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Jesus takes a passage in Deuteronomy and flips it in a new way, so that it teaches us how to follow him - that we need to love God, and love our neighbor. But there's one more step we need to do. —— fmhouston.com
Andy’s determined not to keep telling stories about baseball now that the Astros have started losing, but he’ll tell one more. And that’s of a player whose gifts were considered unworthy. When Paul is writing to the Corinthian church, he’s writing to a church that is allowing spiritual gifts to rip them apart. It was his challenge to teach them that each of these gifts were equally worthy. What are you good at? Where do you see your gifts? And are you putting those gifts into service? If you’d like to take a spiritual gifts assessment to learn more about where God has gifted you, you can find one online at fmhouston.com/sunday this week. fmhouston.com
On Confirmation Sunday, Andy wonders what the church will look like in 60, 70 years. Does it invest in mercy and love and kindness? Because that’s what the church should be. Andy has learned a lot about baseball during the Pandemic, and he’s found a metaphor in some of the changes the game has made. fmhouston.com
Ken gets glasses to deal with eye strain and, as glasses do, they give him a little clarity. When Paul writes the Book of Romans, he's writing about the clarity he’s found. Paul is all about the Spirit. He believed that the central pursuit of the Christian life was living from the Spirit of God. Just knowing the law is not enough, we must commune with God. fmhouston.com
The Book of John, from its very beginning, tells us to listen, to hear, that God is speaking to us.
In this episode I talk about The Falcon and the Winter Soldier final. What I though about it and how it may set things up in future MCU series and movies. Also discuss how i'm doing with creating content again. I talk about the upcoming boxing match between Chisora and Parker. What I think will happen and who I will be routing for. Finally I talk to you all about what music i'm currently listening to. Enjoy!
Join me as I talk about some of the AMAZING music that my fav artists are releasing right now!!! Here's the link to my Expand x9 playlist... https://open.spotify.com/playlist/7lErwn8vkYezd9GdYn47r4
A lesson on compatibility. Meet our first pair, Brian and Isabelle. Even though they don’t know each other’s names, don’t know what each other looks like, they “fall into like” within a couple days of exchanging voice memos. Over 30 days, they develop a deep connection, confess secrets, and are excited to finally meet each in person after the experiment ends. Listen to how everything unfolds.
In this episode of Rockbottum Radio, Momma and RW take calls from famous golf course superintendents like Steve Huffstutler, Matt Crowther, Mark Hoban and several others known only by their code names: Mongo, Fred, and the golf pro from Burnt Run CC. In the process we learn about how a trail cam caught the bearing-grease-on-the-doorknob shop trickster. Also, Momma warns the industry about the rash of course robberies and explains exactly how to stop it. Presented by DryJect.
Additionally, when I'm not getting pulled over, I'm also listening to The Goofy Movie soundtrack. TODAY ON THE SHOW: Suzette has your horoscope sign's theme song! Dr. Doom has a DIRTY LITTLE SECRET! More Johnjay & Rich drunk dials! HUMPDAY DUMPDAY! PLUS, REAL OR FAKE and so.much.more!!
Ceri and Andy talk through Tuchel's tactics and analyse the Southhampton game while looking forwards to Atletico Madrid in Bucharest and then another biggie against Man Utd. chelseapodcast.net @chelseapodcast Produced by Paul Myers and Mike Leigh Engineered by Leon Gorman A Playback Media Production playbackmedia.co.uk Copyright 2020 Playback Media Ltd - playbackmedia.co.uk/copyright
We block the government while we talk about WandaVision, Lord Of The Rings on VHS, The Lodge, S.C.P., DragonBall Advanced, all of The Simpson, Cosmic Kid, Robbie reads the short story Coma, Jericho, and Marilyn Manson... unfortunately. Come on in and listen to the discussion You can contact us at thelastonesinpodcast@gmail.com @LastOnesIn on Twitter, as well as Facebook and InstaGram We genuinely hope you enjoy listening!
Half-Duplexing. Have you heard that term? Chances are good that even if you’ve never heard of it, you have first hand knowledge of what it’s all about. Something similar to this was taking place back in Samuel’s day in the Old Testament. And, for good or for bad, it's a term that can easily be used to describe our own communication with God. What is absolutely amazing is that we have a loving God who wants to speak to us in mercy and love.
