Episodios

  • #123 - Old Self, New Self {Reflections}
    Feb 4 2026

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    A playoff roar at Mile High flipped a switch I thought I’d retired. One moment I was soaking up the energy, the next I felt the old tribal surge—defend the colors, clap back at the chirps, claim the space as “ours.” Nothing exploded on the outside, but inside I could feel a younger version of me take the wheel. That jolt became a mirror: how quickly identity can hitch itself to a jersey, a chant, or a crowd and forget the person across the aisle.

    I share the backstory of my trash-talking athlete days and how that same wiring, redirected, became a gift for encouragement and pastoring. Then we dig into the deeper layer: Paul’s language about the old self and the new self, and why the “jacket” of former habits still feels so easy to slip on when emotions run hot. The game becomes a case study in how belonging, rivalry, and pride activate scripts we no longer want to live by. We walk through practical tools to interrupt the slide—name the urge without shame, confess it to a friend, invite the Spirit to steady your heart, and choose a small replacement action that honors the person in front of you.

    If crowds and timelines reward heat, we can choose a better kind of strength. We talk about what it means to cheer hard without dehumanizing, to hold firm identity without needing an enemy, and to let love, patience, and self-control set the tone even when adrenaline spikes. This is about more than sports. It touches family arguments, online debates, and everyday moments where the old self grabs for the controls. Listen for honest reflection, practical steps, and a reminder that growth is real, even when the past knocks loud.

    If this resonates, share it with a friend, subscribe for more weekly reflections, and leave a review with the moment that stood out most to you. What helps you switch from the old self to the new when the crowd gets loud?

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    9 m
  • Then they Dropped Dead with Pastor Ryan Braley
    Feb 2 2026

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    A dramatic Bible story where two people fall dead might sound like a scare tactic, but the real punch lands somewhere deeper: what kind of community forms when the Spirit fills ordinary people? We walk through Acts 5 and the unsettling account of Ananias and Sapphira to uncover a hopeful, tangible vision of the kingdom of God—one where grace becomes groceries, rent, rides, and real presence.

    We start with Jesus’ core theme: the kingdom of God as a new way of ordering life. Then we watch the early church become a living temple, a people in whom God dwells. Luke’s detail that “there were no needy among them” isn’t poetry; it is a blueprint for shared provision, honest speech, and practical love. Against that backdrop, hypocrisy isn’t a small sin—it’s a community-killer. Peter’s intensity makes sense when we remember his own failure and restoration. The warning is clear: stop performing righteousness, start practicing it.

    From there we connect the text to today’s loneliness crisis—especially among the young—and show how real community answers what algorithms can’t. We talk about life groups that actually do life, men’s and women’s circles that show up, and a Human Needs Fund that turns compassion into electric bills paid and laptops placed into hands. Some days you bring 80 and I bring 20; other days we both limp at 20 and still refuse to let needs go unmet. That’s the quiet miracle of a kingdom-shaped church: honesty over image, burden-sharing over bravado, generosity over applause.

    If you’re craving belonging or ready to serve, this conversation will nudge you toward one brave step—tell the truth about where you are, ask for help if you need it, and share what you can if you have more than enough. Subscribe, share this with a friend who needs hope, and leave a review with one way you plan to practice generosity or honesty this week.

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    36 m
  • #122 - Finding The Third Way {Reflections}
    Jan 28 2026

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    Stuck between two bad choices that both feel wrong? We’ve been there too. Today we talk about the subtle art of finding a third way—an approach modeled by Jesus that refuses shallow binaries and restores nuance, courage, and care for people. Instead of choosing between silence or shouting, canceling or condoning, we slow down and study two famous Gospel moments where a trap demanded a yes or no, and wisdom answered with something better.

    First, we unpack the “taxes to Caesar” showdown. A simple coin becomes a lesson in proportion and allegiance: what bears Caesar’s image can go back to Caesar, but what bears God’s image—people, conscience, devotion—belongs to God alone. That shift helps us engage civic life without making politics our religion. Then we turn to the woman caught in adultery, where a public spectacle dares Jesus to pick punishment or permissiveness. His answer—“Let the one without sin cast the first stone”—reframes justice as self-examination before accusation, exposing hypocrisy while honoring dignity and aiming for restoration.

