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On today's episode, Lawfare Managing Editor Tyler McBrien sits down with Jasper Craven, a freelance reporter covering the military and veterans' issues, to discuss his new book, “God Forgives, Brothers Don't: The Long March of Military Education and the Making of American Manhood.” They speak about why the son of a peace activist embarked on this project, how military education helps explain our current political moment, and so much more.To receive ad-free podcasts, become a Lawfare Material Supporter at www.patreon.com/lawfare. You can also support Lawfare by making a one-time donation at https://givebutter.com/lawfare-institute.Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/lawfare. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Danny and Derek speak with Jasper Craven, a reporter covering the military and veterans' issues, about masculinity and the military. They talk about Trump's time in military school, how his relationship with masculinity has affected his approach to business and politics, Pete Hegseth and his military identity, soldiers' “honor codes” and subverting the rules, how notions of masculinity change between Trump and Hegseth's generations, Graham Platner and how his military service affected him, the emergence of the “warrior ethos,” how the liberal left's denunciations of Platner relate to the military, and the White House UFC fight. Be sure to grab a copy of Jasper's book God Forgives, Brothers Don't: The Long March of Military Education and the Making of American Manhood. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Bad news everyone. Our love for Ryan Gosling is truly tested today with this movie
In this episode of the Explaining History Podcast, we are joined by investigative journalist Jasper Craven to discuss his new book, *God Forgives, Brothers Don't: Inside the Violent, Hypermasculine World of America's Military Schools*. The conversation ranges far beyond military academies to explore how the US military has become the defining institution of American manhood – and what that means for democracy, violence, and the soul of the nation.**Jasper's journey into this subject began with a tip about a dysfunctional military school near Philadelphia, rife with abuse and corruption. That story opened a window onto a broad network of military education – from elite officer training at West Point to reform schools for troubled boys – all peddling the same promise: that rigid hierarchy, discipline, and violence can forge a real man. The military, Jasper argues, has filled a void left by the collapse of other pathways to meaning and middle‑class security.We trace the historical roots of America's uneasy relationship with standing armies – the founders' distrust of a professional military versus the lionisation of the revolutionary war veteran. That tension has been resolved decisively in favour of the soldier. Today, militarism permeates American culture, from a defence budget larger than the next ten countries combined to the reflexive adoration of anyone in uniform. This “secular faith” has produced a generation of veterans who feel their sacrifices are acknowledged only in hollow, abstract gestures – never in a genuine willingness to confront the ugliness of war.The conversation turns to Pete Hegseth, Trump's defence secretary and a walking embodiment of hyper‑performative masculinity. Jasper traces Hegseth's own insecurities – shame at his “soft” father, a desperate need to prove himself – and shows how the military offered him a ready‑made identity. But that identity is brittle, built on a foundation of alcohol abuse, misogyny, Islamophobia, and a deep fear of being seen as weak. Hegseth, Jasper argues, is not an aberration but the “inevitable conclusion” of decades of imperial blowback.We also discuss the role of military schools in channelling working‑class boys – disproportionately white, often struggling with learning disabilities or juvenile justice issues – into a system that promises redemption through submission. The long‑term consequences are devastating: high rates of suicide, PTSD, domestic violence, and extremist radicalisation. Jasper notes that the mob that stormed the Capitol on 6 January was composed largely of military veterans – a fact that was briefly discussed, then quietly forgotten.Topics covered:- Jasper's investigative journey from a single dysfunctional military school to a national network- The economic and social drivers of military recruitment- How military schools weaponise masculinity as a recruiting tool- America's historic tension between distrust of standing armies and adoration of soldiers- The failure of post‑9/11 wars to deliver meaning or victory- Pete Hegseth as a case study in fragile, performative masculinity- The 6 January insurrection and the role of radicalised veterans- The hollow abstraction of veteran worship- Graham Platner's Senate campaign as a test of whether voters can face the real wounds of war---*Jasper Craven's *God Forgives, Brothers Don't* is out now. Please consider buying from an independent bookshop or directly from the publisher.