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St John the Beloved

Podcast von St John the Beloved

Englisch

Geschichte & Religion

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Mehr St John the Beloved

Sermon and teaching audio from St John Church in Cincinnati Ohio.

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Episode Investment Cover

Investment

Doing nothing can feel safe, but it’s often the most dangerous investment we make. We open with Scripture from Ecclesiastes 11, Galatians 6, and 2 Corinthians 9 to show how the Bible talks about money, work, and spiritual growth through one steady image: sowing and reaping. If grain is capital, then every day we decide whether to consume it now, store it for security, or plant it with no guarantees. That same logic applies to our calendars, our habits, our giving, and the kind of people we are becoming. We walk through three marks of wise investment: sacrifice, bold resilience, and patient endurance. From Paul’s call to be a cheerful giver to the warning in Ecclesiastes about waiting for perfect weather, we talk honestly about risk, uncertainty, and why faithful action beats endless analysis. We also explore diversification in a practical way: building skills, creating options, and refusing to let one fragile plan define your future. Then we zoom out to the deeper question Galatians raises: what are you sowing into, the flesh or the Spirit? Sin and obedience both compound over time, which is why the short-term can be so misleading. We close by looking at Jesus as the ultimate investment, the grain of wheat that falls into the ground and bears much fruit, and we ask what it looks like for us to pull out of what is killing us and invest in life that lasts. If this helped you, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review. What’s one investment you want to make this week?

17. Mai 2026 - 36 min
Episode The Industrious Woman Cover

The Industrious Woman

Economics usually makes us think about suits, spreadsheets, and stock prices, but Proverbs 31 starts somewhere far more ordinary and far more powerful: the household. We walk through the famous portrait of the “industrious woman” and ask a direct question with real consequences for marriage, family life, and the broader economy: what unique contributions do women make to economic life when home is treated as the foundation rather than an afterthought? We trace three anchors from the text: priority, profit, and praise. Priority means the well-being of the household comes first, not because women are “only” domestic, but because a well-ordered home produces stability, trust, and strength that spills outward. Profit means Scripture is not embarrassed about women making money, building businesses, spotting opportunities, and reinvesting wisely, as long as the work grows from faithful stewardship rather than replacing it. Along the way, we confront modern pressure toward constant careerism, the burnout spiral it can create, and why child care costs often reveal deeper priority problems. We also land on a surprising theme: attention. We unpack why what we focus on determines what we miss, how charm and beauty can distract us from what actually matters, and why husbands, children, and even the public square are commanded to praise what is truly praiseworthy. We end by looking to Jesus as the perfect example of steady notice and love that helps sinners grow into something new. Subscribe for more biblical teaching, share this with someone who needs encouragement, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway: what should our culture learn to praise again?

10. Mai 2026 - 34 min
Episode Building Wealth Cover

Building Wealth

Wealth can make us defensive, jealous, proud, or anxious, sometimes all in the same week. We want a clean answer: is money the root of all evil, or the proof that we’re finally secure? Proverbs and Jesus give a better story, one that honors wisdom and also exposes the heart. We work through Proverbs 21:20 and Proverbs 13:22, then sit under Jesus’ words in Luke 12, where He warns that life does not consist in the abundance of possessions. We start with restraint: the wise person does not devour everything that comes in, which means wealth is built more by consistent self-control than by one dramatic win. We get practical about budgeting, saving, investing, and giving with a simple 10-10-80 framework, and we name the two pressure points most households feel: income that needs to grow and appetites that need brakes. Christian contentment is not laziness. It’s gratitude that breaks the spell of endless consumption. Then we zoom out to responsibility and reverence. A biblical inheritance aims at children’s children, not to create fragile heirs, but to invite the next generation into a long obedience and a shared project. Finally, Jesus’ parable of the rich fool lands the deepest punch: the danger is not wealth itself, but forgetting God. Covetousness is the desire to possess anything apart from God, and the call is to be rich toward Him as faithful stewards whose lives are on loan. If this helped you, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find these biblical economics conversations.

3. Mai 2026 - 32 min
Episode Profit And Fruitfulness Cover

Profit And Fruitfulness

Profit is a loaded word, but Proverbs treats it with surprising honesty and hope. We want our work to matter, our hours to count, and our effort to produce real fruit not just more exhaustion. So we ask a blunt question: what if the missing ingredient isn’t more hustle, but better efficiency? We walk through a set of Proverbs that connect abundance to diligence, timing, planning, commitment, and skill. Along the way, we tell stories from everyday life: a community garden that thrives because of simple order, a renovation that goes faster when the “demo” is finished cleanly, and why harvest seasons demand urgent action. We also push back on the fantasy of quick wins. Biblical economics frames wealth and profit as long cultivation in the field God has given you, whether that is your job, your business, your marriage, or your calling. Then we turn to mastery. Skill is not just talent you either have or don’t have. It is developed excellence built through repetition, correction, humble learning, and the right people around you. In a world that keeps replacing expertise with convenience, Proverbs invites us to become the kind of workers who waste less, see problems sooner, and create more value with the same inputs. If you want to do less and accomplish more, this message offers a practical roadmap and a deeper anchor in Christ, the Redeemer who wastes nothing in your story. Subscribe, share this with someone who feels stuck in their work, and leave a review with one habit you’re going to practice this week.

26. Apr. 2026 - 33 min
Episode The Poor You Will Always Have Among You Cover

The Poor You Will Always Have Among You

Scarcity is not just an economics term, it is a daily pressure that shapes housing, wages, debt, and the quiet fear of not having enough. We start with a simple story about buying a home after the 2008 collapse and watching the same neighborhood become nearly impossible for new buyers. That shift opens the door to Deuteronomy 15, where God speaks with surprising realism: “there will never cease to be poor in the land.” Poverty is not praised, but it is treated as inevitable in a fallen world, which means the real question is not how to end it forever, but how God’s people respond when a brother or sister falls behind. We walk through three big movements: the persistence of poverty, our response to poverty, and restoring the broken. Along the way, we challenge two popular assumptions that creep into Christian talk about money: that the church is responsible to fix poverty as a global problem, and that poverty can be permanently fixed through enough funding. Scripture pulls us toward a more grounded, more local, and more actionable approach, where the church is best equipped to help the people it actually knows. The focus becomes personal, cheerful, open-handed lending, including the willingness to bear risk, and the wisdom to lend in ways that provide productive assets rather than quick band-aids. The episode also tackles the purpose behind difficult Old Testament laws about debt servitude, showing how mercy is designed to move someone toward independence and dignity, not lifelong dependence. We connect that to modern poverty alleviation through job creation, entrepreneurship, and giving people real opportunities to gain skills and capital. We close by tying it all to the gospel: Jesus does not only relieve us for a moment, he pays the cost to restore us fully. If this encouraged or challenged you, subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review. What is one practical need you see that you could help meet this week?

19. Apr. 2026 - 34 min
Super gut, sehr abwechslungsreich Podimo kann man nur weiterempfehlen
Super gut, sehr abwechslungsreich Podimo kann man nur weiterempfehlen
Ich liebe Podcasts, Hörbücher u. -spiele, Dokus usw. Hier habe ich genügend Auswahl. Macht 👍 weiter so

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