Join us as we explore God's ancient wisdom and apply it to our modern lives. His word is as current and relevant today as it was when he inspired its authors more than two and a half millennia ago. The websites where you can reach us are alittlewalkwithgod.com, richardagee.com, or saf.church. I hope you will join us every week and be sure to let us know how you enjoy the podcast and let others know about it, too. Thanks for listening. Thanks for joining me today for “A Little Walk with God.” I'm your host Richard Agee. In case you haven't noticed, church attendance in the United States has been on the decline for the last several years. Now we can blame the coronavirus pandemic and our inability to gather without risk of spreading the disease. Still, that excuse doesn't explain the decades before the pandemic when attendance continued to fall. For a few short weeks at the beginning of the pandemic, online church service attendance actually grew to levels above physical attendance in some denominations. That didn't last as we got used to the pandemic and decided the church wouldn't help us end it. We could blame our enlightenment on the low attendance, I suppose. Except, I'm not sure how enlightened we are when I listen to the news. I find us filled with as much hate and prejudice and bigotry as ever, maybe even at higher levels when you read letters from any other period in our history. One would assume enlightenment would end that kind of thinking, but it has only grown in the last couple of decades. Our democracy may not last the way it is progressing. Our greatest problem? We left no room for God. We leave lots of room for political correctness. We make sure we stay on the right side of an argument. We work hard to use the right words, so no one accuses us of being racist, the latest and most heinous crime in the country. We step gingerly around pronouns to avoid damaging the psyche of anyone in the LGBTQQIP2SAA community. That's the latest acronym for the all-inclusive community of the various self-identified gender-specific groups, including more than fifteen different parties. But we still throw away our youngest and oldest in our society through our policies. We live in trying times. I've discovered, though, that correctness does not equal right. If you read the last verses of the book of Judges, you'll find the Israelites individually thought they acted correctly, but they did not act rightly. It says, “everyone did what was right in their own eyes.” They thought themselves enlightened. They thought they could succeed by their rules instead of God's. Today, we would say their motto was, “If it feels good, do it.” In that book, we find the same things in our society; abuse of power, abuse of the poor and helpless, and disregard for those in need. Their self-admired wisdom fell far short, though, and they paid the price for their disobedience. For periods of time, God allowed outside nations to invade the land and wreak havoc on the Israelites. After they acknowledged their sin and would cry out for mercy, he would come to their aid, raise up a judge or warrior-leader, and rescue them from their enemies. But after repeating their cycle of apostasy and repentance through several iterations, we come to the end of the book of Judges when the author remarks everyone did what was right in their own eyes. Even the priests failed to follow the laws God set for the nation. Eli, the high priest, let his sons take advantage of the people, taking whatever they wanted for themselves instead of the portion of sacrifices set aside for them. We find out how bad the situation had become spiritually with God's selection of the last judge and first prophet, Samuel, in the book by his name. Samuel served the Lord by helping Eli the priest, who was by that time almost blind. In those days, the Lord hardly ever spoke directly to people, and he did not appear to them in dreams very often. But one night, Eli was asleep in his room, and Samuel was sleeping on a mat near the sacred chest in the Lord's house. They had not been asleep very long when the Lord called out Samuel's name. “Here I am!” Samuel answered. Then he ran to Eli and said, “Here I am. What do you want?” “I didn't call you,” Eli answered. “Go back to bed.” Samuel went back. Again the Lord called out Samuel's name. Samuel got up and went to Eli. “Here I am,” he said. “What do you want?” Eli told him, “Son, I didn't call you. Go back to sleep.” The Lord had not spoken to Samuel before, and Samuel did not recognize the voice. When the Lord called out his name for the third time, Samuel went to Eli again and said, “Here I am. What do you want?” Eli finally realized that it was the Lord who was speaking to Samuel. So he said, “Go back and lie down! If someone speaks to you again, answer, ‘I'm listening, Lord. What do you want me to do?'” Once again Samuel went back and lay down. The Lord then stood beside Samuel and called out as he had done before, “Samuel! Samuel!” “I'm listening,” Samuel answered. “What do you want me to do?” (1 Samuel 3:1-10 CEV) Did you notice? In those days, the Lord hardly ever spoke directly to people, and he did not appear to them in dreams very often. He spoke directly to Adam and Eve. God spoke directly to Noah, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. He spoke directly to many of the judges he called to lead the people against their enemies. He often appeared in dreams to the patriarchs and sometimes to their enemies to warn them against harming God's