    Along the way, we offer practical tools you can use when conversations turn combative: ask better questions that surface values, refuse manufactured urgency, protect image-bearing people over talking points, and seek outcomes that heal rather than humiliate. If you’re tired of hot takes and hardened camps, this conversation will help you practice wisdom that is firm, compassionate, and unshakeably human. Subscribe, share with a friend who’s navigating tough conversations, and tell us: where do you need a third way right now?

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    10 m
  • And Dash Them Against the Rocks with Pastor Ryan Braley
    Jan 26 2026

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    Faith gets brittle when we pretend. This week we lean into a braver way: arguing with Scripture as an act of honor and bringing our full selves to God without a filter. We open the Psalms not as tidy theology, but as a school of prayer where the human heart learns to speak truth—joy, sorrow, rage, and all.

    Together we walk through Psalm 137, set in the ashes of exile. Judah hangs up its harps by Babylon’s rivers, too devastated to sing, and the psalm breaks open with a line that makes modern readers recoil. We don’t sanitize it; we face the history and the horror. What happens when the oppressed name their suffering with gut-level honesty? How does a violent verse function as a cry for justice, not a command for revenge? We place that tension next to Jesus’ refusal of retaliation and his cry, “Father, forgive them,” and ask what it means to hand judgment back to God in a world full of fresh wounds.

    This conversation is both pastoral and practical. We challenge the myth that “good Christians” hide anger, and we explore why the imprecatory psalms are preserved: so the powerless can pray without pretending and so anger doesn’t become action. You’ll hear the backstory of Babylon’s atrocities, why ending a generation meant ending an empire, and how the early church’s vision of mercy reshaped the value of life. Then we turn to practice: write a personal psalm, name your grief and your complicity, and bring it to the cross. Let God receive the truth you’ve been carrying and do what only God can do.

    If this conversation stirred something in you, share it with a friend who needs permission to pray honestly. And if our work helps you wrestle well, subscribe, leave a review, and tell us: what would your psalm say today?

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    34 m
  • #121 - Generational Curses {Reflections}
    Jan 22 2026

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    The phrase “generational curses” can feel like a verdict you didn’t choose. We take that fear head-on, unpacking what those Old Testament passages actually communicate and why Ezekiel’s voice reframes the conversation around personal responsibility, practical hope, and real change. Rather than a mystical hex, we explore how family systems, trauma, and learned behaviors create momentum that can be redirected with clarity, support, and grace.

    We share lived stories of anger, addiction, money missteps, and relational rupture to show how patterns repeat when no one models an alternative—and how they shift when someone does. Along the way, we connect Exodus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy’s warnings about multigenerational consequences with Ezekiel’s insistence that the child does not carry the parent’s guilt. That tension becomes an invitation: acknowledge what you inherited, refuse fatalism, and choose practices that write a different line for the future.

    You’ll hear simple, grounded ways to interrupt the cycle: naming what you absorbed, seeking therapy or wise counsel, building new skills around communication and finances, setting boundaries without bitterness, and letting grace do what effort alone cannot. The heart of our conversation is empowerment and mercy—seeing your past clearly while believing that your next step can be different from your last one. If you’ve ever wondered whether your family history defines you, this is a compassionate, practical roadmap toward freedom.

    If this resonated, share it with a friend who might need courage today, and subscribe so you don’t miss what’s next. Leave a review with one pattern you’re choosing to end—what new story will you pass on?

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    10 m
  • The Flood with Sonja Knutson
    Jan 22 2026

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    What if we’ve been asking the wrong questions about the flood? Instead of debating water heights and global maps, we step into the ancient world that first carried this story and ask what they were trying to remember about God, themselves, and the shape of a good life. The conversation opens with a personal miracle and then widens to the tensions we all feel when modern sensibilities crash into ancient narratives.

    We explore how cultural memory works—why fairy tales were once brutal, why children’s murals skip the grief—and why the Bible’s flood story is not meant to be cute. Drawing on the insight that scripture was written for us but not to us, we show how the text reveals divine grief over human violence, the desire to cleanse a corrupted world, and the possibility of a true restart. Along the way, we treat science as a partner asking how, while faith asks why, acknowledging that many cultures hold flood memories without forcing a single, brittle reading.