**If you enjoy the podcast, please consider supporting us – we are migrating from Patreon to Substack. Details in the show notes.*Explaining History helps you understand the 20th Century through critical conversations and expert interviews. We connect the past to the present. If you enjoy the show, please subscribe and share.▸ Support the Show & Get Exclusive ContentBecome a Patron: patreon.com/explaininghistory▸ Join the Community & Continue the ConversationFacebook Group: facebook.com/groups/ExplainingHistoryPodcastSubstack: theexplaininghistorypodcast.substack.com▸ Read Articles & Go DeeperWebsite: explaininghistory.org Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Secretary of Defense (or ‘War’, as he prefers) Pete Hegseth is a poster child for the way military education likes to inculcate recruits and students into a macho culture of masculinity. The Pentagon has a vast educational network through which to teach these lessons. It includes basic training, service academies like West Point, JROTC, ROTC and dozens of military schools and war colleges. This has given the military brass outsized power in shaping our young men and, by extension, society at large. In “God Forgives, Brothers Don’t: The Long March of Military Education and the Making of American Manhood,” investigative journalist Jasper Craven explores how the military formed and fuels increasingly volatile strains of American masculinity. While many people benefit greatly from the structure and discipline of military training, others have scars from it having been cut off from the development of the other traits that define men, like empathy and caring for others. It’s provocative exploration of men in our society as the messaging about the training and service focuses more and more on a warrior culture.
What does the Seventh Commandment actually teach about sex, marriage, faithfulness, and God's design? In Week 7 of our STONE series, Pastor CJ Ward unpacks Exodus 20:14 and explores why God's boundaries around sexuality exist—not to restrict us, but to protect something valuable. This message addresses: God's design for sexuality Marriage and faithfulness Sexual temptation and modern culture Shame, secrecy, and healing The power of God's forgiveness and restoration Main Scripture: Exodus 20:14 If this message encouraged you, be sure to like, subscribe, and share it with someone who needs hope today. #NewLifeGillette #STONE #SeventhCommandment #Exodus20 #Marriage #Faithfulness #Jesus #ChristianLiving Chapters (00:00:02) - New Life Gillette Church Teaching(00:01:19) - Donor: Hope of Life(00:07:49) - My Dad's Crazy Baseball Cards(00:11:59) - The Sexual Sin(00:18:20) - Christians Should Have the Best Marriages(00:21:32) - The Commandment for Sex Outside Marriage(00:27:02) - Sexual Sin: Shame and the Healing(00:28:22) - God Forgives, Heal and Restores Everything(00:30:24) - Separation of Love and Porn
Matthew 18: 33
Matthew 18: 33
In this episode we have a conversation with reporter Jasper Craven about his new book, God Forgives, Brothers Don't: The Long March of Military Education and the Making of American Manhood, which is a made-for-KYE feat of research that offers a fascinating way into perennial themes of this show: masculinity, U.S. empire, the relationship between violence and civilization, and the surprising camp of conservatism. Along the way we discuss Donald Trump, the mob, Peter Brian Hegseth, Graham Platner, and more. Sources: Jasper Craven, God Forgives, Brothers Don't: The Long March of Military Education and the Making of American Manhood (2026) — "Battle of the Sexes: Pete Hegseth's War on Women," The Baffler, Sept 2025 Dan Gilgoth, The Jesus Machine: How James Dobson, Focus on the Family, and Evangelical America Are Winning the Culture War (2007) Dr. James Dobson, Dare to Discipline: A Pyschologist Offers Urgent Advice to Parents and Teachers (1970) ...and don't forget to subscribe to Know Your Enemy on Patreon for access to all of our bonus episodes!
