Send Me

Send Me

di John Campini
Stagione 1
The Dragon & The Restoration (Job 40-42)
The Season Finale. God concludes His interrogation by pointing to the ultimate monsters: Behemoth and Leviathan. In this final episode, Pastor John and Sarah unpack the tactical meaning of the Chaos Dragon and witness the beautiful moment where Job's "hearing" turns into "sight." We conclude with God's surprising verdict on the friends and the restoration of Job's fortunes—which only happens after he prays for his accusers. Key Topics: Leviathan: The Chaos Dragon that only God can tame. The Verdict: Why God preferred Job's honest anger to the friends' polite lies. The Restoration: The tactical power of forgiveness. Brought to you by Battle Buddy Backup – Healing Through Community and Purpose. www.battlebuddybackup.com
The Whirlwind & The War Horse (Job 38-39)
iption: The silence is broken. Out of the gathering storm, the LORD finally speaks to Job. But instead of answering Job's questions, God demands that Job answer His. In this explosive episode, Pastor John and Sarah cover the "Theophany"—the moment God challenges Job to "dress for action like a man" and takes him on a tour of the cosmos, from the chains of Orion to the neck of the War Horse. Key Topics: The Whirlwind: God arrives to settle the debate. The Inquisition: "Where were you when I laid the foundation of the earth?" The War Horse: God's tactical design of a creature that laughs at fear. Brought to you by Battle Buddy Backup – Healing Through Community and Purpose. www.battlebuddybackup.com
The Young Gun & The Ransom (Job 32-37)
The debate is deadlocked. The elders are silent. Suddenly, a young man named Elihu steps forward, "burning with anger," to rebuke them all. In this episode, Pastor John and Sarah introduce the fourth friend who changes the conversation from "Crime and Punishment" to "Suffering and Education." Key Topics: The Young Gun: Why Elihu waited and why he finally exploded. The Ransom: The incredible prophecy of a Mediator who says, "I have found a ransom" (Job 33:24). The Storm: How Elihu prepares the stage for the arrival of the Whirlwind. Brought to you by Battle Buddy Backup – Healing Through Community and Purpose.www.battlebuddybackup.com
The Covenant of the Eyes (Job 29-31)
The debate is over. Job stands alone to deliver his closing statement. In this episode, Pastor John and Sarah unpack "Job's Covenant" (Job 31:1)—the tactical decision to set a guard over one's eyes—and discuss how Job understood human rights centuries before the rest of the world caught up. Key Topics: The Sod of God: The "Secret Council" Job misses. Tactical Purity: How to make a covenant with your eyes. The Signature: Job signs his legal case. Brought to you by Battle Buddy Backup – Healing Through Community and Purpose. www.battlebuddybackup.com
The Silence of Wisdom (Job 22–28)
The debate grinds to a halt. In the third and final cycle of speeches, the friends run out of arguments. Eliphaz resorts to slander, Bildad barely whispers, and Zophar is completely silent. But out of this exhaustion emerges a beautiful interlude: Job 28, the "Hymn to Wisdom." Pastor John and Sarah explore the difference between human mining—digging for gold—and the divine revelation of Wisdom, which is found only in the fear of Adonai. www.battlebudybackup.com
The Digging In (Job 15–21)
Episode Description: The gloves come off. In the second cycle of speeches, Job's friends stop trying to comfort him and start attacking his character. Eliphaz, Bildad, and Zophar paint a terrified picture of "The Wicked Man," implying that Job is hiding secret sin. Job responds by shattering their "karma theology" with a brutal look at reality and delivers one of the most famous lines in the entire Bible about his Redeemer. www.battlebuddybackup.com
The Dogmatist & The Resurrection Hope (Job 11-14)
Description: Zophar the Dogmatist closes out the first round of debate with the harshest take yet: "You actually deserve worse than this." But in the face of this arrogance, Job begins to look beyond the grave. In this episode, we find the first glimmers of Resurrection hope in the Old Testament as Job asks the ultimate question: "If a man dies, shall he live again?" Key Topics: The Vending Machine God: Zophar’s transactional theology. Worthless Physicians: Diagnosing a crime that wasn't committed. The Tree of Hope: Job’s confidence that death is not the end. Brought to you by Battle Buddy Backup – Healing Through Community and Purpose. www.battlebuddybackup.com
The Missing Mediator (Job 8-10)
Description: The gloves come off. Bildad the Traditionalist steps up with a devastating accusation: "Your children died because they sinned." As Job reels from this blow, he begins to see the massive gap between sinful man and a holy God. In the midst of his defense, Job cries out for an "Arbiter"—a Mediator who can lay a hand on both God and Man. A powerful foreshadowing of the Savior to come. Key Topics: Cruel Counseling: Bildad’s attack on Job’s dead children. The Appeal to History: Why "Tradition" isn't always right. The Arbiter: Job’s desperate need for Jesus. Brought to you by Battle Buddy Backup – Healing Through Community and Purpose. www.battlebuddybackup.com
Friendly Fire & The Karma Trap (Job 4-7)
Description: The "Comfort" ends and the debate begins. Eliphaz the Mystic speaks first, relying on a spooky spiritual vision to claim authority over Job. In this episode, we expose the danger of "Karma Theology"—the idea that innocent people never suffer. Pastor John and Sarah discuss "Spiritual Gaslighting" and how to spot when someone is using the right Bible verse at the wrong time to hurt a friend. Key Topics: Eliphaz’s Vision: Private revelation vs. Public Truth. The Retribution Principle: Why "Good things happen to good people" is a trap. The Treacherous Brook: Job’s disappointment with his friends. Brought to you by Battle Buddy Backup – Healing Through Community and Purpose. www.battlebuddybackup.com
The Primal Scream (Job 3)
Description: After seven days of silence, the dam breaks. Job 3 is not a polite prayer; it is a raw, guttural cry for his own "de-creation." Join us as we analyze Job’s "Primal Scream," where he reverses the language of Genesis 1 to ask God for an "Undo" button. We tackle the hard questions: Is it a sin to wish you were never born? And does our fear actually "open the door" to the enemy, or is that just bad theology? Key Topics: Target ID: Why Job curses his birthday, but not his God. De-Creation: The reversal of "Let there be light." The Great Equalizer: Job’s view of death as freedom from masters. Brought to you by Battle Buddy Backup – Healing Through Community and Purpose. www.battlebuddybackup.com
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