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Navigate Podcast

Navigate Podcast

By: Justin Hart
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Welcome to Navigate. 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 Navigate your Christian walk.

© 2026 Navigate Podcast
Christianity Ministry & Evangelism Relationships Social Sciences Spirituality
Episodes
  • Saul And The Cost Of Self-Rule
    Mar 19 2026

    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.

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    52 mins
  • Fiction, Faith, And The Fight For Truth
    Mar 5 2026

    What if the books on your nightstand are shaping your soul more than your to-do list ever could? We open with the reality of spiritual warfare, then trace how stories train our desires, sharpen our conscience, and equip us to stand firm when culture bends truth out of shape. This isn’t an anti-entertainment rant; it’s a field guide for choosing narratives that echo God’s order rather than numb us with noise.

    We dive into why fiction and nonfiction both matter for Christian formation, and how Jesus’ parables model the power of narrative to lodge truth in the heart. From late-night dopamine binges to the quiet work of wisdom, we show practical ways to engage books and movies without turning off your brain: pause the scene, name what it’s teaching, and measure it against Scripture. We explore beauty, harmony, and resolution in music and art as signposts of a moral universe—one reason some modern stories feel hollow while others satisfy like a resolved chord.

    Expect vivid examples: Oscar Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray as a mirror of conscience, the Odyssey’s sirens alongside Proverbs 7, and Tolkien’s vision of creation as music that can’t be ultimately ruined by discord. We talk Romans 14 maturity, why some should abstain in good conscience, and how others can read widely without losing their footing. Parents will find a blueprint for raising discerning readers—training kids to “smell” the story beneath the story—plus a starter canon that ranges from Little House and Lewis to Moby Dick and Tolkien.

    Listen to build a wiser bookshelf, a braver heart, and a home that treats every movie night like a masterclass in truth, goodness, and beauty. If this resonates, subscribe, share with a friend who loves great stories, and leave a review to help more people find the show.

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    45 mins
  • False Teaching
    Feb 26 2026

    Where do we draw the real borders of the Christian faith—and how do we stop calling every disagreement “heresy”? We open with a simple map: some doctrines are state lines where family can differ, while others are national borders that define the gospel itself. From there, we get practical about discernment, separating theological essentials from ministry methods so we stop breaking fellowship over style and start uniting around mission.

    We walk through classic flashpoints with clarity and care. Calvinism and Arminianism? Both sit within historic orthodoxy, even as they debate God’s sovereignty and human responsibility. Mormonism’s familiar vocabulary with foreign definitions? That crosses the border by redefining Jesus and salvation. Catholicism’s complex system? Many trust Christ and are saved, yet its most consistent soteriology clashes with the finished work of Christ. The goal isn’t scoring points; it’s identifying when the foundation shifts from grace through faith in Christ to something else.

    We also tackle the messy middle where most people live: biblical illiteracy, borrowed talking points, and sincere but misguided convictions. That’s where patient correction matters. Like Priscilla and Aquila with Apollos, we open the Bible, strengthen what’s weak, and watch for fruit over time. Jesus told us to test teachers by their fruit, not their flair. So we address spiritual malpractice—manufactured “prophecy,” platform-driven hype—and explain why public wolves require public rebuke, while confused brothers need fatherly guidance, community, and discipleship.

    Finally, we caution against rushing to endorse celebrity conversions. Hope is good; haste is not. The Gamaliel test—wait and see—keeps us anchored while we pray for lasting repentance and steady obedience. Our charge is simple: be Bereans, surround yourself with wise mentors, keep the Bible as final authority, repent quickly when corrected, and draw strong borders around the gospel while keeping generous state lines where Scripture allows faithful disagreement.

    If this conversation helped you think more clearly about truth and charity, follow the show, leave a review, and share it with a friend who loves theology and hates hot takes.

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    57 mins
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