King's Way Sermons with Dale Partridge
Dale Partridge · King's Way Bible Church
Show overview
King's Way Sermons with Dale Partridge has been publishing since 2023, and across the 3 years since has built a catalogue of 163 episodes, alongside 15 trailers or bonus episodes. That works out to roughly 110 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a weekly cadence.
Episodes typically run thirty-five to sixty minutes — most land between 34 min and 44 min — and the run-time is fairly consistent across the catalogue. None of the episodes are flagged explicit by the publisher. It is catalogued as a EN-language Religion & Spirituality show.
The show is actively publishing — the most recent episode landed 1 weeks ago, with 20 episodes already out so far this year. Published by King's Way Bible Church.
From the publisher
The official Sunday sermon podcast of Dale Partridge, Senior Pastor of King's Way Bible Church in Prescott, Arizona. Pastor Dale's sermons are aimed at strengthening biblical and theological literacy in the church and are thoroughly grounded in Scripture and practical application. To learn more about King's Way, visit www.KingsWayBible.org
Latest Episodes
View all 163 episodesGenesis 9:25-27: The Curse of Ham and the Blessing of Shem and Japheth (Part Two)
Genesis 9:18-28: Race, Nations, and the Curse of Ham
Genesis 9:1-17: God's Weapon—The Bow in the Clouds
Genesis 8:6-22: The Raven, the Dove, and the Mercy of God
1 Peter 1:22-25 - The Painful Work of Overcoming Church Hurt
Genesis 7:17-8:5 - The Unfaithful Never Escapes God's Judgement
Genesis 7:11-16 - The Day the Rain Began in Noah's Flood
The Holy Terror of the Resurrection
Ep 140Palm Sunday: How "Hosanna" Turned to “Crucify Him” in Five Days
In this sermon from Pastor Dale Partridge, we see how Palm Sunday marks the moment Jesus publicly revealed Himself as the promised King—but not the kind of King the people expected. In this sermon, we explore how the same crowd that shouted “Hosanna” would soon cry “Crucify Him,” revealing the fickleness of man and the wisdom of God’s redemptive plan. What looked like defeat was actually the greatest victory in history.
Ep 139Genesis 7:1-10 ~ A Greater Ark Than Noah’s
In this sermon on Genesis 7, we see both the severity and the mercy of God on full display. As the flood approaches, God calls Noah into the ark—a powerful picture of salvation, invitation, and covenant faithfulness. While judgment is certain and global, so is God’s provision for those who trust Him. This message highlights the deeper meaning behind the flood: a foreshadowing of the gospel. Just as Noah was saved through the ark, we are called to come into Christ for refuge from the coming judgment. The flood becomes not only a story of destruction, but of cleansing, redemption, and covenant promise. We are challenged to reflect on Noah’s long-term obedience in a corrupt world and to consider our own faithfulness. God’s patience is real—but it is not endless. The call is clear: trust His means of salvation, walk in steady obedience, and come to Him while there is still time.
Ep 138Genesis 6:18-22 ~ The Foundation Beneath Noah’s Ark
In this sermon from Genesis 6, we reach the turning point of the flood narrative where God introduces one of the most important words in all of Scripture—covenant. While the coming flood reveals God’s judgment on a corrupt world, His covenant with Noah reveals the structure of His saving grace. This message explains how covenant is the framework through which God preserves His promises and ultimately protects the promised seed that will lead to Christ. The ark itself becomes a picture of salvation—just as Noah and his family were saved from judgment inside the ark, all who are in Christ are saved from the wrath to come. The sermon also explores the gathering of the animals, the preservation of creation, and why the global nature of the flood matters. Most importantly, it highlights Noah’s extraordinary obedience. His faith was demonstrated not merely by belief, but by a lifetime of covenant-keeping faithfulness in a world that mocked him. In a culture that fears commitment and rejects stability, Noah stands as a model of steadfast faith. This message calls believers to recover a biblical understanding of covenant—faithfulness in our relationship with God, in our families, and in the church.
