Sunday To Society

Betting on Blood: The Dark Side of the 2026 Prediction Markets

28 min · 27 de abr de 2026
Portada del episodio Betting on Blood: The Dark Side of the 2026 Prediction Markets

Descripción

"Sunday is where we hear it—Society is where we live it." In April 2026, we’ve reached a staggering turning point: The world is no longer just watching the news; we are gambling on it. With over $1 billion flowing into "prediction markets" to bet on the timing of airstrikes and the fall of nations, we have to ask a hard theological question: Is your portfolio profiting from Babylon? In this episode, Riley Reno dives into the ethics of the "Prophet-for-Profit" economy. We explore the 2026 "Catastrophe Casino," the insider trading scandals rocking D.C., and why the "Hustle" of today is a direct assault on the Sovereignty of God. In this episode, we discuss: The shift from a "Work Ethic" to a "Wager Ethic." How "Information Finance" is killing our empathy for our neighbors. A deep dive into James 4:13-15 and 1 Timothy 6:9-10 (KJV). Why the Christian mission isn't to predict the future, but to trust the One who holds it. 🔗 RESOURCES MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE: 📌 The $1 Billion War Gamble: The Guardian: Traders placed $1bn in perfectly timed bets on conflict (April 18, 2026) 📌 The Insider Trading Scandal: Ethics | US defense official reaped millions selling xAI stock (April 9, 2026) 📌 Inside the Prediction Markets: Video: The gamblers betting millions on war

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63 episodios

Portada del episodio What They Never Taught You About Patrick Henry's Most Famous Speech

What They Never Taught You About Patrick Henry's Most Famous Speech

Everyone knows the last eleven words. But almost nobody knows what came before them. On March 23, 1775, Patrick Henry stood up inside St. John's Church in Richmond, Virginia — not a statehouse, not a town square, a church — and delivered one of the most consequential speeches in American history. The Second Virginia Convention had gathered there because no building in Williamsburg was large enough to hold the debate that was about to happen. And what a debate it was. The colonies were fractured. Some delegates still believed reconciliation with Britain was possible. Others believed every peaceful option had already been exhausted. Henry rose to propose something radical: arm the Virginia militia and prepare for war. In the room were George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, and future signers of the Declaration of Independence. What Henry said next would change the direction of the revolution. But here is what gets lost in the history textbooks — the speech is not a political argument. It is a theological one. Henry invokes "the God of Hosts." He frames passivity not as safety but as moral failure. He calls the colonists' cause one watched over by "a just God who presides over the destinies of nations." He does not appeal to rights alone. He appeals to providence. He does not argue that victory is certain. He argues that standing firm is required regardless. In this episode we walk through the four movements of the speech, look at what Henry actually believed about faith and public courage, and sit with a question that is just as sharp 250 years later: what does it look like to take a costly stand when you do not know how it ends? Scripture references: Jeremiah 6:14, Galatians 5:1, 2 Chronicles 20:15 (KJV) Primary sources referenced: text of the Coercive Acts (1774), Journal of the Second Virginia Convention (March 1775), William Wirt's reconstruction of the speech (1817) Sunday to Society is a Christian podcast exploring how men and women of faith lived out their convictions in the public square — and what their stories mean for ours. New episodes weekly. Available on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and YouTube.

Ayer30 min
Portada del episodio Did God Really Found America? The Stories the Founders Couldn't Explain

