• Stop Tripping Over The Flesh And Start Walking Straight
    Feb 19 2026

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    Start here if you’ve felt the tug-of-war between what you know is right and what your impulses demand. We open the Scriptures and find a simple, demanding, and liberating path: walk in the Spirit. Not a sprint fueled by moods, but a steady cadence of love, light, and careful wisdom that reshapes how we think, speak, and choose.

    We begin with gratitude for the grace that made us family and for the Word that keeps our minds clear. From there we unpack three anchors of a faithful walk: walk in love that is born of the Spirit rather than sentiment, walk as children of light so the path is visible and deception loses its lure, and walk circumspectly by watching what stands around us and weighing it against God’s will. Galatians 5 becomes our north star: “Walk in the Spirit, and you shall not fulfill the lust of the flesh.” We confront how the flesh breeds rivalry, complaint, and devouring, especially within the church, and we offer practical ways to cultivate unity by keeping in step with the Spirit.

    We also map the journey’s arc. New birth and baptism mark the beginning, rising to newness of life with a destination in view. Faithfulness is the daily miracle—pressing forward while leaving behind what hinders. Along the way, we name the paradoxical blessings: sleepless nights that become classrooms of dependence, sorrow that refines joy, scarcity that expands generosity. With Scripture as our compass and the Spirit as our strength, we learn to filter the world’s noise, make wise choices at home, work, school, and church, and trade reaction for reliance.

    If your heart longs for steady footing and clear direction, this conversation invites you to recover the slow, strong pace of a Spirit-led life. Subscribe for more Scripture-rich guides to practical faith, share this episode with a friend who needs encouragement, and leave a review to tell us how you’re keeping in step with the Spirit.

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    22 mins
  • How A Skeptic Met Jesus And Found Certainty
    Feb 16 2026

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    What if the shift from striving to peace is one honest prayer away? We follow Nathaniel’s path from sharp skepticism—“Can anything good come out of Nazareth?”—to a clear confession that Jesus is the Son of God. His turning point isn’t a polished argument; it’s a piercing moment of revelation when Jesus says, “I saw you under the fig tree.” That simple line tells a deeper story about how God meets us where we actually are, sees our inner life, and invites us to something greater.

    We read John 1:43–51 and unpack the cultural weight of the fig tree as a place of meditation, then connect it to the present: Scripture, prayer, and the Holy Spirit still converge to speak to real people in specific moments. Along the way, we challenge the urge to debate the Bible into submission and instead lean into a faith that says “yes and amen” to God’s promises. Humility becomes the key posture—being without guile, willing to be known, ready to be taught—so the noise of performance quiets and the peace of Christ takes root.

    From “follow me” to “you will see greater things,” we trace a pattern anyone can live: receive revelation, respond in trust, and keep walking. We talk candidly about judgment based on origins, the trap of trying to feel our way into belief, and the freedom that comes when love is received rather than earned. If you’ve ever wanted a faith that is real, grounded, and life-giving, this conversation offers a clear path forward. Listen, reflect, and share it with someone who needs the nudge to “come and see.” If this resonates, subscribe, leave a review, and tell us: what moment made faith real for you?

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    33 mins
  • The Brother Who Introduced Peter And Accidentally Changed History
    Feb 11 2026

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    A quiet introduction can change the course of history. We walk through the Gospel of John to meet Andrew, a disciple who rarely takes center stage yet repeatedly opens the door for others to meet Jesus. From the Baptist’s bold witness by the Jordan to the intimate moment of “Come and see,” Andrew’s story shows how seeking becomes sharing and how small, faithful acts can ripple outward with surprising power.

    We unpack the setting around John 1, the timing after Jesus’ temptation, and the way John the Baptist’s words nudge Andrew toward a life of invitation. Then we study Jesus’ simple, elegant method: start with a clarifying question, extend a real invitation, and create space to abide. That rhythm forms the bedrock of personal evangelism that feels human, respectful, and effective. Andrew learns it in a day and lives it for a lifetime.

