[RadCast] The Goodness of God (a multi-house party):::


The Psalms are song lyrics. The opening chorus for this one reminds us of God’s goodness and faithfulness in taking care of us. God’s good moves are motivated by love. Join the celebration (Psalm 118:1-4)! 

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[RadCast] It's Not Too Good to be True :::

A Samaritan woman with a reputation ends up everybody around her about Jesus, saying “he knows everything I ever did,” yet she still feels accepted, valued, loved. People believed & were changed — all because of a conversation at a well (John 4:27-30, 39-41).

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Mourning

I can’t begin to tell you how badly I wanted to wake my kids up, fill them with bacon and eggs, and push them out the door to school this morning. No, not because they’re driving me bonkers, but because I want everything to be like it was last week.


This is mourning. This is what it’s like to accept that something is gone.

“It’s not gone – it’s just a few weeks or maybe months, right?”

No, it’s gone. It won’t be the same. Just like after 9/11. Instead of a Tuesday morning of terror in NYC, it’s a slow crawl of terror across the entire globe. It’s like watching the towers slowly collapse, one floor at a time, leaving us to ponder the loss of a floor just as another floor falls.

Of course things won’t be the same. They can’t be. And that’s about all we know for now.

Another floor slowly collapsed just now — the USA/Canada border just shut down. Slowly, slowly, the towers fall. Pieces of paper and clouds of dust crawl between existing buildings.

Those moments when we watched it on TV in 2001… it took us a few minutes to grasp what’s going on. Scaled for today, those minutes are days…

So much has changed but one remains the same: the Lordship of Jesus Christ. He’s our constant right now. We change, things change, He doesn’t.

He’s not gone. He is here. And He loves us through all this. Find it; it’s there. He’s here.

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[RadCast] Jesus Isn’t Causing This :::

Jesus and a Samaritan woman have a clarifying conversation for our ears today — He simply says “It’s me” as she slowly realizes… (John 4:19-20, 25-26) http://www.radamdavidson.com

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[RadCast] Busted Down a Peg :::

Nicodemus thinks he’s got it figured out. Jesus shows him otherwise. A perfect conversation for Lent (John 3:9-12).

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[RadCast] Respect is Not Enough :::


Nicodemus had respect for his role on the High Council and for Jesus, this trouble making yet powerful Rabbi. Nic found a safe way to keep both parties happy. What does this teach us about following Jesus in light of our relationships, identities, connections, and roles? Something to ponder — Lentishly — on this fine Monday Morning (John 3:1-3).

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[RadCast] Sin (us) and Grace (God) :::


Lent is a time of reflection, repentance, and renewal. Unconfessed sin is a heavy weight that slows us down. God does not exist to make us feel bad — rather, He wants to set us free from the guilt of our sin. We want to do right, we don’t… but there is One who sets us free (Psalm 32) www.radamdavidson.com

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[RadCast] The Fasting God Ignored :::

God cares about our motives. The people fasted, checking the box for religious duty, yet they mistreated people and abused power. As we journey toward Lent, we reflect on our own motives in following him. It is painful… as all growth tends to be (Isaiah 58:3-4).
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Consumerism and Church

Consumer culture is a profound problem for contemporary religious belief and practice. Beyond the excesses of consumerism lie cultural dynamics that incline people to engage religious belief as if they were consumer commodities.

– Vincent Miller, Consuming Religion: Christian Faith and Practice in a Consumer Culture (link)

Miller’s is a profound book with predictable content and conclusions. I don’t say that because it’s simplistic or banal, but because it outlines what most of us in ministry already know, namely that commodified church threatens to derail the journey of a disciple.

The author goes on:

When consumption becomes the dominant cultural practice, belief is systematically misdirected from traditional religious practices into consumption. (…) When members of consumer cultures sincerely embrace religious traditions, they encounter them in a fragmented, commodified form. Beliefs, symbols, and even practices come abscracted form their connections to one another. (…) Thus, religious belief is always in danger of being reduced to a decorative veneer of meaning over the vacuousness of everyday life in advanced capitalist societies.

I read this and feel immediately compelled to repent of anything I’ve ever done in ministry to promote, whether by accident or to build something, a consumer culture. I also realize the work ahead of us in a post-Christian nation that may finally have the revival that we’re all praying for — as long as it’s not a decorative veneer, right? Revival for any other reason than personal holiness is nothing more than a new experience for bored consumers like you and me. If we could buy Christlikeness… would we?

Thinking and praying about this. What are your thoughts?

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[RadCast] Bread of Life & Moldy Whoppers :::


Jesus said “I am the bread of life. Whoever comes to me will never go hungry…” (John 6:35). Our spiritual diets leave us empty and void. He knows that & invites our souls to be nourished. http://www.radamdavidson.com

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