Épisodes

  • From Eden To The Well: How Jesus Ends Our Displacement
    Nov 17 2025

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    Ever felt out of place even when life looks “normal”? We open with a story of getting lost on a quiet walk and use that unsettling moment to chart a bigger map of exile—how the human heart drifts from where it was meant to live and how Jesus leads us back. Through three vivid portraits from Scripture—Eden’s first banishment, a leper’s social isolation, and a Samaritan woman’s hidden shame—we explore the many faces of displacement and the deeper longing to belong.

    We begin in Genesis, where communion with God is shattered and survival replaces identity. The language is fierce—banished, driven out, guarded—yet mercy breaks through as God clothes the fallen and signals a future way home. Then we step into the world of Leviticus and Mark, where “unclean” becomes a public label and a person is pushed outside the camp. Jesus answers stigma with touch, restoring more than health: he restores a name, a place, and a people. Finally, we meet the woman at the well at high noon, carrying a complicated story and a deeper thirst. Jesus crosses ethnic, gender, and moral barriers to offer living water, shifting the question from “where to worship” to “how to worship”—in Spirit and truth.

    Along the way we name our own exiles: spiritual distance, social isolation, emotional numbness, and moral fatigue. The throughline is hope. The one truly at home with the Father chose displacement—leaving heaven, suffering outside the city, and bearing abandonment—so we could come back in. If you’ve been hiding, avoiding, or pretending, consider this your invitation to step into the light, receive healing where you hurt most, and reenter community with a story that can guide others home.

    If this spoke to you, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs hope, and leave a quick review so more people can find their way back to belonging.

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    17 min
  • Building A Mature, United Church In A Divided World
    Nov 10 2025

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    What if the most loving church isn’t the one that keeps you comfortable, but the one that calls you to grow up? We take that question straight into Ephesians 4 and uncover how Paul moves from soaring doctrine to gritty daily practice, showing why a real gospel culture requires humility, unity, and words that build rather than break.

    We start by naming the tension: church is hard because people are imperfect and preferences clash. Then we anchor the conversation in the story of Ephesus—an influential city shaped by power and idols—where Paul planted deep roots and wrote with a pastor’s heart. From there we trace the arc of Ephesians: identity in Christ first, then a new way of life. That shift reframes everything. Unity stops being a vague ideal and becomes a practical choice. Maturity stops being a cliché and becomes the steady refusal to chase trends, gossip, and outrage.

    Together we walk through the commands that give a church its shape: put off the old self, tell the truth, don’t let anger rot your heart, do honest work so you can share, and speak only what helps. We talk about accountability and church discipline as acts of love that protect people and restore trust. And we push back on the thin mantra “do what makes you happy,” trading it for a richer invitation—do what makes you holy. Along the way, we share a vision for a serving church: Scripture-centered, Spirit-led, visible in the community, welcoming to strugglers, celebrating baptisms, and committed to forming kids and students who follow Jesus with courage.

    If you’re hungry for a church that stretches you toward Christlikeness—and a community that helps you die to selfishness and live for a bigger mission—this conversation is for you. Listen, share it with a friend, and tell us one place you feel called to grow. If it resonates, subscribe, leave a review, and help more people find the show.

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    43 min
  • You Cannot Follow Jesus While Ignoring His Church
    Nov 3 2025

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    Start with a hard sentence: you can’t follow Jesus while ignoring His church. From there, we open up a candid, Scripture-soaked exploration of what church really is, why gathering isn’t optional, and how a messy, imperfect community becomes the place where transformation takes root. We push past the building and the brand to recover the biblical picture of a people formed by Jesus, devoted to one another, and focused on mission.

    We walk through Hebrews to see Christ as the head of the church—the high priest who establishes a better covenant and the builder who promises His church will endure. Then we trace the early church in Acts, where believers arrange their lives around teaching, prayer, breaking bread, generosity, and courage under pressure. Along the way, we confront modern drift: treating Sundays like entertainment, assuming online-only faith can sustain discipleship, and making church attendance an optional extra rather than the context for growth.

    The conversation turns to 1 Corinthians, where Paul addresses division, compromise, disorder, and loveless gifting. His solution isn’t withdrawal; it’s deeper commitment to unity, holiness, ordered worship, and love that actually bears with one another. We talk plainly about discomfort, hurt, and frustration—and why those tensions, worked through in love, shape resilient disciples. If Jesus loves the local church, created it, and uses it to carry the gospel forward, then showing up, participating, and building others up isn’t just a habit; it’s obedience and joy.