Did God Really Found America? The Stories the Founders Couldn't Explain

In August of 1776, George Washington's entire army was trapped against the East River with the British closing in. By every military calculation, that night should have ended the American Revolution. Then a fog rolled in so thick that nine thousand soldiers escaped without losing a single man. Washington didn't call it luck. He called it Providence. This Fourth of July, as America turns 250, Sunday to Society goes back to the founding of this country — not through politics, but through the stories the founders themselves told about what they believed was happening behind the scenes. Not every signer of the Declaration was a Christian. Some were Deists. Some were skeptics. But almost every one of them, in their own words, described the same thing: a hand bigger than their own, guiding a cause they couldn't fully control. SOURCES & FURTHER READING Here's What's Happening George Washington and the providence of the Revolutionary War — Providence Forum — https://providenceforum.org/story/george-washington/ [https://providenceforum.org/story/george-washington/] The fog at Brooklyn and the storm at Yorktown — 917 Society — https://www.917society.org/post/providence-in-the-founding-miracles-of-the-revolutionary-war-and-the-prayers-of-george-washington [https://www.917society.org/post/providence-in-the-founding-miracles-of-the-revolutionary-war-and-the-prayers-of-george-washington] Washington's letter to Thomas Nelson and his First Inaugural Address — The Tribune and Washington Stand — https://www.tribune.org/the-faith-of-george-washington/ [https://www.tribune.org/the-faith-of-george-washington/] and https://washingtonstand.com/commentary/faith-of-the-founders-washington-adams-and-jefferson-saw-gods-providence-in-americas-founding [https://washingtonstand.com/commentary/faith-of-the-founders-washington-adams-and-jefferson-saw-gods-providence-in-americas-founding] Here's the Story Most People Don't Know Jefferson's Second Inaugural Address and John Adams on the Continental Congress — Washington Stand — https://washingtonstand.com/commentary/faith-of-the-founders-washington-adams-and-jefferson-saw-gods-providence-in-americas-founding [https://washingtonstand.com/commentary/faith-of-the-founders-washington-adams-and-jefferson-saw-gods-providence-in-americas-founding] Washington on the discovery of Benedict Arnold's treason and John Hancock's words to the Continental Congress — Renew a Nation — https://www.renewanation.org/post/god-s-providence-in-american-history [https://www.renewanation.org/post/god-s-providence-in-american-history] What God Says Benjamin Franklin's quotes on Providence and his appeal for prayer at the Constitutional Convention — WallBuilders — https://wallbuilders.com/resource/christian-faith-quotes-by-signers-of-the-declaration/ [https://wallbuilders.com/resource/christian-faith-quotes-by-signers-of-the-declaration/] How Revolutionary era preachers used Scripture to describe God's sovereignty over nations — George P. Wood — https://georgepwood.com/2013/07/12/how-patriot-clergy-used-the-bible-to-support-the-revolution/ [https://georgepwood.com/2013/07/12/how-patriot-clergy-used-the-bible-to-support-the-revolution/] Sunday to Society with Riley Reno From the pew to the public square — every week. Spotify | Apple Podcasts | YouTube Have thoughts on this episode? Drop them in the comments.

29 de jun de 202630 min
Portada del episodio Why Does God Say No? Understanding Unanswered Prayer

Why Does God Say No? Understanding Unanswered Prayer

Have you ever prayed with complete confidence that God would answer... only to hear "no"? Whether it was for healing, a relationship, financial provision, a ministry opportunity, or the salvation of someone you love, unanswered prayer can leave us asking some of the hardest questions of the Christian faith. If God is all-powerful and truly loves us, why doesn't He always say yes? In this episode of Sunday to Society, we explore what the Bible teaches about unanswered prayer and why God's "no" is never random or without purpose. We also examine how modern culture has shaped our expectations, conditioning us to expect immediate answers, personalized outcomes, and a version of love that never refuses. Those cultural assumptions can quietly influence the way we approach prayer and how we respond when God doesn't answer the way we hoped. Together we'll discuss: Why our culture expects every desire to be fulfilled How instant gratification has shaped our expectations of God Why unanswered prayer often feels like rejection What Scripture reveals about God's wisdom in saying "no" How to trust God's character even when you don't understand His answer We'll look at powerful biblical examples of faithful people whose prayers were answered with "no," including: Paul and the thorn in the flesh (2 Corinthians 12) Jesus in the Garden of Gethsemane (Matthew 26) Moses asking to enter the Promised Land (Deuteronomy 3) David praying for his son's life (2 Samuel 12) These passages remind us that God's love is not measured by how often He says "yes," but by His perfect wisdom, His unchanging character, and ultimately by the cross of Jesus Christ. If you've ever struggled with disappointment in prayer, questioned God's silence, or wondered why God didn't answer the way you hoped, this episode is for you. Sunday to Society is a weekly Christian podcast helping believers take biblical truth from the pew to the public square by applying God's Word to the questions and challenges of everyday life. If this episode encouraged you, consider subscribing, leaving a review, and sharing it with someone who may need this reminder today. "And he said unto me, My grace is sufficient for thee: for my strength is made perfect in weakness." — 2 Corinthians 12:9 (KJV)

