Light + Life Podcast

What to Do When You Are Scared to Say Your Doubts Out Loud

33 min · 7. apr. 2026
episode What to Do When You Are Scared to Say Your Doubts Out Loud cover

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If you are scared to say what you really think about faith, this is for you. If you have been carrying doubts, questions, or frustration and wondering whether church can handle the truth, this episode meets that moment with honesty. What young adults are really feeling when faith starts to feel shaky Why church can feel unsafe when honesty seems costly How belonging can start before everything feels settled Tim McConnell shares an honest conversation designed to help people feel known, less alone, and invited into real community. Next step: take one honest step toward belonging at First Pres: https://firstprescos.org/belong

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episode Mentors, Discipleship, and the Life You Can’t Google cover

Mentors, Discipleship, and the Life You Can’t Google

Life has a lot of questions you can’t Google—this episode explores why mentorship might be the missing piece. Have you ever felt like everyone else has life figured out while you’re still Googling how adulthood works? Many young adults long for guidance but don’t know how to find a mentor—or even what mentorship should look like. In this episode of the Light + Life Podcast, Tim and Liza explore the role of mentorship in the Christian life. They discuss why discipleship was always meant to happen through relationships—learning by walking alongside someone who is further along in faith and life. The conversation covers the awkwardness many people feel when approaching a mentor, the difference between friendship and mentorship, and how both mentors and mentees grow in the relationship. Along the way, they share practical ways to begin mentorship organically within church community and encourage listeners to prayerfully consider who they might learn from—and who they might invest in.  Key Takeaways * Mentorship reflects the model of Jesus, who invited people to “follow me” and learn by walking with him.  * Some of the most important parts of life and faith are “un-googleable” and require guidance from others.  * Healthy mentorship doesn’t require perfection—mentors share both victories and struggles. * Many mentorship relationships begin informally through admiration, shared conversation, and simple invitations to coffee or lunch.  * Mentorship is mutual: mentors often learn and grow just as much as mentees.  * A helpful framework is identifying people ahead of you to learn from and people behind you to invest in.  Action Steps / Practical Applications ✅ Pray for three mentors. Ask God to show you people whose lives reflect the kind of faith and character you hope to grow into. ✅ Start with a conversation. Invite someone you admire to coffee and ask how they’ve grown in a particular area of life. ✅ Suggest a shared rhythm. Consider reading a book, studying Scripture, or meeting monthly together. ✅ Show up ready to learn. Respect your mentor’s time and actively apply the wisdom they share. ✅ Look behind you too. Pray for three people you could encourage or walk alongside in their faith journey.

24. mar. 202626 min
episode Singleness Is Not A Waiting Room cover

Singleness Is Not A Waiting Room

What if singleness isn’t a delay in your real life—but a place where Christ meets you fully? In this honest and hope-filled conversation, Liza and Tim explore what the church often gets wrong about singleness. From dating fasts and codependency to cultural idolization of the nuclear family, they unpack the tension many feel between longing for marriage and learning to live fully today. Together, they build a broader, more biblical vision of singleness—one that includes those waiting, those widowed, those never called to marriage, and those living faithfully in unexpected seasons. At its heart, this episode reminds us that identity is rooted in Christ—not relationship status. Key Takeaways * Singleness is not a lesser life—it is not a “holding pattern” before something better. * Marriage is a gift, but it does not fix insecurity, self-pity, or identity struggles. * The church must honor and learn from singles, widows, and those living celibate lives. * Cultural pressure often idolizes family life in ways Scripture does not. * Jesus and Paul model lives that were whole, faithful, and unmarried. * Fulfillment is found in Christ—whether single, married, widowed, or unwillingly single. Action Steps / Practical Applications * Write a sentence that names who you are before your relationship status (e.g., “I am loved, called, and not alone.”) * Examine your prayers—are you asking God only for the blessing, or also for transformation? * Take one relational step this week: text a friend, join a group, or initiate community. * Practice gratitude for this season—even while holding your longings honestly before the Lord. * Ask: What might God be shaping in me right now?

10. mar. 202631 min