people. But when Samuel went to the tabernacle under the tutelage of Eli, God stopped talking to people. I sometimes wonder if it was because they stopped listening and just did what they wanted anyway. I think God has that problem with us sometimes. We let the noise of the world drown out his voice. We let all our electronics, social media, news, entertainment, jobs, business drown out his voice. As Elijah discovered, his voice won't be heard in the whirlwind or the earthquake but the whisper of a gentle breeze. You must listen carefully to hear him. We get addicted to the things around us other than God instead of filling our hearts and minds with him, then wonder why we don't hear from him. God still speaks, though. His word is alive and active and sharper than a two-edged sword, Paul tells us. We must get away from the noise to let it speak to us. God's spirit, active in his word, will prick our conscience and let us know what he wants us to do, how we need to transform our lives and our thinking to become more like him to prepare for citizenship in his kingdom. We can hear him in the words of Christian friends and mentors, carried by the winds of the spirit, guiding us into the right path instead of the politically correct path. Will they be the same? Sometimes, but not always. We can be sure the path will always be one of love. Remember the two great commandments, love God, and love others. All the rest hang on these two. To hear God, take Eli's advice to Samuel. Expect God to speak. When Eli realized the Lord called in the middle of the night, he gave Samuel instruction. Listen to everything he tells you. Listening means more than acknowledging soundwaves vibrate your eardrums and your brain registers the pattern as words and sentences. Listening means letting those words and sentences sink into your brain with meaning and purpose. It means understanding the task directed by those words. Listen to God. Finally, Eli told Samuel to respond, “What do you want me to do?” James says we must be doers of the word and not only hearers of the word. To hear and know what God wants of me and then not to do it means rebellion against him, disobedience, and sin. We need more like Samuel today. Those who will expect God to speak, listen intently to his voice through the avenues his spirit uses to proclaim his words to us and then execute his commands. The world will do everything it can to drown his words in the political correctness that smothers truth and righteousness, but God's word remains in the end. He created this place, and he will judge it in the future. If he will act as our judge, doesn't it make sense to listen to him instead of his adversary? It's time we stand boldly proclaiming God's rightness in a world gone wrong. You can find me at richardagee.com. I also invite you to join us at San Antonio First Church of the Nazarene on West Avenue in San Antonio to hear more Bible-based teaching. You can find out more about my church at SAF.church. Thanks for listening. If you enjoyed it, tell a friend. If you didn't, send me an email and let me know how better to reach out to those around you. Until next week, may God richly bless you as you venture into His story each day. Scriptures marked CEV are taken from the CONTEMPORARY ENGLISH VERSION (CEV): Scripture taken from the CONTEMPORARY ENGLISH VERSION copyright© 1995 by the American Bible Society. Used by permission.
Pastor John Mars Sermon Called "I am Listening Now"
Pastor John Mars Sermon Called "I am Listening Now"
Sermon preached by the Rev. Gregory L. Millikin on Sunday, January 17, 2021, the Second Sunday after the Epiphany, on 1 Samuel 3:1-10, Year B, entitled “I Think You’re Wrong…But I’m Listening.”
Here is the link to playlist that features all the songs that I talked about in this episode! Enjoy and keep listening to new music even if it's old, it can still be new to you. :) https://open.spotify.com/playlist/7uA8EKFtuhAtwMX8mjGJJV Stay Hydrated Friends
Host Chris Ryan is joined by Riverbend CEO Lisa Madden for a discussion about COVID, mental health and the vaccine.
On this final episode of 2020 I name off all of the podcast that I listen to. (Realized I forgot one more. "Common Censored" on YouTube). Hope your holidays was filled with love and that your new year is abundant. Please share this episode. Give it a rating on Apple podcast and subscribe! Check out my other podcast https://open.spotify.com/show/0BkaxNzK5skJRtrfSol59U?si=tugwCDE4QcOieHluKEmDbw. Subscribe to the YouTube Channel https://www.youtube.com/c/ErnestoUnderdoggTV. Become a patron for extra and exclusive content from the Ernest Thoughts Podcast. Paypal: https://www.paypal.me/moneyforernest. Follow the official account of the Ernest Thoughts Podcast on Twitter @ETPodcast and IG @ErnestThoughtspod. My new book "Late Nights on Broadway" A story about three feuding mob families fighting for control of the city while trying to survive. Pride and love are on the line in the heat of war. Find out who will come out victorious in this bloody comedy story set in the 1950s. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08QDVN1SF/?tag=blacklink05-20 --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/ernestthoughtspodcast/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/ernestthoughtspodcast/support
Host Chris Ryan is joined by Project FIRST Director Jeff Stewart with the Concord Fire Department.
Hosts Chris Ryan and Paul Quitadamo are joined by Concord Coalition to End Homelessness Executive Director Ellen Groh.
