Épisodes

  • Titus And The Hard Work Of Fixing Leadership
    Apr 21 2026

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    Culture doesn’t collapse overnight. It erodes one compromised choice at a time, one “we’ll deal with it later” leader at a time. That’s why we keep coming back to the Book of Titus, where Paul sends Titus into Crete to do the hard work of fixing leadership and finishing what was left undone.

    We talk through what makes Titus so practical for biblical leadership and Christian leadership today: choosing leaders based on character over charisma, protecting a healthy culture before it turns toxic, and remembering that what we believe should shape how we live. We also connect church leadership to the real-world challenges of leading a business or team, where change takes courage, patience, and wisdom about people.

    Our guest Chuck joins us with coaching insight from decades of building athletes and teams. We dig into knowing what makes each person tick, why “thank you” can outwork money as a motivator, and how tools like the Five Love Languages can help leaders communicate value in a way people actually receive. We close with a gut-check from Titus 3: does our leadership only help people know more, or does it help them live better?

    Subscribe, share this with a leader who cares about integrity, and leave a review so more people can find the show.

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    45 min
  • Paul’s Final Letter And A Leadership Blueprint For Hard Times
    Apr 14 2026

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    Paul’s final words hit different when you read them like a leadership memo written from prison. We sit with 2 Timothy as Paul pours courage into Timothy, a younger leader carrying the weight of the church in Ephesus, and we ask what it looks like to lead when pressure is real, critics are loud, and the future feels uncertain. Along the way, we keep it honest and light with a steady dose of dad jokes, because good leadership conversations don’t have to be stiff to be serious.

    We talk about why age doesn’t equal maturity, how great leaders spot potential early, and why encouragement is more than being “nice” when someone is stretched thin. We connect Paul’s four-generation handoff to modern succession planning and leadership development, then unpack the soldier, athlete, and farmer images as a framework for focus, discipline, and patience. If you’re leading a family, a small team, or a growing organization, these are skills that translate.

    We also get practical about Scripture and integrity: handling the Word of God accurately, reading a Bible translation you can understand, and using study tools to go deeper without getting overwhelmed. We anchor the conversation in 2 Timothy 3:16-17 and end with Paul’s call to finish strong: fight the good fight, finish the race, keep the faith. If this helps you, subscribe, share it with a leader you respect, and leave a review so more people can find the show.

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    38 min
  • 1 Timothy: Character, Calling, and the Weight of Leadership
    Apr 7 2026

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    First Timothy is blunt, practical, and surprisingly modern and that’s why we love it. Tim Lansford and Dr. Dean Posey unpack why these Pastoral Letters read like personal coaching notes from Paul to a younger leader trying to hold the line in Ephesus, a spiritually complicated city with loud competing beliefs and constant pressure to compromise.

    We talk about why good theology isn’t “extra credit” for leaders but the foundation that shapes judgment, resilience, and culture. You’ll hear why leaders are often placed in hard places for hard reasons, how a clear conscience helps you endure external chaos, and how leadership decay usually starts with small drift in character or teaching. We also dig into Paul’s insistence on prayer as a posture, including praying for rulers you may not agree with, and why “prayer without anger or quarreling” is really about humility, tone, and spiritual credibility.

    From qualifications for elders and deacons to the famous “don’t let anyone despise your youth,” we connect the dots to leadership today: character beats charisma, integrity at home matters, and respect is earned by example, not demanded by title. We close with Paul’s warning about money and motives, the line “godliness with contentment is great gain,” and the long-game call to mentor the next generation. If you like thoughtful leadership talk with a few dad jokes along the way, you’re in the right place. Subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review so more leaders can find the show.

