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The Shock Absorber

The Shock Absorber

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Thinking and doing church a little differently...Soul Revival Church Christianisme Ministère et évangélisme Spiritualité
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    Épisodes
    • Peace guards our hearts
      Dec 23 2025

      Recorded five days after the Bondi terrorist attack, Tim reflects on the strange providence of preaching about peace the morning before the attack.

      His sermon from Philippians 4 explored why we struggle to find peace in a world online world where research shows rising depression, anxiety, and suicidality across all generations. But the biblical vision of peace (shalom) is both gift and obedience: the Spirit gives us peace, and the Spirit empowers us to pursue peace. Prayer, that act of relationship, trust, and faith is what guards our hearts and minds. Not the outcome, but the praying.

      Joel and Tim then dive into a fascinating cultural analysis: "Why Didn't Your Grandparents Deconstruct?" which argues that church hurt, moral failure, bad theology, and unanswered questions have always so why is deconstruction so prevalent among millennials?

      The answer is postmodernism's cultural programming. Previous generations lived in a hegemonic meta-narrative. Even when they experienced church pain, there was nowhere else to go. But millennials came of age in the '90s when postmodernism went mainstream. The new cultural catechism taught: truth is socially constructed, institutions are corrupt, every story masks a power play (especially religion), and authenticity comes through deconstruction. If something feels constraining, the answer isn't reform—it's exit. Walk away or burn it down.


      As Christmas approaches, Tim and Joel discuss Soul Revival's four yearly high points: Christmas, Easter, Week Away, and Planning Days. They unpack why gathering on Christmas Day matters, the strategy behind the Kids Christmas Eve service, and why telling the Christmas story every year matters for forming young disciples.

      The episode ends on the question of traditions: which ones do we hold, which do we discard, and why does the gospel tradition at Christmas still matter in a world that tells us all traditions deserve deconstruction?

      Timestamps:
      00:00 - Intro, Bondi attack and Tim's sermon on peace
      15:51 - Deconstruction: The answer isn't reform, it's exit
      31:06 - The traditions we hold and the traditions we discard

      Discussed on this episode:
      Tim’s sermon on God, Why Can’t I Find Peace?
      On Bondi Beach, by Louise Perry
      Why Didn’t Your Grandparents Deconstruct?, by Paul Anleitner

      About the Shock Absorber:
      A podcast for church leaders and ministry pioneers who want to do church differently. Hosted by Stu Crawshaw, Tim Beilharz, and Joel McMaster from Soul Revival Church.

      Connect with us at joel@shockabsorber.com

      Soul Revival Church meet across the Sutherland Shire & in Ryde: soulrevivalchurch.com

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      43 min
    • Movements always happen and Christians are always in the middle of them
      Dec 16 2025

      With Stu traveling and Tim unwell, Joel brings in the super-subs, Ethan and Brayden, to tackle the 6-7 meme and what it tells us about internet culture, and how Christians should respond.

      They start with a primer on the 6-7 meme, following a breakdown by aidanetcetera on Instagram that claims it's evidence that "postmodernists won the culture war" and what it means to meme something into relevance.


      The guys discuss whether this holds up. Is 6-7 actually abstract art, or is it just teenagers doing what they've always done, creating subculture that adults don't understand? They discuss the lifecycle of memes (why they die when younger kids adopt them), the difference between little memes and big movements like grunge, and whether capital-M Movements can even happen anymore when everyone's algorithm shows them different realities.

      But this isn't just internet anthropology. Joel shares his research on getting his 11-year-old son a phone, Australia's social media ban for under-16s, the rise of sextortion, why helicopter parenting offline paired with complete digital freedom is naive, and what Christian wisdom looks like in practice.

      If older Christians are going to say the internet is bad for development and then we sit around on our phones, what are we modelling? Despite cultural shifts toward declining literacy and shorter attention spans, God is still moving, people are becoming Christians through social media, mini-revivals are happening in the UK, and young believers are figuring out how to be Christian in digital spaces.

