Podcast appearances and mentions of jeff koch

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Best podcasts about jeff koch

Latest podcast episodes about jeff koch

Steven Phillips with The Morning Dish
The Morning Dish (edited) With Steve Mags from the YouTube channel Steve Magnante Junkyard Crawl.

Steven Phillips with The Morning Dish

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2022 19:00


My first “professional” job in California was associate editor for Chrysler Power magazine, which led to more freelance writing for magazine titles like Mopar Action, Drag Racing Monthly, Popular Mechanics New Car Buyers Guide, Muscle Mustangs and Fast Fords, and Scale Auto Enthusiast. These writing gigs were exciting and really got me thinking about becoming a full time staff member on a big title like Hot Rod or Car Craft. I also worked as a machinist at Eric Hansen's Stage V Engineering in Walnut, CA. If you don't know, Stage V Engineering produces a wide range of products for the 426 Hemi engine family. Ranging from complete cast aluminum Hemi cylinder heads to ultra-duty roller rocker arms to freshly-designed intake manifolds, it was a great experience to be part of the Stage V family for three years.In the late summer of 1997 I got a phone call that would literally change my life. It was Ro McGonegal, then the editor of Hot Rod magazine. He wanted to know if I was interested in coming to work for him as Technical Editor. He'd seen some of my published writings and wanted me to join the staff. I must say, trying to remain calm and collected during the interview process was a real test of my acting skills! In the end, I spent the next 7 years aboard the fantastic, glorious ship that is Hot Rod magazine.During the next 7 years, I had the honor of working in the hallowed Petersen Publishing building at 6420 Wilshire Blvd. with guys like Ro McGonegal, Gray Baskerville, Jeff Koch, Terry McGean, John Dianna, Drew Hardin, David Freiburger, Matt King, Doug Glad, Jeff Smith, Matt Stone, Henry De Los Santos, Steve Campbell, Steve Temple, Rob Kinnan and many other professional writers – many of whom I'd been reading since youth. On the other side of the pages, I formed ties within GM, Ford and Chrysler and was granted access to their inner sanctums as part of numerous magazine articles devoted to Detroit high performance engineering. I was also thrilled to have worked with racing and customizing icons like Bill “Grumpy” Jenkins, Ronnie Sox, Jake King, Buddy Martin, Dick Landy, “Big Daddy” Don Garlits, Richard Petty, George Barris, Linda Vaughn, Richard Schroeder, Art Carr, Don Nicholson, Troy Trepanier and many others.Another thing that happened during my time at Hot Rod was the opportunity to appear on Hot Rod Magazine TV, which was then produced by WATV and (as it does today) aired on SPEED TV. This is where I got my first exposure to regular TV work and was able to put some of my training to work. Though there was no extra pay for my efforts (as Tech Editor at Hot Rod I was a salaried employee), the experience was awesome. Quickly we discovered that viewers loved itany time we took the camera into one of the many self-serve automotive boneyards in Southern California. Before long, I hosted over a dozen of these so-called “Junkyard Crawls” and ratings spiked whenever one was included in an episode.By 2005 I had been on staff at Hot Rod for 7 years, that's longer than most Tech Editors – the constant pressure of meeting monthly deadlines has a way of chewing you up. Also, my interests were moving toward doing more TV work and less magazine writing. So I resigned and quickly got a number of jobs hosting automotive TV programming. Maybe you saw me on Classic Car Restoration on the DIY Network, Off Road Adventures on the Outdoor Channel, Rides Reunited on the History Channel as well as some commercials and promotional bits on SPEED TV.

Church Royalty Podcast
A Place Where God Redeems with Pastor John Padula

Church Royalty Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 23, 2021 49:17