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    44 min
  • Second Thessalonians: Rumors, Resilience, And Real Work
    Mar 24 2026

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    When expectations collapse and confusion takes over, teams look to the leader to set the tone. We turn to Second Thessalonians for a grounded playbook on navigating disappointment, stopping the rumor mill, and rebuilding momentum with truth, accountability, and steady encouragement. Paul’s counsel to a church wrestling with delays and misinformation lands squarely in today’s challenges: people waiting instead of working, whispers outrunning facts, and morale dipping after setbacks.

    We start by naming the emotional reality of disappointment and then move to what leaders can control—affirming what’s going right, honoring endurance, and framing a clear next step. You’ll hear practical strategies to counter bad information before it hardens into culture: verify, clarify, and communicate quickly. We dig into the power of one-on-ones before group meetings, why tone matters as much as content, and how to replace fear-fueled narratives with transparent updates that stabilize the room.

    Accountability emerges as a core theme. “Those unwilling to work should not eat” translates to modern teams as fair boundaries, defined roles, and consequences that match commitments. We talk about modeling the standard you expect—walking the floor, showing up for quick check-ins, and proving an open-door policy through action. Encouragement isn’t fluff; it is fuel that keeps people moving when the scoreboard isn’t in your favor. By spotlighting growth, reframing losses into learning, and setting specific ownership for improvements, you create momentum that outlasts a tough quarter or a painful loss.

    If you lead a ministry, a project team, a small business, or a youth squad, this conversation offers a simple, durable framework: tell the truth fast, stand firm in shared practices, keep people accountable, and keep working while you wait. Subscribe, share this episode with a fellow leader, and leave a review telling us where you need to stand firm this week. Your story might be the encouragement someone else needs.

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    38 min
  • Paul’s Playbook: Encouragement, Follow-Through, And Hope From 1 Thessalonians
    Mar 17 2026

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    A Roman city. A fragile new church. A leader who refuses to rule by force. We unpack 1 Thessalonians to reveal a leadership pattern that still works: care deeply, speak clearly, and follow up relentlessly. Paul’s time in Thessalonica was brief and turbulent, yet he built a bond strong enough to last across distance and danger. That didn’t happen by chance. He shared his life, not just his message, and he equipped others—like Timothy—to strengthen and encourage when he couldn’t be there in person.

    We explore what that means for modern teams. If your default style is top-down, you’re not doomed—you just need to know when to flex. Autocratic calls have a place for safety and speed, but people thrive when leaders put dignity first. Translate your values into specific behaviors, put dates on decisions, and schedule check-ins you keep. Follow-up is not micromanagement; it’s how you show the work and the worker both matter. We share simple practices you can use this week: ask for input, set clear outcomes, and create a rhythm that catches slippage early without shame.

    Hope is the thread that ties it together. The early believers expected swift resolution and met delay instead. Paul doesn’t sugarcoat it. He trains a posture: rejoice always, pray constantly, give thanks in all circumstances. That isn’t denial—it’s how leaders sustain courage when goals slip, contracts fall through, or timelines shift. Add one more picture to your toolkit: back into the tight lot so you can drive out straight. Start each day positioned to move forward—focused, relational, and ready to act. If this conversation sharpens your leadership, share it with a friend, subscribe for more, and leave a quick review to tell us what landed.

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    36 min
  • Colossians In Focus
    Mar 10 2026

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    Ever wonder why one public compliment can shift an entire team’s energy? We open with a simple swimming lesson that becomes a metaphor for growth, then dive into Colossians to map a clear path for mission-first leadership. From Paul’s praise of Epaphras to his sweeping picture of Christ’s supremacy, we connect theology to the everyday choices leaders make: what to celebrate, what to resist, and what to repeat until it sticks.

    We break down how a strong center prevents drift, why maturity shows up as the ability to teach others, and how counterfeit spirituality sneaks into organizations as rule-worship, elitism, or optics over outcomes. You’ll hear practical ways to hardwire focus—mission cards, meeting rituals, and clear definitions of done—so your team aligns faster and avoids decision fatigue. We also tackle the quiet damage of ego and insecurity: micromanagement, shifting expectations, and reactivity. With real-world tactics for building trust, giving grounded feedback, and choosing the right moment for hard conversations, we aim to make courage a habit, not a mood.