    From there, we reframe the story around four anchors: Jesus as the ark and our refuge, obedience that looks odd but preserves life, baptism as cleansing that frees us from shame and addiction, and covenant hope symbolized by the rainbow. These themes move the flood out of the nursery and into everyday practice—learning to listen when outrage sells, choosing peace over performative anger, and becoming shelter for one another when life rises around our knees. By focusing on meaning over mechanics, we recover a story that steadies us through grief, makes us honest about harm, and calls us into renewal.

    Join us for a thoughtful, compassionate walk through a hard text that still speaks with power. If this conversation helps you breathe easier or see the story with fresh eyes, share it with a friend, subscribe for more, and leave a review with the lens that most changed your view.

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    21 m
  • #120 - When Culture Rewrites Scripture In Our Heads {Reflections}
    Jan 14 2026

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    What if the stories you love sound different once you hear them in their own world? We kick off the year by naming a blind spot many of us carry: we read an ancient Near Eastern text through modern Western eyes, and those assumptions quietly rewrite meaning. So we slow down, step into first-century streets, and let place, language, and culture do their work.

    We start with Jesus’ trade. The Greek word “tecton” doesn’t lock him inside a woodshop; it opens to a broader builder. In Galilee, stone ruled construction. Picture a laborer dusted with lime, setting foundations and shaping masonry, and watch how that image charges Jesus’ metaphors about rocks, cornerstones, and houses on solid ground. We trace how medieval European translators, surrounded by forests and timber frames, handed down “carpenter” and how that choice still colors sermons, art, and our sense of Jesus’ solidarity with working-class life.

    From there, we reframe modesty in 1 Timothy. Instead of policing skin, Paul likely challenged status display—gold, expensive attire, social flexing that fractured a young community. That shift asks harder questions of our culture: what do we flaunt, and who gets pushed to the edges when wealth becomes a stage? Finally, we revisit the journey to Bethlehem. Rather than a lone couple on a perilous road, think extended family on the move. It’s safer, more communal, and closer to how people lived and traveled in the ancient Mediterranean.

    Throughout, we offer simple tools to read more contextually: ask what assumptions you bring, check key words, consult archaeology and geography, and lean on trusted guides like N. T. Wright and Kent Dobson. Small corrections—builder over carpenter, wealth over skin, caravan over couple—can unlock deeper clarity and a more grounded devotion. If this conversation helped you see familiar passages in a new light, share it with a friend, subscribe, and leave a review. What lens are you planning to question next?

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    9 m
  • The Hardening of Pharaoh’s Heart with Pastor Ryan Braley
    Jan 12 2026

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    A story about plagues, power, and a stubborn king turns out to be a mirror we can’t ignore. We dive into the hard question behind Exodus: what does it mean for Pharaoh’s heart to be hardened—and what does that say about free will, evil, and the kind of people we’re becoming?

    We start where Scripture starts: with a God who makes room for life and entrusts humans with real agency. Israel’s growth embodies that gift; Pharaoh sees it as a threat. From there, we trace how the Bible uses “heart” as the center of thought, will, and moral posture, and why hardening is more than hurt feelings—it’s a chosen resistance to wisdom, mercy, and life. Then we map the progression across the ten plagues, noticing when Pharaoh hardens himself and when the text credits God, and we offer three grounded ways to read that tension: God permitting an already chosen path, God’s presence intensifying a trajectory, and God strengthening Pharaoh’s resolve to weave rebellion into a larger redemptive plan.

    Along the way, we pull in ancient Near Eastern context, showing why early Israel often spoke of God as the cause behind all causes, and we keep our focus on the practical stakes: resisting the anti-creation impulse that still shapes our politics, our online lives, and our daily reactions. The call is simple and demanding—choose life. Keep a soft heart in a hard age. Let your agency make space for others to flourish, from your closest relationships to the most contested public questions.

    If this conversation helps you reimagine a troubling text and your own posture in the world, share it with a friend, subscribe for more, and leave a short review telling us where you see hardening—and hope—right now.

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    31 m