22 de jun de 202630 min
Portada del episodio Why Life and Church Feels Performative Now (And What It’s Doing to Us)

Why Life and Church Feels Performative Now (And What It’s Doing to Us)

In today’s world, life doesn’t just feel lived anymore—it feels performed. In this episode of Sunday to Society, we explore why so much of modern life feels performative, curated, and constantly aware of an unseen audience. From social media to everyday conversations, from personal identity to private moments, many of us have slowly shifted from simply living our lives to managing how our lives appear. But what is this doing to us? We break down how culture has shifted from authenticity to performance, why even “being real” can become another form of presentation, and how the pressure to be seen, validated, and understood is shaping the way we think, act, and even believe. We also look at the deeper root behind it all: the internal “audience” we carry with us everywhere we go. Even when no one is watching, many of us still feel like we are being observed, evaluated, or measured. That quiet pressure changes how we speak, how we choose, and how we show up in the world. To ground this conversation, we look at cultural and psychological research on: * The rise of constant connectivity and digital attention * Social media usage patterns and time spent online * Increasing self-monitoring and impression management in everyday life * Growing reports of loneliness and disconnection in a hyper-connected world But this isn’t just a cultural commentary—it’s also a spiritual reflection. Scripture reminds us that life was never meant to be lived for an audience of approval or perception: “Take heed that ye do not your alms before men, to be seen of them…” (Matthew 6:1, KJV) “Man looketh on the outward appearance, but the LORD looketh on the heart.” (1 Samuel 16:7, KJV) “Am I now seeking the approval of man, or of God?” (Galatians 1:10, KJV) These truths challenge us to reconsider who we are actually living for—and whether we’ve unknowingly begun to measure our lives by the wrong audience. The goal of this episode is not condemnation, but clarity. To slow down the noise. To name what’s happening. And to ask a simple but uncomfortable question: Are we living our lives… or performing them? If this episode encourages you, consider subscribing/following the podcast and sharing it with someone navigating the same tension between authenticity and performance. Sunday to Society — From the pew to the public square.

15 de jun de 202634 min
Portada del episodio Are You Actually a Christian or Just a Cultural One? Here's How to Tell

Are You Actually a Christian or Just a Cultural One? Here's How to Tell

62% of Americans call themselves Christian. That is roughly 210 million people. But the data tells a very different story about how many of those people actually read their Bible, attend church, hold a biblical worldview, or live in any measurable way differently from their non-Christian neighbors. The gap between Christian identity and Christian reality has never been wider. And the church is largely silent about it. In this episode of Sunday to Society we name cultural Christianity for what it is — a counterfeit. We look at how it happened, what Jesus actually said about it, and what the difference is between a cultural Christian and a genuine follower of Christ. SOURCES & FURTHER READING Here's What's Happening 62% of Americans identify as Christian but practice varies dramatically — The Global Statistics — https://www.theglobalstatistics.com/religion-in-us-statistics/ [https://www.theglobalstatistics.com/religion-in-us-statistics/] Christianity in America — the paradox of cultural saturation and inconsistent devotion — World Metrics — https://worldmetrics.org/christianity-in-america-statistics/ [https://worldmetrics.org/christianity-in-america-statistics/] Christian identification dropped from 72% to 66% between 2020 and 2025 — Arizona Christian University — https://www.arizonachristian.edu/2025/05/01/awvi-2025-report-5-americans-abandon-christianity-moral-truth-barna/ [https://www.arizonachristian.edu/2025/05/01/awvi-2025-report-5-americans-abandon-christianity-moral-truth-barna/] How Did We Get Here? PRRI 2025 Census of American Religion — religious affiliation trends — https://prri.org/spotlight/2025-prri-census-of-american-religion/ [https://prri.org/spotlight/2025-prri-census-of-american-religion/] Sunday to Society with Riley Reno From the pew to the public square — every week. Spotify | Apple Podcasts | YouTube Have thoughts on this episode? Drop them in the comments.

8 de jun de 202630 min