This week Jasper Craven joins Francis to discuss his latest book "God Forgives, Brothers Don't". Pick up Jasper's book here in either Hard Cover or Audiobook format - https://bookshop.org/a/25702/9781668087190 When investigative reporter Jasper Craven first dug into Valley Forge Military Academy five years ago, he uncovered an acrid strain of masculinity that was raw, violent, fiercely hierarchical, and quickly mutating out of control. Initially, he had assumed that military education was a dying, outmoded brand. But as he looked deeper, he found a sprawling, well-funded network featuring dozens of military schools, like Valley Forge and West Point, plus thousands of ROTC programs in public colleges and high schools that allowed the Pentagon to wield outsized power on education. Check out the store, and sign up for our twice a month email updates https://whatahellofawaytodad.com/ Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/hellofawaytodad/ Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/hellofawaytodad/
For Memorial Day, author Jasper Craven joins to discuss his book on military education in the US, "God Forgives, Brothers Don't." Buy the book here: https://www.simonandschuster.com/books/God-Forgives-Brothers-Dont/Jasper-Craven/9781668087190
“There is a pretty powerful strain in America today in which men feel some need to be violent and domineering to sort of prove their masculinity. And there's sort of less intense but still prevalent strains that infect many other types of men.” — Jasper Craven Today is Memorial Day — America's annual celebration of its warriors and military ethic. But for Jasper Craven, author of God Forgives, Brothers Don't: The Long March of Military Education and the Making of American Manhood, it should be a day of muted self-reflection rather than bellicose celebration. Especially in May 2026 with America involved in another ludicrous overseas war. Craven's argument is that from George Washington onwards, America has fused military manliness with a self-destructive masculine identity. Thus young men are trained at top military academies like West Point to be unthinkingly domineering and violent. But for Craven, America — a continent surrounded by oceans to the east and west and by friendly neighbours to the north and south — has no need for the unreflective militarism fetishised by its military academies and culture. So what has West Point wrought? A nation of Pete Hegseths, Jasper Craven implies. Happy (ie: peaceful) Memorial Day everyone. Five Takeaways • Military Manliness and American Identity: From Washington to Hegseth: From the Founding Fathers — most of whom were Revolutionary War veterans — America has explicitly fused military manliness with core masculine identity. Boys who want to define themselves as Americans have felt a need to be strong, to serve, to defend. The archetype has only been beefed up over time: through the steroid era and into the world of Navy SEALs and special operators. The result is a culture where men feel the need to be violent and domineering to prove their masculinity, from carrying AK-47s to protests to becoming ICE agents. The problem: the archetype has no relationship to actual national security needs. • West Point and the Civil War: A Fuse, Not a Remedy: West Point was created to produce a well-schooled officer class. What Craven argues: when you allocate massive resources to building a military, you will feel the consequences. Before the Civil War, West Point was segregated into northern and southern companies — which exacerbated tensions rather than building union. When war broke out, many West Point officers defected to the Confederacy, including Robert E. Lee, who had been superintendent. West Point officers on opposite sides then killed each other in their thousands. Many lawmakers called for West Point to be abolished. They were not heeded. • Race, Integration, and the Military's Complex Legacy: Craven acknowledges the military's partial role in racial integration: Truman's executive order in 1948 desegregated the armed forces, which was a genuine milestone ahead of civilian institutions. But he is careful about what this means. Integration at the institutional level did not eliminate racism within the culture. And the same military that desegregated also produced the culture of violence, dehumanisation of the other, and misogyny and homophobia that Craven chronicles throughout the book. Partial credit is still only partial credit. • January 6th and the Politicisation of the Officer Class: In Trump's first term, General Mattis and General Kelly and others demonstrated real courage in reining in Trump's worst impulses. By the end of that term, they had all been replaced by loyalists. During the transition to Biden, Trump's military cronies at the Pentagon went dark. January 6th was largely carried out by military veterans. More than 100 senior retired military officers penned an op-ed supporting what Trump had done. In Trump's second term, the politicisation of the officer class has only accelerated. The non-political professional officer class is now divided. • ROTC, Not West Point: Craven's Prescription: Craven's preferred model: ROTC — military training supplemental to traditional liberal arts education. Survey data shows ROTC officers, because of exposure to Plato, Shakespeare, and the rest, are more well-rounded and better thinkers than West Point graduates. At West Point, it is essentially all STEM. Craven's prescription: introduce the humanities, expose cadets to civilians, break the silos. Ideally, West Point could become a national university that includes military programmes alongside the training of doctors and aid workers. The military-civilian divide is as much the military's creation as the civilian's. About the Guest Jasper Craven is a freelance reporter covering the military and veterans' issues. His work has appeared in the New York Times, Harper's