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We're celebrating 100 episodes of The Church Planting Podcast by returning to the question that started it all: why church planting? Greg invites Paul Taylor, co-founder of Rivers Crossing Church in Cincinnati, to discuss their shared passion for church multiplication. They dive into Paul's journey from skepticism to deep faith and his subsequent dedication to church planting. The episode also highlights collaborative efforts like the Extraordinary Church Collective and strategic initiatives for global church growth. They discuss technological advances in church planting, including digital churches, and strategies for reducing overhead to maximize ministry impact. To connect with Stadia and learn more about how you can help start thriving, growing, multiplying churches for the next generation, visit Stadia Church Planting. Connect with Paul https://extraordinarychurchcollective.com/ https://riverscrossing.com/ Connect with Greg and Stadia https://stadia.org Episode Time and Topic Index [00:00:00] Introduction to the 100th episode and guest Paul Taylor [00:00:47] Paul Taylor's background and passion for church planting [00:02:00] Discussion on why church planting is effective for spreading the gospel [00:04:21] Paul's personal journey to becoming a church planter [00:07:00] The story of Rivers Crossing and its foundational principles [00:12:24] Evolution of church planting strategies and systems over the years [00:14:29] The impact of church planting on local and global scales [00:17:21] Future of digital church planting and resource allocation [00:21:04] Challenges facing church multiplication today [00:25:00] Fun segment on personal interests and readings [00:27:32] Closing remarks and reflections on the 100th episode
February 2021 is both Black History Month and the month during which Jews celebrate the holiday of Purim. So it's a month during which both the Black and Jewish communities in America will reflect on a past marked both by deep pain and injustice, and courage in the face of oppression. What can we teach each other about this process? And what can we, together, teach America? This week, Rabbi Lamm speaks with Van Lathan of The Ringer and the Higher Learning podcast about all of this and more in a fun, fascinating, raw and powerful conversation. Topic Index: 3:11 - What divides and unites the Jewish and Black communities in America? 11:36 - Bringing authentic culture out into the mainstream. 14:33 - No other cultural tradition is as born and made in America as Black American culture. 19:00 - What can Jewish culture do for America? 23:17 - If you want the wildest, blockbuster stories you've ever heard. Read the Bible. 26:26 - Is it even possible to tell the American story as a whole in a way that both faces up to our sins and evils and also brings us together around a common American purpose and destiny? Van thinks so, but it's hard! 36:13 - Van explains why idol worship is a major problem in American society, and how we need to find a way to fight it. 43:40 - One of the most radical innovations in the Bible is: heroes are and always will be imperfect! 49:01 - ›Is there any way for us to bring a sense of objective virtue into our most powerful public institutions in America, whether the market, the state, or pop culture? Van argues that it's possible, but we need to redefine everything our culture assumes about right and wrong.
Tucker and Dale vs Evil (Craig 2010) With special guest Caitlin Durante of The Bechdel Cast! SPOILERS IN THIS EPISODE Life of the Party (Falcone 2018) TOPIC INDEX – Tucker and Dale vs Evil (times are approximate) TOPIC INDEX (times are approximate) 0:00 – Introductions and our guest 4:11 – Movie discussion begins 5:54 – … Continue reading "Tucker and Dale vs Evil (2010)" The post Tucker and Dale vs Evil (2010) appeared first on Collective Nightmares.
Pet Sematary (Kolsch and Widmyer 2019) SPOILERS IN THIS EPISODE SPOILERS IN THIS EPISODE! Pet Sematary Hereditary (Aster 2018) TOPIC INDEX – Pet Sematary (times are approximate) TOPIC INDEX (times are approximate) 0:00 – Introducing the film 2:40 – Spoilers 3:34 – Discussion begins 6:08 – Compared to Pet Sematary (1989 Lambert) 9:46 – Lambert’s … Continue reading "Pet Sematary (2019)" The post Pet Sematary (2019) appeared first on Collective Nightmares.
Greta (Jordan 2019) SPOILERS IN THIS EPISODE SPOILERS IN THIS EPISODE! Greta Kick-Ass (Vaughn 2010) TOPIC INDEX – Greta (times are approximate) TOPIC INDEX (times are approximate) 0:00 – Introducing the film 3:04 – Spoilers this episode 3:44 – Movie discussion begins with a hot take from Laura 5:15 – Different scales of bad for … Continue reading "Greta (2019)" The post Greta (2019) appeared first on Collective Nightmares.