    If this resonated, follow the show, share it with a friend who’s searching for real community, and leave a review to help others find the conversation. Your story helps someone else take a step toward a church they can love and serve.

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    33 min
  • Remember Who God Is And Who You Are
    Oct 27 2025

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    What do you preach when the room feels thin and your heart feels thinner? We chose candor and a compass: hope that doesn’t depend on optics, energy, or ease. Starting from a vulnerable confession about discouragement, we trace a path from shaky self-talk to a sturdy, holy reality by remembering who God is and who we are.

    We sit with David in Psalm 103, not as a spotless hero but as a forgiven sinner who knows the weight of failure and the warmth of mercy. Line by line, we name God’s benefits—He forgives, heals, redeems, crowns with compassion, renews our strength, and removes our sins as far as east is from west. That catalog of grace is not a distraction; it is a framework. When metrics mock and comparison spirals, worship recalibrates the soul around the character of God.

    From there we step into Lamentations 3, letting Jeremiah’s unfiltered grief teach us the turn: Yet this I call to mind, therefore I have hope. Mercy is new every morning. Faithfulness is not seasonal. We talk about the difference between hyped self-belief and the renewing of the mind that comes through Scripture, prayer, and a faithful community. We name the lies that crowd our heads, the pull of platforms and attendance numbers, and the quiet power of showing up, praying together, and letting God set the scale of what matters.

    If you’ve felt defeated, distracted, or small, this conversation invites you to remember your identity as a son or daughter of the Most High and to ground your week in a kingdom that outlasts every empire. Join us, share it with someone who needs hope, and help us build a community that remembers well. Subscribe, leave a review, and tell us: what verse anchors your hope right now?

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    43 min
  • From Saul’s Spiral to David’s Strength: Choosing God When Life Falls Apart
    Oct 14 2025

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    Smoke rises from Ziklag, families are gone, and a weary band turns on their leader. That’s the moment David does something that feels small but changes everything: he strengthens himself in the Lord before he takes a single step. Our conversation follows the long arc of hope—from Hannah’s raw prayer to Samuel’s calling, from Israel’s demand for a king to Saul’s unraveling, and finally to David’s surprising response under crushing pressure.

    We draw out the contrast that Scripture wants us to see. Saul grasps; David asks. Saul moves first and prays later; David inquires of God and only then acts. At Ziklag, that posture leads to a rescue marked by mercy along the way—feeding a dying Egyptian who becomes the key to the enemy’s location. The victory that follows is full, but the test continues after the battle: will power turn inward? David answers by sharing the spoils with those who stayed behind and blessing the surrounding communities, insisting that what the Lord gives is meant to be stewarded, not hoarded.

    Along the way, we wrestle with why we ache for good endings, why life often refuses to give them on demand, and how hope can be more than a mood when the camp is still burning. We talk about seeking God first as a practiced reflex, not a last resort; how generosity is the natural language of people who trust God with outcomes; and why Jesus is the steady center when everything else cycles between gain and loss. If you’re caught between panic and paralysis, this story offers a path: pause, strengthen yourself in the Lord, ask, and then move with courage and mercy.

    If this episode helps you reframe a hard season, share it with a friend, subscribe for more, and leave a review with one practice you’ll try this week.

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    41 min
  • Better a Live Dog Than a Dead Lion
    Sep 28 2025

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    Solomon's unflinching examination of mortality in Ecclesiastes continues to challenge and comfort us today. "The same destiny overtakes all," he writes, observing that death comes equally to the righteous and wicked. Yet instead of despair, this ancient king offers surprising wisdom: "Enjoy life with your wife, whom you love all the days of this meaningless life."

    What makes this wisdom so profound is how it confronts our modern struggles with comparison and discontentment. We constantly measure ourselves against others, chasing more possessions, status, and experiences, yet never finding the joy Solomon describes. True contentment comes not from accumulating more but from embracing what God has already provided.