Magazine, Politico, The Baffler, and the New Republic. He is the author of God Forgives, Brothers Don't: The Long March of Military Education and the Making of American Manhood (Atria/One Signal Publishers, May 19, 2026) and the co-author, with Suzanne Gordon and Steve Early, of Our Veterans. He lives in Brooklyn, New York. References: • God Forgives, Brothers Don't: The Long March of Military Education and the Making of American Manhood by Jasper Craven (Atria/One Signal Publishers, May 19, 2026). • Sebastian Junger, Tribe — referenced in the publishers' framing as a companion text. • Chris Hedges, War Is a Force That Gives Us Meaning — referenced as a companion text. • Episode 2907: Brandon Webb on Puddle Jumpers — the companion episode referenced at the opening; the pro-military counterpart to Craven's critique. • Episode 2909: Adrian Goldsworthy on Athens vs Sparta — also referenced at the opening. About Keen On America Nobody asks more awkward questions than the Anglo-American writer and filmmaker Andrew Keen. In Keen On America, Andrew brings his pointed Transatlantic wit to making sense of the United States — hosting daily interviews about the history and future of this now venerable Republic. With nearly 2,900 episodes since the show launched on TechCrunch in 2010, Keen On America is the most prolific intellectual interview show in the history of podcasting. WebsiteSubstackYouTubeApple Podcasts
Military academies and ROTC clubs teach children and young adults — most of them boys — how to fight in war. But this education comes with its own risk of scars.Vermont-based freelance journalist Jasper Craven explores American military education in his new book, God Forgives, Brothers Don't: The Long March of Military Education and the Making of American Manhood.Craven has reported on the military and veterans' issues for local and national publications including VTDigger, Mother Jones, The New Republic and the The New York Times Magazine.Broadcast live on Wednesday, May 20, 2026, at noon; rebroadcast at 7 p.m.Have questions, comments or tips? Send us a message or check us out on Instagram.
Jasper Craven is an investigative journalist covering the military and veterans' issues. His writing has appeared in Harper's, Politico, The Intercept, The Boston Globe, and The New York Times. He is also a fellow at the Veterans Healthcare Policy Institute. His latest book is God Forgives, Brothers Don't.Learn more by following Jasper at @Jasper_Craven on X and @jaspercraving on Instagram. Intro reel, Writing Table Podcast 2024 Outro RecordingFollow the Writing Table: @writingtablepodcastEmail questions or tell us who you'd like us to invite to the Writing Table: writingtablepodcast@gmail.com.
Vermont journalist Jasper Craven has spent a decade investigating and exposing the culture of toxic masculinity that pervades the American military.In 2018, he wrote a multipart exposé for VTDigger about sexual misconduct and abuse in the Vermont Air National Guard that resulted in hearings at the Vermont Statehouse, reforms in the Guard, and the departure of the adjutant general. His writing on the military and veterans has appeared in The New York Times, Harper's, Politico and Mother Jones, among other publications.Craven's investigation into the Vermont Guard showed him how “the military holds unique elements that can make these problems worse than in civilian life, and also that many of the systems developed to combat that behavior are themselves flawed and easily exploited and can leave women in particular really feeling betrayed by an institution that they've given their lives to.”Craven, who is 33, has a new book, “God Forgives, Brothers Don't: The Long March of Military Education and the Making of American Manhood.” He argues that the U.S. military shapes American masculinity, especially through military schools, academies, and programs such as Junior ROTC in middle and high schools and ROTC in colleges. But the form of masculinity that these institutions advance has taken a heavy toll, as evidenced by a suicide crisis throughout the military.“The idea that the military is the single and most effective reform program for boys is just completely untrue,” said Craven. “Since the 1800s there are many stories of mostly young boys who have been deeply damaged while under the care of military school officials — some have died, some have committed suicide, some have been hospitalized for psychiatric crises.”Craven points to the chest-thumping hypermasculinity of Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth as emblematic of how some men are responding to the growing diversity of the military, including the rising status of women. “Women are being elevated for the first time into senior roles where they are often outshining men in both physical and academic pursuits, and that is majorly threatening to people like Hegseth,” Craven said. “The military response to that is violent subjugation, and that is what we see with Hegseth. … He is just psychically hung up on all of these old school ideas around manliness and military service.”Craven's reporting on the military earned him an unexpected visit from the U.S. Secret Service. After he covered protests at West Point during a speech by President Donald Trump for a story for Politico, a Secret Service agent paid a visit to his parents' home in Vermont.The agent was “alleging without merit, completely falsely that I was acting suspiciously on campus and that I had been asking around to meet the president — again, not true — though if I had been doing that, (I was) certainly well within my rights as a journalist.” Craven quickly concluded that “it was a pretty clear-cut act of intimidation from West Point.”Craven has not been deterred. He is moving back to Vermont to continue his work in journalism. He hopes that his work leads to “alternative ideas around shaping American masculinity and aiding American men.”