Today's episode contains explict information about drugs, alcohol and speaks about sex and other difficult topics in regards to testimony. This episode is not well suited for children.   Seriously, get your tissues ready! In today's episode we hear and remember how dark the places we can go before Christ restores our souls.  This powerful testimony is for anyone who is feeling complacent about the saving power of God!  We forget the same power that raised Christ from the dead saves souls from the fiery pits of hell on this earth and for eternity.  If you feel hopeless over a loved one in the bondage of sin, find hope today in Pastor John's story!     Transcript: John Padula podcast Interview Interviewer: Nickole Perry Recipient: John Padula Introduction: Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Church royalty confessions of church leadership is here to bring the reality about church leadership to the masses so you can feel better about your relationship with Christianity and the American church today. Oh, right, this is Nickole Perry with the church royalty podcast, and today we are with John Padula, the outreach pastor at the altar church in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho. In our family, we call him the beloved pants pastor, because when we first met him, we were literally buying children's jeans from his wife off of Facebook marketplace one night. They are they were about to start their weekly Bible study. And they invited us in, and we have loved their family ever since. So how are you doing today? John? I'm fantastic. How are you? I'm good. I'm really excited to be here today. I'm so sorry that we couldn't do this in person and that this is something you're tired of doing virtually can't wait until life gets back to normal. Yes, amen. Well tell our listeners a little bit about your testimony. I know you have a very powerful testimony in Christ. And I don't even know, you know, the high points. So why don't you share with us a little bit about where the Lord has brought you. I was raised up here in North Idaho, had a great very successful family. But none of them have known the gospel, none of them knew Jesus. And at about 12 years old, I was very violent as a kid, even in kindergarten, I was getting in fights. I just had this I don't know what it was this thing in me that I just always was very angry, very, very violent and full of rage. And I got kicked out of my first school in fifth grade. My parents got a divorce right around that same time. And it forced my mom and I had to move to a different County. My dad kind of went off the deep end started drinking really heavy because my mom left him while he was at work. And he was just like me, he was full of violence full of rage. And we ended up in protective custody because my dad was going to murder my mom. And so, we kind of had to be in police protection for a while through Thanksgiving. I felt like I needed to protect my mom and you know, shoot him before he killed her. And just a crazy childhood of that type of stuff. Went to my second school, was there for about a year got kicked out. And then in seventh grade, we moved to another school still here in North Idaho. I started using speed pills and was drinking smoking marijuana, all that type of stuff, sexually, you know, just very active young, and got kicked out of school and, and by that time, my dad and I started talking even though he's still really hated my mom and was still really hurt and angry. And he was moving to Las Vegas. And so, I decided to go with my dad Las Vegas, and I had already started using speed and a little bit of meth up here. And I was 13 moved to Las Vegas, went to school for three days got a gun pulled on me and me just kind of threw away the whole school thing. I got into gangs started selling speed and crystal glass ice, all that type of stuff they had down there. I ended up on meth for 17 years from age 13 to 30. I'd use methamphetamines and pretty much everything else. But that was kind of my main, the main thing that I used, got into dealing heavy. Some of my friends were cooking meth and I started cooking meth with some of them was always getting arrested, always in trouble, had no care for women. To me all they were was just a, you know, there for pleasure. By the time I came to Christ, I had no moral compass, I had no moral values. Just wicked at heart. And I ended up getting arrested in 1996 for dealing methamphetamines went to a prison, basically prison rehab and didn't succeed. So, the judge sent me to prison, and I had five years fixed with a 15-year tail. So, I had a total of a 20-year sentence. And he said, I'll let you get on probation. But you cannot come back to Kootenai county for five years. So, you need to find somewhere else to live. Well, my dad because of that my dad moved to Moscow, Idaho, I was able to go down and live with him. And I didn't even make it a year before I was back on drugs, selling drugs using abusing women. Just same lifestyle. You know, my heart had never changed even though I was incarcerated for a little bit. After about a year that they violated me five year minimum with a 15- year talent on top of this or could have done 20 and I ended up about a year and a half into it. Go into a community work centre. And it was a non-secure facility and the girl that I was with at the time was at least I had heard she was sleeping around and so I kind of freaked out and I still had that violent nature, and I took off and, in my mind, I was gonna come up to Coeur d'Alene and just kind of murder whoever she was with. I was just I literally went crazy. Coeur d'Alene, I made it to Moscow, Idaho, got a hotel room, stay there for a couple days. And then I talked to my family decided to turn myself in and try to fix the mess that I'd created. Well, I turned myself in after three days, and they sent me back to the prison. They added a new felony, they charged with felony escape, and I ended up in prison for six years. I got out in 2006, well, the end of 2005, I got out. And I went right back to that lifestyle. I was bouncing it a couple of bars up here. Started using meth and coke pretty much instantly when I got out. Three years after I got out, I was in a relationship. And I never really cared about girls before. I mean, there was a couple that, you know, I kind of hung out with but for the most part, they were just, just a tool. And for some reason, this girl that I was with, I really, I was almost obsessed with her and we were only together for a couple months and she ended up getting arrested her probation officer was telling her she couldn't hang out with me or have anything to do with me. She ended up getting violated and ending up in this rehab. Had never heard of this. This pastor Tim's program is good Samaritan I had no clue what it was. But some of my friends were telling me that okay, if you want to see your girlfriend, you can go to this church and there and she's there on, on Sundays. And so, I started popping into this church and I was 137 pounds. Just in really bad shape. I sat in the back one time I came in here sat in the back with my hoodie up and just kind of stayed to myself. And I had no clue I haven't even to this day. I have no recollection of ever seen the guy preaching on the stage or any of that type of stuff. I was just, you know, just laser focused on wanting to see my girlfriend, wonderful woman of God, Katherine Taylor, was sitting in front of me and she turned around and asked if she could pray with me, she said that the Lord spoke to her and told her to turn around and pray for me. And so, me and my mom were there. And I let her pray for me. And it didn't really impact my life at that time. But later, you know, looking back, it was a huge influence of how God was trying to get my attention. Well, my girlfriend ended up graduating rehab. And even though I called her my girlfriend, I was still out women and does not in good shape, dealing drugs doing all the same stuff. Well, she got out of the rehab and started calling me from a restricted number and was like, Hey, I'm not gonna have anything to do with you unless you go to this rehab. Pastor Tim started a men's facility in November, and I think this was in like August of 2008. And so, I was like, Okay, I'll go to this rehab, and she didn't tell me anything about it being about Jesus, like, I never heard the gospel, never knew the gospel. I had no clue what I was getting myself into. I just was gonna go fake my way through this rehab. So, the time is getting closer, they're getting this men's facility ready to get up and get going. And I believe it was November. They got it up and going November 2008. They started the men's facility. And I met with Pastor Tim and I walked in the church, and I introduced myself and I said, Hey, my name is John. And he looks at me and he says Johan Padula. And I said, Yeah. And he looked at me said, God has a plan for your life. And it kind of freaked me out. So, I just kind of backed up and walked off. You know, I had no clue what he was talking about. Well, I ended up meeting with him after that. And we sat down, and he just started asking me questions. And he's like, Well, why do you want the rehab? And I was like, well, because Danielle told me how to do the rehab, you know, and he's like, Well, do you really want this life change? And you know, at that point, I was still just in manipulation mode. I was lying and yes, of course, we had one life change. So, they get the men's facility up and going, I think there was two guys in it at