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Aileen Clark of Uy Que Horror is back to join us for a look at two truly unhinged scare films. In the 1960s and 70s churches occasionally produced low budget morality tales and scare movies to frighten their congregations into going back to church if they feel like they're slacking off. The problem is that they were made by people who didn't know how to make movies with casts of non-actors and extremely low budgets. They were cheap and terrible and everyone hated watching them. Along came Ron and June Ormond and their son Tim, the first family of exploitation, teamed up with Reverend Estus W. Pirkle, a charismatic fundamentalist preacher from Mississippi to adapt Pirkle's fire and brimstone sermon If Footmen Tire You What Will Horses Do that threatened easily frightened Christians with seeking out draconian churches that shunned anything looking like empathy and service in favor of a hard line position against all things communism. In the sequel, The Burning Hell, Estus Pirkle has decided that his last sermon didn't put enough terror in the hearts of Christians over going to hell so here's one that's literally all about how much hell sucks and how you definitely want to accept Jesus Christ into your heart so you don't go there. These fiery sermons are illustrated with scenes of trashy, gory violence that you definitely don't expect to find in movies meant for fragile, easily offended Christian people. They are completely weird and hilarious.Join the Bring Me The Axe Discord: https://discord.gg/snkxuxzJSupport Bring Me The Axe! on Patreon:https://patreon.com/bringmetheaxepodBuy Bring Me The Axe merch here:https://www.bonfire.com/store/bring-me-the-axe-podcast/
In this episode hosts, Mike and Shauna are joined by our special guest, Jesse Pirkle, Soul Care Pastor at SouthernHills Church to continue our mini-series, Counseling Through Bible Narratives Old Testament. Jesse Discusses how he uses his growth assignment of Jeremiah 2:11-13 to expose functional idolatry with counselees, both in-session, and out-of-session.Episode Resource:Counseling Through Bible Narratives - ABC RES
victory in Him
Growing in Jesus is a mystery - God provides some important insights
Growing in Jesus is a mystery - God provides some insights
Growing in Jesus is a mystery - God provides some insights
Growing in Jesus is a mystery - God provides some insights
importance of two baptisms
importance of repentance from sin
Importance of two baptisms
victory is in Him
importance of repentence
Jesus brought good news
Jesus brought good news
Kingdom of God - part 1
Kingdom of God (part 2)
Kigdom of God - part 3
Kingdom of God - part 4
Kingdom of God - part 5
Jesus is greater and more loving than we perceive
The major ways satan attacks
The Christian life changes substantially when all is given over to Jesus
The Christian life changes substantially when all is given to the Lord
Jesus provided direct access to the Father
Knowing the Father and the Son is eternal life (John 17:3)
Victory in Battle (part 1) -- Jim Pirkle - Dec 2024 by Equipping The Saints
How we abide and Jesus and He simultaneously abides in us
The life of a Christian is reflected in Gideon's story
Jesus is higher than we perceive
Exalting Jesus as our first priority
He makes all things new in our lives
seeking the Lord's plans as the best way forward
Jesus graciously changes us -- we need to welcome His changes.
Pushing forward to God's best in Jesus
satan is committed to replacing the substance of Jesus with other things
He makes all things new in our lives
Jesus rescues us
Jesus was a servant and we are called to be servants
Jesus brought a new covenant based on Him
Jesus split the veil -- Jim Pirkle June 2025 by Equipping The Saints
Sara Pirkle is a Southern poet, an identical twin, a breast cancer survivor, and a board game enthusiast. Her first full-length collection of poetry, The Disappearing Act, won the Adrienne Bond Award for Poetry and was published by Mercer University Press in 2018. In 2019, she was nominated for Georgia Author of the Year in Poetry, and in 2022 she was shortlisted for the Oxford Poetry Prize. She also dabbles in songwriting and co-wrote a song on Remy Le Boeuf's album, Architecture of Storms, which was nominated for a 2023 GRAMMY in the Best Large Jazz Ensemble Album category. Pirkle's poems have been nominated for the Pushcart Prize five times, the Best of the Net Anthology twice, and the Independent Best American Poetry Award. She earned a PhD in English from Georgia State University and an MFA in Creative Writing from Georgia College & State University. She is an Associate Director of Creative Writing at The University of Alabama.Anya Krugovoy Silver was born in Media, Pennsylvania in December of 1968, and she grew up in Swarthmore. The child of immigrants, her first two languages were German and Russian. She graduated from Haverford College, and she earned a PhD in literature from Emory University in Atlanta. In 1998, Silver and