The Kingdom Corner with Matt Geib

The Practices Defined~Pt. 2

19 min · 5. kesä 2026
jakson The Practices Defined~Pt. 2 kansikuva

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KINGDOM CORNER READING ROOM THE PRACTICES DEFINED (PART 2) JUNE 5, 2026 In this episode of the Kingdom Corner Reading Room, we continue our journey through Practicing the Way by John Mark Comer. What exactly are spiritual disciplines? Are they merely religious habits, or are they something much deeper? We explore the idea that spiritual disciplines are not ways to earn God's approval, but rather ways of positioning ourselves to receive His transforming grace. As Dallas Willard and other Christian thinkers remind us, transformation is a partnership with God. We make space; God does the transforming. This episode also introduces the first two core practices of Jesus: * Sabbath * Solitude and Silence These foundational practices help us slow down, hear God's voice, cultivate joy, and live from a place of rest rather than exhaustion. IN THIS EPISODE * A spiritual discipline as a way to access God's power * The partnership between God's work and our participation * Why transformation is impossible through willpower alone * Turning everyday activities into channels of grace * The importance of Sabbath in an exhausted culture * Solitude and silence as gateways to God's presence * Why rest and quiet are essential for spiritual formation * Practical ways to create space for God in everyday life KEY QUOTE > "A spiritual discipline is a way to access God's power because we are making ourselves available to Him." REFLECTION QUESTIONS 1. Is there an activity you already enjoy—walking, gardening, fishing, exercise, reading, or another hobby—that could become a spiritual practice through intentional awareness of God's presence? 2. How practiced are you in solitude before God? When was the last time you simply listened rather than spoke? 3. Are you living from a place of rest, or from a place of constant exhaustion and hurry? SCRIPTURE REFERENCES * Philippians 2:13 * Romans 6:13 * Matthew 11:28-30 * Mark 1:35 * Luke 5:16 FINAL THOUGHT The goal of spiritual disciplines is not performance but transformation. We are not trying to impress God; we are learning to make room for Him. As we slow down, rest, listen, and practice His presence, God gradually reshapes our hearts into the likeness of Christ. Keep seeking. Keep growing. Keep listening. One day at a time. Kingdom Corner Podcast Helping you live the Kingdom culture on earth as it is in heaven. 📖 Searching for Significance: A Devotional Journey Through Ecclesiastes Available through the Significance Academy. ☕ If these teachings encourage and strengthen your faith journey, consider supporting the ministry through Buy Me a Coffee. Your support helps continue the work of teaching, podcasting, and equipping others to walk with Christ in everyday life.buymeacoffee.com/ [https://www.buymeacoffee.com/pZ923Ye7Ge]pZ923Ye7Ge [https://www.buymeacoffee.com/pZ923Ye7Ge]

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jakson Tips for the Journey: Applying the Nine Spiritual Practices kansikuva

Tips for the Journey: Applying the Nine Spiritual Practices

SHOW NOTES TIPS FOR THE JOURNEY: APPLYING THE NINE SPIRITUAL PRACTICES In today's Reading Room, we continue through Practicing the Way by John Mark Comer, exploring the final three tips for putting spiritual practices into daily life. Spiritual growth rarely happens overnight. Like learning an instrument, mastering a craft, or training for a sport, formation takes patience, repetition, and consistency over time. The goal is not perfection, but faithfulness. IN THIS EPISODE 1. Follow the J-Curve * Growth often feels awkward before it feels natural. * New spiritual practices may initially seem difficult or uncomfortable. * Resist the urge to judge your progress too quickly. * Stay with the process and allow God to work through the discipline. 2. Practice in Community * Historically, a "rule of life" was designed for communities, not just individuals. * Spiritual growth is strengthened when shared with others. * Community provides encouragement, accountability, and support. * Following Jesus was never meant to be a solitary journey. 3. There Is No Formation Without Repetition * Transformation happens through consistency over time. * Small daily practices have long-term impact. * Spiritual disciplines work much like compound interest. * The ordinary rhythms of prayer, Scripture, community, and worship gradually shape us into the likeness of Christ. KEY INSIGHTS * Learning often requires becoming uncomfortable before becoming proficient. * Growth is usually slow, cumulative, and sometimes monotonous. * Spiritual practices are not the destination; they are vehicles that help form Christ within us. * Great joy can be found in repetition when we learn to delight in the present moment. REFLECTION QUESTIONS * How do you respond when new spiritual practices feel difficult or awkward? * Have you begun developing your own rule of life? * Who could walk this journey with you in community? * What is one small spiritual practice you can strengthen this week? * Which spiritual discipline needs more attention in your life right now? MEMORABLE QUOTES > "There is great joy to be found in repetition if we learn to be patient and full of delight in the present moment." > "Micro-rituals have macro-significance." > "To follow Jesus is to never be alone." > "Change is all about consistency over time." FINAL THOUGHT Think of spiritual practices as scaffolding around a building under construction. Prayer, Scripture, Sabbath, solitude, community, service, generosity, fasting, and witness are not ends in themselves. They are tools God uses to shape Christ within us. The invitation is simple: Stay with it. Be patient. Trust the process. And tomorrow—do it again.

