Episodes

Monday Apr 21, 2025
Trusting God (Episode 137)
Monday Apr 21, 2025
Monday Apr 21, 2025
Trusting God is defined as the firm belief that He is faithful, reliable, and true to His promises. But oftentimes, when we say we are trusting God, it’s hard to determine if we really are when we have alternatives at the same time. The more resources we have, the more difficult it can be to determine how much we are really trusting God when we say that we are.
In this episode, Frank King says it is when we have no “Plan B” that we must truly trust God. That is when He is glorified. And to glorify Him is what we have been called to do.
Possibly, for all of us, times will come when our resources, no matter how vast they are, can't help us. That’s when God is calling us to trust Him completely. The question is, will our faith rise to the occasion.
Furthermore, we are commanded to live our life fully trusting God. The psalmist writes, “Trust in the Lord with all your heart. And do not lean on your own understanding. In all your ways, acknowledge Him. And He will make your paths straight” (Proverbs 3:5-6, NASB).
Gideon's Experience
In the days of the Judges, God called a man by the name of Gideon to lead His people against the Midianites. The children of Israel had done evil in the sight of God (Judges 6:1). He in turn delivered them into the hands of the Midianites for seven years. That’s why they were where they were.
It was at the end of those seven years of bondage that God called on Gideon to lead His people. The Midianites were a fierce army. Gideon was intimidated by the task. He asked God to show him some signs that He would be with him, which God did.
Gideon started out with an army of 32,000 men. But God said to him, “The people who are with you are too many for Me to give Midian into their hands. For Israel would become boastful, saying, ‘My own power has delivered me’” (Judges 7:2, NASB). Through a series of events, God reduced Gideon’s army from 32,000 men to 300 men.
God told Gideon he was now ready to go and fight. With only 300 men, Gideon had no choice but to trust the Lord.
If you desire to do anything relevant for the Lord, you must trust Him for a successful outcome. You can’t effectively do in your own strength what He is calling you to do. But if you trust Him, He will show Himself faithful on your behalf. That was Gideon’s experience.

Tuesday Apr 15, 2025
The Bodily Resurrection of Christ (Episode 136)
Tuesday Apr 15, 2025
Tuesday Apr 15, 2025
“If you confess with your mouth Jesus as Lord and believe in your heart that God raised Him from the dead, you will be saved” (Romans 10:9, NASB). These words penned by Paul the apostle underscore the importance of believing in the bodily resurrection of Christ. Our eternal salvation depends upon it. That is the focus of this Easter episode by Frank King.
In his first letter to the church at Corinth, Paul addressed the church members who said there is no resurrection of the dead. “If there be no resurrection of the dead, then is Christ not risen,” Paul said (1 Corinthians 15:13, KJV).
Paul also saw the argument that there is no resurrection from the dead as an attack on the credibility of the apostles. He said, “We are found false witnesses of God; because we have testified of God that he raised up Christ: whom he raised not up, if so be that the dead rise not” (verse 15).
All the apostles saw the Lord Jesus Christ with their own eyes. The original twelve were with Him throughout His public ministry. After He returned to heaven, they became witnesses of His life, His death, and His bodily resurrection.
A false witness is a person who claims to have seen something that he has not seen. That’s, in effect, what the apostles would be, Paul argued, if there is no resurrection of the dead.
Believing Having Not Seen
Just as it was in the church at Corinth, some who listen to this episode may not believe in the resurrection of the dead. They wrestle with the idea of the bodily resurrection of Christ. Perhaps many who attend church weekly have the same struggle. This is not a minor issue. Rather, it is a matter of eternal consequences. That’s why Paul so passionately addressed the subject in his letter to the church.
According to the Scriptures, early on that first day of the week, God raised Jesus bodily from the grave. He took victory from the grave and the sting out of death. Because He lives, those who believe in Him will live forevermore. And that’s what we celebrate this awesome time of the year we call Easter.
Everything we hope for and live for rests upon the fact that God raised Christ bodily from the grave. That’s why this is such a big deal for us. And why Paul was inspired to challenge the unbelievers in the church on this matter.
But accepting the bodily resurrection of Christ is a matter of faith. None of us have witnessed it. No one can show us infallible proof of the same. “Blessed are they that have not seen, and yet have believed,” Jesus said (John 20:29, KJV).

