Episodios

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

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    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?

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

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    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?

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

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    “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.

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

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    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.

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    30 m
  • #129 - Scapegoat Season {Reflections}
    Mar 18 2026

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    A crowd can make good people do ugly things, and sometimes the scariest part is how normal it feels while it’s happening. We start with a haunting detail from Mark’s Gospel: while Jesus is being crucified, random passersby still stop to hurl insults. Why would someone who has nothing to gain join in? What kind of social force turns bystanders into participants, and turns cruelty into a group activity?

    We connect that question to a simple story from childhood where a group of friends panics, then saves itself by blaming one outsider. That instinct to preserve unity by choosing a target is exactly what French philosopher Rene Girard explored through mimetic contagion and the scapegoat mechanism. When tension rises, emotions spread, and a community unconsciously offloads its conflict onto one person, the group feels united again, but the “peace” comes at the victim’s expense. It’s an unsettling framework for understanding mob behavior, public outrage cycles, and why cancel culture can feel satisfying even when it’s unjust.

    Then we return to the cross and see something shocking: Jesus refuses to retaliate. Instead of returning violence with violence, he absorbs it and speaks forgiveness, exposing scapegoating for what it is. We end with a practical invitation for Lent and beyond: resist the pull of the crowd, stop hunting for scapegoats, admit our own need for mercy, and follow a way that actually heals. If this conversation helps you, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review, and tell us where you see scapegoating showing up today.

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    13 m
  • The Mocking with Sonja Knutson
    Mar 16 2026

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    Mockery feels small until it hits the core of who you are. On a snowy morning, we keep walking the Lenten journey to the cross and sit with one of the hardest scenes to read: Jesus being laughed at, dressed up, spat on, and publicly shamed. Sonia Knutson starts with a story many of us recognize, the sting of being judged for something as simple as a pair of shoes, and then invites us to notice what shame tries to do to our identity.

    From there we zoom in on the Gospel of Mark and why it dwells on the brutality. Soldiers drape Jesus in purple, press on a crown of thorns, and perform a sarcastic “Hail” that was meant to degrade Him. Passersby, religious leaders, and even those crucified beside Him pile on. We wrestle with the question Mark forces onto the page: does this make Jesus look weak, or does it reveal a God who chooses vulnerability and love over self-protection?

    The turning point is irony. The mock coronation becomes a real coronation, and the King they ridicule is the King who rises. We also bring it home: the bandwagons we jump on, the ways we conform for approval, and the danger of “fake faith” that goes through motions while daily life says none of it is true. If you want a deeper, more honest Christian faith this Lent, hit play, then subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review with the line that challenged you most.

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    16 m
  • #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