Épisodes

  • Didache Chapter 8: On Fasting
    Feb 24 2026

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    In this episode, we move into Didache chapter 8 and confront a discipline the modern church often sidelines: fasting. The Didache does not present fasting as spiritual cosplay or an optional upgrade for the unusually devoted. It treats it as an ordinary rhythm of Christian life, a practiced resistance against imitation religion, and a training ground for loyalty when obedience costs you something.

    We work through the opening verses of chapter 8 and the logic behind them. The Didache draws a clear boundary between performative spirituality and embodied discipline. It calls believers to fast, but not as theater. It also gives structure, setting fasting within a communal pattern that forms identity over time. This is not about earning favor. It is about alignment, retraining appetite, and learning to want God more than comfort.

    As the conversation unfolds, we wrestle with why fasting has disappeared in so many Protestant spaces, and why early Christians treated it like normal Christianity rather than extreme Christianity. We talk about the temptation to make faith purely internal and private, the ways the body exposes what the heart is actually loyal to, and how fasting forces honesty. You find out quickly what rules you when food is not there to mute you.

    This episode invites listeners to recover fasting as a discipline of allegiance. Not punishment. Not superstition. Not a badge. A deliberate weakening of the self so the will can be re-anchored to the Way of Life.


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    47 min
  • Didache Chapter 7: On Baptism
    Feb 17 2026

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    In this episode, we turn to Didache chapter 7 and step into one of the most debated and misunderstood practices in Christian history: baptism. The early Church does not treat baptism as a casual ritual or a mechanical transaction. It treats it as covenantal allegiance. After teaching the Way of Life and the Way of Death, only then does the Didache speak of baptism. Why does formation come before immersion? And what does that order tell us about the heart behind the act?

    We walk through the Didache’s instructions carefully. Baptize in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Use living water if possible. If not, use what you have. Fast beforehand. The emphasis is not on spectacle or office, but on reverence, preparation, and intention. The act is simple. The posture is not. We wrestle with modern controversies around infant baptism, rebaptism, salvation formulas, and altar calls, asking what allegiance truly looks like in light of Scripture and early Church practice.

    As the discussion unfolds, we reflect on the difference between John’s baptism of repentance and baptism into Christ. We consider whether baptism saves, whether it must be done a certain way, and whether discomfort, fasting, and communal participation were meant to protect its weight from becoming routine. We also confront the danger of treating sacred acts like magic words or emotional milestones rather than covenantal commitments.

    This episode invites listeners to reconsider baptism not as a checkbox or a performance, but as a public declaration of loyalty to the King. It is a call to reverence, to preparation, and to remembering that Jesus himself entered the waters, not because he needed cleansing, but because covenant demands visible allegiance.


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    49 min
  • Didache Chapters 5-6: The Way of Death (Part 2)
    Feb 10 2026

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    In this episode, we continue our reading of Didache chapters 5 and 6 and press deeper into what the text calls the Way of Death, not as a fear tactic, but as a diagnostic. The Didache does not treat sin as isolated mistakes. It treats it as a divided allegiance that slowly reshapes desire, speech, priorities, and worship.

    Before we return to the text, we share what is unfolding in our own community through a new season of public ministry, including Prayer in the Pasture, Praise in the Pasture, and Community in the Pasture. These events are designed to model the disciplines the Didache assumes, prayer, fasting, embodied community, and practical formation outside the four walls of the church. We also introduce the Logic of God prayer line as a way to normalize vulnerability, build a real network of intercession, and cultivate confidence in prayer for both new and mature believers.

    From there we move into Didache chapter 6, where the warning sharpens. See that no one leads you astray from this way of the teaching. We talk about how easy it is to drift when the church offers comfort without formation, milk without meat, and curated curriculum in place of Scripture. We explore the tension in the Didache’s command to bear the whole yoke of the Lord, and the mercy embedded in its realism, do what you can. Not as an excuse to compromise, but as a call to earnest obedience, one step at a time, in a life that is still being sanctified.

    We close by wrestling with the Didache’s final warning about food sacrificed to idols and the worship of dead gods, not as ancient trivia, but as a window into the spiritual world the early church assumed. We talk about the danger of treating God as distant or inactive, the modern church’s temptation to function as if the Spirit is silent, and why the gospel itself is a declaration that rival powers are not ultimate. The call is simple and severe. Choose the Way of Life with your whole self, because divided allegiance will eventually hollow you out.

    Prayer line: (772) 206-0753


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    58 min
  • Didache Chapters 5-6: The Way of Death (Part 1)
    Feb 3 2026

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    In this episode, we begin our examination of chapters 5 and 6 of the Didache, where the text turns sharply from formation into warning and names what it calls The Way of Death. This is not a philosophical category or a list of abstract evils. It is a lived path, marked by habits, dispositions, and unchecked desires that slowly pull a person and a community away from God.

    We walk through the opening contours of the Way of Death, paying close attention to how the Didache organizes its warnings. Violence, pride, greed, sexual disorder, dishonesty, and misuse of power are not treated as random sins but as interconnected patterns that reinforce one another. The text assumes that moral drift does not happen all at once. It happens through repetition, justification, and silence.

    As the discussion unfolds, we reflect on why the Didache places such heavy emphasis on speech, authority, and self rule. Why does the early Church see arrogance and unrestrained desire as signs of spiritual decay? How does this ancient framework challenge modern ideas of autonomy, self expression, and moral flexibility? And why does the Didache refuse to soften the language around consequences?

