Native Drums

Native Drums

What Happens When Worship Becomes Movement

9 min · 4 de jul de 2026
Portada del episodio What Happens When Worship Becomes Movement

Descripción

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2442306/fan_mail/new] A summer camp where kids learn choreography is nice. A summer camp where kids learn how to worship, lead, and believe they belong is something else entirely. We sit down with Mia to celebrate the 26th year of Heaven Bound Praise Dance Camp at Savannah Grove Baptist Church in Florence, South Carolina, and to share what makes this week such a life-giving tradition for families, students, and the church community.  We walk through what parents and students can expect at Heaven Bound Praise Dance Camp 2026: Monday through Friday, July 6 to July 10, days running 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., and a welcoming age range starting around five and up. Mia explains how the camp separates groups by age and then opens up different worship arts pathways for older students, including flag, mime, sign language, and lyrical dance. We also dig into the men’s division, why a masculine approach matters, and how the camp helps young men move past the idea that praise dance is “for girls” by grounding it in faith, confidence, and real examples.  Then we zoom out to the bigger story: how the camp started as a small weekend for nine dancers, grew year after year to serve upward of 200 participants, paused through COVID, and came back strong. We highlight the Friday worship recital where the public can see what the dancers learned, plus the expansion to a second location with Heaven Bound Praise Dance Camp in Columbia, South Carolina at Bible Way Church of Atlas Road (July 20 to July 24). If you care about youth ministry, Christian dance, praise and worship, or building a stronger church community, this conversation will stick with you. Subscribe, share this with a parent or youth leader, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2442306/support]

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41 episodios

Portada del episodio What's Often Forgotten About the Freedom of the Fourth

What's Often Forgotten About the Freedom of the Fourth

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2442306/fan_mail/new] Fireworks are loud, simple, and temporary. Freedom is none of those things. I’m Napoleon Bradford, and I’m asking a question most of us were never taught to sit with: when did you become free, and freedom from whom? If your answer is “July 4th, 1776,” stay with me, because for millions of Americans that date has never been fully true historically, legally, or socially. We walk through the parts of the American story that often get pushed to the margins: 1619 and the arrival of enslaved Africans, the Declaration of Independence written in a world that did not include Black people in its definition of equality, and the Constitution turning human beings into representation math through the three-fifths compromise. We also name the uncomfortable details about emancipation, the “except as punishment for crime” loophole in the 13th Amendment, and the long chain that leads to convict leasing, forced prison labor, and mass incarceration. Then we bring it into the present with Reconstruction’s living legacy: the 14th Amendment and birthright citizenship debates, voting rights and modern redistricting fights, and why citizenship and representation are still contested ground. Finally, we talk about the good of God talk in turbulent times, a liberating faith that breaks the spell of empire, tells the truth, honors the ancestors, and insists we are more than what America has called us. If this helps you rethink patriotism, memory, and what real freedom requires, subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find the conversation. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2442306/support]

Ayer27 min
Portada del episodio What Happens When Worship Becomes Movement

What Happens When Worship Becomes Movement

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2442306/fan_mail/new] A summer camp where kids learn choreography is nice. A summer camp where kids learn how to worship, lead, and believe they belong is something else entirely. We sit down with Mia to celebrate the 26th year of Heaven Bound Praise Dance Camp at Savannah Grove Baptist Church in Florence, South Carolina, and to share what makes this week such a life-giving tradition for families, students, and the church community.  We walk through what parents and students can expect at Heaven Bound Praise Dance Camp 2026: Monday through Friday, July 6 to July 10, days running 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., and a welcoming age range starting around five and up. Mia explains how the camp separates groups by age and then opens up different worship arts pathways for older students, including flag, mime, sign language, and lyrical dance. We also dig into the men’s division, why a masculine approach matters, and how the camp helps young men move past the idea that praise dance is “for girls” by grounding it in faith, confidence, and real examples.  Then we zoom out to the bigger story: how the camp started as a small weekend for nine dancers, grew year after year to serve upward of 200 participants, paused through COVID, and came back strong. We highlight the Friday worship recital where the public can see what the dancers learned, plus the expansion to a second location with Heaven Bound Praise Dance Camp in Columbia, South Carolina at Bible Way Church of Atlas Road (July 20 to July 24). If you care about youth ministry, Christian dance, praise and worship, or building a stronger church community, this conversation will stick with you. Subscribe, share this with a parent or youth leader, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2442306/support]

