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đ Episode Description:
Lament isnât the opposite of faith, itâs faith drawn close. In this episode of the Christ Focused Network Podcast, Sam Johnston walks through one of the most underutilized forms of worship in the modern Church: biblical lament.
Too often, believers feel the pressure that "grief is not part of the proper Christian life" or that they should smile through their pain. But Scripture models something far more honest and healing. David, Jeremiah, Job, and even Jesus didnât rush through their grief, they prayed it. This episode invites listeners to slow-walk through lament's four biblical movements, address, complaint, request, and trust, and rediscover how grief expressed with God becomes a form of sacred worship.
Weâll cover:
* Address â Why biblical lament starts with calling on God by name, even when He feels absent. This first move is faith, naming who you're talking to when your heart is breaking (Psalm 42:1â2).
* Complaint â How lament permits you to say what's wrong. Weâll explore why expressing sorrow isnât dishonoring but deeply biblical, and why sanitized prayers can stunt our spiritual life (Psalm 42:3â10).
* Request â A faithful lament doesnât just vent, it asks. This section covers how to make specific petitions even when youâre unsure if God will act immediately (Psalm 43:1â3).
* Trust â Every lament is heading somewhere. It ends in surrendered confidence. âHope in God; for I shall again praise Himâ isnât a platitude, itâs the kind of worship only sorrow can produce (Psalm 43:5).
Expect a practical, Scripture-rich invitation to write your own lament. You'll receive a guided framework for crafting a Psalm 42-style prayer and a breakdown of why so many Christians are burned out,
not because they feel too much, but because they never let those feelings breathe before God.
Link To Full Edition - CLICK HERE
Next Week - Sneak Peek
âThe Vocational Calling Myth: How Your Skill Serves the Kingdom.â
Somewhere along the way we inhaled a half-truth: âReal ministry happens on Sunday. Monday through Friday? Thatâs âjust work.ââ Scripture tells a different story. From Bezalelâs Spirit-filled craftsmanship in Exodus 31 to Paulâs tent-making and the sweeping command, âWhatever you do, work heartily, as for the Lordâ (Col 3:23-24), God insists the sacredâsecular divide is an illusion. Your spreadsheets, design mock-ups, lesson plans, and patient charts are all potential altars. Next issue, weâll dismantle the myth, trace a biblical theology of vocation, and offer tools to craft a personal purpose statement that resists burnout and turns daily skill into kingdom seed.
What Weâll Explore
* Created to Craft - Why the first person âfilled with the Spiritâ in Scripture was a blue-collar artisan (Ex 31:1-6).
* Assigned, Not Accidental - How Paulâs counsel âlet each person lead the life⊠assigned by Godâ (1 Cor 7:17) frees us from career envy.
* Work as Worship - Practical habits to consecrate e-mails and meetings, not just quiet times.
* Burnout Antidotes - Sabbath rhythms and identity anchors that keep calling from curdling into idolatry.
Pre-Reading to Prime the Conversation
* Colossians 3:23-24: Link
Sets the cornerstone, your true Supervisor sits on heavenâs throne.
* Exodus 31:1-6: Link
Bezalel & Oholiab: proof that Spirit-anointed skill isnât limited to pulpits.
* 1 Corinthians 7:17: Link
Paul roots vocation in divine assignment, not social prestige.
* Tim Keller, Every Good Endeavor (ch. 3 âWork as Cultivationâ): Link
Unpacks Genesis vocation and modern application.
* Dorothy Sayers, âWhy Work?â (essay): Link
A bracing call to view work as co-creation, not mere pay-cheque.
* Brother Lawrence, The Practice of the Presence of God (Letter 1): Link
Monastic wisdom for washing dishes to the glory of God.
* Jordan Raynor, Called to Create (intro): Link
Entrepreneurial perspective on faith-driven excellence.
* Podcast: âVocation and Calling: Isaiah 60; 65:21-25; Revelation 21:1-5, 22-27â â John Terrill, Former Director, Center for Integrity in Business, Seattle Pacific University (16 min): Link
Big-picture eschatology: Why what we build now echoes into eternity.
* Song: âBackwards Kingdomâ by
Sam McCabe
featuring
Andy Squyres
: Link
A musical meditation on upside-down kingdom values, perfect backdrop as you rethink âordinaryâ work.
Dip into one or two resources; bring a note on how they reframed your nine-to-five.
Thank you for entrusting me with your time, and perhaps today with your tears. The Father not only permits lament, He collects it. âFor the Lamb in the midst of the throne will be their shepherd... and God will wipe away every tear from their eyes.â (Revelation 7:17 (ESV)). May that promise give you courage to pray your grief until grief itself becomes worship.
Iâm glad youâre here.
Letâs run the race - Eyes Up, Chin Up!
Grace and peace,
Sam JohnstonFounder, Christ Focused[email protected]
Modern Epistles Book Link
Modern Epistles Audio Book Link
P.S. Forward this to a friend you think would love to dig in deeper on this topic. This post is public so feel free to share it.
