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Ghost and Ashe in America return to The Chosen Season 3, Episode 5 for a heavy, emotional ride through Clean Part 2. This week, they unpack the parallel arcs of Jairus racing to save his dying daughter, Veronica's twelve years of suffering and the moment she reaches for the hem of the garment, and Eden's quiet crisis of faith after a devastating miscarriage. It's all one big conversation about what Jesus actually honors: not polish, not permission, not ritual cleanliness, but certainty. Faith without resistance.
Along the way, the hosts take a few very Ghost and Ashe detours. The origins of Kabbalistic mysticism and why Jesus told everyone to keep their mouths shut about raising the dead. Why Mike Huckabee is, diplomatically speaking, a slimy politician. How the Western church outsourced charity to the federal government and lost the plot. And a surprisingly moving tour through De Tocqueville, Thomas Paine, and why Americans used to say "I'm a Virginian" instead of "I'm an American."
It's biblical, it's political, it's occasionally ironic, and it lands exactly where it should. Your faith is the point. Everything else is commentary.
By Badlands Media4.7
120120 ratings
Ghost and Ashe in America return to The Chosen Season 3, Episode 5 for a heavy, emotional ride through Clean Part 2. This week, they unpack the parallel arcs of Jairus racing to save his dying daughter, Veronica's twelve years of suffering and the moment she reaches for the hem of the garment, and Eden's quiet crisis of faith after a devastating miscarriage. It's all one big conversation about what Jesus actually honors: not polish, not permission, not ritual cleanliness, but certainty. Faith without resistance.
Along the way, the hosts take a few very Ghost and Ashe detours. The origins of Kabbalistic mysticism and why Jesus told everyone to keep their mouths shut about raising the dead. Why Mike Huckabee is, diplomatically speaking, a slimy politician. How the Western church outsourced charity to the federal government and lost the plot. And a surprisingly moving tour through De Tocqueville, Thomas Paine, and why Americans used to say "I'm a Virginian" instead of "I'm an American."
It's biblical, it's political, it's occasionally ironic, and it lands exactly where it should. Your faith is the point. Everything else is commentary.

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