempts churches to go vague on doctrine just to keep things comfortable. We also get painfully practical about relationships: how close family and friend dynamics can become a breeding ground for petty irritation, how “prayer requests” can turn into gossip, and how bitterness can wear religious language like a mask. Then we push into identity and discipleship. Are you becoming a different person in each social circle? Are you stuck in a courtesy trap where nobody will say what they really believe? We also challenge emotionalism in Christian life: spiritual highs are not the same as repentance, and real worship often looks like obedience in a dry season when God feels absent. If you want a sharper view of temptation, Christian growth, and what faithful action looks like, hit play, share this with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find it. What part of The Screwtape Letters feels uncomfortably familiar right now? Send us Fan Mail Support the show

    49 min
  8. Mar 19

    Saul And The Cost Of Self-Rule

    Saul is one of the most unsettling characters in 1 Samuel because he has real moments of clarity, real victories, and real encounters with the Spirit of God and still ends up unraveling. We unpack why Israel’s demand for a king “like the nations” sets the whole tragedy in motion, and how Saul becomes the kind of leader you get when image, fear, and control outrun obedience. We also talk about the difference between spiritual experiences and spiritual roots. Saul can prophesy, worship, and be visibly moved, yet return to the same default patterns. That takes us into a blunt conversation about the slogan “it’s a relationship, not a religion” and why cutting yourself off from the historic church, discipleship, and long-term formation can leave your faith shallow when pressure hits. If you’ve ever confused adrenaline for maturity, this will recalibrate you. Then we go straight at the hardest line: “the Lord sent an evil spirit to torment Saul.” We explore divine sovereignty, human responsibility, and spiritual warfare without turning it into a tie game between God and Satan. We connect it to David’s worship music bringing relief, why proclamation and praise matter, and how modern mental health language can sometimes hide spiritual realities we should be willing to name. We close with Saul chasing David, David sparing Saul, and why reconciliation is often the most costly kind of leadership. If this helped you, subscribe, share it with a friend who cares about biblical leadership and spiritual formation, and leave a review with your biggest question coming out of the conversation. Send us Fan Mail Support the show

    52 min
5
out of 5
30 Ratings

About

Welcome to King's Banner Podcast. We got tired of the same ole answers when we started looking for help when it came to our walks with God. So together we go deeper than most would on topics that most people have heard or were taught but never fully understood. It is our way of simplifying concepts that we may have over complicated throughout our lives. Bringing theology and life experience into each episode.  It is our hope and desire to help you in your Christian walk.

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