Episodios

  • #128 - Your Boos Mean Nothing {Reflections}
    Mar 11 2026

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    The crowd can be loud, confident, and completely wrong. We’re in the Lenten stretch, and I want to talk about a trap that shows up everywhere from pop culture to politics to Holy Week: the madness of crowds and the craving to be approved by them. I start with a Rick and Morty moment that cuts straight through performative outrage: “Your boos mean nothing to me. I’ve seen what makes you cheer.” It’s funny, but it also stings, because it exposes how often we let applause and criticism steer our choices.

    From there we dig into Tulip Mania, the 1630s economic bubble where a flower bulb could trade for the price of a house. It sounds absurd, but that’s the point: when herd mentality takes over, irrational behavior feels normal. We connect that to a modern flashpoint with Team USA hockey and how quickly the public can crown heroes and then reverse course. To put science behind the instinct to conform, we talk through the Asch conformity experiment and why so many people will say the wrong thing out loud just to avoid standing out.

    Then we turn to the Passion story and Jesus before Pilate. Pilate knows Jesus is innocent, his wife warns him, and yet he caves to the mob, offering Barabbas and washing his hands while the crowd demands crucifixion. The question we keep circling is simple and hard: what do you do when the crowd cheers for the wrong thing, or boos the right thing? If you want a grounded, faith-filled way to think about approval, courage, and truth during Lent, press play. Subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review, then tell us: where do you feel the strongest pressure to conform?

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    10 m
  • The Cyrenian with Pastor Ryan Braley
    Mar 9 2026

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    A stranger is yanked from a crowd and everything changes. We follow Simon of Cyrene, an African pilgrim likely in Jerusalem for Passover, as he’s forced to shoulder Jesus’ cross—a single-verse moment that quietly reshapes church history and discipleship. Why do three Gospels preserve his name and even mention his sons? Because this “minor” detail anchors the Passion in lived reality and reveals how an interruption can become a calling.

    We open the scene with the gritty backdrop of Roman crucifixion: a system designed for humiliation, control, and spectacle. Then we trace a linguistic thread—“compelled”—back to the Sermon on the Mount, where Jesus reframed coercion with the second-mile ethic. Luke’s note that Simon carried the cross “behind” Jesus is not throwaway; that’s rabbi-disciple language. Without a class or creed, Simon steps into apprenticeship by posture: following under the weight of the cross. The tool of domination becomes, in his hands, a path into redemption’s story.

    From there we connect names and cities. Mark’s habit of precise detail echoes Peter’s eyewitness preaching; Paul’s greetings to Rufus in Romans hint that Simon’s household became known believers in the Roman church. That line—from Jerusalem’s streets to Rome’s house churches—shows how the Gospel moved through ordinary people and unplanned moments. We also wrestle with our own “what-if” points, recognizing how accidents, interruptions, and detours often carry sacred possibility when we choose to follow rather than grasp for control.

    If you’re weary of interruptions or unsure how to carry what’s been handed to you, this conversation offers a clear, grounded invitation: recover your agency by getting behind Jesus, one step, one mile, one yes at a time. Listen, reflect, and if it helps you see your day differently, share it with a friend, subscribe for more, and leave a review so others can find the show.

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    33 m
  • #127 - Head on a Swivel: Staying Awake in a Distracted World {Reflections}
    Mar 4 2026

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    What if the difference between a grounded life and a regretful one is as simple—and as hard—as paying attention? We connect three vivid scenes: a bodyguard’s rule for staying safe, a culture bent over its phones, and a midnight vigil in the Garden of Gethsemane. The thread is attention—how we give it, how we lose it, and what gathers at the edges of our lives when we stop keeping watch.

    We start with practical awareness: “head on a swivel” as a habit that prevents trouble long before it arrives. From there we move to the everyday drift of modern distraction, from the Chipotle line to school cafeterias where friends eat side by side while living in separate screens. It’s not an anti-tech rant; it’s a candid look at how devices reshape posture, presence, and even identity. Then we step into the garden, where Jesus seeks the highest good in focused prayer while his closest friends fight sleep. Their spirit is willing, their flesh is weak, and the consequences unfold in real time as betrayal approaches from the margins.