The Human Centipede 2 Full Sequence (Six 2011) SPOILERS IN THIS EPISODE FOR The Human Centipede First Sequence (Six 2009) Mentioned Without Spoilers I Spit On Your Grave (Zarchi 1978) I Spit On Your Grave (Monroe 2010) I Don’t Feel at Home In This World Anymore (Blair 2017) Peeping Tom (Powell 1960) TOPIC INDEX – … Continue reading "The Human Centipede 2 Full Sequence (2011)" The post The Human Centipede 2 Full Sequence (2011) appeared first on Collective Nightmares.
All of your co-hosts are recording away from home for this very special episode 50 look back! Hannah prepped several things which she left at home. There is some WTB trivia tossed about! Everybody gets sort of sappy about what doing this show has meant to them! Each co-host talks about their favorite obsessions that other co-hosts have brought to the show and gives an "update" on how it's impacted their life. HOMEWORK: - CALL US!! Next week is all about you so we want to hear from you! Leave us a voicemail at our new phone number: 774-326-0420 (Blaze it) - If you don't want to hear your voice on the show, you can also email us or tweet at us- check the website for our contact info - For more information about EVERY obsession we mentioned this week, check out our Topic Index at WayTooBroad.com!! - Follow @ErnBrn, @NEDiscoGreg, @Hanthropology, and @TooBroadPod on Twitter - Follow LesbianMovieReviews and WayTooBroad on IG - Listen to So Dreamy - Email us at waytoobroad@gmail.com - Please leave us a rating/review/subscribe on iTunes or Podknife!
This episode features a superb conversation with my good friend Shae Crowell. She's a teacher, a singer + choral leader, a union thug, and many other things. She's got great things to say about how education works, why class size matters, what history is, and why music is important. Enjoy! Topic Index: 2:00 - Life as a student 8:30 - Student teaching + early jobs 27:00 - Teaching philosophy 52:00 - African-American History 64:30 - Economics 70:00 - Unions 80:30 - Parenting + education 85:30 - Nashville in Harmony
Rob Newman speaks with NGIS New South Wales business manager Jeeten Chauhan and NGIS Marketing Manager Adam Mullett about the world of imagery and how it is becoming more accessible to industry. Topic Index: 0:40 What is the history and origin of Nearmap? 1:15 Aerial imagery has become more democratised and easier to integrate - What are other people and industries doing with that imagery? 3:20 As the imagery industry has matured there’s been a lot of other competitors that have entered the market, not just from aerial imagery, but also from satellite and drone imagery. People perhaps don’t care about how the imagery is taken - How does Nearmap respond to those new entrants? 4:30 Is satellite imagery improving enough that it can compete or is Nearmap doing something special to keep ahead? 5:25 Does Nearmap have any long term plans to go into space? 6:30 What benefits are our clients seeing when they integrate the rich data that Nearmap provides with their sales or business data? 8:50 How is aerial imagery is more than just a picture? 9:40 What is it about 3D that makes people get excited and tells an engaging story? 11:45 What do you see is the next industry where you are going to have a really big impact? 13:05 (Jeeten) Are there any things Nearmap might not have thought of? 15:00 Ten years from now using AI and machine learning, where do you expect imagery to be used and what are the sorts of things we’ll be able to get out of it?
Maps are a powerful storytelling tool and when they are well designed, help us make decisions based on data. Listen to Paul Farrell and Richard Bentley talk maps on the podcast, like they have been for the last 25 years. Topic Index: 0:35 What is a map? 3:10 Why should we use a map? 5:45 We probably don’t always need a map - When should we not use a map? 7:45 Why do I need to spend money developing a map? Why is Excel not enough - when do I need a map? 8:55 What is location data? 9.25 Where do I get location data? 10:20 What about CRM? Is the addresses data of my customers or value of sales data an example of location data? 11:30 What are some good examples of maps you’ve seen recently? 14:00 What are the characteristics of a good map?
