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A small disagreement can upend an entire community when gossip spreads and pride takes the wheel. We dive into Philippians 4 to trace how a private rift between two respected leaders began to fracture an otherwise faithful church—and how Paul guides them, and us, back to peace. Instead of picking sides or shaming from a distance, Paul models gracious confrontation: he names the issue without spectacle, appeals to both women equally, and calls them to meet on their shared ground “in the Lord.” He even honors their gospel work, reminding everyone that these are not enemies to defeat but sisters to restore.
From there, we pull out practical principles for real-world peacemaking. Disagreements are inevitable; division is optional. You’ll hear why mature believers still clash, how conflicts between a few can harm many, and why the church should raise up peacemakers who step in to cool tempers and untangle issues rather than become spectators or partisans. We talk about the dangers of letting preferences eclipse doctrine, the cost to a church’s witness when fights go public, and the courage it takes to invite a wise third party to help two sides hear each other.
Perspective changes everything. Paul anchors his counsel in eternity—“whose names are in the book of life”—to pull our eyes above the fray. When our future is drenched in grace, our present can be too. We end with a vivid, modern story of everyday grace on a city bus to prove that small acts of kindness can rebuild trust and create community anywhere. If grace can transform a daily commute, it can heal a church family. Listen, reflect, and share your next peacemaking step with us.
If this conversation helped you, follow the show, leave a review, and share this episode with a friend who could use a nudge toward reconciliation.
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By Stephen Davey4.8
245245 ratings
Share a comment
A small disagreement can upend an entire community when gossip spreads and pride takes the wheel. We dive into Philippians 4 to trace how a private rift between two respected leaders began to fracture an otherwise faithful church—and how Paul guides them, and us, back to peace. Instead of picking sides or shaming from a distance, Paul models gracious confrontation: he names the issue without spectacle, appeals to both women equally, and calls them to meet on their shared ground “in the Lord.” He even honors their gospel work, reminding everyone that these are not enemies to defeat but sisters to restore.
From there, we pull out practical principles for real-world peacemaking. Disagreements are inevitable; division is optional. You’ll hear why mature believers still clash, how conflicts between a few can harm many, and why the church should raise up peacemakers who step in to cool tempers and untangle issues rather than become spectators or partisans. We talk about the dangers of letting preferences eclipse doctrine, the cost to a church’s witness when fights go public, and the courage it takes to invite a wise third party to help two sides hear each other.
Perspective changes everything. Paul anchors his counsel in eternity—“whose names are in the book of life”—to pull our eyes above the fray. When our future is drenched in grace, our present can be too. We end with a vivid, modern story of everyday grace on a city bus to prove that small acts of kindness can rebuild trust and create community anywhere. If grace can transform a daily commute, it can heal a church family. Listen, reflect, and share your next peacemaking step with us.
If this conversation helped you, follow the show, leave a review, and share this episode with a friend who could use a nudge toward reconciliation.
Support the show

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