Épisodes

  • The Rhythms of Lent
    Feb 26 2026

    In this episode of the Dulin Weekly Podcast, Pastor James reflects on Lent as an invitation to examine the rhythms that shape our daily lives. Noting the church’s seasonal pattern of preparation and celebration, he explores how Lent creates space to pause, notice, and gently realign what feels hurried, chaotic, or disconnected. Through everyday examples — worship, prayer, habits, and even the practices we set aside — listeners are encouraged to ask which rhythms nourish their relationship with God, others, and themselves, and which may be draining or distracting. Rather than a season of obligation, Lent is framed as a compassionate experiment: a time to try new practices, release unhelpful patterns, and cultivate attentiveness so that life’s deeper, life-giving rhythms can emerge with greater clarity and intention.

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    13 min
  • Practicing Lent: Process, Not Transaction
    Feb 19 2026

    Lent often begins with the question, “What are you giving up?” But Lent is not about earning God’s love or proving spiritual worth. In this week’s Dulin Weekly Podcast, Pastor James reflects on Lent as a season of practice — subtractive or additive — that helps us notice our dependencies, form new habits, and open ourselves to grace. Lent is not transactional; it is transformational. It is the slow work of being shaped by God, one small, faithful step at a time.

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    14 min
  • Forgiveness Is Not Forgetting
    Feb 12 2026

    Forgiveness is often misunderstood. It does not mean saying what happened was okay. It does not require reconciliation. And it does not erase the scars. In this week’s Dulin Weekly Podcast, Pastor James reflects further on his recent sermon about forgiveness, clarifying what forgiveness is — and what it is not. Drawing on the Japanese art of kintsugi and the image of the risen Christ bearing scars, he explores how forgiveness allows us to move forward without letting past wounds define us. Letting go is not excusing harm; it is refusing to let it shape our future.

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    13 min
  • Practicing the Path of Jesus
    Feb 5 2026

    In this week’s Dulin Weekly Podcast, James Henry reflects on what lies at the heart of both Wesleyan faith and the teachings of Jesus: not simply believing certain ideas, but practicing a way of life shaped by love, presence, and compassion. Drawing on Jesus’ call to “follow,” James explores how discipleship is about walking the path Jesus modeled—loving neighbor, letting go of what binds us, and engaging the world with God’s unflinching love. Through stories of everyday practices within the Dulin community and beyond, he invites listeners to consider how their own gifts and callings can become tangible expressions of faith. Ultimately, this reflection reminds us that faith is not just something we hold—it is something we live.

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    13 min
  • Scripture as Sacred Conversation
    Jan 29 2026

    In this final reflection of the Wesleyan Quadrilateral series, Pastor James Henry turns to Scripture, inviting listeners to approach the Bible not primarily as a rulebook or proof-text, but as a living conversation partner through which God continues to speak. Drawing on the practice of Lectio Divina and the understanding of Scripture as emerging from inspired oral traditions, James reflects on the Bible as the faithful human attempt to express encounters with the Divine through story, poetry, prayer, and vision. He acknowledges Scripture’s deep authority while emphasizing that its meaning unfolds differently for each person, shaped by experience, reason, and community. Ultimately, he encourages listeners to read Scripture seriously, prayerfully, and openly—allowing it to question, comfort, challenge, and shape them as they seek to know God and themselves more deeply.

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    14 min
  • Drawing from the Well: Tradition
    Jan 22 2026

    In this episode of the Dulin Weekly Podcast, Pastor James Henry continues the exploration of the Wesleyan Quadrilateral by reflecting on tradition, inviting listeners to see it not as a confining force but as a well from which faith can draw wisdom, nourishment, and guidance. Acknowledging the ways tradition has sometimes harmed or excluded, he reframes it as a living conversation shaped by those who have gone before us—prayers prayed, practices formed, and institutions built in response to human need. Drawing on the Methodist story and the legacy of John Wesley, the episode explores how traditions like worship practices, theological language, education, healthcare, and communal rituals have evolved over time, offering both gifts to receive and elements to re-examine or release. Ultimately, tradition is presented as one voice among others—alongside scripture, reason, and experience—that helps believers make faith their own while faithfully passing it on to future generations.

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    15 min
  • Faith That Thinks
    Jan 15 2026

    In this episode of the Dulin Weekly Podcast, Pastor James reflects on Reason as one of the four elements of the Wesleyan Quadrilateral. Far from being the enemy of faith, reason is described as a God-given gift that helps us interpret, discern, and live out our faith in real life. Drawing on Wesleyan theology and everyday experience, the episode explores how reason works alongside Scripture, Tradition, and Experience to move faith from abstract belief into faithful practice—especially in loving God and neighbor. Rather than offering certainty or control, reason invites humility, curiosity, and discernment, helping us ask what love looks like here and now. Listeners are encouraged to let reason be a companion in the coming week, guiding thoughtful, loving responses in the midst of life’s complexities.


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    14 min
  • Experience: The Lens We Cannot Remove
    Jan 8 2026

    In this episode of the Dulin Weekly Podcast, Pastor James Henry begins the new year by introducing a short series on the Wesleyan Quadrilateral, focusing first on experience as a foundational way people encounter and understand God. Drawing on Wesleyan theology, scripture, and lived reality, James reflects on how faith is not formed abstractly but emerges through the concrete experiences of our lives—shaped by our stories, wounds, joys, and bodies. He challenges the idea of pure objectivity in faith, noting that we always approach scripture, tradition, and reason through the lens of experience, and emphasizes that God meets us where we are through prevenient grace, accompanying us in every moment of life. Encouraging listeners not to diminish their own experiences, James affirms that God is present in the good, the bad, and the ordinary, inviting healing and transformation through lived encounter. The episode sets the stage for upcoming reflections on reason, tradition, and scripture, while grounding the conversation in the everyday reality of how faith is truly lived.

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    13 min