By Christ Focused NetworkYoutube Link
đ Episode Description:
Lament isnât the opposite of faith, itâs faith drawn close. In this episode of the Christ Focused Network Podcast, Sam Johnston walks through one of the most underutilized forms of worship in the modern Church: biblical lament.
Too often, believers feel the pressure that "grief is not part of the proper Christian life" or that they should smile through their pain. But Scripture models something far more honest and healing. David, Jeremiah, Job, and even Jesus didnât rush through their grief, they prayed it. This episode invites listeners to slow-walk through lament's four biblical movements, address, complaint, request, and trust, and rediscover how grief expressed with God becomes a form of sacred worship.
Weâll cover:
* Address â Why biblical lament starts with calling on God by name, even when He feels absent. This first move is faith, naming who you're talking to when your heart is breaking (Psalm 42:1â2).
* Complaint â How lament permits you to say what's wrong. Weâll explore why expressing sorrow isnât dishonoring but deeply biblical, and why sanitized prayers can stunt our spiritual life (Psalm 42:3â10).
* Request â A faithful lament doesnât just vent, it asks. This section covers how to make specific petitions even when youâre unsure if God will act immediately (Psalm 43:1â3).
* Trust â Every lament is heading somewhere. It ends in surrendered confidence. âHope in God; for I shall again praise Himâ isnât a platitude, itâs the kind of worship only sorrow can produce (Psalm 43:5).
Expect a practical, Scripture-rich invitation to write your own lament. You'll receive a guided framework for crafting a Psalm 42-style prayer and a breakdown of why so many Christians are burned out,
not because they feel too much, but because they never let those feelings breathe before God.
Link To Full Edition - CLICK HERE
Next Week - Sneak Peek
âThe Vocational Calling Myth: How Your Skill Serves the Kingdom.â
Somewhere along the way we inhaled a half-truth: âReal ministry happens on Sunday. Monday through Friday? Thatâs âjust work.ââ Scripture tells a different story. From Bezalelâs Spirit-filled craftsmanship in Exodus 31 to Paulâs tent-making and the sweeping command, âWhatever you do, work heartily, as for the Lordâ (Col 3:23-24), God insists the sacredâsecular divide is an illusion. Your spreadsheets, design mock-ups, lesson plans, and patient charts are all potential altars. Next issue, weâll dismantle the myth, trace a biblical theology of vocation, and offer tools to craft a personal purpose statement that resists burnout and turns daily skill into kingdom seed.
What Weâll Explore
* Created to Craft - Why the first person âfilled with the Spiritâ in Scripture was a blue-collar artisan (Ex 31:1-6).
* Assigned, Not Accidental - How Paulâs counsel âlet each person lead the life⊠assigned by Godâ (1 Cor 7:17) frees us from career envy.
* Work as Worship - Practical habits to consecrate e-mails and meetings, not just quiet times.
* Burnout Antidotes - Sabbath rhythms and identity anchors that keep calling from curdling into idolatry.
Pre-Reading to Prime the Conversation
* Colossians 3:23-24: Link
Sets the cornerstone, your true Supervisor sits on heavenâs throne.
* Exodus 31:1-6: Link
Bezalel & Oholiab: proof that Spirit-anointed skill isnât limited to pulpits.
* 1 Corinthians 7:17: Link
Paul roots vocation in divine assignment, not social prestige.
* Tim Keller, Every Good Endeavor (ch. 3 âWork as Cultivationâ): Link
Unpacks Genesis vocation and modern application.
* Dorothy Sayers, âWhy Work?â (essay): Link
A bracing call to view work as co-creation, not mere pay-cheque.
* Brother Lawrence, The Practice of the Presence of God (Letter 1): Link
Monastic wisdom for washing dishes to the glory of God.
* Jordan Raynor, Called to Create (intro): Link
Entrepreneurial perspective on faith-driven excellence.
* Podcast: âVocation and Calling: Isaiah 60; 65:21-25; Revelation 21:1-5, 22-27â â John Terrill, Former Director, Center for Integrity in Business, Seattle Pacific University (16 min): Link
Big-picture eschatology: Why what we build now echoes into eternity.
* Song: âBackwards Kingdomâ by
Sam McCabe
featuring
Andy Squyres
: Link
A musical meditation on upside-down kingdom values, perfect backdrop as you rethink âordinaryâ work.
Dip into one or two resources; bring a note on how they reframed your nine-to-five.
Thank you for entrusting me with your time, and perhaps today with your tears. The Father not only permits lament, He collects it. âFor the Lamb in the midst of the throne will be their shepherd... and God will wipe away every tear from their eyes.â (Revelation 7:17 (ESV)). May that promise give you courage to pray your grief until grief itself becomes worship.
Iâm glad youâre here.
Letâs run the race - Eyes Up, Chin Up!
Grace and peace,
Sam JohnstonFounder, Christ Focused[email protected]
Modern Epistles Book Link
Modern Epistles Audio Book Link
P.S. Forward this to a friend you think would love to dig in deeper on this topic. This post is public so feel free to share it.