    Along the way we name the “small foxes” that slip by when we’re not awake—intrusive thoughts, low-grade complaints, and pockets of unforgiveness that breed in the dark. We offer simple, actionable ways to reclaim attention: look up and scan your surroundings, create phone-free meals, take silent walks, and close the day with a brief inventory of where you were most awake. With Lent as a guide, we explore repentance as re-aimed attention—turning from numb drift toward God, family, friends, and the present moment that keeps asking for our whole selves.

    If this resonates, share it with a friend who could use a nudge to look up. Subscribe, leave a review, and tell us: what will you keep watch over this week?

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    11 m
  • The Arrest with Pastor Ryan Braley
    Mar 4 2026

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    A moonlit garden. Torches, steel, and a kiss that turns friendship inside out. We revisit the arrest of Jesus through John’s Gospel and uncover a story that refuses to play by the rules of fear. From the opening theme of light shining in the darkness to the charged moment Jesus says “I am” and soldiers stumble backward, we trace how the scene echoes Genesis and signals a new creation rising in the very place night thinks it wins.

    We talk about Judas leaving a lit table for the shadows, and why that choice still mirrors our pull toward control over community. We explore the reversal of Eden—humans searching for God in a garden—and the startling tenderness of Jesus calling the betrayer “friend,” offering a way back even as the torches close in. Then the focus shifts to power: an armed detachment for a poor rabbi, an overreaction born of anxiety, and the shockwave of presence that unsettles every script. When Peter swings his sword, Jesus names the cycle—live by it, die by it—and shows a better way that disarms without dehumanizing.

    This episode weaves biblical theology, history, and practical discipleship to ask what kind of revolution actually lasts. Not a march on palaces, but a remaking of hearts that ripples outward—inside out rather than outside in. We reflect on nonviolence as courageous action, on the dignity‑restoring practices Jesus taught, and on how awe reframes our scale of worry. Above all, we return to John’s promise: the darkness is real, but it cannot overcome the light. If you’re carrying the Sunday scaries or headline dread, come stand with us in the garden and watch how love holds.

    If this conversation stirred something in you, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a review with the moment that stayed with you most. Your reflections help this community grow.

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    35 m
  • #126 - You Are Not Your Beliefs {Reflections}
    Feb 26 2026

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    Ever notice how a simple disagreement can feel like a verdict on your character? We unpack why debates about theology, politics, or culture so often feel personal, and we map a healthier way to hold conviction without fusing your identity to your opinions. Ryan shares how early certainty in theology turned dialogue into a threat and how that same pattern shows up today in tribal badges, echo chambers, and the fear of exile from our group.

    We dig into the psychology of enmeshment—when connected things that should stay distinct get fused—and contrast it with differentiation, the skill of staying emotionally separate while remaining connected. You’ll hear why beliefs become load-bearing walls for belonging and safety, how online platforms reward hot takes over nuance, and a striking story of an influencer who kept a disproven belief because it gave him love and community. Together we explore practical tools: watch your body for fight-or-flight cues, use time-bound language like “Here’s how I see it right now,” and practice curiosity as a sign of inner stability.

    Grounded in faith, we revisit the freeing truth that identity rests in God’s unconditional love, not in being right. That anchors us to engage difference without panic, to learn from challenge, and to refine what we hold most dear. If you’ve felt conversations turning explosive or listening becoming impossible, this is a roadmap back to calm, clarity, and connection—where disagreement is a workshop, not a war.

    If this resonates, subscribe and share it with a friend. Leave a review with one insight you’re taking into your next hard conversation.

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    12 m
  • The Arrest with Sonja Knutson
    Feb 23 2026

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    Lanterns cut the night air, feet pound the garden path, and a friend steps forward with a kiss. We walk into Gethsemane and face the question that sits under every hard moment: when pressure closes in, do we meet it with chaos or with calm authority? A sudden change of plans put a different voice at the mic, but the path stayed the same—straight toward the cross and the arrest that set everything in motion.