4 de jul de 20269 min
Portada del episodio No Youth No Church

No Youth No Church

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2442306/fan_mail/new] If your church’s older members stepped away tomorrow, who would still be standing in the building a year from now? That question drives a real, practical conversation with Alpheus Anderson, an author, music director, producer, and the founder of Pure in Heart children’s and youth choir. We talk about the quiet crisis many congregations feel after COVID: youth ministry numbers shrinking, fewer teens engaged, and churches losing the next generation without meaning to. The message is blunt but hopeful: no youth, no church, and there are solutions if we’re willing to change how we show up. We dig into what effective discipleship looks like right now, especially when attention is competing with phones, headphones, and nonstop media. Alpheus breaks down how to teach the Bible OTL “on their level” without losing depth, using what he calls “enter train,” entertainment and training together. We also talk about why Sunday school, children’s church, VBS, and small groups still matter, because “faith comes by hearing,” and students simply are not hearing the Word enough to form a steady biblical worldview. Then we get tactical about college ministry and outreach. Alpheus shares four things he sees college students looking for: care, cash, cause, and community. Instead of leading with “come to our church,” we talk about serving first by showing up on campus with practical help and consistent presence. We even explore creative ideas like a college pantry in unused church space, plus how service opportunities can open doors for long-term connection. You’ll also hear updates on Pure in Heart, new music, Stellar nomination excitement, and how a youth-driven mission like singing for peace in China becomes a powerful picture of what happens when young people are trained and trusted. If this conversation helps you, subscribe, share it with a ministry leader, and leave a review so more churches can build a future with their youth. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2442306/support]

28 de jun de 202629 min
Portada del episodio The King Summit Preview

The King Summit Preview

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2442306/fan_mail/new] You can feel it when a community moment is bigger than a flyer. Josiellia Williams sits down with Bishop Michael Blue for a special Native Drums conversation that starts with a full preview of CCFM’s King Summit at the Florence Center in Florence, South Carolina, then goes deeper into what churches actually need to navigate right now. We walk through the schedule, the worship nights, the morning glory gatherings, and why bringing influential voices into the region can strengthen what local pastors and leaders already pour into their people. We also spend real time on the practical breakout sessions that make this event more than a service. Mental health support, worship and arts, media training, financial legacy building, and especially church security take center stage. Bishop Blue explains why “Who’s watching while we’re praying?” is not a slogan but a necessary question in a world that has shifted, and why best practices matter so safety stays wise, calm, and intentional. Then the conversation turns to youth in the church after COVID, and it gets honest. We talk about being deliberate, creating communities young people want to return to, and helping them build a faith that can think as well as believe through apologetics and open dialogue. If you care about church leadership, community empowerment, and youth ministry that lasts, this one will stay with you. Subscribe, share this with a friend in ministry, and leave a review so more people can find the conversation. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2442306/support]

24 de jun de 202630 min
Portada del episodio 138 Years Of Faith In Action

138 Years Of Faith In Action

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2442306/fan_mail/new] 138 years is not a slogan, it’s proof of a mission that keeps showing up. From Savannah Grove Baptist Church, we talk with Mrs. Mary Alice Graham, president of the Women’s Baptist Educational and Missionary Convention of South Carolina, and Dr. Sarah Simmons, second vice president, about how this statewide women’s ministry keeps Christian education and missionary work alive across generations. We get into the real mechanics of the convention: the history of leadership, what it takes to host thousands of women, and how the three departments create a pipeline from youth (up to 17), to Young Women’s Auxiliary (18 to 45), to senior women (45 and up). You’ll hear stories that feel joyful and practical, from youth-led worship and performances to traditions like corsages, district colors, and the energy that comes when the room is full. We also dig into impact you can measure. The convention supports HBCUs in South Carolina, including Morris College and Benedict College, with scholarship opportunities and major contributions. Then we shift to a powerful community health focus: mental health training through Hold Out the Lifeline, including a free class that can certify participants for three years and equip churches to recognize needs and respond with care. Add in women in ministry, scholarship fundraising like the Rainbow Tea, and a canned-goods service project that leaves help behind in every host community, and you’ve got a blueprint for faith in action. If you care about church leadership, women’s ministry, youth development, HBCU scholarships, and mental health resources for congregations, press play. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review so more listeners can find Native Drums. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2442306/support]

21 de jun de 202630 min