the time. So, I wouldn't check myself in and I was still using, like, it wasn't like I stopped using and was trying to do better. Well, I went there for I think one day, and it was so uncomfortable, because I was just so full of sin and darkness and my motives were wrong and impure. And just the presence of God at the ranch. I mean, it's people up there dead serious about the relationship with the Lord and there's just this love. It is so, so inviting. But when you don't want that, it's, it's like the opposite. It's almost repelling. It's like man, I didn't want nothing to do with this. I left after one day, well, then the girl tell me to turn myself back in up there and going into the rehab again. So, I went a week later, I think for two or three days, and I just couldn't do it. So, I left again. Once again, here I am faced with this decision. Do I want them, you know the relationship? Am I going to you know, try to do whatever I can to keep the girl and so I did I let her talk me into going back up there and this time? This time when it was just a little different. Hey, I'm gonna actually give this place a chance. I think it was about three or four days into it. We were doing outside chores and the guy that was running the place at the time he was the facilitators name's Chris Anderson. He came up to me while I was raking the gravel. You know, trying to make the driveway decent. And he just asked me, he just asked me about my relationship with Jesus. And if I had ever known God, and He says, do you mind if I pray for you? And now I had never even envisioned this whole God thing. Which when you're 70, think about a bunch of old people who go in there with super boring, they don't have anything else to do. So, they go meet on Sundays, and they worship that's dead and gone and know that there's just nothing to it. I had no idea that God was alive and well, and I was about to have an encounter that was going to change my life. So, I said, Yeah, sure, you can pray for me. And he put his hand on my shoulder. And as soon as you touch me, I wanted to punch him right in his mouth. Like just the scene inside of me the darkness that I was still holding on to and you know, he was born again, he loved the board, a great man of God. And he started praying. And as he started praying, Lord touched my life. I started weeping for my sin, I didn't even know what sin was. It wasn't like he said, Hey, here's the gospel. I'm gonna, you know, he didn't explain any of that. He just shared Jesus with me and just wanted to pray for me. And the LORD came into my life, revealed my sin to me. And I was so broken over man, I didn't cry. Like I was, uh, I was like, the total opposite of anybody who would ever cry or show my emotions. And I just started weeping. Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry And by the time he was done praying for me, I was grinning from ear to ear, I opened my eyes, and we were in the driveway, and I looked up and I see the sky was blue. And the trees were green. That 30 years old, I had never known that. I'd never seen that. I never experienced that because my eyes were just so blinded by my sin. And God radically changed my life. In not progressively in the blink of an eye. I was a different person. The rage, the violence, the anger, the foul mouth, the pornography, I was bound by pornography for 21 years, you know, not to be graphic, but I would, you know, be sexual with women, sometimes multiple women at once. And when I would leave, I would still be driving in my car, looking at DVD players with pornography, playing in my car plugged into my cigarette lighter. Wow! I mean, just bound by sexual perversion. And for 21 years. I wasn't like the gentleman said, Hey, you know, this is what's gonna happen, you're gonna be free of these sins. And, you know, you'd like your hearts gonna be different, like, I had no clue. So, when God came into my life, and the Holy Spirit touched me, and changed me, like, I had no idea that's what was gonna happen. And I was free from the porn with drugs, the whole all the whole nine yards. 2nd Corinthians 517, it says, Therefore, if any man be in Christ, he is a new creature, Old things are passed away, behold, all things have become new. And at that point in my life, December 5, that's what happened to me. I became a new creation in Christ Jesus, he took all of my sin, and he made me brand new. Now, I, my whole life has been very impulsive and emotionally driven. Okay? So, the program at that time, the inpatient was 90 days long, and you do Bible studies, and discipleship and teaching and worship and prayer, like all of this stuff, but I got saved, and I could not sit still, like I was so full of. I had to go do something with it. And so, I've failed with you know, relapse, and like I went 100 miles an hour, I was going into the people's houses that I was dealing drugs with, but I was cooking meth with the bars, the tattoo shops everywhere, I knew that there was people that I knew that were lost, I was going and ministering to them. I would grab them and bring them to the church and tell pastor Tim was like, Hey, you got to meet with this guy. You got a minister; this guy needs Jesus. My friends were coming to Christ. I was taking their drugs and throwing them away in the dumpster behind the church to the point where pastor told me, you cannot throw drugs away in a dumpster anymore. Oh my gosh. John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula It was it was an amazing. Yeah. But I had no idea. You know, I didn't know anything about sanctification or being above reproach. So, I was just, I was doing things ignorantly. And so, the girl, you know, we were kind of back and forth. And I would always take somebody with me for accountability because I thought that's what that meant. I had no idea. I just shouldn't have been their period. But so, one day, she tells me, she says, you know what, I'm done with it. You're not above reproach. Okay? And I told me that night, I had no clue what that meant, right? That's putting myself in, you know, situations that I shouldn't have been in. Sure? But in my eyes, I would just go in to get the senators. I just want to get all my friends and lead them to Jesus. Right. And so, she said, I'm done with you. And that was the first time in 30 years that I've ever had. I felt my emotion because I've been on drugs for so long that I never really felt real emotions. Oh? And so, I ran straight to my friend's house, my Well, he was an old friend, and I got high again, and I couldn't stop for three months. I kept coming to the church, and you know, I wasn't deceitful about it. Like I told everybody Man, I'm not doing good. But I kept coming in trying and I couldn't find repentance again. Then about three months later, I pulled up to the church and Pastor saw all drugs, a bunch of cash and a pistol sitting on my seat. And I had no intention of him seeing any that I was just going to drive through Park, go see him, but he happened to be walking out. And he put his head in my car in my passenger window. And he looked down and seeing all that was the first time I'd seen him cry, and he was just streaming tears. And he said, I hand you over to Satan in the name of Jesus. He said, whatever you're doing, go get done quick. And I pray that the god somehow redeems you from all of it. And I got so offended, so mad, I just burned out of there, took off and the next day, I put my head on the steering wheel after I brought pastor and another gentleman al Gregory, I brought them a coffee and I went outside, and I wanted repentance. I just couldn't get there. And so, I put Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula my head on the steering wheel of my car, and I said, Lord, you have to stop me. And I drove to the house I was selling drugs out of again. When I left, there's a canine unit. And it followed me pulled me over said that I hadn't had a warrant for a year. And he arrested me. And it was a detective with a point. It was officer Craig Buell, who now I have so much respect for he arrested me, and I had to go to 16 days in jail. And it was for some old warrant that I really never had. I was on misdemeanour probation through all of this. So, I really had no warrant. But when my heart really cried out to the Lord, I feel like he's superimposed himself on me and created this warrant that was never there. And put me in jail for 16 days. And I was able to just start reading the scriptures and reading the Bible and repenting and, and I got out after 16 days, and that was 12 years ago, and no alcohol, no drugs, no pornography and never went back. And God has just absolutely, continually redeemed my life from all of my sin. That is a radical testimony. I will tell I will tell you, and this is one of my favourite things about being a Christian. I didn't come to my faith until I was an adult also. And one of my favourite things about being a Christian is that Padula, I would not have known any of those things like there's so much shiny Jesus in you that it's hard for me to believe that that's who you are, because you are different now, like you are such a different man, the man that I met, and I am just floored at what God can do in a person's life. Like it's amazing. I also I couldn't have kids. You know, I've been with almost 1000 women not safe. When I was in prison for six years, I had some pain in my ah! Region.? Yes. So, it was hurting so bad. I asked him to take me finally they took me to the hospital and the guy did an ultrasound. And he, you know, told me what was wrong. And he said, and by the way, you have a zero sperm count. I hope you didn't ever plan on having kids because you're never gonna have kids. Wow? And I love kids even in my son, I love my niece and nephew. And so, I just kind of accepted it. And then I got saved. And now I have a nineyear-old, an eight-year-old, a five-year-old and a four-year-old. And so, God didn't just heal me spiritually. He absolutely redeemed me physically. He gave me four beautiful babies, a beautiful wife. And he's been so merciful in it. Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Oh my gosh, Padula? he really has been so merciful and generous. And wow. Yeah That's amazing. You know, um, I don't often share this, and I never plan on sharing it in a podcast. But I grew up in a feminist family and didn't believe that, you know, babies were babies in the womb, and in college, I had an abortion. And the statistics for women having abortions and then being able to have kids or having a lot of problems in that area are high. And so, the fact that I have eight children, after, you know, having murdered my own baby, unbeknownst to me, at that time, like is not lost on me. And it's a great amount of grace that you feel when the Lord redeems those things, you know, so, wow, I'm like so over overwhelmed. Oh, my gosh, well, and your wife is amazing, and your kids are adorable. And we've actually benefited from the physical blessings in your life in taking hand me downs from you and whatnot also, so Oh my gosh, do you have um it's hard. You know, my, my next questions, I don't even like them now after, after hearing your testimony. Do you have like the part about you know where you are going back into these places you had been giving your testimony and bringing people to Christ. And just having that passion for people to know the Lord and then being told that you weren't that you were being hunted weren't being? What was the above approach? Yeah! Do you feel like that is an overused term in the sense of like, I mean, if people are getting saved and coming to repentance, does it matter where you are? Or where you are stumbling, and that's why it was being used like that, that part strikes me so much, because it's one of those like, Christianise, like terms above reproach that. They just wonder like, how do you feel about that now? like, 12 years later, people being saved? Do you feel like you really, were doing something wrong? Or do you feel like you were walking in, like the Holy Spirit and excitement like bringing people to the Lord? Um! well, if I had to do it all over, would have ministered to the same people, I just wouldn't have put myself in the positions that I did. Just one of the circumstances, I went to a strip club, and I took the church secretary at the time, you know, I said, Hey, I'm going out to this bar and went to the strip club. And I went up to the tip rail, where the girl was dancing, and stood up and shared the gospel with her. told her, you know, that God loved her and that, you know, she needed Jesus Christ as Lord and Saviour, and he could give her hope. And obviously, I wouldn't do that again, as knowing what I know now. Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry Did she come to know the Lord? No, but the bartender who was a lesbian at the time, came to church with me the next day, let me pray over and gentlemen, that was inside the bar that I prayed over that night, he came to church the next day, and God has definitely been working on them over-over the years. So that there was a lot of cool things that happened, but I definitely would have done things a little different. Sure? No one for the example. want somebody else to go into those circumstances because I've seen it hundreds of times down the last 12 years, people great intentions went to the bar to see their friends to try to minister to them, and they ended up drunk by the end of the night. So, you know, being a good example of being above reproach, but not to a religious extreme. That's really good way to put it. I like how you worded that, you know, we I always joke that I'm a recovering Pharisee. And, and we have to really work to make sure that we're not raising little Pharisees in a very Christian home, you know? And so, I like how you put that, you know, we want to be careful to be above reproach, while not letting religion become what is the ultimate factor? So, I guess so what I'm curious, we're Calvary, we come from Calvary Chapel a lot of our, you know, pastors have these. These what I always call gnarly testimonies, you know, of great sin that the Lord has shined light on in their life that they don't have any more. Do you feel like this gives you an upper hand or, like a bad deal when it comes to your faith? Now, I hear it both ways. You know, I see grownups my age, you know, women in their late 30s, early 40s, who have walked with the Lord faithfully. From their youth raised in a Christian home, I call them I call them second generation, Christians. And, and I'm in such admiration of them, you know, and then like, I gives me great hope for my own kids being raised in a Christian home. But they always say things like, Well, you know, but you understand like grace more, you understand? forgiveness more. And they always seem to have like this, this higher esteem for those who have great sin forgiven. And it always bothers me, because I feel like I would have preferred to walk faithfully in the Lord all those years, because we know I think you and I probably would say, even though he's been gracious to make beautiful things from our darkness, all those days were wasted. For him, you know. And so, I'm curious as a pastor, how this comes about I, when I sent you my questions, I told you that I was greatly irritated when I saw another man talking to you about me and just kind of jabbing you about having, you know, drug addiction in your past. And you cleared it up for me and told me John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula that he was just totally joking. And I just didn't know his personality that well, but it rubbed me the wrong way. And I wondered if you get that. And if you get that in certain church circles or if you are more kind of deemed a higher echelon because you have this greater sense of grace and forgiveness. Well, it kind of goes both ways. We have a lot of local pastors that will call us when they're dealing with family members, friends, church members who are struggling with alcohol or drugs, or even suicide. Jews in the community, lean on us because That's kind of, that's our specific ministry. I mean, that's where we've came out of that's where God has gifted us and being able to speak into those lives. But there are some want to be very careful. They lean more towards the religious side of things instead of the relational side of things. You can tell sometimes they look down their nose at you because you have a background like that and you weren't raised like they were in a good Godly, you know, wholesome home. But you got to witness a beautiful thing that we have here in Kootenai County, we have the ministerial Association. And it's for senior pastors only, which I'm not a senior pastor. But when our pastor got shot, they asked me to come in. And that was five years ago, and I've been able to stay ever since and build great relationships with those men. And all of them in their have pass. Have some type of sinful thing. Anyway? He's the ministerial association president. He was a gangbanger in California. I mean, he was pretty hardcore the other way and God rescued him out of that. That is a Calvary guy huh? Yeah. Yeah, so all of those men in there, we all have great relationships. But in the community? Um, Yeah, it happens sometimes. That's interesting. And what about as far as just general congregants? No, no. Yeah. Interesting. So, then I there was one other part. I mean, there was tons in your story that I could just keep going on and on about, but the part where you said, you know, you're at the rehab facility, and the man put his hand on your shoulder, and you just wanted to punch him. I could almost feel like a permeable like spiritual warfare in that moment. What's your stand on spiritual warfare? And how do you feel like, or I guess I should say, do you feel that Satan was just after your life? How do you? How do you play spiritual warfare into this, especially in the ministry that you guys are doing now? We totally believe in spiritual warfare. We see it every single day. Yes, that was a perfect example of darkness and light and full of darkness Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula and sin. And it was a man who was full of the Holy Spirit just touched me. I mean, it was like instant reaction to be violent. And I'm very thankful that the Lord gave me the strength because in my flesh in the past, I can never restrain myself like that. So that was definitely the Lord protecting me because he knew what was about to happen. We deal with spiritual warfare, demon possessions, oppression, affliction all the time, especially dealing with people who are suicidal drug addiction. Yeah, that's Yeah, That's the people that we deal with come from. So yes, we know that. What you do and what you're even, you know, expressing right now must be spiritually exhausting. You know, Satan's fighting to keep these souls from salvage salvation, and a flesh that's so deeply rooted in sin like, how do you personally manage this sort of spiritual exhaustion? Um? for me, I'm kind of an all-in guy. So, anything I do, I put 