Monday Apr 07, 2025
God's Progressive Work in You (Episode 135)
Monday Apr 07, 2025
Monday Apr 07, 2025
No matter how long you live as a Christian, plenty room will always exist in your life to become more like Christ. The good news is that God is still working in your life toward that end. This episode addresses God’s progressive work in our life.
The basis of this episode is found in the words of Paul in his letter to the Philippians. There he writes, “Being confident of this very thing, that he which hath begun a good work in you will perform it until the day of Jesus Christ” (Philippians 1:6, KJV).
Note that Paul refers to God’s work in us as a “good work.” Furthermore, until the day of Christ, should we live until then, God will be working to perfect His good work in us.
Accordingly, we must be careful and not judge a person based upon some current snapshot we see of the person. Every genuine believer in Christ is a good work in progress. How we see someone today is no indication of who he will be tomorrow. That this is true attests to God’s progressive work in us. He wants to make and mold each of us into the image of His Son.
It is important to note that this episode is not about salvation. Salvation is an instant and complete work of God in our life. If someone were to genuinely accept Christ as his or her Savior today and die tonight, that person will go to be with the Lord. This episode, however, addresses our spiritual growth, which is not instant but ongoing.
Cooperating with the Process
We can impede God’s progressive work in our life. We should instead cooperate with what God is doing in us. He does not force change upon our life. This is the reason some Christians grow more quickly than others do.
Imagine that you are on the interstate, and you find out that some road work is going on. The exit you need to take is closed temporarily. So, you must go down a couple more exits and then take some back roads to get to where you are going. Going that way still gets you to your destination; it’s just a longer route because of the roadblock.
That’s the situation with God’s efforts to further His work in some Christians’ lives. They build personal detours and roadblocks to what God wants to accomplish in their life. So, He has to work through those issues with them. He can still get them where He wants to take them. But it takes longer when we don’t cooperate with His ongoing good work in us.

Sunday Mar 30, 2025
Four Christian Principles to Live By (Episode 134)
Sunday Mar 30, 2025
Sunday Mar 30, 2025
We all have physical, emotional, and mental limitations. That means a limit exists as to how much we can be subjected to physically, emotionally, or mentally. No one is an exception to that reality.
Consider our men and women in the military. Upon entry, they are mentally and physically strong. But even for them, a limit exists as to what they can be subjected to before they become overwhelmed physically, emotionally, or mentally. Hence, it’s not unusual for some of them to return from the horrors of war experiencing mental and emotional trauma.
The reason this is true is because God has not made any of us to carry the weight of our world upon our own shoulders. Those who try to do so will learn that to be true. Our ability to endure and overcome overwhelming situations in life is a function of our relationship with the Lord. This episode addresses four Christian principles every Christian should incorporate into his or her life.
Salvation Is Not Enough
We have not arrived just because we have accepted Christ as our Savior and become born again. After this conversion, we have only just begun. Of course, that experience is enough to get us into heaven. But meanwhile, we must live down here. And our adversary the devil wants to destroy us.
About that Peter writes, “Be sober, be vigilant, because your adversary the devil, as a roaring lion, walketh about, seeking whom he may devour” (1 Peter 5:8, KJV). Paraphrase: If you are a Christian, the devil is your enemy, and he wants to destroy you. That’s why the Christian principles discussed in this episode are important. They will help you to be victorious, amid the enemy’s assaults against you.
Incorporating these principles into your life is not a requirement for salvation. Rather, they are a matter of your quality of life as a Christian. They will enable you to live a more effective and fulfilled Christian life. The better you are at incorporating these Christian principles into your life, the stronger and more rooted in the faith your life will be.

