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Fear has a way of shrinking your world down to whatever headline is loudest and whatever person seems most powerful. We push back on that impulse by reading Psalm 118 out loud and letting it set the order of operations: God first, refuge first, obedience first. “The Lord is for me, so I will have no fear” isn’t sentimental, it’s a claim about where courage actually comes from when life gets ugly and trust in people starts to wobble.
From there, we move through John 12 as Jesus approaches Passover, Mary anoints His feet, and the crowds celebrate a King who rides in on a donkey. It’s a vivid reminder that real worship can look wasteful to cynical eyes, that betrayal often hides behind moral talk, and that God’s plan keeps moving even when leaders try to clamp down on it. We also read Proverbs on marriage and speak plainly about responsibility, satisfaction, and faithfulness inside the covenant, plus Proverbs 15 on wisdom, humility, and the kind of words God delights in.
We then honor Medal of Honor recipient John Edward Butts and reflect on leadership under fire, before shifting into America’s Christian heritage with a look at the stated Christian purposes behind Yale and Princeton. Whether you’re here for Bible reading, Christian marriage guidance, faith and culture, or Christian education history, the thread stays consistent: no policy can replace repentance, and no institution can fix what only God can heal.
Subscribe for more, share this with someone who needs steadier footing, and leave a review so more listeners can find the show. What part of Psalm 118 do you need to remember most right now?
#AmericanHeritage
#ChristianNation
#AmericanEducation
Support the show
The American Soul Podcast
https://www.buzzsprout.com/1791934/subscribe
Countryside Book Series
https://www.amazon.com/Countryside-Book-J-T-Cope-IV-ebook/dp/B00MPIXOB2
By Jesse4
1313 ratings
Drop us a note about the podcast.
Fear has a way of shrinking your world down to whatever headline is loudest and whatever person seems most powerful. We push back on that impulse by reading Psalm 118 out loud and letting it set the order of operations: God first, refuge first, obedience first. “The Lord is for me, so I will have no fear” isn’t sentimental, it’s a claim about where courage actually comes from when life gets ugly and trust in people starts to wobble.
From there, we move through John 12 as Jesus approaches Passover, Mary anoints His feet, and the crowds celebrate a King who rides in on a donkey. It’s a vivid reminder that real worship can look wasteful to cynical eyes, that betrayal often hides behind moral talk, and that God’s plan keeps moving even when leaders try to clamp down on it. We also read Proverbs on marriage and speak plainly about responsibility, satisfaction, and faithfulness inside the covenant, plus Proverbs 15 on wisdom, humility, and the kind of words God delights in.
We then honor Medal of Honor recipient John Edward Butts and reflect on leadership under fire, before shifting into America’s Christian heritage with a look at the stated Christian purposes behind Yale and Princeton. Whether you’re here for Bible reading, Christian marriage guidance, faith and culture, or Christian education history, the thread stays consistent: no policy can replace repentance, and no institution can fix what only God can heal.
Subscribe for more, share this with someone who needs steadier footing, and leave a review so more listeners can find the show. What part of Psalm 118 do you need to remember most right now?
#AmericanHeritage
#ChristianNation
#AmericanEducation
Support the show
The American Soul Podcast
https://www.buzzsprout.com/1791934/subscribe
Countryside Book Series
https://www.amazon.com/Countryside-Book-J-T-Cope-IV-ebook/dp/B00MPIXOB2