Biblical Talks with Elder Michael Tolliver Podcast

Michael Tolliver

When the term Reformed theology is used, it often refers to something less historical. Often it refers to a theology that acknowledges the doctrine of predestination and holds to a high view of the Bible as God’s inerrant Word. Sometimes it is also identified with the so-called five points of Calvinism: total depravity, unconditional election, limited atonement, irresistible grace, and the perseverance of the saints. These are all important teachings of the Reformed tradition, but they do not fully encapsulate or describe Reformed theology. A better starting place is five statements that have been called the five solas of the Reformation. These five solas (sola is the Latin word for “only” or “alone”) are sola Scriptura (Scripture alone), sola fide (faith alone), sola gratia (grace alone), solus Christus (Christ alone), and soli Deo gloria (God’s glory alone). Put together, these solas clearly express the central concerns of the Protestant Reformation, which was about worship and authority within the church as much as it was about individual salvation. The “alone” in each is vital, and they emphasize the sufficiency of God’s Word and the gracious nature of salvation, received by faith alone, in Christ alone. The last of the five solas, soli Deo gloria, is the natural outworking of the first four. It reminds us that Reformed theology understands all of life in terms of the glory of God. To be Reformed in our thinking is to be God-centered. Salvation is from the Lord from beginning to end, and even our existence is a gift from Him.

Episodes

  1. 3h ago

    Sermon of the Week Charles Spurgeon: Why God Chose You

    Send us Fan Mail Why were YOU rescued while millions perish? 🕯️ It is the question that shatters human pride and rebuilds the soul on the bedrock of grace. Why did God set His affection on you? Was it your intellect? Your kindness? Your choice? In this powerful message, we channel the timeless wisdom of the "Prince of Preachers," Charles Haddon Spurgeon, to explore the most controversial yet comforting doctrine in all of Scripture: Unconditional Election. We are stripping away the modern, "me-centered" gospel to reveal the terrifying and glorious sovereignty of God. This is not a message for the faint of heart. It is a hammer that breaks pride and a balm that heals the trembling saint. 👇 IN THIS SERMON, YOU WILL DISCOVER: ✅ The Great Lie of "Foreknowledge": Why God didn't choose you just because He saw you would choose Him. ✅ The Theological Battle: A clear comparison between the "begging God" of modern theology and the "Conquering King" of the Bible (Arminianism vs. Calvinism). ✅ The Scandal of Romans 9: Understanding why God loved Jacob and hated Esau. ✅ The Golden Chain of Security: Why your salvation is unbreakable and eternally secure. ✅ True Assurance: How to know, for certain, if you are among the Elect.   Each month, Elder Tolliver offers a spiritually encouraging book to help you in your walk with Christ for any size donation. Please go to biblicaltalks.com website to take advantage of this opportunity.  Support the show Have a blessed day, and thanks for listening! Visit my website to learn more at https://www.biblicaltalks.com

    42 min
  2. Jun 12

    Sermon of the Week: Pastor Billy McKillop: Set Apart by Grace

    Send us Fan Mail Paul’s conversion story in Galatians 1:11–24 teaches us something powerful about identity—you’ve got to know the Source you’re drawing from. Paul declares that the gospel he preached didn’t come from human classrooms, human approval, or human imagination. It came straight from Jesus Christ Himself. Before Christ arrested his life, Paul was caught in the grind of religious performance—climbing ladders, chasing titles, measuring his worth by his résumé. His identity was built on achievement, comparison, and competition. But Jesus lived another way. Jesus walked in perfect union with the Father. He never hustled for identity. He never performed for approval. He never let accomplishments define Him. And here’s the good news: through Christ’s finished work on the cross, we get to step out of the exhausting cycle of self-promotion and step into the rest of God’s approval. Our worth is no longer tied to what we do, but to what Christ has already done. When we root our identity in Him, we stop striving for validation and start living from the security of His grace.   Each month, Elder Tolliver offers a spiritually encouraging book to help you in your walk with Christ for any size donation. Please go to biblicaltalks.com website to take advantage of this opportunity.  Support the show Have a blessed day, and thanks for listening! Visit my website to learn more at https://www.biblicaltalks.com

    41 min
  3. Jun 10

    A Spotlight on the Scriptures: Psalms 107:1-3: Redemption Today, Coronation Tomorrow

    Send us Fan Mail This is a Spotlight on the Scriptures: Psalms 107:1-3 Oh give thanks to the LORD, for he is good, for his steadfast love endures forever! Let the redeemed of the LORD say so, whom he has redeemed from trouble and gathered in from the lands, from the east and from the west, from the north and from the south.  A Psalm of Redemption and a Promise Yet to Come This psalm is a holy summons—a call to the redeemed to lift their voices in thanksgiving. Why? Because the Lord, in His mercy, brought His people out of Babylonian bondage and began to gather them back into the land. That was grace. That was deliverance. But hear me now: that regathering was only a preview, not the premiere. It was partial, not permanent. The full fulfillment is still on the horizon. It will come when the Messiah steps into His millennial reign—when the King of kings sits on David’s throne and gathers His people from every corner of the earth. That’s not just restoration—that’s coronation. That’s not just return—that’s reign. So yes, we thank Him for what He’s done. But we also praise Him for what He’s promised. Because the same God who brought them out will one day bring them all the way in. And when He does, every exile will be home, every tear will be dried, and every knee will bow before the One who redeems and reigns. This is a Spotlight on the Scriptures  Support the show Have a blessed day, and thanks for listening! Visit my website to learn more at https://www.biblicaltalks.com

