• Bella Taylor Smith, The Voice Australia Winner Who Chose Ministry
    Jun 30 2026

    Bella Taylor Smith was 17 when she got saved at a summer camp during a worship service and realized that singing was not just something she could do — it was what she was made for. Years later, when a Voice Australia application popped up on her computer during Covid lockdowns, she felt the Lord prompting her to apply. She won. And then, rather than chasing the biggest mainstream opportunity that win could have opened, she and her husband moved to Nashville to make Christian music full time.

    Worship, the local church, and music made for your living room: Bella shares the story behind her new EP For the Home, the companion piece to her earlier project For the House, and why she wanted to make two distinctly different kinds of music — one filled with scripture for the local church, and one intimate and honest enough to fill a home with the Lord's presence. She also tells the genuinely strange story of winning The Voice Australia by watching the pre-recorded finale on her then-boyfriend's parents' couch, the difference between Australian and American food ingredients, and what it means to be a worship leader whose goal is to disappear so the congregation can find Jesus.

    Highlights

    • Why she felt the Lord prompting her to enter The Voice Australia even though Christian music was always the plan
    • The bizarre Covid finale where all four finalists pre-recorded four different endings and she found out she won watching TV
    • Why she made two separate EPs, For the House for the local church and For the Home for intimate listening
    • How she got saved at 15 at a summer camp worship service and knew immediately that was where she was meant to sing
    • What it has been like to move from Australia, where Christianity is not culturally embedded, to the Christian music world of Nashville
    • Why she believes a worship leader's job is to be as invisible as possible and simply connect people to heaven
    • What her husband's production philosophy of recording with live musicians means for the intimate organic sound of her music
    • Her honest take on Australian versus American food and why high fructose corn syrup is actually banned in Australia

    Resources / Links / CTA

    • 🌐 Bella Taylor Smith website: https://www.bellataylorsmith.com
    • 📱 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bella.taylor
    • 🎵 EP: For the Home
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    12 mins
  • Bethany Wohrle Lost Her Niece and Wrote an Album About the Goodness of God
    Jun 25 2026

    Bethany Wohrle has been with Bethel Music since she was 17 years old. Her voice is on All Hail King Jesus and Living Hope, songs with tens of millions of streams that have been sung in churches around the world. But when her niece Junie died unexpectedly at 18 months old in February 2023, Bethany nearly didn't show up to the Nashville writing camp she had scheduled for her debut solo album just weeks later. She went anyway, and what happened in those writing rooms was not what she expected.

    Grief, hope, and a God who is still good even when nothing makes sense: Bethany shares how the songs on her debut album Reason That I Sing, releasing July 10, were born not from a desire to process sadness but from a determination to write hope-filled music because she had seen too much of God's faithfulness to doubt Him now. She talks about the song So Close, written for her sister and brother-in-law as a declaration that God can bring dead things back to life, what it means to be a worship leader whose goal is to be as invisible as possible, and why walking through the hardest season of her life left her more on fire to lead people into worship than she has ever been.

    Highlights

    • How her niece Junie's unexpected death three years ago became the grief behind nearly every song on this album
    • Why she went to the Nashville writing camp just weeks after the loss and what God did in those rooms
    • Why she refused to write a song about sadness and what she chose to write about instead
    • So Close, the song she wrote for her sister, and the moment they both wept listening to the mastered version together
    • What she believes the role of a worship leader actually is — to be invisible and simply connect the congregation to heaven
    • The woman who had never raised her hands in church and what happened when the whole room lifted them together
    • All Authority, the song on the new album declaring that every fear and worry bows to the King of Kings
    • What she is sensing about the movement of God right now and why she does not want to be left behind what He is doing

    Resources / Links / CTA

    • 🌐 Bethany Wohrle website: https://bethanywohrle.com
    • 📱 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bethanywohrle
    • 🎵 Album: Reason That I Sing
    • 🎵 Single: He Is Here
    • 🌐 Bethel Music: https://bethelmusic.com
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    18 mins
  • She Said Yes to God and He Made Her a Missionary Through Music
    Jun 23 2026

    Anike grew up with a Muslim father, a conviction that some of the music she was listening to was wrong, and no idea she would one day be the first female artist signed to Reach Records. She looked up Christian remixes, found Lecrae, convinced her family to let her go to a church summer camp by calling it an internship program, and gave her life to Jesus on day three. Two days later, Lecrae showed up at the camp. She had no idea what God was setting in motion.

