Cover image of show Created in the Image of God

Created in the Image of God

Podcast by Wade Fransson

English

History & religion

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About Created in the Image of God

Tune in every Tuesday for an inspiring journey on Created in the Image of God: Building Vibrant Communities. Wade Fransson and his distinguished guests explore the essence of human nature and the transformative power of unity in diversity through live-streamed discussions rooted in the Independent Investigation of Reality. This series advocates for authentic connections among individuals to foster thriving, inclusive communities. Anchored in spiritual truths and a collective quest for understanding, these conversations inspire growth and progress toward a harmonious world. soopllc.substack.com wadefransson.substack.com

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250 episodes

episode Breaking the Power of the Mask with Jocelyn J. Jones | Created In The Image of God 251 artwork

Breaking the Power of the Mask with Jocelyn J. Jones | Created In The Image of God 251

Jocelyn J. Jones grew up in Catholic school, watching her mom convert so the kids wouldn’t be left out—and quietly learning how to perform faith without ever really meeting God. She remembers sitting bored in Mass, inventing sins for confession, and treating church as ritual rather than relationship. That began to shift at a Kairos retreat in high school, but the real turning point came in college, when a friend invited her to a women’s Bible study and a worn VHS tape—Juanita Bynum’s “No More Sheets”—brought soul ties and sexual trauma into the light.In this episode, Jocelyn shares how God met her in that “ugly cry” on the living room floor, walked with her through years of wrestling, and eventually led her from journalism and TV into full‑time ministry at 23. Today she’s an ordained minister, author of Breaking the Power of the Mask, founder of Faith on the Journey Counseling, and a Master Facilitator with the Trauma Healing Institute, helping people heal from trauma, grief, and shame through a Christ‑centered lens.Together we talk about religion versus relationship, judgment versus love, and why taking off the mask is the first step toward emotional freedom and a life of purpose in Christ. Get full access to Created in the Image of God at wadefransson.substack.com/subscribe [https://wadefransson.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

Yesterday - 48 min
episode Intellectual Friendship with R. J. Snell | Created In The Image of God 250 artwork

Intellectual Friendship with R. J. Snell | Created In The Image of God 250

R. J. Snell likes to say he’s a farm boy from nowhere. Growing up in Carbon, Alberta—a town of about 360 people—he learned early what it meant to belong to a place where everyone showed up for your little league game and honked the horn, regardless of which church they attended or whether they believed at all. When his parents suggested he probably wasn’t cut out to be a farmer and should “keep going to school,” they set him on a path that would eventually lead through philosophy, teaching, and into his role today as Director of Academic Programs at the Witherspoon Institute in Princeton and editor‑in‑chief of Public Discourse.In this episode, Snell reflects on how those small‑town lessons—rootedness, responsibility, and community—shape his work with students at one of the world’s most prestigious universities. He points out that while places like Princeton excel at technical excellence, they often hesitate to ask the deepest normative questions: What is the purpose of life? What is a human person for? What may we reasonably hope in? That’s where his work with Witherspoon comes in. Just off campus, he gathers students into seminars and reading groups designed to make space for those questions, and to model what he calls “intellectual friendship”: a community where people with differing beliefs can pursue truth together without collapsing into either relativism or rage.Snell describes his approach as putting the emphasis not on having the cleverest answers, but on learning to ask better, more honest questions—and sustaining a culture where that is valued. He talks about helping young adults navigate a fragmented age without losing their capacity for wonder or moral seriousness, and about how real community can “turn down the boil” in a society where every disagreement feels like a crisis. Along the way, he draws on decades of teaching, writing, and lecturing across North America and Europe, unpacking why philosophy, ethics, and a rich understanding of the human person still matter in a world dominated by technology and speed.For parents uneasy about sending their kids into today’s campus climate, students longing for deeper conversation, or anyone hungry for a more sane, humane way to think and live, this episode offers a grounded vision: that friendship, truth, and responsibility to a particular place and people are not luxuries, but the very conditions for flourishing in our time. Get full access to Created in the Image of God at wadefransson.substack.com/subscribe [https://wadefransson.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

27 May 2026 - 1 h 13 min
episode Elephants, the Grass & the Teacher with Chinyere Egbe | Created In The Image of God 249 artwork

Elephants, the Grass & the Teacher with Chinyere Egbe | Created In The Image of God 249