her husband began teaching at Mercer University in Macon, Georgia. While pregnant with their son in 2004, she was diagnosed with and treated for inflammatory breast cancer. After five years of remission, her cancer returned as bone metastasis in 2010. She published four books of poetry and one book of criticism in her lifetime. She won the Georgia Author of the Year Award in 2015, and she was awarded a Guggenheim Fellow for Poetry in 2018, the same year in which she died. At the time of her death, she was in the process of editing her fifth book, Saint Agnostica, which was published in 2021 by Louisiana State University Press. The following poems were recorded with permission from Louisiana State University Press: Silver, Anya Krugovoy. “Blush” and “The Poem in My Childhood.” The Ninety-Third Name of God: Poems, Louisiana State University Press, 2010Silver, Anya Krugovoy. “There's a River.” I Watched You Disappear: Poems, Louisiana State University Press, 2014Silver, Anya Krugovoy. “From Nothing.” From Nothing: Poems, Louisiana State University Press, 2016Silver, Anya Krugovoy. “Being Ill.” Saint Agnostica: Poems, Louisiana State University Press, 2021Links: Sara PirkleSara Pirkle's website"Weighing the Options" in Delta Poetry Review"Not Prometheus" in Eclectica"Pretend You Don't Owe Me a Thing" in Rattle"Evolution of the Writing Process: A Conversation with Dr. Sara Pirkle Hughes"--University of AlabamaAnya Krugovoy SilverBio and poems at The Poetry Foundation"Anya Krugovoy Silver, 1968-1018" in New Georgia Encyclopedia
Sara Pirkle is a Southern poet, an identical twin, a breast cancer survivor, and a board game enthusiast. Her first full-length collection of poetry, The Disappearing Act, won the Adrienne Bond Award for Poetry and was published by Mercer University Press in 2018. In 2019, she was nominated for Georgia Author of the Year in Poetry, and in 2022 she was shortlisted for the Oxford Poetry Prize. She also dabbles in songwriting and co-wrote a song on Remy Le Boeuf's album, Architecture of Storms, which was nominated for a 2023 GRAMMY in the Best Large Jazz Ensemble Album category. Pirkle's poems have been nominated for the Pushcart Prize five times, the Best of the Net Anthology twice, and the Independent Best American Poetry Award. She earned a PhD in English from Georgia State University and an MFA in Creative Writing from Georgia College & State University. She is an Associate Director of Creative Writing at The University of Alabama.Anya Krugovoy Silver was born in Media, Pennsylvania in December of 1968, and she grew up in Swarthmore. The child of immigrants, her first two languages were German and Russian. She graduated from Haverford College, and she earned a PhD in literature from Emory University in Atlanta. In 1998, Silver and her husband began teaching at Mercer University in Macon, Georgia. While pregnant with their son in 2004, she was diagnosed with and treated for inflammatory breast cancer. After five years of remission, her cancer returned as bone metastasis in 2010. She published four books of poetry and one book of criticism in her lifetime. She won the Georgia Author of the Year Award in 2015, and she was awarded a Guggenheim Fellow for Poetry in 2018, the same year in which she died. At the time of her death, she was in the process of editing her fifth book, Saint Agnostica, which was published in 2021 by Louisiana State University Press. The following poems were recorded with permission from Louisiana State University Press: Silver, Anya Krugovoy. “Blush” and “The Poem in My Childhood.” The Ninety-Third Name of God: Poems, Louisiana State University Press, 2010Silver, Anya Krugovoy. “There's a River.” I Watched You Disappear: Poems, Louisiana State University Press, 2014Silver, Anya Krugovoy. “From Nothing.” From Nothing: Poems, Louisiana State University Press, 2016Silver, Anya Krugovoy. “Being Ill.” Saint Agnostica: Poems, Louisiana State University Press, 2021Links: Sara PirkleSara Pirkle's website"Weighing the Options" in Delta Poetry Review"Not Prometheus" in Eclectica"Pretend You Don't Owe Me a Thing" in Rattle"Evolution of the Writing Process: A Conversation with Dr. Sara Pirkle Hughes"--University of AlabamaAnya Krugovoy SilverBio and poems at The Poetry Foundation"Anya Krugovoy Silver, 1968-1018" in New Georgia Encyclopedia
10 Major Deceptions of Satan - Jim Pirkle April 2, 2025 by Equipping The Saints
10 Major Deceptions of Satan -- Jim Pirkle April 2025 by Equipping The Saints
Weekly Message from Maranatha Church of Jacksonville. Find out more at maranathajax.com
The Priceless Privilege of Knowing Jesus -- Jim Pirkle MD PhD March 2025 by Equipping The Saints
Weekly Message from Maranatha Church of Jacksonville. Find out more at maranathajax.com
Weekly Message from Maranatha Church of Jacksonville. Find out more at maranathajax.com
Weekly Message from Maranatha Church of Jacksonville. Find out more at maranathajax.com
Weekly Message from Maranatha Church of Jacksonville. Find out more at maranathajax.com