On this episode of Good Noise Podcast, I'm joined by Jay Valentine of Guilt Trip to talk about their EP God Forgives. We dive into the intensity behind the release, unpacking the themes of anger, reflection, and personal accountability that drive the project.Jay shares insight into the writing process, the mindset behind the lyrics, and how God Forgives captures both the aggression and emotional honesty that define the band's sound. We also talk about the hardcore scene, channeling real-life experiences into heavy music, and what this EP represents for the band moving forward.This episode was broadcast live on idobi Radio on Tuesday, 4/1 at 9pm ET, before being released across all podcast platforms.Tune in next week for more exclusive station takeovers at idobi.com or on the free Idobi Radio appGuilt Trip Socials:Website: https://www.guilttripmhc.com/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/guilttripmhc/?hl=enFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/guilttripmhcTikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@guilttripmhcYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@guilttripmhcApple Music: https://music.apple.com/us/artist/guilt-trip/1463581100Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/artist/07mhRucOGu6NJvRNVzqoxU?si=_guoPIbvTN2I7Z3oQITbrQ
When was the last time you confessed your wrongdoing to anyone? To God? Alejandro Duran reminds us that this is a key to our relationship with God and our ability to Win Today over sin and shame.
Only God Forgives (2013) The Film Buff Review
Only God Forgives (2013) The Film Buff Review
Chapter 694 - "We Can Do Things That We Couldn't Have Done Before" ...as read by Jay Valentine of Guilt Trip Today we welcome Guilt Trip frontman Jay Valentine to the podcast. Guilt Trip surprised dropped their new ep, God Forgives, last month on Roadrunner Records. The conversation focuses on the new ep as Jay talks about the decision to release these three tracks as an ep, how his religious background informs his lyrical ideas, how being signed to Roadrunner opens up the bands ability to create more freely, their experience touring in the States for the first time, and more. https://www.guilttripmhc.com/https://mlvltd.com/collections/guilt-triphttps://guilttripmhc.bandcamp.com/DiscordPatreonSubstack Email: asthestorygrows@gmail.com Chapter 694 Music: Guilt Trip - "Dirt" Guilt Trip - "Angel Eyes" Guilt Trip - "Burn"
Join in with us as Mike and Susie speak to us about how God forgives our shame and how prayer activates our relationship with the Holy Sprit. It's time for the church to rise up and live victoriously! Check out video here Thank you for tuning in to the Empowered Living Podcast. Here are some different ways to connect with us- https://empoweredlifechurch.org https://www.facebook.com/ELCtalent https://www.instagram.com/elct
You are Barabbas. In this episode of The Pursuit, James Griffin, Carlos Fernandez, and Matt Moody walk through Peter's sermon in Acts 2 and 3, unpacking the Barabbas exchange and what it really means that Jesus took the cross reserved for a murderer. The conversation goes deep on penal substitutionary atonement, why we struggle to believe God actually forgives us even when we're confident he forgives others, and the critical difference between Holy Spirit conviction and shame from the enemy.They also tackle why so many believers keep fishing up what God has already cast into the ocean, what repentance actually looks like versus self-improvement, and why the prodigal son story might be the most important thing you read this week.If this episode helped you, share it with someone who needs to hear it. Like and subscribe to never miss an episode.To submit a question, send us a DM on Instagram or Facebook.Crosspoint City Church exists to relentlessly pursue those far from God to help them know and follow Jesus. To help support this mission and work, visit https://www.mycpcc.com/giveTo learn more about all of our locations or what is coming up at Crosspoint City, check out https://www.crosspointcity.com/ or follow us on your favorite social platform @CrosspointCity
Will and Anurag discuss new releases by Ulrika Spacek, Only God Forgives, and MX Lonely, plus a live report and a death of the week.