Ep 1371 Peter 1:13-16 Hopeful Minds and Holy Lives
In this sermon from First Epistle of Peter 1:13–16, believers are called to live with disciplined minds, steady hope, and holy lives. Because Christians have been chosen by the Father, sanctified by the Spirit, and cleansed by the blood of Christ, their lives must reflect that grace. The Apostle Simon Peter commands believers to “gird up the loins of your mind,” calling Christians to reject distraction, cultivate sober thinking, and anchor their hope fully in the future grace that will be revealed at the return of Jesus Christ. This message warns against spiritual and mental intoxication—constant reaction, undisciplined thoughts, and shallow spirituality—and calls the church to recover clear thinking rooted in Scripture. Christians are reminded that they are not merely forgiven sinners but children of God, called to reflect the holiness of their Father. The Christian life is therefore marked by three commitments: a disciplined mind, a hope fixed on Christ’s return, and a life pursuing holiness. In a chaotic world, believers must remain steady—thinking clearly, living faithfully, and trusting the promise that Christ will return to renew all things.
Ep 136Genesis 6:9–17 ~ In the Ark or Under the Wrath?
As we return to the book of Genesis, we begin the journey toward the flood narrative and the powerful contrast between a corrupt world and one righteous man. In Genesis 6:9–17, Noah stands blameless by faith in the midst of universal wickedness. While all flesh was corrupt and violence filled the earth, God preserved His promised seed through one household. This sermon explores: • The contrast between Noah and a fallen world • Righteousness by faith (not works) • The biological and moral corruption before the flood • The covenant connection between humanity and creation • The ark as a type of Christ • The flood as a picture of divine wrath The flood is not ultimately about water — it is about judgment. Just as the ark bore the storm of God’s wrath and preserved those inside, Jesus Christ bore the wrath of God for all who are united to Him by faith. The question is not “Am I good?” The question is: Are you in the Ark?
Ep 135Ephesians 5:22-27 ~ An Introduction to Biblical Patriarchy
In this powerful sermon on marriage and biblical patriarchy, the pastor uses Ephesians 5:22-33 to explain God's clear "instruction manual" for building a joyful, ordered Christian marriage. Comparing marriage without God's design to assembling furniture without instructions, he highlights how many couples end up in frustration, resentment, or divorce by making it up as they go. Drawing parallels between Christ and the church, he teaches: • Wives are called to joyful submission to their husbands as to the Lord — a dignifying, revolutionary act in a world of insubordination. • Husbands are the head, modeling Christ's sacrificial love by providing, protecting, leading, and gently cherishing their wives to present them holy and radiant before God. • True authority flows from sacrificial responsibility, not tyranny. • Biblical patriarchy brings order, joy, legacy, and a living picture of the gospel to the world. Perfect for couples seeking God's blueprint for strong, gospel-centered marriages in a chaotic culture
Ep 134Genesis 6:5-8 ~ Total Depravity Before the Flood
In Genesis 6:5–8, Scripture gives God’s own assessment of the world just before the flood. Humanity’s wickedness had reached its peak—every intention of the human heart was only evil continually. This passage reveals the doctrine of total depravity, showing not merely outward corruption but a deep, internal rebellion against God. As God looks upon the earth, we see His omniscience, His holy grief over sin, and His righteous judgment. Yet this is not a message of despair. In the darkest moment of human history, Scripture gives one of the most hopeful contrasts in the Bible: “But Noah found favor in the eyes of the Lord.” This sermon explains God’s grief without denying His sovereignty, refutes open theism, and shows how divine judgment and mercy coexist. Noah’s preservation points forward to Christ—the greater Ark—who saves sinners from the coming judgment by grace alone. Genesis 6 is not only a warning of wrath, but a powerful proclamation of grace.
Ep 133Genesis 6:1–4 - Who Are the Nephilim?