      The episode lands on a hopeful note: movements still happen, they just look different now. And Christians are always in the middle of them. From women transforming the Roman Empire through radical hospitality to hippies doubling down on to Gen Z finding Jesus through TikTok, God works through every cultural shift. The question isn't whether to fear the movement, but how to partner with young people as they generatively figure out what it means to follow Jesus online and offline.

      Timestamps:
      00:00 - Intro and laying out the generations
      04:16 - Is this 6-7 meme a work of art?
      12:55 - When are memes cool and not cool?
      20:38 - A movement of understanding how to be online
      28:21 - Leaning into what people see as freedoms without knowing the consequences
      34:19 - What do we model as the digital world becomes increasingly more prevalent?
      43:44 - Movements still happen, and Christians are still in them

      Discussed on this episode:
      aidanetcetera on Instagram
      Doot Doot, by Skrilla
      Lamelo Ball basketball edits
      Social media ban
      Lewis’s Chip Lunch episode on the internet
      Richard Dawkins a cultural Christian

      About the Shock Absorber:
      A podcast for church leaders and ministry pioneers who want to do church differently. Hosted by Stu Crawshaw, Tim Beilharz, and Joel McMaster from Soul Revival Church.

      Soul Revival Church meet across the Sutherland Shire & in Ryde: soulrevivalchurch.com

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      58 min
    • God is not a God of efficiency
      Dec 9 2025

      Joel reclaims the hosting chair from Tim (who did a great job, but still...). They start off by debating favourite movies, why Tim can't finish The Godfather, and the comfort of rewatching The Bourne Identity, but quickly pivot into questions of efficiency, productivity and whether we should be as efficient as the world demands us to be.

      Tim has been reading extensively about digital culture, AI, and what it means to be embodied Christians in an increasingly disembodied world. He introduces two key books: Christine Rosen's secular "The Extinction of Experience" and Samuel D. James's Christian "Digital Liturgies." Both argue, from different angles, that we're losing something fundamentally human as we trade physical experiences for digital ones.

      The theological anchor is incarnation. God created us as embodied beings. Jesus took on flesh and was resurrected into a physical body. This matters profoundly for how we think about technology, productivity, and formation as disciples. When Mark Andreessen coins the term "reality privilege" to argue that most people's physical experiences are worse than what digital worlds can offer, he's essentially making the argument of The Matrix's Cypher: the fake world is better than the real one.

      Tim and Joel push back hard. They discuss why God is not efficient (it took 1800 years from Abraham to Jesus), why the Bible is intentionally slow and story-shaped rather than a bullet-point list, why handwriting matters, why reading actual books matters, why face-to-face conversations are "3D" while text messages are "2D," and why the church must be a place of refuge from culture's aggressive push toward endless efficiency and productivity.

      Timestamps:
      00:00 - Intro, favourite movies
      11:47 - We are created incarnate
      26:22 - Does every moment have to be productive?
      33:52 - The devious trick of efficiency
      44:42 - How we are formed matters
      1:06:30 - Tim's Takeaway

      Discussed on this episode:
      Anchorman
      Step Brothers
      The Mummy I
      The Mummy Returns
      Alien
      Young Frankenstein
      The Bourne Identity
      The Fast and the Furious
      The Godfather
      The Social Network
      A Few Good Men
      Die Hard
      Lethal Weapon
      Tunnel 29, by Helena Merriman
      The Escape Artist, by Jonathan Freedland
      Cloverfield
      The Extinction of Experience, by Christine Rosen:
      Digital Liturgies, by Samuel D. James
      Marc Andreesen
      The Jungle Village Hooked on Phones

      About the Shock Absorber:
      A podcast for church leaders and ministry pioneers who want to do church differently. Hosted by Stu Crawshaw, Tim Beilharz, and Joel McMaster from Soul Revival Church.

      Soul Revival Church meet across the Sutherland Shire & in Ryde: soulrevivalchurch.com

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      1 h et 11 min
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