In this episode, Fr. Fessio discusses the forgiveness we receive at every Mass.
0:30 - Student walkout – Mather, Northside Prep, Amundson, Streamwood… 20:16 - Trump on body cameras in MN 37:01 - Illinois Primary Check-in 01:02:15 - Midnight Meat Trains 01:16:36 - In-depth History with Frank from Arlington Heights 01:20:15 - Market Specialist for Market Day Report! Scott "the cow guy" Shellady: I'm for free trade... but I'm not for free trade if they're tariffing us and we're not tariffing them. Check out Scott’s Market Day Report! – 10:30am CT to 1pm CT- and The Cow Guy Close – 1pm CT to 1:30pm CT – both at RFD-TV 01:38:23 - Wirepoints founder Mark Glennon breaks down how benefits fraud is quietly draining billions from taxpayers. 01:54:02 - Morning Joe tries to have his Don Lemon moment 02:15:19 - Journalist Jasper Craven on America’s new gambling epidemic. Jasper is also the author of God Forgives, Brothers Don’t: The Long March of Military Education and the Making of American Manhood, which will be published in May.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This is message 2 in Understanding the Love of God Jeremiah 30:18-31:40 God's love does not fail, fade, or retreat in the face of human sin, judgment, or delay. Though His people may wander, face correction, or endure loss, He remains faithful to every promise He has made. His love is covenantal, purposeful, and enduring, drawing, restoring, and preserving according to His word. God finishes what He begins, gathers what has been scattered, forgives what has been broken, and continues to love because His nature never changes. Don't forget to download our app for more from the Riverview Baptist Church. http://onelink.to/rbcapp Find more at https://riverviewbc.com/ Donate through Pushpay https://pushpay.com/pay/riverviewbc
POSTCARDS FROM DAVID: God Forgives You 2 Samuel 12:1-15
Tom Logue - January 11th 2026 When we stop listening and obeying, we wander — but prayer shows us the way forward. This week, Tom pauses our King and His Kingdom series to bring a prophetic and pastoral message rooted in Exodus 15 and Numbers 13–14, asking a piercing question the Lord placed on his heart: Why did God's people wander in the wilderness? Though the journey from Egypt to the Promised Land should have taken days, Israel wandered for forty years because they chose complaint over trust and fear over obedience. Through the stories of Moses, Caleb, Joshua, and the people of Israel, Tom shows how forgetting what God is capable of leads to fear, rebellion, and spiritual drifting. The message presses closer to home as Tom reminds us that this is not just Israel's story — it's ours. When we stop listening to God and obeying His voice, we wander relationally, spiritually, and communally. Drawing a powerful modern analogy and tying it to the life of prayer, Tom calls the church to build their lives around ongoing, relational prayer, not occasional moments. Prayer is not a religious task — it's the way we stay close to God, avoid wandering, and walk faithfully toward the Promised Land. As we step into a new year, this sermon invites every listener to examine their life honestly: Are we walking with God, or wandering without Him? The invitation is clear and hopeful — return to prayer, trust the Lord's leadership, and walk forward together into the fullness of His kingdom. Learn more about our church: https://restoredtemecula.church Follow us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/restoredtemecula and Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/restoredtemecula #Exodus #Numbers #Prayer #ListeningAndObeying #SpiritualFormation #KingAndHisKingdom #RestoredTemecula Share this message with someone who needs to hear it. Chapters (00:00:00) - Restored Church(00:00:35) - God Reveals Himself in Exodus, Chapter 15(00:02:52) - What Did The Israelites Do?