A profitable government department. Landgate has spent the last 10 years fostering innovation through a structured program. Innovation program founder and now Landgate CEO Jodi Cant joined NGIS to discuss how a government agency can spin off companies and provide an environment where start ups can take advantage of public assets. Topic Index: 0:35 What do you see is Landgate’s role as being a provider of spatial services and data for Western Australians going forwards? 1:35 How does Landgate as the land information authority benchmark against other similar departments around Australia? 2:20 How do you deal with the tension between providing income for Landgate and providing community based typographic information? 3:45 You were one of the trailblazers in WA government - How did you get from being a government employee to starting this innovation hub? 5:10 Do you think it was a coincidence that the first innovation program in Australia was in spatial technology? 5:45 10 years on - what do you think you’ve achieved in the Innovation Hub? 7:25 If someone came to you and said they’d like to replicate what you’ve achieved - what would you tell them to do? What are the first steps? 8:50 How do you [Jodie] think Landgate is different to other government departments in their behaviour? 11:45 Why does data replication occur across departments/ why is it allowed to occur? 1:05 What environment do you need to build for people inside your organisation to be successful or add that innovation? 14:50 How do people get in contact with SPUR? 16:25 SPUR’s had a few really good success stories that we’ve seen in the market. Are there any other departments that you’d like to see, in different industries or states, that you would like to see start up an innovation program? 17:45 Final thoughts about innovation, government or spatial?
Charlie Gunningham has been innovating in the Australian marketplace for more than 25 years and now helps others gain funding from the federal government. Join Charlie and NGIS' Richard Bentley and Adam Mullett to find out why spatial is a key technology for start ups. Topic Index: 00:40 Charlie Gunningham, your title is Commercialisation Advisor at Accelerated Commercialisation - what does that title mean? 1:28 What is innovation? 2:56 Is there something innovative about ideas that aren’t new to the world, just new to me? 4:28 How do you help people innovate using a map? 5:55 Many startups that are coming out of Australia have a spatial component coming out of them. Why is spatial becoming so big? 8:20 How is the mining industry helping the startup industry? 10:10 Who’s responsibility should it be to create the environment for innovation - big companies, government or startups? 12:15 40% of jobs are going to be disrupted in the next 10 years - what’s going to happen? 13:50 Digital disruption is a cliche- what’s the most influential technological change that you’ve (Charlie) seen come through industry? 16:40 If you’re in an existing company and you have an idea- how do you take it from an idea to being a product or a business model? How do I commercialise that as an intrapreneur or as a company? 19:15 [Richard] You’ve been in sales a long time - what do people buy? 22:55 Have you seen any startups out of Australia that you think are really promising that we should check out?
Location Intelligence is giving data scientists, developers and business users new tools to make decisions based on data. Everything happens somewhere and CARTO CEO Javier de la Torre sat down with NGIS to discuss where they are up to and where they are going in the near future. Topic Index: 1:00 What is CARTO and where does it come from? 3:55 Is there a difference between CARTO and the traditional GIS stack? 6:05 CARTO uses the phrase LI often and that plays off business intelligence - Where do you see it moving from in a corporate/ business sense and the users there in understanding how they can use mapping and GIS? 8:40 LI is bigger than ever - What will happen to the GIS teams in client organisations, NGIS and the industry? 11:40 CARTO plays well with other technology stacks - Where does that play into your [Javier] strategy and why does that make CARTO relevant? 14:15 Are you able to reveal to us today anything in the roadmap for CARTO? 16:30 Asia has a diverse range of markets from developing to highly developed markets - Where do you see the business opportunities here to apply what CARTO has built? 18:30 Are we now entering the golden age of visualisation and analytics? 20:40 What are some of the most interesting, unexpected use cases that you’ve seen for CARTO around the world?
NGIS Executive Director Richard Bentley discusses the role of location and mapping technology when he first started in the industry in the 1980s and the progress made in the time since. Topic Index: 0:50 How long have you [Richard] been in the industry? 1:40 How has your [Richard] experience affected how you view mapping technologies today? 3:00 Where has location information come to over the last few decades in business? 4:30 Do companies struggle with big amounts of data and getting information out of it to make decisions? 5:50 Humans are visual animals - Why are maps the best way to get answers out of your data? 6:50 What are some of the most important mapping technologies for businesses right now? 8:25 What are some of the applications where HD real time video and pictorial data could be useful? 9:20 Realistically, what are some of the location opportunities that are now new that will become business as usual in the future? 11:45 How soon before workplaces can reach the same level of personal and customised information that is currently available within consumer applications (ie. FitBit integrating with doctors)?