It's been too long and it's personal
Hosts Chris Ryan and Paul Quitadamo are joined by NAMI New Hampshire Executive Director Ken Norton on this edition of the show,
Riverbend CEO Lisa Madden joins co-hosts Chris Ryan and Paul Quitadamo for a discussion of how COVID-19 is effecting the mental health of our community.
Hosts Chris Ryan and Paul Quitadamo are joined on this edition of the show by Lynn Anne Palmer is the Director of Riverbend's Counseling Associate.
Host Chris Ryan talks with Ron White, who is Riverbend's Family Advocate within the NH Drug Court Program, and was also formerly the Superintendent of the Merrimack County Jail.
Hosts Chris Ryan and Paul Quitadamo are joined by 'Hike The Good Hike' blogger Jesse Cody on this edition of the show.
Hosts Chris Ryan and Paul Quitadamo are joined on this edition of the show by Riverbend CEO Lisa Madden for a discussion about the significant mental health impacts of living in the COVID-19 environment.
In this episode I talk about the current songs I'm listening to. What the cycle of an up and coming magician looks like. Also talk about what's going on with Blackpool Magician convention next year and my gig at the Peacock bar in 2018. Enjoy.
Hosts Chris Ryan and Paul Quitadamo are joined by podcaster Japhet Chalker on this edition of the show.
The Spotify playlist that features all these songs is https://open.spotify.com/playlist/1NU5aTIrzVz0ptRbD8mT88
Co-hosts Chris Ryan and Paul Quitadamo are joined by Karen Jantzen and Rebecca Wolfe from Riverbend to discuss October being "Mental Health Awareness Month".
Welcome back to episode #15 of ItsNotTheWorstMovieEver. This week we bring you one last film before October begins and who better to choose this week then our very own Sterling. This week we watched Transporter 3 an old favorite of Sterling's. Listen to find out if Sterling was able to get the old man to come out or was the old man satisfied! Please leave a review and share the podcast with your friends and family it helps us out a lot. Hope you enjoy this weeks episode and have a great time!
In this trailer for Episode 35 of The Chris and Andre Show, Chris and Andre discuss the start of the 2020 NFL season, the Washington Football Team's temporary rebranding, and Andre's Denver Broncos and the potential of Drew Lock.
Hosts Chris Ryan and Paul Quitadamo are joined by authors Sonja Wasden and Rachael Siddoway who've written An Impossible Life: The Inspiring True Story of a Woman's Struggle from Within.
Dr. Chris joined us to talk about tonight's "I'm Listening" special, that aims to end the stigma of talking about mental health. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Host and KYW Newsradio Community Affairs Reporter Cherri Gregg asks the burning questions about the mental health and suicide prevention in the age of covid19. In this special edition of the show, "I'm Listening," we explore the impact that the pandemic, job loss, racial unrest and more are having on mental health. The Centers for Disease Control recently issued a report saying that one in four young adults has reported suicidal thoughts. Some experts fear that the trauma from these unprecedented times could cause a tsunami effect- where society does not actually see a mental health crisis until months, perhaps years after the pandemic subsides. So how do we mitigate the issues that brewing and save lives? Julie Peticca, Director of Crisis Intervention at Montgomery County Emergency Services joins D. Trevor Evans a Licensed Clinical Social Worker from the Men's Center, Phillip J. Roundtree, a social worker and mental health coach and Founder of Quadify LLC and Sarah-Ashley Andrews, who founded Dare to Hope after losing a friend to suicide. The newsmaker of the week is Yolanda Johnson-Young, a Philadelphia mother turned filmmaker. Her award winning documentary, "Finding Elijah," tells the story of the son she lost to suicide in 2017. Elijah was 20 years old when he took his own life after suffering from mental illness. The film is Johnson-Young's journey of finding out about the son, she realized, she barely knew. The documentary has won 10 awards at various film festivals and has helped Johnson-Young not only process her grief, but help other families struggling after the death of a loved one to suicide. Johnson-Young is now an advocate for suicide prevention and walks with AASP. The film will be aired on WHYY TV on September 29th at 7:30pm. LINK: https://www.facebook.com/events/369856124402075/. The Patriot Homecare Changemaker of the week is the Philly Hopeline. Launched in May of 2020, the Hopeline is the result of a partnership between Uplift Philadelphia's Center for Grieving Children and the School District of Philadelphia. The purpose is to provide counseling and referral services for Philadelphia students and caregivers during the survivors. Meghan Szafran and Lamya Broussard of Uplift Center for Grieving Children are guests. To access the hopeline: 1-833-PHL-HOPE (1-833-745-467). Flashpoint airs every Saturday at 9:30pm and Sunday at 8:30am on 1060AM. Subscribe to the Flashpoint Podcast on the Apple Podcast, Radio.com or others apps where you get your podcast by searching "Flashpoint." Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