(00:08:03) - God's Warning for the People of Israel(00:12:15) - "People Love to Complain About Their Leaders"(00:15:35) - The Promise Land(00:20:03) - The Israelites: Do Not Obey God(00:25:45) - If the Lord Is With You, You Have Nothing to Fear(00:30:40) - God Forgives the Israelites(00:34:42) - Why Did My People Wander?(00:41:27) - God's Blessings for the Body of Christ(00:43:58) - What I Wish I Knew About My Love Life(00:47:16) - A Paralyzed Man Gets Ready to Attend His First NHL(00:51:03) - Build Your Life Around Prayer(00:55:05) - A Week in the Life of AI(01:00:15) - God Prays for You Today(01:09:06) - Thanksgiving Worship
Jay Lennington • Joshua 8:1–8:35 • Xchange
2025-06-30 - How God Forgives ⧸⧸ Jonah 3-4 [vCmePPW2w9w] by Salvador Flores III
Send us a textIf God forgives all our sins, why does Purgatory still exist? Many Catholics struggle with this question, and today we unpack what the Church actually teaches about forgiveness, purification, and God's perfect love.Support the showSupport this show and get all future episodes by email atwww.kenandjanelle.com
This is message 18 in The Names of God Series The God Who Can Be Trusted Psalm 25:1-22 God can be trusted completely because He is the God of our salvation. His salvation is not just something He gives but who He is. When we wait on Him, we can rest in His wisdom, mercy, and faithfulness. Waiting on God is not weakness or delay; it is the confident posture of a heart that believes He will guide, forgive, protect, and deliver in His perfect time. Don't forget to download our app for more from the Riverview Baptist Church. http://onelink.to/rbcapp Find more at https://riverviewbc.com/ Donate through Pushpay https://pushpay.com/pay/riverviewbc
Pastor Isaac Roman | My Story
Tom Logue - November 2nd 2025 God forgives 10,000 talents — and forgiven people forgive. This week, Tom continues our King and His Kingdom series in Matthew 18:21–35, where Jesus teaches what forgiveness actually is, and what reconciliation actually requires. Using the parable of the unforgiving servant, Tom shows how forgiveness is not pretending nothing happened — forgiveness is paying the debt yourself instead of making the other person pay. He also unpacks why reconciliation requires both ingredients: repentance + forgiveness… not one without the other. This message calls us out of pride, bitterness, tally-keeping, and “they owe me,” into the freedom and humility of the gospel — where God cancels our unpayable debt through Christ, and empowers us to extend that same mercy toward others. Learn more about our church: https://restoredtemecula.church Follow us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/restoredtemecula and Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/restoredtemecula #Matthew18 #Forgiveness #Reconciliation #Grace #KingAndHisKingdom #RestoredTemecula Share this message with someone who needs to hear it. Chapters (00:00:00) - Wonders Welcome(00:00:54) - Matthew, The King and His Kingdom(00:01:49) - Matthew 18: Holy Spirit Prays for Us(00:03:32) - Jesus' Words on Reconciliation (vs21)(00:07:43) - Jesus Forgive 10,000 Talons!(00:13:51) - Forgiveness in the Parable of Tim Keller(00:15:35) - Forgiveness Is Not Making the Perpetrator Pay Their Debt(00:17:33) - What is Forgiveness in Marriage?(00:20:55) - Forgiveness and Reconciliation: Two Ingredients(00:24:59) - Why We Should Not shortcut Reconciliation With Abused Women(00:28:04) - Does God Call You To Repeatedly Subject Yourself to Unrep(00:32:33) - Forgiveness and Reparation in the Bible(00:35:17) - Holding a Grudge(00:39:02) - God Forgives 10,000 Talents(00:44:52) - Give Love(00:45:35) - God's Word(00:46:14) - The Reasons Why You're Unable to Forgive Others(00:53:09) - God Compels You When Your Heart aches(00:55:36) - Coming soon: The Suitable