In this sermon on Genesis 6:1–4, we examine one of the most debated and mysterious passages in Scripture: the sons of God, the daughters of men, and the Nephilim. Set in the context of the war between the seed of the serpent and the seed of the woman, this passage reveals the final escalation of moral and biological corruption before the flood. Drawing from the Old and New Testaments, we explore historic interpretations held by the early church, the role of fallen angels, the identity of the Nephilim, and why God announced a 120-year countdown to judgment. Ultimately, this text reminds us that even when evil seems overwhelming, God remains sovereign, preserves His promised seed, and faithfully accomplishes His redemptive purposes.
Ep 132Genesis 5 - The History of the Pre-Flood World
Genesis 5 is often overlooked as “just a genealogy,” but it is actually a powerful record of the pre-flood world, the faithfulness of God, and the unfolding promise of redemption. This sermon walks through the generations from Adam to Noah, showing how life and death confirm the curse of the fall while also pointing forward to hope in the coming Messiah. Through Adam, Enoch, and Noah, we see the contrast between fallen humanity and those who “walked with God.” The extraordinary lifespans of the pre-flood world reveal a radically different environment, preserved by God to pass down firsthand testimony of creation, the fall, and the coming judgment. Enoch’s translation into heaven reminds us that faith pleases God, while Noah stands as the divinely chosen preserver of the promised seed. Ultimately, Genesis 5 teaches that while death reigns in Adam, life is promised through the greater Adam—Jesus Christ. This genealogy is not filler; it is a testimony to God’s faithfulness, judgment, mercy, and redemptive plan from the beginning of the world.
Ep 131Genesis 4:25-26 - The Appointed Seed and the Birth of Prayer
In the closing verses of Genesis 4, God reveals that human evil and tragedy cannot thwart His redemptive purposes. After the death of Abel and the rise of Cain’s godless civilization, hope appears lost for Adam and Eve. Yet God preserves the covenant promise through the birth of Seth—an appointed seed who continues the godly line that will ultimately lead to Christ. With the birth of Enosh, Scripture records the first instance of people calling upon the name of the Lord, marking the beginning of worship, prayer, and public reliance on God’s promises. This sermon contrasts the boastful violence of Cain’s line with the humble faith of Seth’s descendants and reminds believers that God often works through ordinary faithfulness rather than dramatic spectacle. In seasons of confusion, loss, or delayed clarity, God calls His people to trust His purposes and to call upon His name in faith.
Ep 130Genesis 4:17-24 - Polygamy and the Rise of a Godless Civilization.
In this sermon from Genesis 4:17–24, we trace the lineage of Cain and witness the rise of a civilization built apart from God. What begins with Cain’s rebellion against divine judgment quickly escalates into cultural defiance, the perversion of marriage through polygamy, and an unchecked glorification of violence. Through the example of Lamech, Scripture shows us that sin never remains stagnant—it always intensifies when left unrestrained by repentance and the gospel. The sermon addresses common grace, exposing the error of confusing God’s patience and gifts with approval of sin. It also explains why polygamy, though tolerated in certain periods of redemptive history, stands in direct opposition to God’s one-flesh design for marriage and ultimately distorts the gospel itself. As Cain’s line descends further into pride and bloodshed, we are reminded that cultures do not morally evolve without Christ—they devolve. This passage sets the stage for the coming flood, highlighting humanity’s growing need for redemption and the promise of God’s intervention. Only the gospel of Jesus Christ reverses the effects of the fall and brings true order, life, and hope to a fallen world.
Ep 129Genesis 4:10-16 Marked but Not Repentant
In Genesis 4:10–16, we see the sobering consequences of unrepentant sin through the life of Cain—the first man cursed by God. This sermon explores the biblical theology of blood, justice, and covenantal judgment, showing how Cain’s murder of Abel brings exile, restlessness, and spiritual death. While Abel’s blood cries out for justice, Christ’s blood speaks a better word—perfect atonement and true peace. We examine God’s poetic justice, the difference between godly sorrow and fear of consequences, and why Cain’s wandering life is a warning to every generation. The message closes with a powerful call: not to raise Cains who rebel and wander, but Abels who walk in faith, obedience, and covenantal blessing.