Episodios

  • #132 - Two Questions That Change Everything {Reflections}
    Apr 15 2026

    Send us Fan Mail

    Two questions can stop you in your tracks, the way a guard’s shout can freeze a stranger at the wrong gate: Who are you? And what are you doing here? Ryan opens with an old story about Rabbi Akiva taking a wrong turn and ending up face-to-face with a Roman garrison. The guard calls down those two questions, and instead of brushing them off, Akiva treats them like treasure, so valuable he’d pay to hear them every morning.

    That’s the heart of this reflection: identity and purpose aren’t vague “someday” topics. They’re daily essentials. We talk about why so many of us move through life distracted and half-awake, invested in work routines and small ego projects while never really examining what we’re becoming. With Socrates’ warning about the unexamined life in the background, we lean into a simple contrast: asleep versus awake. Awake means honest reflection, clear priorities, and a life that matches your values instead of your momentum.

    You’ll walk away with a practical, repeatable habit: ask those two questions each day, and let the answers shape your choices before the years slip by. If this landed for you, share the episode with a friend, subscribe for more reflections, and leave a review. What’s your answer today to “Who are you?”

    Join us! Facebook | Instagram | www.clcelkriver.org


    Más Menos
    3 m
  • Underneath It All with Pastor Ryan Braley
    Apr 13 2026

    Send us Fan Mail

    Underneath everything we argue about, fear, chase, and try to control sits a claim that is either liberating or offensive: Jesus Christ is the center of it all. We walk through Colossians 1 and an early Christian hymn that calls Jesus the image of the invisible God, the firstborn over creation, and the One through whom all things were created. If you’ve ever wondered what God is like, we keep it simple and concrete: look at Jesus and watch how he handles power, how he treats annoying people, how he steps into suffering, and how the cross shows love from underneath rather than domination from above.

    Then we move from the personal to the cosmic. Colossians says “in him all things hold together,” and we explore what it means to call Jesus the Sustainer, the “cosmic glue” that makes the universe a universe and can bring coherence to a life that feels like scattered instruments warming up in the same room. We also name the pressures the first Christians faced in Colossae, from legalism and asceticism to angel fascination and secret-knowledge spirituality, plus the real social cost of refusing to worship the local gods. The message is blunt: Christianity is Jesus plus nothing.

    Finally, we lean into resurrection life. Jesus is the firstborn from the dead, the start of new creation bursting into the old world right now, and that means you are not done yet. There is forgiveness, restoration, and a steady hope for anyone carrying pain, addiction, illness, loneliness, or injustice. Next week, our friend Rob Morris from Love 146 joins us, and we’ll also hear more about their work to end child trafficking and exploitation.

    Subscribe for the rest of the Colossians series, share this with a friend who needs hope, and leave a review that tells us what line you can’t stop thinking about.

    Join us! Facebook | Instagram | www.clcelkriver.org


    Más Menos
    34 m
  • How to (Clumsily) Practice Resurrection with Pastor Ryan Braley
    Apr 7 2026

    Send us Fan Mail

    Easter isn’t asking you to admire a nice message about springtime. We’re talking about a claim that is either breathtakingly true or totally disruptive: Jesus is raised bodily, seen and touched, and that resurrection is the first sign that God is making everything new.

    We lean into why humans ache for endings and closure, then we trace how Scripture dares to give one. Revelation 21 describes a renewed world with no more death, mourning, crying, or pain, and with God present among people. That vision is not escapism and it is not a floating-soul-afterlife. It’s resurrection, restoration, justice, and healing on a cosmic scale, a new heaven and new earth where chaos and evil don’t get to stay.

    Then we sit in the tension we all feel: the future has dawned, but it’s not fully here. We still grieve real losses, face real diagnoses, and watch real destruction on the news. Christian hope doesn’t minimize any of it. It argues something sharper: the worst thing is not the last thing. Because we know the ending, we can practice resurrection right now by bringing life where things are dying, standing with people facing injustice, sharing with those in need, and doing small faithful acts that participate in the renewal of the world.

    If this gave you hope or challenged you, subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find it.

    Join us! Facebook | Instagram | www.clcelkriver.org


    Más Menos
    26 m
  • How Is This Night Different? with Sonja Knutson
    Apr 7 2026

    Send us Fan Mail

    A strange greeting like “Happy Maundy Thursday” can sound like code, and we get it because church language can feel like trying to explain a sport nobody’s ever watched. So we slow down and tell the story in plain words: the night Jesus gathers friends for a Passover meal, then flips every expectation with a towel, a basin, and the kind of love you can’t control.

    We walk through the Last Supper as more than a tradition. Foot washing becomes the shock that exposes our discomfort with vulnerability, especially when we’d rather serve than be served. Jesus tells Peter that this can’t be earned and it can’t be negotiated, it has to be received. Then comes the mandatum, the command that gives Maundy Thursday its name: love one another as I have loved you. That’s agape love, not sentimental, but chosen, self-giving, and defining for Christian discipleship.

    From there, we connect the command to abiding in God’s love and to communion, where bread and wine become a visible promise of a new covenant. And we don’t keep it theoretical. We talk about “hard tables” where love feels risky: grief, divorce, depression, addiction, estrangement, and the people we’d rather avoid. The question that lingers is simple and unsettling: how will I be different because of this night?

    If this helped you see Holy Week with fresh eyes, subscribe for more, share it with a friend who’s curious about Jesus, and leave a review so others can find the conversation. What’s one “hard table” you feel called to show up to with love this week?