    Christian hip hop, the gospel carried in a beat, and what it means to give God your yes even when it costs you everything: Anike shares how a high school biology project turned into freestyle circles at lunch that turned into a full-time calling, why she carries headphones everywhere so people can listen before they realize they're hearing about Jesus, and what led her to change her name from Wande to Anike as an act of obedience to God. She also talks about the new single Holy Girls, inspired by Proverbs 31, what it felt like to record her entry for the Forrest Frank contest on a camera mic at her relative's house and get selected anyway, and why she believes you don't need the perfect setup for God to use what you have.

    Highlights

    • How finding Lecrae through a search for Christian remixes became the first domino in her entire journey to faith
    • The summer camp permission slip she got her Muslim father to sign by calling it an internship, and what happened on day three
    • Why she brought headphones to school every day as her non-awkward strategy for evangelism
    • What it cost her to give up a Nigerian family's expectation of becoming a doctor or lawyer to pursue music full time
    • Holy Girls, the Proverbs 31-inspired single celebrating women of God who are unashamed, diligent, and fearless
    • Why she changed her name from Wande to Anike and what God showed her through letting go of a brand she had built
    • Recording her Forrest Frank contest entry on a camera mic at her relative's house and getting selected for the album anyway
    • Her new ebook Song Release 101, giving other artists everything she had to figure out alone about releasing music legally

    Resources / Links / CTA

    • 🌐 Anike website: https://anike.net
    • 📱 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/anike
    • 🎵 Single: Holy Girls
    • 🎵 Single: Contagious
    • 🎵 Forrest Frank collaboration: Jesus Is Alive
    • 🌐 Reach Records: https://www.reachrecords.com/artists/wande
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    16 mins
  • Was America Founded as a Christian Nation?
    Jun 18 2026

    Dr. Thomas Kidd, professor at Midwestern Seminary and author of biographies on Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin, Patrick Henry, and George Whitefield, has spent his career at the intersection of American history and Christian faith. He is one of the most careful historians working on the founding era today, and when he says the debate over whether America was founded as a Christian nation has enough to offend both sides, he means it — and he can explain exactly why.

    The founders, the First Amendment, and the tens of millions of churchgoers nobody is counting: Dr. Kidd unpacks why the separation of church and state was actually championed most fiercely by evangelical Baptists who were being persecuted by state churches, why Jefferson hosted church services in government buildings while also being the architect of religious liberty, and why Christianity thrives more when the government stays out of it. He also drops a finding from upcoming research that could reframe the entire conversation about American religious decline — congregational surveys are undercounting the total number of churches in America by at least 25%, and the tens of millions of people showing up every Sunday who never get counted are roughly equivalent in size to the entire group of Americans who claim no religion at all.

    Highlights

    • Why the founding has enough historical evidence to offend both the Christian nation crowd and the strict secularists
    • How Baptist Christians were among the loudest voices for church-state separation because state religion meant persecution
    • Why Jefferson hosted church services in government buildings while also being the great architect of religious liberty
    • What the founders actually believed about Christianity's role — strong cultural influence, but no official legal role
    • How the Great Awakening of the 1740s shaped Patrick Henry's speaking style and the entire patriot movement
    • Why Rosa Parks was chosen specifically because she was a dignified, churchgoing Christian woman — and why that matters
    • The upcoming research showing American churches are undercounted by at least 25% and what that means for the nones narrative
    • Why religiously practicing people consistently outperform non-practicing people on every measure of human flourishing globally

    Resources / Links / CTA

    • 📱 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ThomasSKidd
    • 📖 Book: American History Volume Two
    • 📖 Upcoming Book: The Death of Religion? co-authored with Byron Johnson
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    22 mins
  • The Lie Depression Tells and What Sam Eaton Did to Fight Back
    Jun 16 2026

    Sam Eaton grew up hiding under tables in kindergarten because he was afraid of the world. His father's alcoholism left deep roots of trauma, and years later, after watching four people in his school community die by suicide, he could no longer stay silent about the pain he had carried alone for years. Sam is the founder of Recklessly Alive, a suicide prevention ministry, and the author of the new book You Can Do This: Daily Affirmations to Live Recklessly Alive. He has spoken at more than 250 events across the country, and he opens up here about his own attempt, what brought him through, and why he believes almost everyone who feels suicidal does not actually want to die.