    You’ll hear how Andrew brings three very different groups to Jesus: his brother Peter, a young boy holding loaves and fish, and a group of Greeks searching for truth. Each moment highlights a consistent pattern—notice the person, bridge the gap, trust Jesus with the outcome. Rather than chasing crowds or building a sect, Andrew embodies a practical theology of presence. His legacy invites us to trade performance for proximity, slogans for conversations, and pressure for hospitality.

    If you’ve ever wondered how to share your faith without hype, Andrew offers a pathway marked by humility, clarity, and action. Listen to be equipped with simple steps you can take today—ask what people seek, say “come and see,” and walk with them one step at a time. If this reflection encourages you, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review so others can find the show.

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    17 mins
  • Two Prayers Enter A Temple And Only Humility Is Heard
    Feb 9 2026

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    Two people walk into the temple. One recites a flawless spiritual résumé. The other can barely raise his eyes. Only one goes home justified. We unpack the shock of Luke 18:9–14 with fresh eyes, naming the subtle ways pride hides in our prayers and how humility opens the door to real mercy.

    We start with the audience Jesus addresses—those who trust in themselves and quietly look down on others—and explore why comparison is the oxygen of pride. Then we sketch the Pharisee and the tax collector without caricature. The Pharisee was devout and disciplined, the kind of person communities often admire. The tax collector had harmed neighbors under Roman power, a figure people rightly distrusted. That complexity matters, because Jesus moves past labels to expose the spirit behind each posture: self-exaltation versus contrition.

    From there, we dissect their prayers word by word and posture by posture. The Pharisee’s thanksgiving shifts into self-congratulation and horizontal comparison. The tax collector’s short cry—God, be merciful to me, the sinner—becomes a doorway to justification. We talk about the theology of mercy, why confession is not self-loathing but agreement with truth, and how honest prayer reshapes daily practices like fasting, giving, and service. Along the way, we name the modern forms of phariseeism that tempt us: moral scorekeeping, curated spirituality, and the comfort of being “better than.”

    If you’ve ever prayed and sensed only the echo of your own voice, this conversation offers a path back to God-centered prayer: simple words, low posture, clear confession, and trust in grace. Come rethink what it means to be heard, to be lifted, and to go home justified.

    If this resonates, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs encouragement, and leave a review to help more listeners find these conversations.

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    29 mins
  • Grace Changes Everything
    Jan 31 2026

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    Grace changes the terms of everything. We start with Jeremiah’s promise of a New Covenant and the ancient practice of covenant “cutting,” then follow the thread to the cross where Jesus becomes the sacrifice that secures the covenant on our behalf. From there, we walk with Paul in Acts 20 as he heads toward affliction to “testify to the gospel of the grace of God,” revealing why the law exposes our need but cannot supply the power to meet it.

    We unpack the crucial shift from law to grace: the law demanded perfection and offered no help; grace pardons, empowers, and gives us a “new and living way.” Along the way, we dig into core claims that stretch the mind and calm the heart—salvation by grace through faith, not works; reconciliation as a gift, not wages; and growth in holiness fueled by “grace upon grace,” not white-knuckled effort. If grace feels too good to be true, we consider why that reaction is common and how trust in the finished work of Christ reorients our fears, habits, and hopes.

    You’ll hear how covenant, sacrifice, and promise come together in Jesus, why Paul’s courage flows from grace, and how everyday discipleship shifts from earning to receiving. The result is practical and pastoral: a faith rooted in the gift of God that produces joy, perseverance, and worship. If you’re ready to trade exhaustion for assurance and striving for Spirit-led strength, press play, share this with a friend who needs hope, and leave a review to help others find the good news of grace.

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    16 mins
  • Pride Says “I’ve Got This”; Faith Says “God Already Did”
    Jan 27 2026

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    What if the life you’re striving to build is actually meant to be received? We open Scripture and follow a golden thread from Habakkuk to Romans to explore a bold claim: the just shall live by faith. Not a vague spirituality, but concrete trust in what God has said, and in what Christ has done, right now.