When wars are told in history books, the focus is usually on generals, presidents, and borders. Chinyere Emmanuel Egbe insists the real story lies elsewhere. A Nigerian‑born economist and long‑time CUNY professor who has spent decades teaching statistics and finance in Brooklyn, Dr. Egbe is also the author of Elephants, the Grass and the Teacher, a memoir of growing up during the Nigerian Civil War (1967–1970). In it, he uses a simple image to describe what he saw: the “elephants” — ruling establishments and military elites — decide when wars start and end, but it is the “grass,” the masses of ordinary people and low‑ranking soldiers, that is trampled.In this episode, Dr. Egbe walks through his early life under British colonial rule, the disciplined, justice‑oriented home shaped by his London‑educated teacher father and deeply prayerful mother, and the way that upbringing gave him a rigid sense of right and wrong. He then traces how Nigeria’s negotiated independence in 1960, followed by flawed elections and political crises in the mid‑1960s, spiraled into a military coup and eventually civil war. From his vantage point as a boy in Eastern Nigeria, he witnessed firsthand how decisions made by distant leaders translated into hunger, fear, displacement, and death on the ground.Along the way, he returns again and again to what he calls “divine interventions”: the improbable escapes and narrow misses that kept his family alive when, as a statistician, he now sees the odds should have gone the other way. He reflects on ancient voices like Plutarch and reformers in Rome who also saw commanders treating soldiers like expendable coins, and connects that insight to Paul’s blunt question in the New Testament: “From whence come wars and fightings among you?” For Dr. Egbe, the answer is clear — greed and the struggle of powerful “elephants” over resources God has already provided in sufficient measure for all.The conversation then bridges to his later work: why those wartime experiences drove him toward economics, why he believes education is a moral calling, and how his efforts in Central Brooklyn — from launching degree programs in financial economics to creating a Wall Street‑style trading lab and leading HUD‑funded community projects — are part of the same lifelong response to injustice he first sensed as a child.For listeners who have only known war through headlines, or who wonder what faith and justice look like when you’ve seen conflict up close, this episode offers a rare combination: rigorous economic insight, vivid personal story, and a clear-eyed moral critique of power that still leaves room for gratitude, purpose, and hope. Get full access to Created in the Image of God at wadefransson.substack.com/subscribe [https://wadefransson.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

25 May 2026 - 54 min
episode The Stories Our Words Tell with Gregory Coles | Created In The Image of God 248 artwork

The Stories Our Words Tell with Gregory Coles | Created In The Image of God 248

Gregory Coles is a writer, speaker, and language scholar whose life sits at the crossroads of faith, identity, and words. The author of Single, Gay, Christian, No Longer Strangers, The Limits of My World, and the forthcoming Sexuality Beyond Sex (IVP, 2026), Greg has spent years asking what it means to follow Jesus as a single, gay Christian who loves the church and takes Scripture seriously.In [http://seriously.In] this episode, we talk about why language matters so much—how the labels we choose can shape our sense of self, our expectations of God, and even who feels welcome in the body of Christ. Greg shares how his own story has been formed by Scripture, prayer, and community, and why surrendering our desires and identities to God doesn’t mean pretending our questions or longings don’t exist.From memoir to theology to literary scholarship, this conversation invites us into a more honest, nuanced way of talking about sexuality, discipleship, and the image of God in every person—especially those who don’t fit our assumptions. Get full access to SOOPMedia on Substack at soopllc.substack.com/subscribe [https://soopllc.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4] Get full access to Created in the Image of God at wadefransson.substack.com/subscribe [https://wadefransson.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

20 May 2026 - 1 h 26 min
episode From Grief to Gratitude with Steven Ferrara | Created In The Image of God 247 artwork

From Grief to Gratitude with Steven Ferrara | Created In The Image of God 247

On paper, Steven Ferrara had the kind of life many people dream about. Born into a poor but tightly knit Italian family in Newark’s Ironbound neighborhood, he grew up surrounded by Sunday dinners, grandparents in the basement kitchen, and a home full of love. A spiritual seeker from his teens—studying universal principles, practicing Transcendental Meditation, and devouring teachings on consciousness—he went straight into business at 18, eventually building one of the largest privately held financial services firms in the Northeast. By mid‑life he had a thriving career, a beautiful home, a loving wife, and three children.Then, in 2004, his world collapsed. His 23‑year‑old son Christopher, with whom he shared an unusually deep bond as both father and business partner, died suddenly in a car accident. Five years later, his wife—the emotional cornerstone of their family—was diagnosed with a rapid illness and passed away within weeks. Despite decades of spiritual practice, Steven found himself undone: running through his neighborhood shouting at God, questioning everything he had ever believed, and wondering how life could possibly go on.In [http://on.In] this episode, Steven shares how his long habit of journaling—begun the day after his son’s death and continued for twenty years—became the unlikely container for his healing. Only after retiring and handing his firm to a successor team did he begin to reread the shelves of journals he had filled. As he did, he started to see the quiet “life lessons” that had been forming in the middle of his pain: invitations to accept what he could not control, to see death through a different lens, and to discover that gratitude and grief can coexist. Those insights eventually became his book From Grief to Gratitude: A New Paradigm on Death, a roadmap for others walking through loss.Drawing on spiritual influences from his Catholic childhood to universalist teachings, contemplative authors, and his own direct experience with God, Steven talks about what it has meant to move beyond fear, anger, and guilt into a genuine, hard‑earned gratitude—for his parents, his children, his late wife, and even the “curve balls” he would never have chosen. He speaks candidly about parenting his daughters through the loss of their mother, the ongoing nature of grief, and how he now understands death not as the end of relationship, but as a change of form within a larger, loving reality.For anyone who has lost a child, a spouse, or simply finds themselves afraid of death and undone by sorrow, this conversation offers no clichés—only the voice of someone who has lived through the fire and found a deeper peace on the other side. Steven’s story is an invitation to consider that even in life’s hardest seasons, a grateful heart is still possible. Get full access to SOOPMedia on Substack at soopllc.substack.com/subscribe [https://soopllc.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4] Get full access to Created in the Image of God at wadefransson.substack.com/subscribe [https://wadefransson.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

18 May 2026 - 47 min
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