On September 23 from 6-8 pm, Entercom radio presents “I'm Listening,” a 2-hour show to help bring awareness to mental health and suicide. Here in DFW, the show will be simulcast on six Entercom radio stations, plus Radio.com. In addition, it will be broadcast on early 300 Entercom stations nationwide. The Dallas Ft. Worth Hospital Council is proud to be a sponsor of the 2020 “I'm Listening” campaign, representing all of the North Texas hospitals in promoting this very important broadcast. Today's guests are: Sherry Cusumano is executive Director of Community Education and Clinical Development at Medical City Green Oaks in Dallas. Sherry is also President of NAMI North Texas, the National Alliance on Mental Illness. Sherry shares her passion on breaking through the stigma surrounding mental health. This is her uninterrupted interview from Show 38. Sue Schell is Vice President and Clinical Director of Behavioral Health at Children's Health System of Texas where she oversees the integration of behavioral health programming and service delivery in the community bringing services directly to the families who need them. Sue has a passion for our children's health, and the most important thing we can do to help our kids: Talk about it! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Hosts Chris Ryan and Paul Quitadmo are joined on this edition of the show by NAMI NH's Director of Suicide Prevention Services Elaine de Mello.
Hosts Chris Ryan and Paul Quitadamo are joined by Shannon Bresaw, who is the Program Director for Recovery Friendly Workplace - New Hampshire and Matt McKenney is is the Workforce Development Leader at Hypertherm on the Human Resources team.
Hosts Chris Ryan and Paul Quitadamo are joined by Jenny Hoffman, who was a 2020 cast member of "This is My Brave" for a discussion of mental health.
Ah, yes. Season 2. The writing gets sharper. The plots get stronger. The cast really settles into their respective roles, and all in all the show becomes a much more cohesive unit. A well oiled machine that pushes the series to new heights and sets the actors and crew up for immense success. Of course that probably won’t happen on Cinema Sopabox. We’ll still go down rabbit holes, drink too much, say the most moronic shit, and care about nothing more than cracking each other up. You know how we do: The Intro, A Shot Of Tequila, What’s The Last Thing You Saw?, What Is Robbie Clark Drinking?, The Main Event, Impression Game, and The Outro. IT NEVER GETS OLD!! Nothing is off limits! Nobody's safe! This is madness. This is chaos. THIS! IS! CINEMA SOAPBOX! #dicksuave #eyediosmio #imapproaching #fooFIGHtuhs #apricums #jazzapples #duderanch #bashful #taintlime #lassieisclassy #dickjustice #racistpuffs The Soapbox Online: HQ - https://bit.ly/2UaB4q5 FB - https://bit.ly/2FIXPxY Idiotsyncratic: HQ - http://bit.ly/2KYuYHW FB - http://bit.ly/2XYoE6V Hundred Proof History: HQ - http://bit.ly/2HdQA0b FB - http://bit.ly/2P3gvOG "La Ciudad" theme courtesy of The Pajammas Bandcamp - https://bit.ly/2RItiXx Facebook - https://bit.ly/2MrkhfJ
I don't see why any podcast needs to be 3 hours long, or even 2 hours, for that matter, not even 1 hour. It's very difficult to keep anyone interested - so why does Joe Rogan have a podcast that is 3 hours? And why did Spotify pay 100 million dollars for it? I listened for the first time today, and YIKEs. After the first hour, I couldn't wait for it to end...but it just kept going and going and going. Plus, I was tempted to bolt in the first 6 minutes due to too many ads!
Host Chris Ryan is joined by Shana Large, Riverbend's Director of Substance Use Disorders.
Host Chris Ryan is joined by by Samantha Captain, who is a Team Support Peer Leader for Riverbend's Emergency Services, to discuss the sometimes harsh realities of mental illness.
Hosts Chris Ryan and Paul Quitadamo are joined by Ellen Desmond from the Bureau of Student Wellness. Ellen is also the volunteer director for "This Is My Brave".
Hosts Chris Ryan and Paul Quitadamo are joined on this edition of the show by Riverbend's Director of the Children's Program Melissa Colby.
Hosts Chris Ryan and Paul Quitadamo are joined by Beth Fleming from "This Is My Brave".