100% in. So, to me it doesn't really bother me. I get physically exhausted more than spiritually exhausted. Yesterday, I don't ever wake up in the middle of the night. And yesterday, the Lord woke me up at 2am I couldn't go back to sleep. So, I started praying for some people. One of my dear, dear friends owns gross doughnuts here in Cortland. His name is Dennis Gross. And I started praying for him. And the Lord said, Go give him a hug. And it was like by that time, I think it was 2.30 in the morning. Like what? Go give him a hug. So, I just kind of dismissed it. And I kept praying. And the Lord said, Go give him a hug right now. Well, he owns a donut shop. And so, I was like, Okay, well, maybe he's baking overnight tonight. So, I got dressed. When got my truck, drove to his donut shop and Post Falls because he has one in Cortland. Wonderful falls. And he just happened to be there. And I seen the lights were on and his car was in the back. And so, I went to the back door and opened the door. He's like, what are you doing here? He thought maybe something was wrong. So, it was like 2.30 -2.45 in the morning. By that time, the Lord said, Give me a hug. So, we're thankful. He said, his neck was hurting really bad. And he can really use prayer. He loves the Lord. He's a great man of God. And so, we just got to fellowship for like a half hour 45 minutes and just pray and talk and it was a great time. So, I'm still catching up from that I get physically exhausted because that type of stuff. Physically, I have a hard time with it spiritually. The Lord definitely protects me and my family. We have four kids. I have nine guys that live in my house with us right now. We usually only have six at a time that we kind of mentor and disciple. It gets taxing, but it's mostly for me. It's mostly physical. Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Oh, Wow, that's amazing. You know, it's funny the Gross doughnuts we drove by on the way to the ministerial Association meeting, and we like died. We almost stopped just to bring you guys donut so that we could show up and be like, we bought Gross doughnuts. Like, we just thought it was genius marketing. It never occurred to me that it was his last name. Yeah, I think I think good doughnuts? They're the most amazing ever. I cannot wait to get back there and try that if you are listening to this podcast and you are in the north Idaho area, please get over to Gross doughnuts immediately. Let us know how maybe they are. Oh my gosh. That's so funny. I can't believe you guys are friends. Amos is going to be excited to hear that because we had I mean, a good 15 minutes hilariousness over the Gross donut slice. So, there's also I feel like where there are ministries where there's a great amount of spiritual warfare, there is a great amount of fruit, something some that people never get to experience. As Christians in America today, just living very safe and quite lives. What kind of fruit Do you think you see in your ministry that you wish all Christians could see? Well, I could tell you a story after story. I mean, even just with the guys at my house, just sharing, you know, their personal testimonies. I get to see people come in at their worst, hopeless, addicted, some of them on the verge of physical death because they malnourished, I mean, they're just in bad shape. And then seeing them come to Christ. I mean, we've, boy we see it. That's amazing. Yeah. Now how many other men do you know that have come through the program that have become pastors? Are you the unicorn? Um, well, there's been. So, I was one of the first men through the rehab. And then a couple years after me, or actually year and a half after me, a gentleman named Jeff Koch came. He came to Christ. started he was the co-founder of set apart discipleship, which is the ministry I started in 2013. He was a co-founder of that, and then the Lord called him to go and pastor somewhere else. He's pastoring, another church here locally. And then another gentleman came in about eight years ago, Steve Hemming, and he became one of our pastors, our associate pastors also in just about six months ago, in September, a good friend of ours, Pastor Dave Roberts was retiring from his church. So, we have quite a few of them that have kind of grown up here and branched out and started pastoring in other places. I had a guy live with me, Logan Andalusian and he came to Christ. He's an amazing man, lived with my wife and I, for two and a half years, instead of just a normal six months at some of them do. And he said, The Lord told him Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry to stay with us till he got married, and he did outside of the last two or three weeks. And now he's the youth pastor at Heart of the City Church here in Portland. And so, we've seen so many beautiful testimonies now he's married has a beautiful brand-new baby stepping into ministry. That's amazing. I would say that is a great 27 of our staff, a good Samaritan, are graduates. Really? Yeah.? Wow. What a fruitful ministry. We love it. It's taxing, but we love it. Well, I have to ask, I mean, I have a 13-year-old for like a pretty innocent kid, you know, we home school and we've had the blessing of just getting to be close with him. And even though my husband and I were both raised by single moms, you know, just the fact that he has two parents there. We've just seen such a such a different, like lifestyle for him. I was like almost weeping through half of your testimony, just because you started so young. And we have some law enforcement in our family. So, they've heard a lot of things on the other side of this, but what do you say to teenager youth that think they can dabble in these things, and it's not going to affect them? Well, the hard part about that with young men and women, you know, young teenagers is even though you can tell them till you blue in the face, all of the things that may happen to them, they're really not consequence oriented yet, you know, they really haven't developed to the point where most of them know there are some that may be the exception to the rule. But most of them don't learn from other people's stories, so they won't you know, you don't tell them hey, you know, this is what could happen this guy, you know, or myself, Roomful. And so, for us. We try to just give them the gospel and get them going that direction and let them have the power of Christ in their life because most of them think they're the exception. You know, if they're already considering using or drinking that or they at an age, they think that it won't happen to them. They've already, most of them have already decided that the I know that guy went to prison, this guy died, this guy committed suicide. I know. But that won't be me. That's really interesting. I actually I take a pretty firm stance that people run one way or another that way, where they kind of feel like they have John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry to experience something personally to know if it's true. And unfortunately, that is my personality, too. But these, the secondgeneration Christians that have these great testimonies had the wisdom that they say in the Bible of, you know, seeing somebody else fall and not going down that same path. So that's a really, that's a really great point, you know, to focus on giving them something to do I always, as a Christian, in the American church today, I've always struggled with raising our kids in a building where they're just telling them all the things they shouldn't be doing. And I felt like as the Lord grew me quickly, in my faith as an adult, there was so much he told us to do, you know, and like, if you're busy about the Father's business, and you are doing what he told you to do, you're not attracted to sin and other things, because you're busy, and it's fulfilling to be serving the Lord, and fulfilling your purpose and life. So, I like that you said that. I mean, you know, it's true. Jesus needs to get a hold of them, and they need to be directed to a life of purpose. Yep, absolutely. So, I keep throwing around the term the American church, because I feel like there's a lot of things about the American church that are unique to the world, and especially in churches, but in North Idaho, it seems to be a little bit of a different picture, you guys have a really great grasp on things from what we've seen. But what do you think the biggest challenge as a pastor in the American church today is, and I would imagine that yours might have something to do, you know, with drug consumption in our country? And the discouraging part for us in the American culture of the church is that we get so much so many who come into the program, who've been bound by sin, their whole life drug addict, since they were youth, you know, everything contrary to Scripture, but because they said a prayer when they were, you know, 15, there are saved and you can't really tell them any different you can't get them to examine the fruit of their life, because they've been told by all their church leaders that since they repeated after them that they're saved. And so, we see so many people who are just bound by sin. There's no fruit of their life. There's never been a conversion, but because the American church culture is so in my opinion, watered down with this cheap grace, that there's so many false converts out there. It's, it's terrifying. I agree. Oh, my gosh, that is I'm going to quote you on that. And there's going to be graphics all over the place to Padula, that was well said. We are