The Study Boys

FLAME & Lex Lutheran

Lex Lutheran and FLAME continue The Study podcast with a new venture—The Study Boys. In this second space, the focus is on proclaiming Christ, His gifts, engaging culture, and thoughtfully including the Book of Concord in today’s conversations. This podcast serves as a reaction platform, spotlighting helpful teachings rooted in the Holy Bible and ancient Christian thought while confronting unhealthy ideas that invade the Christian space.

  1. APR 21

    Losing the Gospel in the Pursuit of Experience: When ‘More’ Means Less

    In this episode, Lex Lutheran and I wrestle with what happens when our immediate needs and perceived pressures begin to take priority over God’s priorities. When that shift happens, the goalposts move—and what God has actually given to His Church starts to feel secondary, outdated, or even irrelevant. We’re seeing a growing trend where Christians prefer a version of the faith centered on feelings, prophetic words, dreams, and mystical experiences—while struggling to see the ongoing relevance of the Gospel itself: the forgiveness of sins, the finished work of Christ, and His continued presence for us in Word and Sacrament. We react to Dr. Rod Rosenbladt's "The Gospel For Those Broken By The Church." A well-known message to the hurting Christian—those who have been crushed under heavy doses of law preaching and have rarely, if ever, heard the Gospel clearly delivered. His work exposes just how easy it is to lose the main thing, even in churches that claim to preach Christ. Here is the full talk: https://youtu.be/5TJvBxIXLlI?si=DiOJW2-34ZQH3p89  PLEASE Take a listen---to the whole thing!! Thank us later!! We also engage voices—pastors and teachers—who assume that message is old, insufficient, or no longer compelling, and who push for something “more.” But in chasing experience, many have unintentionally displaced the very center: Christ for you. This episode is a call to recover what God has actually promised to do for sinners/saints.

    1h 7m
  2. MAR 4

    Cutting People Off? Christians, Forgiveness, and the Culture of Canceling Relationships

    In this episode, FLAME and Lex Lutheran discuss the growing cultural trend of “cutting people off”—ending relationships permanently over disagreements, offenses, or personal frustrations. Social media often celebrates the idea of removing people from your life at the first sign of conflict, but is this really the Christian way to handle broken relationships? We explore how Scripture calls believers to something deeper than impulsive separation. While there are situations where distance and protection are necessary—especially in dangerous or abusive circumstances—many relationships today are ended prematurely over petty conflicts, misunderstandings, and minor offenses. Christians are called to live in the tension of law and gospel: confronting sin honestly, allowing consequences to unfold when someone refuses to repent, and yet still leaving room for forgiveness, prayer, patience, and reconciliation. Sometimes love means creating space—not to cancel someone—but to let them experience the weight of their decisions while still remaining open to repentance and restoration. In a culture quick to cancel relationships, we ask: What does the fruit of the Spirit look like in conflict? How should Christians practice long-suffering and forgiveness? When are boundaries appropriate, and when are they just bitterness? How do we hold people accountable without abandoning them? Join us as we think through how Christians can navigate broken relationships in a way that reflects Christ’s mercy, truth, and wisdom.

    1 hr
5
out of 5
24 Ratings

About

Lex Lutheran and FLAME continue The Study podcast with a new venture—The Study Boys. In this second space, the focus is on proclaiming Christ, His gifts, engaging culture, and thoughtfully including the Book of Concord in today’s conversations. This podcast serves as a reaction platform, spotlighting helpful teachings rooted in the Holy Bible and ancient Christian thought while confronting unhealthy ideas that invade the Christian space.

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