    This episode invites listeners to begin a sober reckoning with formation gone wrong. It is the first step into the Way of Death, not to induce fear, but to sharpen discernment. Before the text calls believers back to repentance and restraint, it demands honesty about where certain paths actually lead.


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    54 min
  • Didache Chapters 1–4: The Way of Life (Part 2)
    Jan 27 2026

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    In this episode, we continue through chapters 1 through 4 of the Didache, pressing deeper into what the early Church called The Way of Life. The text moves beyond broad moral commands and into the daily posture of discipleship, where humility, obedience, and community accountability become central to following Christ. This is not aspirational ethics. It is formation through restraint, discipline, and practiced love.

    We explore how the Didache sharpens its vision of the Christian life by addressing teachers, leaders, generosity, correction, and submission. Authority is not treated as power but as responsibility. Giving is not framed as charity but as participation in God’s economy. Correction is not punishment but protection. The Way of Life assumes a community where believers are shaped together, not in isolation.

    As the discussion unfolds, we reflect on how uncomfortable this vision feels to modern Christians formed by individualism and autonomy. What does it mean to submit to teaching without surrendering conscience? Why does the Didache treat unchecked speech, pride, and self rule as spiritual dangers? And how does this ancient text expose the gap between belief and obedience in contemporary faith?

    This episode invites listeners to wrestle with discipline, authority, and communal formation. It is a continuation of the Way of Life that refuses to reduce Christianity to ideas alone, calling believers instead into a shared practice of humility, faithfulness, and lived obedience before God and one another.


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    1 h et 6 min
  • Didache Chapters 1–4: The Way of Life (Part 1)
    Jan 20 2026

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    In this episode, we begin a full series through the Didache, one of the earliest Christian discipleship texts, by focusing on chapters 1 through 4, known as The Way of Life. Written for new believers on the edge of the apostolic age, the Didache does not open with doctrine or debate. It opens with a path. A way to walk. A life to be formed.

    We explore how The Way of Life is built around love, restraint, generosity, humility, and obedience, drawing deeply from the teachings of Jesus without needing to quote them directly. Faith here is not defined by private belief but by public practice. Speech, money, sexuality, anger, hospitality, and community responsibility are treated as spiritual disciplines rather than personal preferences.

    As we work through these opening chapters, we reflect on how the Didache confronts modern assumptions about discipleship. What does it mean to follow Christ when the earliest Christians assumed moral formation, not spiritual minimalism? Why does this text refuse to separate belief from behavior? And how does The Way of Life expose the gaps left when Christianity becomes cultural rather than lived?

    This episode invites listeners to step back into the earliest rhythms of Christian formation. It is the beginning of a journey through the Didache that will move from The Way of Life to The Way of Death, asking not only what Christians believed, but how they were expected to live.


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    1 h et 16 min
  • Zoetic Music Interview
    Jan 13 2026

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    In this episode, we sit down with Zoetic Music for a candid conversation about Christian creativity, theological discernment, and what it means to make art that is both excellent and faithful. This is not a shallow promo run. It is a serious look at vocation and craft, and the spiritual responsibility that comes with shaping words and sound in the name of Christ.

    We talk about Zoetic’s origin story, their musical formation in jazz and classical worlds, and why they intentionally build music that is not designed for congregational worship yet remains accountable to Scripture. We explore how they choose topics, why lyrics require far more discipline than inspiration, and what it takes to write with theological clarity without reducing music to slogans.

    As the conversation deepens, we wrestle with the modern worship landscape. When does worship become production. Where is the line between support and spectacle. What does it mean to lead worship as a believer rather than perform worship as a professional. We also address the pressure Christians feel to comment on every cultural controversy, and why Zoetic aims to be bold where Scripture is clear while leaving space where it is not.

    This episode invites listeners to consider the sacred work of creating in a noisy age. It is a conversation about calling, integrity, and the kind of art that does not manipulate emotion but forms faith through beauty, truth, and restraint.


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    54 min
  • Josephs Bones (Genesis 50 - Part 2)
    Jan 6 2026

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    In this episode, we continue through the closing movement of Genesis 50, where death, memory, and covenant collide at the end of the patriarchal story. Jacob is buried, Joseph weeps, and the future of Israel hangs in the tension between promise and exile. But this is no ordinary conclusion. It is a theological unveiling. Why does Joseph insist his bones be carried out of Egypt? Why does burial matter so deeply in this story? And what does it mean that Israel’s inheritance is tied not to land yet, but to hope preserved in bones?

    We trace the significance of burial, embalming, and procession, exploring how ancient Near Eastern ideas of inheritance, land rights, and identity shape this final chapter. From the royal mourning of Egypt to the threshing floor of Atad, the narrative reveals a people both honored and displaced. In Joseph’s final words, we hear not triumph but longing. God will surely visit you. The promise is restated, but fulfillment remains distant.

    As the brothers fear Joseph after Jacob’s death, we confront unresolved guilt, fragile reconciliation, and the lingering cost of betrayal. Joseph’s response raises hard questions about forgiveness, power, and humility. Is this grace, restraint, or something more complicated? And why does Joseph, the savior of many, still die outside the land of promise?

    This episode invites listeners to wrestle with exile, remembrance, and faith that waits beyond a lifetime. It is a journey from burial to hope, from forgotten bones to future redemption, where God’s covenant endures even when His people remain far from home.


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    1 h et 5 min