Crusade with Me

Plans, What We Know, and How We Act

1 h 6 min · 11. Juni 2026
Episode Plans, What We Know, and How We Act Cover

Beschreibung

We all think we know how life is supposed to work. We make plans. We form opinions. We create expectations about what God should do, how He should do it, and when He should do it. But what happens when God's plans are different from ours? In this episode of Crusade with Me! Dave and Kathy explore the gap between what we think we know and the reality God reveals through Scripture. Abram thought he understood his future. He had a plan, a timeline, and a logical conclusion about how his life would unfold. Yet God had something far greater in mind—something Abram could not see from where he stood. The Psalmist reminds us that real security is never found in our own strength, intelligence, resources, or carefully constructed plans. The Lord is not impressed by the strength of a horse or the might of an army. Our hope is found in Him alone. In First John, we discover that God has already shown us what love looks like. Yet even with that revelation, we often reshape God's love into something more comfortable, more convenient, or more aligned with our preferences. We want God's blessings while resisting God's transformation. Then Jesus confronts us with the sobering account of the rich man and Lazarus. Even in torment, the rich man remains the same man he was in life. He still sees Lazarus as someone to serve him. He still wants to negotiate. He still refuses to truly repent. The flames reveal what was already there. Together, these readings ask a difficult but necessary question: Are we allowing God to transform us, or are we simply asking Him to bless the plans we've already made? Join us as we discuss faith, humility, self-deception, God's surprising plans, and the danger of becoming so attached to our own understanding that we miss what God is trying to teach us. Because sometimes the greatest obstacle to God's work in our lives is not what we don't know. It's what we're convinced we already know.

Kommentare

0

Sei die erste Person, die kommentiert

Melde dich jetzt an und werde Teil der Crusade with Me-Community!

Loslegen

2 Monate für 1 €

Dann 4,99 € / Monat · Jederzeit kündbar.

  • Podcasts nur bei Podimo
  • 20 Stunden Hörbücher / Monat
  • Alle kostenlosen Podcasts

Alle Folgen

157 Folgen

Episode Plans, What We Know, and How We Act Cover

Plans, What We Know, and How We Act

We all think we know how life is supposed to work. We make plans. We form opinions. We create expectations about what God should do, how He should do it, and when He should do it. But what happens when God's plans are different from ours? In this episode of Crusade with Me! Dave and Kathy explore the gap between what we think we know and the reality God reveals through Scripture. Abram thought he understood his future. He had a plan, a timeline, and a logical conclusion about how his life would unfold. Yet God had something far greater in mind—something Abram could not see from where he stood. The Psalmist reminds us that real security is never found in our own strength, intelligence, resources, or carefully constructed plans. The Lord is not impressed by the strength of a horse or the might of an army. Our hope is found in Him alone. In First John, we discover that God has already shown us what love looks like. Yet even with that revelation, we often reshape God's love into something more comfortable, more convenient, or more aligned with our preferences. We want God's blessings while resisting God's transformation. Then Jesus confronts us with the sobering account of the rich man and Lazarus. Even in torment, the rich man remains the same man he was in life. He still sees Lazarus as someone to serve him. He still wants to negotiate. He still refuses to truly repent. The flames reveal what was already there. Together, these readings ask a difficult but necessary question: Are we allowing God to transform us, or are we simply asking Him to bless the plans we've already made? Join us as we discuss faith, humility, self-deception, God's surprising plans, and the danger of becoming so attached to our own understanding that we miss what God is trying to teach us. Because sometimes the greatest obstacle to God's work in our lives is not what we don't know. It's what we're convinced we already know.

11. Juni 20261 h 6 min
Episode Crusade with Me! Come Back Episode: Just be a tree! Cover

Crusade with Me! Come Back Episode: Just be a tree!

Crusade with Me! is back. After months away from the microphone, we're beginning a new chapter with a simple but life-changing question: What if the secret to peace, purpose, and growth is not becoming someone else—but becoming who God created you to be? A tree never struggles with its identity. An oak doesn't wish it were a maple. An apple tree doesn't envy an olive tree. A tree doesn't wake up one morning and decide it would rather be a goat. It simply receives what God made it to be and grows. Yet many of us spend our lives exhausted from comparison, chasing identities that were never ours, trying to force fruit that can only come from being properly rooted. In this comeback episode, Dave and Kathy explores one of the most powerful themes woven throughout Scripture: God's people are often described as trees. Trees planted by streams of water. Trees that endure drought. Trees that bear fruit in season. Trees that remain rooted when storms come. Drawing from Psalm 1, Jeremiah 17, Genesis 1, John 15, Romans 12, Ephesians 2, and other key passages, we'll examine what it means to stop striving to become someone else and start growing into the person God designed from the beginning. You'll discover: • Why identity always comes before behavior • Why comparison is one of the fastest ways to kill joy • What Scripture means when it says creation reproduces "after its kind" • Why fruit is not something we force but something that reveals who we are • How to stay rooted when life's heat, drought, and storms arrive • Why God's design for your life began long before your first success—or your first failure Most importantly, we'll discuss a truth that modern culture desperately needs to hear: The created thing does not define itself. The Creator does. The Christian life is not about inventing a new self. It is about recovering the person God intended all along. The tree's job is not to manufacture fruit. The tree's job is to stay rooted. And perhaps your job isn't to become someone else either. Perhaps your job is simply to remain connected to the One who created you. So welcome back to Crusade with Me! Let's begin this next chapter together. Be rooted. Be faithful. Be transformed. And above all... Just be the tree.

9. Juni 202652 min