actually in Pennsylvania right now. And we're in the middle of Amish country. They're literally like horse, horses, and buggies, like going by us on the roads. And I'm not incredibly familiar with the culture, but somebody was telling me that the farm we're visiting, she was saying, Amish are a lot like Christians, like there are some that do, John Padula Nickole Perry you know, sinful things and call themselves Amish, whether they smoke or use bad language or, you know, secretly use phones when they're not supposed to, or whatever. And then you have the faithful ones. And I thought, Man, it's, it's like Jewish Christians. It's like Jewish people today to you know, you have Jewish of faith and Jewish of religion, I mean, culture versus religion. And, and it's true, it's very difficult today, to differentiate between, when someone says they're a Christian, you almost just, you got to wait it out and see if what they're saying is true, or if they have any fruit. It's really interesting. And I hate to, I only noticed it as a parent, because your kids will say, Oh, so and so's said, they're a Christian. But were they just drunk it like every barbecue last year, or whatever it is, you know? And you're like, Oh, this is like, so awkward and painful. And how do you? How do you broach that subject? So, as you're raising your kids, and you see this problem in church culture of sort of that cheap grace and maybe people saying they're Christians, and they're not how do you address that with your own kids? My kids, they seem to have a pretty good amount of discernment, my two oldest, they will even see things and they said, you know, this person said that they're this but the way they talk when nobody's around, it doesn't seem there, eight and nine and so for them to be able to see that it's definitely the work of God. We try to really raise our kids to love everybody, and to not judge in a manner to condemn who is really doing the right thing and who isn't? Or what is somebody doing in secret? Because that's really who they are and to? you know, the character shown on that. That's true. I am, I always joke. I mean I joke but it's true. You know, do we believe what we say we believe in theory, or in real life like do we believe that A soft answer turns away wrath and a harsh word stirs up anger because if we really believe it. We're not going to say that yelling at our kids is what's going to turn them around right, it'll piss off the answer and so I, my kids, I really still struggle with, with raising my voice and yelling and we're all working on gentleness and harsh tones even just this week. But the thing that always cracks me up is I always tell the kids look guys, this is who we are who we are right now in our house, the worst of us like this is who we are like this, it's not who you are when you see Pastor Dan it's not who you are, you know when you're sitting perfectly at church like this is the sin that has to be routed out, it's really upset that your brother put his foot on your bed or whatever, you know, and like we're like are we. I know you're probably better human than I am now but I'm like my worst person to my poor husband and my kids. Not always, but they have definitely seen the worst. John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry Nickole Perry Yeah. Well, tell me a little bit about your wife and she just like I didn't catch it that the same, the same woman from the story in the rehab? It's not! It's not so that woman just had a great impact in bringing you to the Lord and you found your wife later. Yep, the Lord blessed me with Amanda. She actually was an opiate addict because she went through the ranch, and I fell in love with her, and I went and told Pastor. He's like she's in the rehab leave her alone, and I was like why, I know I was trying to tell you how I feel and then she kind of had the same experience during her journey she just felt we didn't even know each other and she at one point told Pastor when we were baptizing people in the lake. And she says, I just have this feeling I fell in I love with this guy. So she's amazing, amazing, amazing. Well, I had a feeling she was amazing because she let the nine other men sleep in your house and go through the discipleship program and I'm betting she cooks a lot of food and probably does a lot of laundry. Yes, she does. And she has a full-time job she's a third-grade teacher at Cornerstone Christian Academy Post falls, which turns not a job it's a ministry but it's still, I mean it's a lot, and then she comes home, and she cooks, she cleans, and she's serves faithfully she's one of the busiest women that I know in her heart is just, I love her. she's got, he knows what he's doing. That makes me so happy it's one of my favourite things to listen to. Man praise His wife is a good thing a man who finds a good wife. That's right. Okay, so now. She got the short end of the stick. Maybe, I mean, she sounds like a better human than you should, so I tend to be partial to the pastor's wives honestly so it's not you. Okay, well let's do the lightning round, which is my favourite part. If you're just joining us on the show. This is my, my favourite part, I take it from that sort of Sports Centre mentality and we're gonna just go through a list of some hard questions. Padula didn't have these questions beforehand, most of them are yes or no or short answer, and John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry I'm going to go through them quickly and hopefully you can just answer them with the first answer that comes to your mind. Okay. Okay. All right, first I do want to know do you do your own laundry. No! What's your favourite movie? Oh Boy! I guess we don't really watch movies often. You like any of the new Christian movies like The God's Not Dead, Courageous. Oh yeah, I said, Courageous, it blanked out on me. Yeah, courageous I would say it's probably my favourite movie. Okay, which is super ironic right getting your history with law enforcement. Yeah. Do you lean more towards Calvinism or Arminianism? If you could go right in the middle. What about eschatology Are you pre-med or post-trib? I'm Pan, all pan out, but I lean more towards group trib. Okay, what is it Pan trib is that a real thing? Yeah, it will Pan out. Okay, Are you more of a fan of topical teaching or verse by verse, Topical! Pro or anti mask. Anti! Pro or Anti Vax. John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Anti! Got a North Idaho boy on our hands, Contemporary or Traditional worship. Oh boy, probably right in the middle I just love to worship but there's both of them really can really touch me as long as it's just intimate and real worship. Favourite superhero? Green lantern. Oh, I can't let that go, why Green Lantern? School called me Green Lantern, even to the point where at my birthday party. My mom, she yelled at me she was a Johnny Paul. And my buddy Jensen because you don't have to call him Green Lantern. Oh my gosh? I just loved him as a kid. Oh, that's good politics are no politics? from the pulpit. Politics. Do Christians have the freedom to drink alcohol? I have the freedom to not drink alcohol. That is good, actually. It's a great question asking you, you've chosen to, to walk in and complete freedom from that. Do you have any objection to those who did not have the bondage of drunkenness in their past, to have the liberty of having a glass of wine from now then? Most people didn't even let's say they have a glass of wine now and then don't really just have a glass now and then. But there are some. Yeah, there are some people that I know that love the Lord dearly. I just think, why so to me it's like, I just don't see any use of it? Awesome that is a good answer, should women be labelled as pastors. No. Does your church exercise church discipline? Yes. Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Nickole Perry John Padula Holy Spirit or Holy Ghost? Through Holy Ghost. What about spiritual guests do you think they were for the biblical times only are present day also. Present day absolutely. Children in church or children's church? Personally, children in church, we do have the possibility or the ability in our church we do have children's church, but I might get sit with me in church, unless my youngest ones get really rowdy in the middle of service, I'll take him downstairs. Okay! Who is responsible for sin, Adam or Eve. You know as much as he did and he was, you know, it was Adam. Biblical counselling or psychology? Biblical counselling. What's your dream job Padula? I'm living it. That's my favourite answer. What about your dream car? Dream car. I had a 78 Caprice classic a two door and if I could have one of those again and have it fixed up it would be my dream car. Oh gosh. And you know what that is, I'm gonna have to google that one. Okay, favourite food. Any type of meat steak I love steak. Then you're a Hunter. Yes. I wish we had more time to talk about that. Okay and I haven't done this before, but I really want to ask you what is the thing you wish you said to your wife every single day. I appreciate you. Nickole Perry John Padula Good, that's a good one. All right, well, that's all I have for you Padula. Thank you so much for your time you guys again this is John Padula. You got the altar church and Coeur d'Alene in Idaho and if you get up to North Idaho. I think that you go visit them. They're an amazing church doing a great work for the Lord much, much group. Thank you so much for your time John. Yes, ma'am. We love you guys and we're so, so, thankful.