After a four-year-old boy accidentally broke a rare 3,500-year-old Bronze Age jar displayed at a museum in Israel, he received a kind and surprising response. The museum staff forgave him and invited him back. Roee Shafir, speaking for the Hecht Museum, said doing so heightened global interest in the restoration process and might serve to inspire the boy’s interest in history and archaeology—a healing and positive outcome. The story brings to mind God’s compelling declaration of His forgiveness after rebellion by the Israelites. They’d rebelled against Him by begging Moses’ brother Aaron to make a gold calf for them for idol worship (Exodus 32:1). “When Moses approached the camp and saw the calf and the dancing, his anger burned and he threw the tablets [of covenant law] out of his hands, breaking them to pieces at the foot of the mountain” (v. 19). At God’s instruction, “Moses chiseled out two stone tablets like the first ones and went up Mount Sinai early in the morning” (34:4). When God came down, He “passed in front of Moses, proclaiming Himself, ‘The Lord, the Lord, the compassionate and gracious God . . . maintaining love to thousands, and forgiving wickedness, rebellion and sin’ ” (vv. 6-7). What a profound reminder. Despite our worst sins, God still forgives. He yearns to restore us.
This reflection dives into Jonah's story and Jesus' teaching to show why resentment blocks holiness.Morning Offering, October 8, 2025Every morning, join Father Brad as he begins the day with prayer and reflection. In a few short minutes, Father Brad guides you in prayer, shares a brief reflection grounding your day in the Church's rhythm of feast days and liturgy, and provides you with the encouragement necessary to go forward with peace and strength. Disclaimer: The ads shown before, during, or after this video have no affiliation with Morning Offering and are controlled by YouTubeLet us do as the saints urge and begin our days in prayer together so as a community of believers we may join the Psalmist in saying, “In the morning, Lord, you hear my voice; in the morning I lay my requests before you and wait expectantly.” (Psalm 5:3-4)________________
MrBeast contestant turned viral content creator Camilla Araújo joins the boys to discuss Sophie Rain making $50M/year on OF, ROASTS Logan for losing to KSI, sleeping with 2000 men w/ Bonnie Blue, her family’s reaction to starting an OF at 19 years old (+ will god will forgive her?), Logan spending $10M on Pokémon cards, her uncanny resemblance to Katy Perry, Mike fumbling Tate McRae, if she’s ever been to a Diddy party & more.. SUBSCRIBE TO THE PODCAST ► https://www.youtube.com/impaulsive You can grab my shirts and all WWE Merch, hats, tees, replica title belts, Superstar collections on https://shop.wwe.com/ & https://www.fanatics.com/ Be sure to subscribe to the WWE Topps Now mailing list on https://www.topps.com/ and follow Topps on all social media platforms so you never miss a single moment. Thank you https://mmcollective.studio/ & https://www.monsters.video/ for hosting us! Watch Previous (Benny Safdie On Directing Smashing Machine, The Rock’s INSANE Body Transformation, UFC vs. Jake Paul) ► https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zdSoEkvAzQs&t=1s ADD US ON: INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/impaulsiveshow/ Timestamps: 0:00 Welcome Camilla Araújo!
The death of the Son of God is outrageous enough, and the glory of God that it upholds is great enough, that God is vindicated to forgive our sins.
Saturday is review day on The Daily Promise. Every Saturday, we review this week's promises so we can allow them to go deep into our hearts and lives. Here are the promises we covered this week. John 14:3 - Jesus Will Soon Return. 1 John 2:1 – When I Sin, Jesus is My Advocate. James 5:16 – Prayer Accomplishes Much Hebrews 10:17 – God Forgives and Forgets Your Sin Proverbs 15:8 – God Loves to Hear His Children Pray