    We unpack the charged scene where Jesus names himself—“I am he”—and the crowd staggers backward. That phrase doesn’t just identify a man; it rings with the divine name, rooting courage in God’s presence. From there the contrasts sharpen: soldiers swarming while a Savior shields his friends, a blade flashing as Peter reaches for force, and a healing touch that restores an enemy’s ear. We look at how protection, restraint, and obedience come together in one steady posture that refuses collateral damage, even in the dark.

    Along the way, a tender story of a third-grade accusation—complete with a missing troll-head pencil and a mother’s defense—grounds the theology in everyday life. We talk about Judas’ kiss as a prearranged signal, how betrayal can dress like care, and why Jesus still allows it without losing his center. The geography matters too: a garden of prayer beside the Kidron Valley of sorrow, echoing David’s grief and pointing to Jesus’ path through pain toward purpose. This is a guide for anyone who feels misunderstood, tested, or tempted to swing first and think later.

    If you’re longing for practical faith under fire, this conversation offers a way forward: name reality without rage, protect people over pride, and trust the larger story God is writing. Listen, share it with someone who needs calm in their storm, and leave a review so more people can find hope on the road to the cross.

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    19 m
  • Ash Tells A Story with Pastor Ben Carruthers
    Feb 19 2026

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    Ash tells a story—and so do our lives. From a shocking Raiders of the Lost Ark moment to the quiet ache of a broken Christmas ornament, we trace how small reveals expose what truly owns our hearts. We wrestle with Jesus’ promise of an abundant, overflowing life in John 10 and the “thief” that steals it, not by fear, but by bright distractions tailor-made to our desires. Think less horror villain and more charming lure that says, “Come on out,” while pulling us away from the good we already know.

    We share the rich young ruler and Judas as mirrors for our own loyalties, then bring it close to home with the Buddy Bench—a simple playground practice that models what adults often forget: abundance moves outward. Instead of settling for checklist religion, we sit with John 6 where many walk away when Jesus says, “Follow me.” Peter’s reply becomes our anchor: where else would we go? The call isn’t to more hustle; it’s to a Person who is the bread of life.

    Repentance gets a fresh frame through the Hebrew word shuv—turning back, again and again, as a proactive, hopeful practice. We name how the thief is kleptos, sneaky and subtracting by inches, and we explore how Lent helps us notice what’s been quietly taken. The cross traced in ash is not a mark of shame; it’s a sign of companionship. We don’t turn alone. Grace meets us in the turning, and communion becomes the place we set burdens down and begin again.

    If death already shouts from our headlines, we don’t need more doom. We need a reminder to live—beyond the mirror, toward one another, anchored in Christ. Listen, reflect, and tell us what you’re choosing to leave behind so your ash will tell the story of a life that overflowed. Subscribe, share with someone who needs courage today, and leave a review with your one-word intention for this Lent.

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    23 m
  • #125 - Ash Wednesday: Mortality, Mercy, And Meaning {Reflections}
    Feb 18 2026

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    Start with the words none of us want to hear: you are going to die. Now feel what happens next—attention sharpens, breath slows, the moment grows weighty and bright. That’s the doorway Ash Wednesday opens, and we walk through it together to find a paradoxical gift: when we face our limits, we gain our life back.

    We explore the deep meaning of ashes—the cross traced with dust and oil, the voice that names our beginning and our end—and why this ancient ritual still speaks with power. Ryan shares his first Ash Wednesday experience and how a quiet line from Thich Nhat Hanh’s How to Sit reframed prayer as simple presence: sit, stop, breathe. From there we unpack Lent as a season of stopping and looking deeply, a countercultural practice that interrupts hurry and brings us home to God, ourselves, and our neighbors.

    Two messages anchor the conversation. First, remember you are dust: mortality humbles our egos and clarifies purpose, inviting us to love widely, build beauty, and live fully while we can. Second, return: repentance is not shame but a turn toward wholeness, an honest naming of how we’ve wandered and a step back onto the path of shalom. Along the way, we offer practical ways to practice presence—daily stillness, examen, fasting from distraction, small acts of repair—so the season becomes a lived rhythm, not a vague intention.

    If this reflection stirs you, share it with someone who needs a gentler pace and a truer hope. Subscribe for more reflections, leave a review to help others find the show, and tell us: which message meets you today—dust or return?

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    10 m