    Mental health, the lies depression tells, and what Scripture says to the person who doesn't want to be alive: Sam walks through why suicide at its core is simply pain that has outgrown someone's ability to cope, why talking about it openly makes people more likely to seek help rather than less, and how Job and the Psalms show that this struggle is not new to God and has never been a sign of faith failure. He also shares the one simple daily practice that carried him through the months after his own attempt, why community is essential even when you have to push yourself to show up, and what he wants caregivers to know about how to reach the people they love who are struggling.

    Highlights

    • Losing four people to suicide in one school community and how that became the turning point that broke his silence
    • Why almost everyone who feels suicidal doesn't actually want to die — they just can't see another way through the pain
    • How social media triples the pressure on young people and why three and a half hours a day doubles the risk for depression
    • The one simple daily practice he used after his own attempt — one small thing a day, photographed as proof that life can get better
    • What Job, Jonah, and the Psalms reveal about God's long familiarity with the pain of not wanting to be alive
    • Why struggling with mental health is not a spiritual failure, and why faith and medicine are meant to work together
    • The police officer video that went viral and what it captures about the power of human connection in a crisis moment
    • What he wants caregivers, parents, and teachers to know about how to reach someone who is struggling without having the perfect words

    Resources / Links / CTA

    • 🌐 Sam Eaton website and Recklessly Alive: https://www.recklesslyalive.com
    • 📱 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/recklesslyalive
    • 📖 Book: You Can Do This by Sam Eaton
    • 🆘 If you or someone you know is struggling, the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline is available 24/7 — call or text 988
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    19 mins
  • What 45,000 Students Lining Up at 3am Says About This Generation
    Jun 11 2026

    Kristian Stanfill has been part of Passion Music for over 20 years. He has seen a lot. But what he is witnessing right now among Gen Z, he says, is different. Not hype. Not emotional. Students showing up at Globe Life Field in Arlington at 3am, lining up around the building with their physical Bibles, just to make sure they could get into the room. Forty-five thousand of them. All hungry for the same thing.

    Repentance, revival, and a generation that wants something durable enough to build a life on: Christian shares what he believes Asbury 2023 cracked open across college campuses in America, why this move of God is marked by confession and holy living rather than spectacle, and what the new Passion album Just That Good is really about — joy from a life that has been genuinely redeemed. He also gives a preview of the upcoming Passion tour with Taya and Levi Lusko, and why none of them are interested in just doing a show.

    Highlights

    • What Christian has never seen in 20-plus years with Passion, and why this moment feels unmistakably different
    • How the Asbury outpouring in February 2023 stripped back celebrity culture Christianity and got back to the simple heart of faith
    • The image seared into his mind of students lined up around Globe Life Field at 3am, Bibles in hand, just to get in the room
    • Why this generation is not looking for hype but for something real, durable, and honest enough to build a life on
    • What the title track Just That Good is about and where the joy in it comes from
    • What Watch Him Work, What a Worthy Name, and the rest of the album represent for Passion
    • The upcoming tour with Taya and Levi Lusko and why all three of them are going into every city with faith for something fresh
    • Why Christian says leaving his family is only worth it if God is actually going to show up and do something powerful

    Resources / Links / CTA

    • 🌐 Kristian Stanfill's website: https://www.kristianstanfill.com
    • 📱 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/kristianstanfill
    • 🎵 Album: Just That Good
    • 🌐 Follow, share, and explore more of Crosswalk Talk
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    12 mins
  • The More Science Knows, the More It Points to God
    Jun 9 2026

    Dr. Michael Behe, biochemist and professor at Lehigh University, has spent his career making a case that most scientists would rather not hear. The concept he became famous for, irreducible complexity, argues that the molecular machinery inside living cells is so intricately assembled that removing a single part causes the entire system to collapse. Darwin thought the closer you looked at biology, the simpler it would get. The opposite turned out to be true, and that discovery has never stopped being inconvenient for strict materialism.