Sunday Mar 23, 2025
Three Ways Salvation Changes Your Life (Episode 133)
Sunday Mar 23, 2025
Sunday Mar 23, 2025
What happens to a person when the Lord saves him or her? Is there any power in that experience? Or is the subject of salvation no more than religious jargon? This episode addresses three life-changing effects of a genuine salvation experience.
In his first epistle, John writes these words: “Hereby we do know that we know him, if we keep his commandments. He that saith, I know him, and keepeth not his commandments, is a liar, and the truth is not in him” (1 John 2:3-4, KJV).
Now that’s blunt language. But it does not get any clearer than that. When we accept Christ as our Savior, we become born again through faith. Through that born-again experience, our life radically changes. We become a new creation; old things are passed away; all things become new (2 Corinthians 5:17). Because of that transformation, John can write so emphatically in the two verses above.
Somebody may argue that although he lives like he doesn’t know God, the truth is that he does know Him. But according to what John writes, the way you know that you know God is that you keep His commandments. And if you don’t, you are lying. We conclude then that one of the ways salvation changes your life is that you will thereafter keep the Lord’s commandments.
It's important to note that the message in these verses is not that you MUST keep the Lord’s commandments to be saved. Rather, because you are saved, you WILL keep His commandments. In this episode, Evangelist Frank King addresses two other powerful ways salvation changes your life.
Examine Yourself, Not Others
According to John, no one who claims to know the Lord is an exception to what he states above. Nevertheless, the cited obedience may or may not be reflected in the lives of babes in Christ. One the other hand, we should not preoccupy ourselves with judging other believers’ relationship with the Lord.
Please note the first part of John’s words above. He says, “Hereby WE do know that WE know him.” In other words, it's not how we know others know Him, but how we know we know Him. Accordingly, the main objective of this episode is for us to look at ourselves and not others. We should view ourselves in the mirror of the Word. Then we must decide if the person we see really knows God or is merely a religious churchgoer. If it is the latter, we must take the necessary corrective action.
What’s the big deal about knowing if you really know the Lord? The most important decision you need to address in this life is where you will spend eternity. Jesus asks the question, “For what shall it profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?” (Mark 8:36, KJV).
Jesus’ question is relevant because of the value of your soul. Your soul is priceless. Your soul is immortal. It involves your emotions and your will. Your soul is who you are. Even gaining this entire world—if you could--is not worth losing your soul.
What’s so amazing about the incredible ways salvation changes your life is God’s simple plan for experiencing these life-changing benefits. Simply put, you must repent of your sins, confess Christ as Lord, and believe that God has raised Him from the dead.

Monday Mar 17, 2025
Receiving a Good Report Through Faith (Episode 132)
Monday Mar 17, 2025
Monday Mar 17, 2025
The Bible contains numerous accounts of men and women who successfully walked with God while on earth. We share something in common with them. They successfully walked with God, and we are currently striving to do the same. This episode focuses our attention on the Old Testament servants whose faith enabled them to receive a good report. We do well to heed the biblical accounts of their lives, if we want to please God.
According to the writer of the book of Hebrews, these heroes of faith, “Having obtained a good report through faith, received not the promise” (Hebrews 11:39, KJV). We tend to think that if someone says he has faith in God and he does not receive what he desired, he must not have had faith. According to the verse, however, these servants obtained a good report by faith--even though they did not receive the fulfillment of the promise.
It can be hard to remain faithful to God when you don’t receive what you are believing Him for. But that’s what real faith is all about.
So, what is the promise they did not receive? This is a reference to the promised coming of Jesus Christ. These faithful servants didn’t live to see the fullness of blessings that would come through the promised Messiah. Still, they remained faithful while living in anticipation of the Messianic promises given them.
Our Cloud of Witnesses
The writer refers to the men and women of faith mentioned in the book of Hebrews, chapter 11, as our cloud of witnesses. He says we are “compassed about with so great a cloud of witnesses” (Hebrews 12:1). A witness is someone who has experienced or seen something firsthand.
The heroes of faith mentioned in the book of Hebrews are witnesses because they know firsthand what it takes to receive a good report through faith.
When you read the Word of God, imagine that you are stepping into an arena to run a race. And there is this big cheering squad of faith heroes rooting for you. Abraham is saying, “Keep the faith.” David is saying, “Worship the Lord.” Job is saying, “Endure the hardness.” Samuel is saying, “Obey the Lord.” Through what has been recorded of their faith journeys, they are saying you can do this because we did it.
Now imagine stepping into an arena to run a race, and you have no one cheering you along. That’s how it is when you fail to read the Word of God so these great men and women of faith can pour into you along the way. The truth is that to be a winner in the faith, you need to connect yourself with other winners in the faith.
From the beginning of the Bible until the end, we have testimony after testimony of real people who had real challenges. They walked with God by faith, and they overcame. According to the Bible, the things that happened to them were written for our examples.