    Throughout, we keep the tone light with rapid-fire dad jokes and vivid stories, but the throughline stays steady: encouragement is a leadership discipline, identity shapes culture, and resilience grows when the mission is more than a motto. If you’re leading a business, a church, or a small team, you’ll leave with concrete tools to praise in public, coach for growth, and stay kindly stubborn under criticism.

    If this helped you refocus on your North Star, subscribe, share it with a friend, and drop us your favorite dad joke or one public compliment you’ll give today. Your story might show up in a future episode.

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    34 min
  • Leadership Lessons From Philippians: Partnership, Humility, And Resilient Joy
    Mar 3 2026

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    Joy that doesn’t blink in the face of pressure sounds impossible—until you hear Paul write it from a prison cell. We open Philippians and explore how a community born in crisis became a model for resilient leadership, practical humility, and culture that sticks when life gets loud.

    We start with the origin story in Acts—chains, an earthquake, a jailer’s turnaround—and trace how those early trials forged a deep partnership between Paul and the church at Philippi. From there, we unpack what “partnership” really means for modern teams: shifting people from “working for” to “building with,” translating mission statements into habits, and measuring culture by what we do under stress, not what we say in meetings.

    Chapter two takes center stage as we break down the “mind of Christ” as a leadership pattern: consider others first, choose the servant’s role, and trade status for service. We name ego as the silent arsonist of teams and offer practical ways to douse it—shared wins, transparent decisions, honest feedback, and interdependence instead of lone-wolf heroics. Then we move to Paul’s famous lines in chapter four: rejoice, practice gratitude, pray with specificity, and fix your attention on what is true and excellent. You’ll hear how this mindset becomes a protective garrison around your heart and mind, and how to build it with simple rhythms—clear boundaries, focus blocks, reflective walks, and a support system that keeps you steady.

    By the end, you’ll have a field map for leading through disruption: anchor joy beyond outcomes, align culture with mission, and guard your inner life so your outer leadership stays calm, clear, and kind. If this resonates, follow the show, share it with a leader who needs courage today, and leave a quick review so others can find it. Then tell us: where do you need more peace and focus this week?

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    36 min
  • From Doctrine To Daily Decisions In Ephesians
    Feb 24 2026

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    What if the fastest way to a healthier team isn’t a new system, but a clearer identity? We open Ephesians and find a blueprint leaders can live by: doctrine first, practice second. The early chapters ground us in who we are—people shaped by grace, purpose, and unity—so the later chapters can show how belief becomes behavior in meetings, hiring, feedback, and decision-making. That shift from vision to execution becomes tangible when Paul redefines leadership as equipping. Think mending nets: closing gaps, building skills, and resourcing people so good work doesn’t fall through. We translate that into modern roles and ask the tough test—could your organization run smoothly if you stepped away for two weeks?

    We also dig into communication as culture. “Let no corrupting talk come out of your mouth” isn’t just a verse; it’s a management KPI. The mouth of the leader sets the weather of the workplace. We share practical ways to audit your words, model calm under pressure, and replace sarcasm with clarity so your team brings problems early and owns solutions. Along the way, we revisit gratitude for the “rope holders” who lowered us past danger—mentors, coaches, friends—and challenge each of us to become rope holders for the next person. Gratitude changes posture; posture changes outcomes.

    To round it out, we explore readiness through the armor metaphor and translate it into daily habits: protect your mission with smart boundaries, invest in wellness rhythms that raise energy, and build processes that let decisions happen at the edge. You’ll leave with three concrete challenges—audit your speech for seven days, run a 48-hour time audit to spot waste, and identify one wall you can lower between you and your team. Subscribe, share this with a leader who needs it, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway so we can equip more people to lead with purpose and grace.

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    39 min