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Psalm 63 starts with a sentence that refuses to stay theoretical: “My soul thirsts for you.” That’s the doorway into a conversation about what we reach for when life feels dry, pressured, or hollow and how quickly our hearts make replacements when worship gets crowded out. We pray, we read, and we ask the uncomfortable question Luke 4 forces on all of us: when temptation offers comfort, status, or control, do we answer with God’s Word or with a deal that slowly reshapes our loyalty?
From Jesus in the wilderness to Jesus rejected in Nazareth, we trace how truth can provoke resistance even among familiar faces. Along the way, we talk about modern idolatry that doesn’t always look “religious” at all: sports, entertainment, fitness, academics, work, and anything we put on a pedestal. We return to Psalm 63 and Proverbs to anchor the episode in integrity, perseverance, and the conviction that crooked hearts and constant lying don’t get the final word.
The back half turns to history and civic life, including a 1946 Dallas public school Bible course outline that required New Testament reading and Scripture memory verses. I make the case that publicly funded education always points somewhere and that a Christian nation should not pretend it can be spiritually neutral, while still respecting individual religious liberty in the home. If you care about Christian discipleship, Bible teaching, public education, and the battle for a nation’s moral center, you’ll find plenty to wrestle with here. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find the show.
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
Psalm 63 starts with a sentence that refuses to stay theoretical: “My soul thirsts for you.” That’s the doorway into a conversation about what we reach for when life feels dry, pressured, or hollow and how quickly our hearts make replacements when worship gets crowded out. We pray, we read, and we ask the uncomfortable question Luke 4 forces on all of us: when temptation offers comfort, status, or control, do we answer with God’s Word or with a deal that slowly reshapes our loyalty?
From Jesus in the wilderness to Jesus rejected in Nazareth, we trace how truth can provoke resistance even among familiar faces. Along the way, we talk about modern idolatry that doesn’t always look “religious” at all: sports, entertainment, fitness, academics, work, and anything we put on a pedestal. We return to Psalm 63 and Proverbs to anchor the episode in integrity, perseverance, and the conviction that crooked hearts and constant lying don’t get the final word.
The back half turns to history and civic life, including a 1946 Dallas public school Bible course outline that required New Testament reading and Scripture memory verses. I make the case that publicly funded education always points somewhere and that a Christian nation should not pretend it can be spiritually neutral, while still respecting individual religious liberty in the home. If you care about Christian discipleship, Bible teaching, public education, and the battle for a nation’s moral center, you’ll find plenty to wrestle with here. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find the show.
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