    For Christians, this wisdom takes on even deeper significance. Unlike Solomon, who had no concept of resurrection, we understand that death isn't the final word. The stark difference between a believer's funeral and a non-believer's illustrates this hope perfectly. While both experience grief, those who trust in Jesus celebrate the certainty of reunion. As Jason noted, "I don't want my kids to repeat my mistakes" – wisdom means learning from others rather than insisting on experiencing folly firsthand.

    Throughout these chapters, Solomon contrasts wisdom with foolishness, noting how "fools multiply words" while the wise speak with grace and purpose. Even a little foolishness can undermine a lifetime of wisdom, which is why seeking God's guidance matters so profoundly. Whether you're young or experiencing the midpoint of life, Solomon's message remains urgent: follow Jesus while you can.

    The reality that "everyone comes to the same end" should motivate us to make choices today that align with eternal values. You don't need more experiences or possessions – you need Jesus. When facing your mortality, will you have built your own kingdom of meaningless pursuits, or will you have sought God's kingdom first? The living still have this choice, and Solomon's ancient wisdom points us toward the one decision that transforms both our present joy and eternal destiny.

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    33 min
  • When Kings Rule but God Reigns
    Sep 21 2025

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    Have you ever wondered how to balance respecting authority while standing firmly for truth in a world that seems increasingly hostile to faith? Solomon's wisdom from Ecclesiastes offers profound guidance for this exact dilemma.

    Solomon begins by telling us to "obey the king" – not just because he's king, but because we've taken an oath before God. This echoes Paul's later teaching in Romans that "authorities are established by God." But what happens when earthly kingdoms clash with God's kingdom? The answer lies in understanding that while we respect earthly authorities, our ultimate allegiance is to Jesus alone.

    This sermon explores the delicate balance Christians must maintain as people of justice living in an unjust world. We're called to be different – to stand for truth without becoming tyrannical, to speak against corruption without resorting to the world's tactics. The powerful story of Helmuth James, a Christian lawyer who opposed Hitler from within the Nazi system, illustrates how believers can confront evil without becoming what they oppose.

    As our society grows more polarized, the church's witness becomes increasingly crucial. We're called to be peacemakers, justice-seekers, and truth-tellers – all while demonstrating the grace and love of Christ. This isn't about grand gestures but daily faithfulness: speaking truth in love, standing with the oppressed, and pointing others to Jesus through how we live.

    The darkness around us may seem overwhelming, but remember that in a world growing increasingly dark, we are the light that matters. How will you shine today? Join us as we explore what it means to be God's people in challenging times, standing firmly on truth while extending grace to a hurting world.

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    37 min
  • Beyond the Chase: What Truly Matters When Life Ends
    Sep 8 2025

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    Solomon's shift from personal reflection to wisdom sharing in Ecclesiastes chapter 7 brings us face-to-face with mortality and meaning. What begins as almost funeral-like observations quickly transforms into profound insights about living well in light of life's inevitable end.

    I recently wrote my own eulogy – a strange exercise that forced me to confront uncomfortable questions. What legacy am I building? Would people speak of me as I hope they would? Most importantly, have I focused on what truly matters? Because as Solomon reminds us, "A good name is better than fine perfume, and the day of death better than the day of birth."

    This counter-cultural wisdom strikes at the heart of our pleasure-seeking society. Solomon insists that mourning is better than feasting, that sadness benefits the heart, and that wisdom is found in confronting life's difficulties rather than escaping them. These insights parallel Jesus' teachings in the Beatitudes, where blessings are pronounced on those who mourn and hunger for righteousness.

    Solomon also addresses our tendency to live mentally trapped between nostalgia for the past and anxiety about the future, missing the only moment we can actually influence – the present. This obsession manifests in our cultural resistance to change (like the recent Cracker Barrel logo outrage) while preventing us from investing deeply in relationships right before us.

    Perhaps most powerfully, Solomon acknowledges life's apparent unfairness. The wicked sometimes prosper while the righteous suffer. Yet even without the revelation of Jesus that we now possess, he concludes that pursuing God is what ultimately matters. For us today, this means recognizing our value in God's eyes beyond our brokenness – that we are loved, chosen, redeemed, and purposeful in His divine plan.

    Whether you're wrestling with mortality, questioning your purpose, or feeling distant from God, remember this truth: You are deeply loved. So much that even if you were the only person who needed saving, Jesus would have died for you alone. This is the message that gives meaning to everything "under the sun."

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    37 min