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Unfiltered Christianity

Unfiltered Christianity

Written by: Joey Papa & Victoria Piccirilli
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About this listen

A space for honest talk for the imperfectly faithful. We're two people from different walks of life who share one passion, our love and adoration for Jesus. Here, we wrestle with the frustrating gap between faith and the human experience, talk about what real-life spirituality looks like, and remind each other that grace meets us in the mess.2025 Christianity Ministry & Evangelism Spirituality
Episodes
  • [30] Christ Gave Us His Body | Take, Eat; This Is My Body
    May 18 2026

    In the second episode of our "Body of Christ" series, we move from the mystery of the incarnation into the mystery of communion, crucifixion, and union. If the first episode explored the staggering reality that "the Word became flesh and dwelt among us" (John 1:14), this episode asks an even deeper question: How did His body become us?

    At the center of Christianity is not merely a teaching, but a body. A body broken. A body given. Jesus did not simply come to inspire humanity from a distance. He entered fully into human suffering, humiliation, weakness, rejection, and death. At the Last Supper, He held up bread and declared, "Take, eat; this is My body" (Matthew 26:26). Then He commanded His disciples: "Do this in remembrance of Me" (Luke 22:19).

    Why did Jesus ask us to remember His broken body and spilled blood? Why not simply remember His miracles, His sermons, or even His resurrection? In this episode, we explore the mystery that the cross became the meeting place between God and humanity. Through His suffering, Christ united Himself to the deepest realities of human existence so that humanity could be united to Him.

    We wrestle with the sacredness of communion, the meaning of Christ's crucifixion, and the shocking language of Jesus in John 6 when He declared, "Unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink His blood, you have no life in you." What sounded offensive to many was actually an invitation into union. The all-consuming God offered Himself to be consumed.

    This conversation also explores the transformation that took place after the resurrection and ascension. Jesus said, "I will not leave you as orphans" (John 14:18), because His plan was never to remain one man in one place. Through the Holy Spirit, His life would fill many people, forming one Body on the earth. As Paul writes, "Now you are the body of Christ, and individually members of it" (1 Corinthians 12:27).

    Together, we examine how communion became common union, how the crucifixion became the hinge between Christ's physical body and His living Body on the earth, and how believers are not merely followers of Jesus, but participants in His life. We explore Paul's vision of the Church as one body with many members (1 Corinthians 12), the mystery of believers becoming "co-heirs with Christ" (Romans 8:17), and the cosmic longing of creation itself, "waiting for the revealing of the sons of God" (Romans 8:19).

    By the end of this episode, the phrase "Body of Christ" no longer feels like a church cliché. It becomes holy. Sobering. Intimate. Cosmic. The crucifixion was not simply the forgiveness of sins. It was the consummation of union. Christ became a body so that, through Him, humanity could become His Body on the earth.

    Learn more about making space for God at kallahculture.org

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    34 mins
  • [29] Christ Became a Body - The Word Became Flesh
    May 11 2026

    In this first episode of our series on "The Body of Christ," we begin with the most foundational and often overlooked meaning of that phrase: the actual, physical body of Jesus. Before the Body of Christ can be understood as the Church on the earth, and before we can grasp the mystery of the Bride seated with Christ in glory, we have to first return to the wonder of the incarnation. God did not redeem humanity from a distance. He stepped into creation, took on flesh, entered the human story, and became one of us.

    This conversation moves slowly and reverently through the weight of that reality: that the Word became flesh, not temporarily as a costume or assignment, but as an eternal decision of love. Jesus did not simply visit humanity for 33 years and then return to being disembodied Spirit. Through His incarnation, crucifixion, resurrection, and ascension, a glorified human body is now seated on the throne. Flesh and bone are in heaven. Humanity, in Christ, has been brought back into its original purpose: union with God, co-heirship with Christ, and participation in His reign.

    Together, we reflect on the scandalous beauty of a God who humbled Himself, emptied Himself, experienced limitation, hunger, grief, obedience, suffering, and even death in a real human body. We talk about why flesh matters to God, why creation was never the problem, and why Jesus redeemed us through a body, as a body, and into a body. This episode invites listeners to recover a deeper reverence for the incarnation and to see their own humanity differently, not as something shameful or disposable, but as something God created, entered, redeemed, and made holy.

    Learn more about silent retreats at kallahculture.org

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    46 mins
  • [28] God's Response to Breakdown - Healing The Whole Person
    May 4 2026

    This episode is for the moments when you feel overwhelmed, exhausted, or quietly falling apart and start to wonder what's wrong with you spiritually. Looking at God's response to Elijah in 1 Kings 19, we see something very different than what many of us have been taught. Before correction, before instruction, before any kind of spiritual fixing, God meets him in his physical and emotional need with rest, food, and care. In a moment where Elijah is ready to give up, God doesn't rebuke him, He tends to him. That alone reshapes how we understand the heart of God toward us.

    This conversation explores how God doesn't separate you into parts, but sees and restores you as a whole person, body, mind, and spirit. We talk honestly about the tendency to over-spiritualize everything, to assume that anxiety, exhaustion, or emotional struggle must mean something is wrong with our faith, and how that belief quietly leads to shame and self-condemnation. Through Elijah's story, we begin to see a different pattern, one where God addresses what's actually happening beneath the surface and responds with compassion instead of pressure.

    We also look at the way Jesus interacts with people in the Gospels, restoring not just their spiritual condition, but their dignity, identity, and place in community. Again and again, we see that God's care is not fragmented. He doesn't rush past your humanity to get to your spirituality. He meets you in it.

    If you've been trying to fix yourself spiritually while ignoring your need for rest, care, or honest processing, this episode is an invitation to slow down and receive a different kind of healing. One that is patient, whole, and deeply personal.

    Learn more about Kallah: kallahculture.org

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    43 mins
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