    We unpack how the gospel reveals the righteousness of God from faith to faith, why Paul isn’t ashamed of this message, and how it becomes real for anyone—Jew or Gentile—who believes. The law demanded righteousness; the gospel provides it in Jesus. That truth reframes both our standing with God and our daily walk. We move from self-reliance to humble dependence, from managing image to embracing grace, from white-knuckled effort to Spirit-led obedience. Faith is not passive. It listens to the word, believes the promise, and acts on it with a steady, quiet courage.

    Along the way, we tackle the pride-versus-humility divide, show why grace flows where we depend on God, and reflect on what it means to receive a righteousness that holds when feelings don’t. We close with praise and a benediction that roots our hope in the One who keeps us from falling and presents us faultless with great joy. If you’re hungry for a faith that is both honest and anchored, this conversation will meet you right where you are and invite you deeper into the grace of Christ.

    If this speaks to you, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a review so more people can discover the good news that changes everything.

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    11 mins
  • So You Want To Be A Disciple? Bring Your Cross And Leave Your Ego
    Jan 20 2026

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    Start the year with a radical reset: deny the self that keeps you stuck and discover the life only Christ can give. We open the scriptures to trace a clear path from Adam to Christ, then unpack what it actually means to follow Jesus when the feelings fade and the calendar fills. No clichés, no shortcuts—just the daily cross, honest surrender, and the steady power of grace.

    We walk through Luke 9:23 and Galatians 6:14 to show why denying self is not self-hatred but the doorway to freedom. You’ll hear how the cross breaks the world’s pull, why “according to the scriptures” anchors your hope, and how Christ’s death, burial, and resurrection shape every step of discipleship. We explore the benefits of the cross beyond forgiveness: the old self crucified with Christ, the call to take up your cross daily, and the Spirit’s work in producing love, joy, and peace that resolutions can’t create.

    If you’ve ever wondered how to keep trusting when the old patterns won’t die, this conversation gives you a grounded, scripture-rich framework. We celebrate grace upon grace, remember God’s promises are yes and amen, and end with a heartfelt prayer that points you back to the One who keeps you from falling. Subscribe, share with a friend who needs hope today, and leave a review to tell us: what promise are you standing on this week?

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    19 mins
  • According To Your Word: Finding Direction, Peace, And Renewal In Psalm 119
    Jan 15 2026

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    Start with a question that matters: what does life look like when you truly live “according to Your word”? We open Psalm 119 and follow its thread through cleansing, guidance, peace, mercy, and renewal, showing how Scripture is not just information but transformation. The heartbeat of the message comes from verse 65—“You have dealt well with Your servant, O Lord, according to Your word”—and it becomes a lens for seeing how God directs our steps and supplies the grace we need.

    We walk through the universal problem of sin and the practical answer the Bible gives for a clean path: take heed to the Word. Then we move to the promise of perfect peace—shalom, shalom—for the mind stayed on God, exploring how attention shaped by Scripture steadies us when anxiety, noise, and wandering pull us off course. This isn’t about religious performance; it’s about trust that grows by hearing and doing. Along the way we highlight how mercy is received “according to Your word,” how forgiveness and new life are secured by God’s promise, and why revival is not a one-time event but an ongoing prayer—“Revive me according to Your word”—for weary souls who feel like dust.

    We also turn to the power of community. The call not to forsake gathering reminds us that spiritual resilience is a group project. We exhort, we encourage, and we help one another stay aligned with the truth when life presses hard. The result is a life marked by direction and provision: Scripture shows the way and feeds the journey. If you’re seeking clarity, peace, or a fresh start with God, this conversation offers a clear path forward—rooted in the text, centered on grace, and aimed at joy.

    If this message strengthens you, subscribe, share it with a friend who needs renewal, and leave a review to help more listeners find hope in God’s Word. What promise from Scripture are you holding onto this week?

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    13 mins