Everyday God for Your Every Day

Navigating Life Transitions With God : Ending, Losing & Letting Go

53 min · 1 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Navigating Life Transitions With God : Ending, Losing & Letting Go

Descripción

The month of May has a way of exposing how much life is made of endings. A graduation party, a last day of school, a move, a breakup, a promotion, an empty nest, or the quiet shift of perimenopause and menopause all carry the same truth: something is closing, even if something exciting is opening. For Christians trying to live with God in real life, transitions are not “extra” moments on the way to the main story. They are the bridge between seasons, the place where grief, hope, fear, relief, and anticipation all overlap. When we ignore the transition, we often carry old wounds, old thought patterns, and unfinished grief into new relationships, new jobs, and new routines, and then we wonder why the new season feels heavier than it should. We talk about the transition itself as the bridge between what was and what’s next, and why it deserves real attention. I use childbirth as a vivid metaphor for change: new life comes through discomfort, surrender, and grit. Then we anchor in Scripture with Ecclesiastes 3 and Jesus’ words about new wine needing new wineskins, because spiritual growth often requires flexibility, healing, and the courage to release old patterns that cannot hold what God is doing now.  I also share personal, honest examples like empty nest emotions and menopause brain fog, plus what it looks like to grieve even the loss of a familiar devotional routine while learning to commune with God in a new way. You’ll leave with practical next steps like journaling, naming what you’re losing, talking it out with safe people, and bringing your anger and questions directly to God with hope for the future. If this helps you, subscribe, share it with a friend in transition, and leave a review so more people can find support for life’s endings and new beginnings. Text Kathy [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2602174/fan_mail/new]

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17 episodios

Portada del episodio Navigating Life Transitions With God : Ending, Losing & Letting Go

Navigating Life Transitions With God : Ending, Losing & Letting Go

The month of May has a way of exposing how much life is made of endings. A graduation party, a last day of school, a move, a breakup, a promotion, an empty nest, or the quiet shift of perimenopause and menopause all carry the same truth: something is closing, even if something exciting is opening. For Christians trying to live with God in real life, transitions are not “extra” moments on the way to the main story. They are the bridge between seasons, the place where grief, hope, fear, relief, and anticipation all overlap. When we ignore the transition, we often carry old wounds, old thought patterns, and unfinished grief into new relationships, new jobs, and new routines, and then we wonder why the new season feels heavier than it should. We talk about the transition itself as the bridge between what was and what’s next, and why it deserves real attention. I use childbirth as a vivid metaphor for change: new life comes through discomfort, surrender, and grit. Then we anchor in Scripture with Ecclesiastes 3 and Jesus’ words about new wine needing new wineskins, because spiritual growth often requires flexibility, healing, and the courage to release old patterns that cannot hold what God is doing now.  I also share personal, honest examples like empty nest emotions and menopause brain fog, plus what it looks like to grieve even the loss of a familiar devotional routine while learning to commune with God in a new way. You’ll leave with practical next steps like journaling, naming what you’re losing, talking it out with safe people, and bringing your anger and questions directly to God with hope for the future. If this helps you, subscribe, share it with a friend in transition, and leave a review so more people can find support for life’s endings and new beginnings. Text Kathy [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2602174/fan_mail/new]

1 de jun de 202653 min
Portada del episodio Clenched Fists Cannot Receive What God Wants to Give

Clenched Fists Cannot Receive What God Wants to Give

We let go of the script and talk honestly about what happens after acceptance when God asks for real trust instead of a polished plan. We explore how clinging to old identities, old hurts, and false safety nets keeps our hands closed to the love, grace, and freedom God wants to give.  • Why we cling to routines, structures, and control to feel safe  • The clenched fists picture and why closed hands cannot receive  • What it looks like to accept God’s love as an exchange of definitions  • What it looks like to accept your identity in Christ over your past and self-talk  • How to recognize grace at work when shame loses its grip  • Extending grace to others and growing an unoffendable heart  • Why transformation and the fruit of the Spirit come through grace, not willpower  • Why the Christian walk is not convenient or comfortable, yet still easier with God  • A practical prompt to name what you are holding onto and release it to God  Many of us say we trust God, but we still build backups that make us feel safe: routines, certainty, money, titles, relationships, or the familiar patterns of our old thinking. Spiritual growth often starts when those supports shake and we realize how tightly we cling.  Text Kathy [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2602174/fan_mail/new]