Monday Mar 10, 2025
The Way, the Truth, and the Life (Episode 131)
Monday Mar 10, 2025
Monday Mar 10, 2025
“I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me,” Jesus said (John 14:6, KJV). To those outside Christendom, this is one of the most arrogant statements Christians can make. It suggests that Christianity is the only valid faith. Frank King expounds on these powerful words of Jesus in this episode.
We have countless religions to choose from today. Also, in America, we have the right to freedom of religion. Ironically, when it comes to knowing and getting right with God the Creator, you don’t get to exercise freedom of religion.
That worldview goes against the grain of our culture. In virtually everything, we have options. But in this matter of eternal consequences, Jesus says, in effect, we don’t have options.
Christology is the area of Christian theology pertaining to the person, nature, and role of Christ. These aspects of Christ lay at the very foundation of Christianity.
For a religious community to be deemed Christian, it must adhere to the biblical teachings regarding the person, nature and role of Christ. We can disagree on many things and still be fellow Christians. But not on these vital truths about the person of Jesus.
“The Way, the Truth, and the Life” is a loaded self-declaration. We do well to take a closer look. So, let us unpack this phrase:
The Way
Every place in America and in the world has a specific location. Because of that, you can take your favorite navigational equipment, input your destination, and your device will guide you there. For most places, there is more than one route to get there. But as for heaven and the Father, Jesus says He is the only way. Absolutely no alternative way to God and to heaven exists. In John 10:9, Jesus refers to Himself as the door.
The Truth
Truth is not relative. Truth is not in the eyes of the beholder. It is not situation ethics. In other words, it’s not a function of the circumstances. Truth in the eyes of God is absolute. In John 17:17, Jesus says to God, “Your Word is truth.” Hence, God’s Word is the standard by which all claims, philosophies and doctrines are evaluated, relative to the truth. Jesus was the embodiment of the truth. Everything He said, taught and did was consistent with the Word of God.
The Life
Jesus says He came that we might have life (John 10:10). In that verse, the word for life is not the word bios (bee-oss), which denotes merely physical life. But He uses the word ZOH-ee, which is life in the absolute sense. Only one source exists for obtaining this true life. In John 5:24, Jesus says, “Verily, verily, I say unto you, He that heareth my word, and believeth on him that sent me, hath everlasting life, and shall not come into condemnation; but is passed from death unto life” (KJV).
Coming to the Father
After proclaiming Himself to be the Way, the Truth, and the Life, Jesus drops the bomb. He says, “No one comes to the Father but through Me” (John 14:6, NASB). That's the point Jesus was leading up to. In other words, to come to the Father, we must follow the Way He showed us. Accept the Truth He taught. And receive Life through faith in Him.

Monday Mar 03, 2025
Focusing on What's Important (Episode 130)
Monday Mar 03, 2025
Monday Mar 03, 2025
In this episode, Evangelist Frank King addresses our need for time-management and setting priorities. He says these are two of the keys to success in life. God has given us only 24 hours in a day to work with. We must know what’s important in life and how to be a good steward with our time.
A limit exists to how much we can prevent life from imposing itself upon us. Each of our lives is inseparably connected to the lives of others. For instance, you may need to help care for an elderly parent or family member. You didn’t ask for that, but you have it. The only way we can get through the challenges of life is by determining what’s important and disciplining ourselves to focus on those things first.
Think about Jesus. While He was on earth, He was clothed in human flesh. Hence, He was physically confined. He couldn’t be everywhere solving everybody’s problem. He didn’t try to because that was not His mission. Jesus knew what His mission was, He focused on the mission, and He did that with perfection.
We tend to overrate the importance of some things in our life at the expense of other things that truly are important. Overrated activities may include things such as a hobby or a personal routine. For instance, your daily trip to Starbucks for coffee. Or your weekly trip to the golf course. Those things in the life of some people are overrated. At the same time, we may underrate some things that really are important.
Sitting at the Feet of Jesus
One day Jesus stopped by the house of Martha and her sister Mary. When He arrived, Mary sat down at His feet and heard Him speak. Martha, on the other hand, was busy serving and trying to be a good host. She went to Jesus and said Lord, don’t you care that my sister has left me alone to serve.
“Martha, Martha, thou art careful and troubled about many things.” Jesus said (Luke 10:41, KJV). “But one thing is needful: and Mary hath chosen that good part, which shall not be taken away from her” (verse 42).
What Jesus says about Martha is true about many of us today. We are full of care and troubled about many things. Amidst it all, there is one thing that we need to make our priority. That is to spend time with the Lord daily and let Him speak to us through His Word and through prayer.
For some of us, however, we are so busy trying to manage everything in life that we may leave our need to connect with God to chance. We say if I get around to spending time with God, OK. But if not, that’s OK too. But if you are willing to leave it to chance, then it’s not important to you. One does not leave to chance what's important.
With time, life will become increasingly more demanding upon our limited time. The best single thing you can do to succeed is to make it a priority to spend time alone with the Lord each day. Your time with Him will positively impact every aspect of your day.




