Episodes

  • Cana's Overflow: Uncorking God's Abundance Through Radical Obedience
    Jan 12 2026

    Dive deep into the miraculous story of the Wedding at Cana. This podcast explores the profound truths hidden in the six stone jars, the transformative power of radical obedience, and the extravagant nature of God's provision. Learn how to trust God's instructions, even when they seem strange or difficult, and prepare your heart to receive His overflowing blessings in your own life. Join us on a journey from emptiness to lavish abundance.

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    11 mins
  • Called to Follow
    Jan 5 2026

    In this episode, we step into the moment where everything changes.


    Fresh from His baptism and the beginning of His public ministry, Jesus walks along the Sea of Galilee and calls ordinary fishermen into an extraordinary life. With simple words — “Follow Me” — He invites Simon Peter, Andrew, James, and John to leave their nets, their security, and their old identities behind.


    This isn’t just a story about first-century fishermen. It’s a reflection on what it means to follow Jesus today — in a world of constant noise, busyness, and divided priorities. What are the “nets” we’re holding onto? What does radical obedience look like in modern life? And how do we respond when Jesus calls, not as a suggestion, but as a divine summons?


    This episode explores trust, surrender, and the courage it takes to reorder our lives around Christ’s call — right here, right now.

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    12 mins
  • The Jordan Moment: Jesus’ Baptism and New Beginnings
    Jan 1 2026

    What really happened at the Jordan River — and why does it matter so deeply for us today?


    In this episode, we slow down and step into one of the most pivotal moments in Jesus’ life: His baptism. Though sinless, Jesus chooses to enter the waters — not for cleansing, but for identification, obedience, and mission. Heaven opens. The Spirit descends like a dove. And the Father’s voice declares love, identity, and approval.


    Together, we explore why Jesus’ baptism was not a formality, but a defining moment of preparation — one that equipped Him for the wilderness ahead and the ministry to come. We reflect on the meaning of the dove, the significance of God’s spoken affirmation, and the powerful truth that God never sends us into purpose without first grounding us in love.


    This episode also turns the lens inward, asking what our own “Jordan moments” look like — those public or quiet decisions where we die to an old life and step into something new. Moments of recommitment. Moments of surrender. Moments where God reminds us: You are my beloved.


    Whether you’re reflecting on baptism, facing a new season, or standing on the edge of a calling, this episode offers space to pause, listen, and remember that God’s voice still speaks — not just calling us to mission, but assuring us that we are never sent alone.


    Whether you’re reflecting on baptism, facing a new season, or standing on the edge of a calling, this episode offers space to pause, listen, and remember that God’s voice still speaks — not just calling us to mission, but assuring us that we are never sent alone.



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    11 mins
  • Tested in the Wilderness
    Dec 29 2025

    What if the wilderness isn’t punishment — but preparation?


    In this episode, we step into Matthew 4, where Jesus, immediately after His baptism, is led into the wilderness. Forty days of fasting. Physical weakness. Isolation. And then, temptation.


    We explore the three temptations of Jesus — provision, identity, and authority — not just as a historical moment, but as a practical blueprint for our own lives. Each temptation reveals how the enemy twists Scripture, targets legitimate needs, and tries to pull us toward self-reliance instead of trust.


    Jesus doesn’t argue. He doesn’t negotiate.

    He responds with the Word of God, rightly handled — leading back to humility, dependence on the Father, and truth.


    This episode invites you to see your own wilderness seasons — times of uncertainty, testing, or transition — not as setbacks, but as sacred ground where God is forming clarity, strength, and obedience.


    If you’ve ever felt tested, tempted, or unsure of what’s next, this conversation offers a framework for understanding the wilderness as preparation for purpose, not delay.





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    14 mins
  • Finding God’s Purpose in the Ordinary
    Dec 28 2025

    What if God is doing His deepest work in the parts of life that feel most ordinary, unseen, or overlooked?


    In this episode, we step into Nazareth — not as a place of insignificance, but as a school of faithfulness. For thirty years, Jesus lived a quiet, hidden life: learning a trade, obeying His parents, sharing meals, worshipping in the synagogue. No miracles. No crowds. Just daily obedience.


    And yet, those unseen years were not wasted. They were preparation.


    We explore how God sanctifies ordinary life — how patience, diligence, obedience, and faithfulness in small things become the foundation for everything that follows. From Joseph’s hidden years in prison to Jesus’ long years in Nazareth, Scripture reminds us that fruitfulness begins with faithfulness.


    This episode invites you to reflect on your own “Nazareth” — the routines, responsibilities, and quiet places of your life — and to see them not as delays, but as sacred ground where God is actively at work.


    If you’ve ever felt overlooked, stuck, or frustrated by slow progress, this message offers hope, perspective, and a renewed vision for holiness in the everyday.


    Because God doesn’t just work in the extraordinary —

    He transforms the ordinary.