    Science pointing beyond itself, the mind behind the machinery, and what a young generation deserves to know: Dr. Behe walks through why he joined The Story of Everything, how the fine-tuning of the universe and the information embedded in DNA both point insistently toward a designer, and why the mainstream scientific establishment continues to resist conclusions that the evidence increasingly demands. He also shares his go-to argument for God — not from biochemistry, but from the one thing every person already knows they have — a mind — and why that single observation, followed honestly, leads somewhere materialists cannot explain away.

    Highlights

    • Why irreducible complexity is not going away and why evolutionary biology is still fighting to ignore it
    • How Darwin's assumption that cells were simple blobs of protoplasm turned out to be completely wrong
    • Why the more science advances, the stronger the evidence for purposeful design becomes
    • The fine-tuning argument and why the universe sits on a knife's edge to allow life to exist at all
    • His go-to argument for God, starting not with biochemistry but with the reality of the human mind
    • Why the mainstream media and academic establishment push the science-versus-faith narrative against their own evidence
    • What books like The God Delusion have done to students, and why this film is a direct answer to that
    • Why he believes young people who feel like accidents need to hear that science itself says otherwise

    Resources / Links / CTA

    • 🌐 Dr. Michael Behe website: https://michaelbehe.com
    • 🎬 The Story of Everything: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt13374694
    • 📖 Book: Darwin's Black Box
    • 📖 Book: The Edge of Evolution
    • 🌐 Discovery Institute: https://www.discovery.org
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    14 mins
  • Why Shae Robins Let Go of Broadway and How God Opened Every Door
    Jun 4 2026

    Shae Robins had one dream her entire life — Broadway. She worked the hours, joined the union, had friends performing on tour, and was ready to make the move to New York. Then, driving to work one morning past red rock canyons in Utah, God gave her a peace she wasn't looking for, and she let go. She signed with an agent almost immediately, got cast in her first Great American Family film, and has been making faith-forward rom-coms ever since. It turns out God was not closing a door. He was building a different stage entirely.

    Identity, letting go, and the faith stitched into the seams of everyday life: Shae shares what drew her to Blessings in Disguise, a film about a fashion designer who discovers her grandmother's Bible verse-stitched dresses and finds her way back to what matters, and how those themes led to a seven-day devotional audio series through the Glorify app called The Fabric of Faith. She also talks about the night her daughter called out "Hi Mommy" from the audience while she was playing Belle in Beauty and the Beast, why she believes families are starving for content that doesn't require a filter, and what it means to her to raise two little girls while making films they can be proud of.

    Highlights

    • The morning God gave her peace about letting go of Broadway and how everything opened up immediately after
    • How her first Great American Family film Destined at Christmas launched a career she never planned for
    • What drew her to Blessings in Disguise and why the themes of identity and self-worth hit close to home
    • The grandmother's Bible verse-stitched dresses in the film and why that detail became the heart of the story
    • The Fabric of Faith, a seven-day Glorify audio devotional tied to Blessings in Disguise covering identity, community, stillness, and grace
    • The night her daughter shouted "Hi Mommy" from the audience during Beauty and the Beast and why it was the highlight of her life
    • Why she believes families are spiritually hungry for content that carries hope and light without compromise
    • Her upcoming film A Christmas Prayer Two, a sequel to the Movieguide Award-winning original

    Resources / Links / CTA

    • 📱 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/shae_robins
    • 🎬 Blessings in Disguise
    • 🌐 Glorify app: https://glorify-app.com
    • 🌐 Follow, share, and explore more of Crosswalk Talk
    • 👉 Follow, share, and subscribe for more faith-driven conversations on Lifeaudio

    Discover more Christian podcasts at lifeaudio.com and inquire about advertising opportunities at lifeaudio.com/contact-us.

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    18 mins