    3 min
  4. Jun 9

    Deep Dive Philippians: You Can Master Religion And Still Miss Jesus

    Send us Fan Mail Philippians 3:10-11: that I may know him and the power of his resurrection, and may share his sufferings, becoming like him in his death, that by any means possible I may attain the resurrection from the dead. Someone once said, “One of the most dangerous forms of human error is forgetting what one is trying to achieve.” And saints, that danger is real in the Christian life. It is easy—far too easy—to get distracted, to get busy, to get religious, and yet forget the very thing we’re supposed to be aiming at. So, what is the goal of the Christian life? Paul answers it with beautiful simplicity: The goal of the Christian life is to know Christ and to be like Him. That’s it. That’s the target. That’s the aim. That’s the bull’s-eye. Christianity is not a ladder of rules we climb to reach heaven. It is not rituals, routines, or religious performances. Christianity is a living, growing, personal relationship with the risen Lord Jesus Christ—a relationship that transforms us into His likeness. Our goal is to know Him. And our goal is to become like Him. And saints, hear me well: our goal is to know Him—and to make Him known.   Each month, Elder Tolliver offers a spiritually encouraging book to help you in your walk with Christ for any size donation. Please go to biblicaltalks.com website to take advantage of this opportunity.  Support the show Have a blessed day, and thanks for listening! Visit my website to learn more at https://www.biblicaltalks.com

    41 min
  5. Jun 3

    A Spotlight on the Scriptures: Job 1:20-21: When Everything Falls Apart, Turn to Worship

    Send us Fan Mail This is a Spotlight on the Scriptures: Job 1:20-21 Then Job arose and tore his robe and shaved his head and fell on the ground and worshiped. And he said, “Naked I came from my mother's womb, and naked shall I return. The LORD gave, and the LORD has taken away; blessed be the name of the LORD.” Praise in the Dark: A Word from Job’s Ashes Don’t miss this, saints—Job didn’t just cry, he didn’t just complain, he didn’t just collapse. The Bible says he fell to the ground and worshiped. After the loss. After the heartbreak. After the funeral. After the fire. He knew where to turn when everything fell apart. He didn’t run from God—he bowed before Him. We come into this world naked, with nothing in our hands. And let me tell you something: the only way we won’t go to the grave naked is if somebody else dresses us for it. That’s the truth. You can’t take your house, your car, your degrees, or your designer suits with you. You leave it all behind. Job understood that. He said, “The Lord gave, and the Lord hath taken away; blessed be the name of the Lord.”  That’s not bitterness—that’s boldness. That’s not defeat—that’s devotion. Job didn’t just praise God in the sunshine—he praised Him in the storm. And that’s where your breakthrough lives. Anybody can shout when the bills are paid and the body is healthy. But can you worship when the casket is closed? Can you lift your hands when your heart is heavy? Can you say “Hallelujah” when hell is breaking loose? Because that’s where heaven leans in. That’s where angels take notes. That’s where God says, “Now that’s my child.” So, if you’re walking through the valley, don’t wait for the light—praise Him in the dark. Because the same God who gives is the God who governs. And the same God who allows loss is the God who brings life. This is a Spotlight on the Scriptures    Support the show Have a blessed day, and thanks for listening! Visit my website to learn more at https://www.biblicaltalks.com

    4 min

About

When the term Reformed theology is used, it often refers to something less historical. Often it refers to a theology that acknowledges the doctrine of predestination and holds to a high view of the Bible as God’s inerrant Word. Sometimes it is also identified with the so-called five points of Calvinism: total depravity, unconditional election, limited atonement, irresistible grace, and the perseverance of the saints. These are all important teachings of the Reformed tradition, but they do not fully encapsulate or describe Reformed theology. A better starting place is five statements that have been called the five solas of the Reformation. These five solas (sola is the Latin word for “only” or “alone”) are sola Scriptura (Scripture alone), sola fide (faith alone), sola gratia (grace alone), solus Christus (Christ alone), and soli Deo gloria (God’s glory alone). Put together, these solas clearly express the central concerns of the Protestant Reformation, which was about worship and authority within the church as much as it was about individual salvation. The “alone” in each is vital, and they emphasize the sufficiency of God’s Word and the gracious nature of salvation, received by faith alone, in Christ alone. The last of the five solas, soli Deo gloria, is the natural outworking of the first four. It reminds us that Reformed theology understands all of life in terms of the glory of God. To be Reformed in our thinking is to be God-centered. Salvation is from the Lord from beginning to end, and even our existence is a gift from Him.