    Join us! Facebook | Instagram | www.clcelkriver.org


    Más Menos
    18 m
  • #131 - The Most Uncomfortable Day in Christianity {Reflections}
    Apr 1 2026

    Send us Fan Mail

    We’re wired to love winners, which makes Holy Week oddly uncomfortable. Easter Sunday is bright and obvious, but Good Friday is slow, humiliating, and hard to look at. That’s exactly why we need it. I talk about why I used to avoid crucifixes, why an empty cross can feel easier, and why the Christian story insists that resurrection hope comes through the cross, not around it.

    A trip to Assisi and the story of Saint Francis praying before the Cross of San Damiano reshaped how I see Jesus’ suffering. That crucifix became more than religious art for me; it became a reminder that God’s victory is revealed in what looks like defeat. Drawing on Martin Luther’s theology of the cross and the idea of the “hidden God,” we explore how God can appear absent in pain while being most present, meeting us with real solidarity in loneliness, grief, and brokenness.

    We also get practical about Christian discipleship during Holy Week: not seeking suffering, but refusing to deny it, letting go of self control and self reliance, and learning to trust God when things feel lost. If you’ve been rushing to the “happy ending,” consider this an invitation to slow down, sit with Good Friday, and discover what kind of hope can actually raise the dead.

    If this resonates, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find these Holy Week reflections. What helps you stay present to Good Friday instead of skipping ahead?

    Join us! Facebook | Instagram | www.clcelkriver.org


    Más Menos
    9 m
  • The Crucifixion with Pastor Ryan Braley
    Mar 30 2026

    Send us Fan Mail

    Rome didn’t just rule with soldiers, it ruled with stories. One of its loudest stories was the Roman triumph: a victory parade that crowned the emperor, filled the streets with incense, and trained everyone to believe that real power looks like dominance, spectacle, and control. We’re at the penultimate week of our Journey To The Cross series, and we argue that Mark wants you to see Jesus’ crucifixion through that exact backdrop.

    We walk through the triumph step by step, then watch Mark 15 echo the same images in startling ways: the Praetorium, the purple robe, the “crown,” the procession, the offered wine, the place of the skull, and even two figures at the right and left. What looks like humiliation becomes a deliberate subversion of empire. The moment that lands it all is not a cheer from the crowd but a confession from a Roman centurion: “Truly this man is God’s son.” Mark’s Gospel reframes Good Friday as the real victory parade.

    From there, we press the question into everyday life. If the cross is triumph, then power is not power-over. It’s power-under, expressed through self-giving love. That has consequences for how we handle conflict, politics, relationships, and the temptation to organize life around winning. As Holy Week approaches, we end with a simple invitation to respond to God, even if you’re unsure where you stand.

    Subscribe for next week’s resurrection message, share this with a friend who’s wrestling with faith and power, and leave a review to help others find the show. What’s one area where you feel pulled toward “power-over” right now?

    Join us! Facebook | Instagram | www.clcelkriver.org


    Más Menos
    33 m
  • #130 - What If Salvation Starts With Diagnosis {Reflections}
    Mar 25 2026

    Send us Fan Mail

    “What must I do to be saved?” sounds like it should have one clean answer. We can quote Paul in Romans without blinking: confess Jesus as Lord and believe in the resurrection. But when people bring that same question to Jesus in the Gospels, he refuses to hand out a single script. Instead, he responds with startling, specific words that feel less like a formula and more like a diagnosis.

    We walk through four encounters that make this clear: the rich young ruler who can’t loosen his grip on wealth and control, the lawyer who wants to shrink the definition of “neighbor,” Nicodemus the respected teacher who needs more than religion and intellect, and the woman at the well who longs for living water that finally satisfies. Each conversation points to a different barrier, and each reveals something about how Jesus leads people into eternal life, the kingdom of God, and true worship.

    The thread running through all of it is painfully personal: Jesus goes after “the thing” we cling to most, the attachment that blocks us from receiving a full, robust life in him. If you’ve ever wondered why faith can feel stuck even when your beliefs feel right, this reflection will help you name what might be in the way and what it could look like to exchange your life for Christ’s life. Subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find the show.

    Join us! Facebook | Instagram | www.clcelkriver.org


    Más Menos
    8 m
  • The Consoling with Pastor Ben Carruthers
    Mar 23 2026

    Send us Fan Mail

    Five people stand near Jesus as he suffers on the cross, and that detail changes how I read John 19. While so many disappear into fear, Mary, Mary Magdalene, Salome, Mary the wife of Clopas, and John stay close enough to be counted. That’s not just courage. It’s a picture of Christian community being formed in real time, where love is stronger than reputation, comfort, or self-protection.

    We walk through who each person is and what their presence says about discipleship. Mary of Clopas is almost unknown, yet she shows up. Salome has a history of misunderstanding Jesus, yet she refuses to abandon him. Mary Magdalene carries a story of healing and transformation that helps us name the way oppression and shame can crush a life until Jesus restores it. John, likely young, stays when the other disciples run, and Jesus entrusts him with Mary’s care, creating family through faithfulness.

    Then we bring it home to the loneliness epidemic. Even with constant digital connection, isolation is rising, with serious effects on mental health and physical health, and kids are often hit the hardest. The question becomes painfully practical: who is your community when you’re broken, confused, grieving, or celebrating? And if you don’t have one, what step can you take today to start building it through the church, small groups, and consistent relationships.

    If this message challenges you, share it with a friend who needs real support, subscribe for more from Journey to the Cross, and leave a review so more people can find a path from loneliness to community.

    Join us! Facebook | Instagram | www.clcelkriver.org


    Más Menos
    30 m