Linus Wyrsch
Philippe Lemm

Linus Wyrsch

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2021 61:13


"On today’s episode of The Jazz Hole, interview guest Philippe Lemm talks about “First Steps” by the Philippe Lemm Trio (released via Outside In Music), consisting of Philippe Lemm on drums & percussion, Angelo Di Loreto on piano and Jeff Koch on drums. The new album by the NYC-based Dutch drummer, percussionist and composer Philippe Lemm is centered around his unique background in dance, but it also happens to be pianist and composer Angelo di Loreto's last studio recording before his tragic passing last Fall. Philippe Lemm took the time to talk about the beautiful music as well as the sad tragedy. The other trio featured on today’s ensemble is TuneTown, which pools the creativity of three of Canada’s top jazz improvisers: Kelly Jefferson (saxophones), Artie Roth (bass) and Ernesto Cervini (drums, percussion and on bass clarinet). Their sophomore album is entitled Entering Utopia and just came out on Three Pines Records. -------- TuneTown - “Entering Utopia”, “Billyish” & “Sycamore Album: Entering Utopia Kelly Jefferson (ts, ss), Artie Roth (b, composer of “Entering Utopia” & “Sycamore”) and Ernesto Cervini (d, perc, composer of “Billyish”) Philippe Lemm Trio - “The Kiln” & “Kalief” Album: First Steps Philippe Lemm (d, perc, comp) , Angelo Di Loreto (p), Jeff Koch (b) and Simon Moullier (vib) Philippe Lemm Trio - Malambo Album. First Steps Philippe Lemm (d, perc) , Angelo Di Loreto (p, comp) and Jeff Koch (b) 00:00 - The Jazz Hole with Linus 02:16 - Entering Utopia - TuneTown 05:38 - Billyish - TuneTown 09:24 - Sycamore - TuneTown 15:51 - The Jazz Hole with Linus 18:52 - The Kiln - Philippe Lemm Trio 25:44 - Interview with Philippe Lemm, Part I 34:38 - Kalief - Philippe Lemm Trio 39:54 - Interview with Philippe Lemm, Part II 52:42 - Outro 53:53 - Malambo - Philippe Lemm Trio 61:13 - Finish "

Linus Wyrsch
Things To Come

Linus Wyrsch

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2020 62:48


"The Jazz Hole with Linus features music from the following new albums today: The Twelfth of Never by the Toronto-based world-jazz nonet Manteca, Latin Lounge by the well-known percussionist Frank Colón, The Shape Of Things by saxophonist Rich Halley, pianist Matthew Shipp, bassist Michael Bisio and drummer Newman Taylor Baker, and lastly music from “New Amsterdam” and from “City Birds” by the Philippe Lemm Trio. Sadly, the trio’s award-winning pianist Angelo Di Loreto passed away on October 17th, he was only 30 years young. RIP Angelo Di Loreto. Manteca - “Lowdown” & “’Twas Brillig” Album: The Twelfth Of Never Doug Wilde (p, kbds, composer), Matt Zimbel (congas, clay drums, dundun, perc, composer), Art Avalos (d, perc), Colleen Allen (ww), Charlie Cooley (d), Mark Ferguson (tb, b-tb, vib, kbds), Will Jarvis (e-b, b), Jason Logue (tp, flh) and Nick Tateishi (e-g, g) Frank Colón - “Spanish Heart” & “Bali” Album: Latin Lounge Frank Colón (perc, prog, voc), José Arimateia (tp), Raphael Batista (vio), Julio Falavigna, Christiano Rocha (d), Daniel Figueiredo (add syn), Jamie Glaser (g), Estevão Lima (b), Jr. Lobbo (e-g), Luana Mallet (voc), Carlos Malta (fl, b-fl), Kleyton Martins (p, kbds), Roman Miroshnichenko (flamenco g), Elton Ricardo (rhodes), José Staneck (harm), Mateus Starling (e-g), Cristiano Veneza (violin, viola, cello), Mateus Viana (acc) Rich Halley, Matthew Shipp, Michael Bisio, Newman Taylor Baker - “Tetrahedron” & “Vector” Album: The Shape Of Things Rich Halley (ts), Matthew Shipp (p), Michael Bisio (b) and Newman Taylor Baker (d) ----- Philippe Lemm Trio - When You Wake Up Album: New Amsterdam Philippe Lemm (d), Angelo Di Loreto (p, composer) and Jeff Koch (b) Philippe Lemm Trio - Emerge Album: City Birds Philippe Lemm (d), Angelo Di Loreto (p, composer) and Jeff Koch (b) 00:00 - The Jazz Hole with Linus 01:48 - Lowdown - Manteca 06:56 - ’Twas Brillig - Manteca 12:00 - Spanish Heart - Frank Colón 16:54 - The Jazz Hole with Linus 18:19 - Bali - Frank Colón 26:13 - Tetrahedron - Rich Halley, Matthew Shipp, Michael Bisio, Newman Taylor Baker 37:06 - The Jazz Hole with Linus 37:45 - Vector - Rich Halley, Matthew Shipp, Michael Bisio, Newman Taylor Baker 47:41 - When You Wake Up - Philippe Lemm Trio 55:20 - The Jazz Hole with Linus 56:54 - Emerge - Philippe Lemm Trio 62:48 - Finish "

Bagels and Blessings
Music and Talk -8-8-20

Bagels and Blessings

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2020


Sometimes you just have to kick back, grab your coffee, have a bagel and listen to FANTASTIC music!  Today I feature some new music from Beckah Shae, and you'll enjoy your favs like Jonathan Settel, Paul Wilbur, Joshua Aaron, Sue Samuel, Miqedem, John Waller, Steve McConnell, Rachel & Avner Boskey, Jeff Koch and Marty & Misha Goetz-Hoyt.Enjoy!!

