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“What Does the Kingdom Look Like on a Tuesday?”
In this episode of Echo, Adrienne and Pastor Dan move from theology to everyday life as they continue exploring the gospel of the Kingdom. After weeks of clarifying what Jesus actually preached and lingering on the beauty of Christ Himself, the conversation turns practical: What does it mean to live under the reign of Jesus in ordinary places like work, family, and relationships?
Drawing from Luke 4 and the Sermon on the Mount, they reflect on how the Kingdom is not a religious program or checklist, but a way of seeing and responding to real life. Rather than adding new pressure, Kingdom life begins with a simple posture of attention—learning to ask, “Jesus, what would Your reign look like here today?”
This episode is an invitation to reimagine the everyday as sacred space where God is already at work. No formulas, no quick fixes—just a gentle, hopeful conversation about noticing the nearness of the Kingdom.
Different rooms. Different conversations. The same center—Jesus as King.
By Dan Sinkhorn4.8
44 ratings
“What Does the Kingdom Look Like on a Tuesday?”
In this episode of Echo, Adrienne and Pastor Dan move from theology to everyday life as they continue exploring the gospel of the Kingdom. After weeks of clarifying what Jesus actually preached and lingering on the beauty of Christ Himself, the conversation turns practical: What does it mean to live under the reign of Jesus in ordinary places like work, family, and relationships?
Drawing from Luke 4 and the Sermon on the Mount, they reflect on how the Kingdom is not a religious program or checklist, but a way of seeing and responding to real life. Rather than adding new pressure, Kingdom life begins with a simple posture of attention—learning to ask, “Jesus, what would Your reign look like here today?”
This episode is an invitation to reimagine the everyday as sacred space where God is already at work. No formulas, no quick fixes—just a gentle, hopeful conversation about noticing the nearness of the Kingdom.
Different rooms. Different conversations. The same center—Jesus as King.