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    11 mins
  • God’s Protection in Peril
    Dec 27 2025

    Escape to Egypt: Finding God’s Protection in Peril


    The Christmas story is often wrapped in warmth and wonder — but the Gospel does not let us stay there for long.


    In this episode, we follow the narrative into Matthew chapter 2, where celebration turns into crisis and joy gives way to urgency. The Magi have departed, King Herod realizes he has been outwitted, and his paranoia erupts into a deadly threat against a newborn child proclaimed as “King of the Jews.” What unfolds next is not a peaceful continuation of the nativity, but a desperate flight into uncertainty.


    Joseph is warned in a dream with chilling clarity: Get up. Take the child and his mother. Flee to Egypt. There is no time for planning, no guarantees, and no explanation of how long the journey will last. This is not a spiritual retreat or a planned relocation — it is exile. A young family becomes refugees overnight, carrying nothing but obedience, fear, and trust.


    We explore why Egypt, of all places, becomes the place of refuge. Historically, politically, and theologically, Egypt makes sense — outside Herod’s jurisdiction yet within the Roman world, offering safety through established routes and relative stability. But beneath the practical reasons lies a deeper story: God once again calling His Son out of Egypt, echoing Israel’s own history of deliverance and redemption.


    This episode reflects on God’s quiet but intentional provision — especially through the gifts of the Magi. Gold, frankincense, and myrrh are not just symbolic offerings; they become the means by which God sustains the journey before the danger is fully revealed. It is a reminder that God often prepares what we will need long before we understand why.


    At its heart, this is a story about protection that doesn’t rely on power, armies, or miracles in the spotlight. Instead, it unfolds through dreams, obedience, and the faithfulness of one man who listens and acts without hesitation. God’s plan moves forward not through force, but through trust.


    This episode invites us to sit with the tension, feel the vulnerability, and recognize ourselves in the story. When life turns suddenly, when the path forward feels unclear, and when obedience demands movement before certainty, the God who protected a child in Egypt remains the same today.


    A powerful reflection on exile, faith under pressure, and the steady presence of God — even when the journey leads into the unknown.



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    12 mins
  • Christmas Truths: Hope, Love, and Christ’s Birth Today
    Dec 25 2025

    Merry Christmas!

    What does Christmas really mean — not just to remember, but to live?


    In this episode, we explore the profound truth of the Incarnation: God stepping fully into human history, not from a distance, but from within our mess, our hardship, and our ordinary lives. Drawing from the Gospels of Luke and Matthew, we see how the same story is told in strikingly different ways — one earthy and humble, the other cosmic and royal — revealing the richness of who Jesus is.


    Luke shows us a long journey, a very pregnant Mary, rejection at the inn, shepherds on the margins, and faithful figures like Simeon and Anna — everyday people who waited patiently for God to act. Matthew, on the other hand, traces Jesus’ lineage back to Abraham and David, declaring from the start that this child is the promised King.


    Together, these perspectives tell one unified story: this is not just a story about a baby, but a revolution in how we understand God, power, value, and love. The good news is for all people — especially those the world tends to overlook.


    This episode invites you to move beyond nostalgia and sentimentality and into a lived response: embracing hope, practicing sacrificial love, and fostering peace in our families and communities — starting today.


    Because Christmas isn’t just something we remember.

    It’s something we live.

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    12 mins
  • Nativity’s Humble Hope
    Dec 23 2025

    In this episode, we slow down and sit with the often-overlooked reality of Christ’s birth — not as a polished Christmas scene, but as a moment of profound humility, vulnerability, and obedience.


    Placing Luke’s Gospel alongside Matthew’s, we explore how the same story is told from different angles. Luke draws us into the earthy details: the census, the long road to Bethlehem, the exhaustion, the manger, and the shepherds. This is not a story of comfort and control — it is a story of trust lived out one step at a time.


    We reflect on what it truly meant for Mary and Joseph to walk in faith. Their trust wasn’t passive. It was active, costly, and deeply practical. There was fear, physical strain, uncertainty, and the reality of having no suitable place to rest — yet there is no record of protest, no argument, only quiet obedience.


    The episode unpacks the meaning behind “no room in the inn,” exploring the Greek word kataluma, which can mean a guest room or family lodging. Rather than rejection, we see a crowded home — and a God who willingly enters the world in the most humble, exposed way possible.


    Drawing from Philippians 2, we reflect on the mystery of Christ’s self-emptying — kenosis — where the King of the Universe chooses vulnerability over power, humility over status, and presence over prestige. This is the great inversion of expectations: not a political Messiah overthrowing Rome, but a Savior born into weakness, identifying with the lowest from His very first breath.


    This episode invites us to consider where God still meets us today — not in our strength or success, but in our limits, our exhaustion, and our uncertainty. When there is no room left, when resources are gone, when faith feels costly — that is often where Christ’s power is born in us.



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    15 mins