Stories from the C|SUITE
What do NFIB and Hockey have in common? That would be Jeff Koch.

Stories from the C|SUITE

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2020 30:30


Jeff Koch is President and CEO of the United Methodist Insurance Company. He also maintains a limited role as a business and insurance consultant in Brentwood, Tennessee. Mr. Koch’s areas of expertise include insurance; captive insurance and alternative risk management programs; business planning; business development; and affinity member benefit programs. Mr. Koch has worked with national associations, affinity groups, and companies consulting on captives and insurance, member benefit programs, and pricing and feasibility studies for enterprise risk captive insurance companies. Mr. Koch has a degree in Industrial Engineering from the University of Pittsburgh and a Masters Degree in Business Administration from Vanderbilt University’s Owen Graduate School of Management. Previously Mr. Koch was Vice President of Member Benefits for the National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB). He established and managed the operation of NFIB’s in-house life and health and property and casualty insurance agencies and its property and casualty managing general agency. He was responsible for the operation of five programs sponsored by NFIB written through state workers compensation funds (Arizona, Maryland, Montana, Ohio, and Texas) and one group self-insurance program (Alabama). The total premium in the programs exceeded $150 million. He also managed NFIB’s relationships with FedEx, Dell, Bank of America, Solveras Payment Solutions, Payce Payroll Services, and a number of other business partners. Prior to joining NFIB, he worked for two international insurance brokerage firms for eleven years developing and operating affinity group programs including risk purchasing groups, captives, and self-insured groups. He managed a group captive insurance company for seven years. His clients included non-profit clinics, hazardous material carriers, chemical manufacturers, equipment dealers, and NFIB. He developed loss probability studies and loss projections, and evaluated and reviewed security requirements for the captive insurance companies he managed. Mr. Koch worked as an Industrial Engineer for seven years focusing on operations analysis, systems analysis and design, and reducing the cost and frequency of workplace injuries. He was employed by United States Steel and Ingram Barge Company. Contact us here

Aliens of Prague
#7 Two Improv Comedians - with Jim (UK) & Jeff (USA)

Aliens of Prague

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 30, 2020 62:56


Jim High and Jeff Koch are two actor, Improv comedians living in Prague. In this episode we talked about secrets of Improv comedy, hosting a burlesque show, quietest village, stage fright, dark and black sense of humor, clowns, standup comedy, giving away seats in public transport and panel buildings. Jim and Jeff and their Improv group holds weekly show in Prague https://www.pragueimprovcomedy.com/

Lawyers for Jesus Radio
Mortgage Broker Gets Specific About His Approach to Helping Others Get the Right Mortgage

Lawyers for Jesus Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2018 24:02


Jeff Koch is the Vice President of residential lending with Draper & Kramer Mortgage Corp., and has been a mortgage consultant since 2002. He was previously on Lawyers for Jesus to discuss his powerful testimony and how he came to Christ, but today we will be discussing how his faith takes shape in the workplace. For over 14 years, Jeff has maintained an emphasis on character, clarity and courtesy for his clients. He sees his role in the mortgage and home buying process as part of caring for the whole person, not just a number.

First Timers Podcast Show
Ep5: We're talking renovation loans with Jeff Koch from Fairway Mortgage

First Timers Podcast Show

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2018 53:10


Welcome to the First Timers Podcast Show where we offer insights, tips and advice for first time or long time Home Buyers, Sellers, and Investors. Thank you for listening to the show. My name is Mikey T, or Michael Anthony Timpani as my momma named me. Please follow the show on Instagram and Facebook @firstTimersPodcastShow You can follow me on Instagram and Facebook @THSHomeAdvisors and @mikeyTSellsNJHomes Please leave a review on ITunes, subscribe and share this podcast. Message us with any questions or topics you would like to hear covered. And if you’re a professional and have some value you could offer my listeners, please reach out, we would love to hear from you. Today we welcome Jeff Koch from Fairway Mortgage to the show. Jeff educates us about two different home renovation mortgage products, 203k and the Homestyle loan. Jeff is super knowledgeable in home renovation loans as well as all types of mortgages. You can contact Jeff on his website loansByJeffery.com 732-307-9848 and on Instagram.com/newjerseyfairway

Lawyers for Jesus Radio
Mortgage Consultant Jeff Koch Give His Powerful Testimony of Faith

Lawyers for Jesus Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2018 24:00


Jeff Koch is the Vice President of residential lending with Draper & Kramer Mortgage Corp., and has been a mortgage consultant since 2002. For over 14 years, Jeff has maintained an emphasis on character, clarity and courtesy for his clients. He sees his role in the mortgage and home buying process as part of caring for the whole person, not just a number. Jeff’s spiritual journey began with him growing up in a Jewish home, abandoning faith altogether as a teen and young adult, then finally coming to know and follow Jesus after longing for “something more”.

OTC Podcasts (Miscellaneous)
2017 - A Steady Hand - Genesis 25:19-34

OTC Podcasts (Miscellaneous)

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2017 55:00


Jeff Koch shares on today's Torah portion.

torah steady jeff koch
Hemmings Collector-Car Radio
Hemmings Radio Episode 147

Hemmings Collector-Car Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2017 21:18


First up this week, we offer a historical profile of David Dunbar Buick. Next, we welcome Hemmings Motor News West Coast editor Jeff Koch, who talks with myself and senior editor Matt Litwin about die cast cars from Hot Wheels to Matchbox. Give us a listen and email us at radio@hemmings.com.

Cars Yeah with Mark Greene
148: Jeff Koch from Hemming Motor News Talks About His 9,400 Die-Cast Cars

Cars Yeah with Mark Greene

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 25, 2014 30:31


Jeff Koch has been the West Coast Editor for Hemmings Motor News for over ten years. He has been a professional automotive writer and photographer for more than 20 years and has written and taken photographs for magazines as divers as Hot Rod and Super Street. Jeff worked for the Johnny Lightning die cast car company, and he’s an avid collector of die cast cars himself and has collected for over 20 years. Which ties in with today because it happens to be Christmas 2014! So pour yourself some eggnog, sit down next to the fireplace and we’ll have some fun talking and playing with cars.

christmas cars motor hot rod hemming diecast super street johnny lightning jeff koch hemmings motor news
Funnel Cake Sports Radio
Funnel Cake Gang June 5, 2013

Funnel Cake Sports Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2013


Chris, Night Hawk, Matt, Triple Threat; Jeff Koch joins us from spursdynasty.com, the father effect, taco licking, Bruce Jenner, MLB pending suspensions, NHL Playoffs, wikifeet, Hot or Not, Chach and a Half