23 de may de 202627 min
Portada del episodio Acceptance Begins When I Stop Trying To Fix Everyone

Acceptance Begins When I Stop Trying To Fix Everyone

The fastest way to lose peace is to make it your job to fix everybody. I’m closing out the Acceptance series by talking about the kind of acceptance that actually costs something: acknowledging people as they are, even when they think differently, believe differently, or hurt you, and refusing to turn love into a control project.  We ground this in Scripture, because “acceptance” is not a vague self-help idea. Jesus tells us to stop judging while ignoring our own plank (Matthew 7:1–5), and Romans 3:23 levels the room by reminding us that all of us fall short. We also sit with Jesus’ command to love your neighbor as yourself (Matthew 22:39), and we tease out why self-acceptance and humility are often the missing links when we struggle to accept others.  I also get honest about the nuance: acceptance is not approval. You can love someone without endorsing every choice, and you can recognize sin without stepping into the role of judge. We talk about forgiveness, praying for enemies, and what it looks like when the fruit of the Spirit becomes visible in everyday Christian relationships, especially in the home where different personalities and love languages collide.  If you’ve been stuck in frustration, offense, or exhaustion from unmet expectations, let this be a reset. Listen, share it with someone who needs more grace, and if it helps you, subscribe and leave a review. What’s one relationship where you want to practice acceptance this week? Text Kathy [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2602174/fan_mail/new]

16 de may de 202647 min
Portada del episodio Letting God Define Good or What's Best on a Scale We Cannot Fully See nor Understand.

Letting God Define Good or What's Best on a Scale We Cannot Fully See nor Understand.

The hardest spiritual questions usually show up when life hurts: If God already knows what will happen, do my choices matter? And if Scripture says God knows who will be saved, what do I do with the people I love who are far from Him? I sit with those questions head-on, without dodging the tension between God’s sovereignty, human free will, and the deep ache of unanswered prayer. I unpack a crucial distinction between what is predetermined and what is foreknown, then ground it with concrete examples from Scripture and from my own life. We talk about why “God didn’t intervene” is often shorthand for “God didn’t stop this the way I wanted,” and why accepting God’s authority means letting Him define good on a scale we cannot fully see. That doesn’t minimize evil or suffering. It reframes them inside a bigger story where God’s providence keeps working even when we cannot track it. From there, I move into what obedience looks like when the outcomes are not ours to control. We cannot save anyone, only Jesus saves, but we are still called to plant seeds, live as a witness, and trust God with what happens beneath the surface. Using Hebrews 11 and Romans 8, I tie faith to hope, patience, and the kind of joy that can coexist with sorrow when we anchor ourselves in God’s unchanging character. If this encouraged you, subscribe so you do not miss what comes next, share it with a friend who is asking hard questions, and leave a review to help more people find the show. Text Kathy [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2602174/fan_mail/new]

11 de may de 202640 min
Portada del episodio Jesus, I Need You- SOS Prayer

Jesus, I Need You- SOS Prayer

Some prayers aren’t polished. They’re urgent. They sound like an SOS. That’s where we start today, speaking to the person who feels trapped in distress, despair, or fear about where life is heading, and needs God to intervene right now. We root this moment in Romans 10:9-13, walking through the promise that if you declare “Jesus is Lord” and believe God raised him from the dead, you will be saved. We slow down on what that means in real life: belief in your heart, confession with your mouth, and the surprising relief of realizing you don’t have to carry shame as proof of sincerity. The scripture is clear and steady: anyone who believes in him will never be put to shame. We also hold onto the inclusive hope in the passage, that there is no difference and the same Lord is Lord of all, richly blessing all who call on him. Whether you’re brand new to faith, returning after a long drift, or unsure you even know how to love God yet, we give you simple words to pray aloud: “Jesus, I need you. Rescue me. Help me. Save me.” If this lands with you, share it with someone who needs a lifeline, subscribe for more, and leave a review so more people can find this message. Text Kathy [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2602174/fan_mail/new]

7 de may de 20262 min