18. kesä 202621 min
jakson "One Degree Off Course: When A Wound Becomes The Steering Wheel" kansikuva

"One Degree Off Course: When A Wound Becomes The Steering Wheel"

SHOW NOTES One Degree Off Course: When a Wound Becomes the Steering Wheel Most people do not wake up one morning intending to betray their calling, destroy their legacy, or shipwreck their faith. More often, they drift—one disappointment, one offense, one unresolved wound at a time. In this concluding installment of our Stewardship of Power series, we examine the lives of two men who began with tremendous promise but allowed wounded hearts to alter the course of their lives: King Saul and Revolutionary War General Benedict Arnold. Through their stories, we discover that the greatest danger is not always dramatic failure but subtle drift. We also meet a third man—Jonathan—whose response to disappointment reveals a better path marked by humility, loyalty, trust, and freedom. Join us as we explore how bitterness takes root, why forgiveness protects the heart, and how to remain on course when life does not unfold as we expected. IN THIS EPISODE * The Apollo 13 lesson: how one degree off course can change a destination * Benedict Arnold: from celebrated hero to infamous traitor * Saul's rise, decline, and the danger of insecurity * How bitterness grows beneath the surface * Why forgiveness is often for our protection * Simon the Sorcerer and the trap of self-advancement * The older brother of the prodigal son and the danger of comparison * Jonathan's remarkable response to disappointment * Protecting your heart instead of protecting your position * How to stay aligned with God's purposes when life wounds us KEY SCRIPTURES * Proverbs 4:23 * 1 Samuel 13 * 1 Samuel 15 * 1 Samuel 18 * Hebrews 12:14–15 * Acts 8:18–23 * Luke 15:25–32 REFLECTION QUESTIONS 1. Is there a disappointment, hurt, or offense that has taken up too much space in my heart? 2. Do I celebrate God's work in others, or do I quietly compare myself to them? 3. Where might God be inviting me to trust His timing instead of grasping for control? MEMORABLE THOUGHTS FROM THIS EPISODE * "Most people drift into failure one degree at a time." * "Saul wasn't sorry for his sin; he was sorry for his loss." * "Forgiveness is often for our protection." * "One man protected his position. The other protected his heart." * "When a wound becomes the steering wheel, it changes the destination." * "The greatest danger is not failure—it's drift." IF THESE PODCASTS HAVE ENCOURAGED YOUR FAITH JOURNEY AND YOU'D LIKE TO HELP SUPPORT THE MINISTRY, YOU CAN DO SO THROUGH THE BUY ME A COFFEE LINK BELOW. YOUR SUPPORT HELPS COVER THE ONGOING COSTS OF PRODUCING AND SHARING THESE TEACHINGS. THANK YOU FOR BEING PART OF THE KINGDOM CORNER COMMUNITY. https://buymeacoffee.com/pZ923Ye7Ge [https://buymeacoffee.com/pZ923Ye7Ge]

16. kesä 202646 min
jakson "Start Where You Are, Not Where You Should Be" kansikuva

"Start Where You Are, Not Where You Should Be"

Kingdom Corner Reading Room Start Where You Are, Not Where You Should Be In this week's Reading Room, we continue our journey through Practicing the Way by John Mark Comer and explore six practical principles for building a healthy Rule of Life. What if spiritual growth begins not with doing more, but with honestly embracing the life God has already given you? In this episode, we explore six practical principles for building a healthy Rule of Life. Discover why starting small, working within your current season, and taking faithful steps may be far more transformative than chasing spiritual perfection. Many of us approach spiritual growth with unrealistic expectations. We imagine the person we wish we were, rather than honestly assessing where we are today. Yet God meets us in the reality of our present circumstances, not in an imagined future version of ourselves. In this episode, we discuss: • Why spiritual growth begins with honesty about your current season of life • The importance of starting small rather than making grand resolutions • Why subtraction can be just as important as addition in following Jesus • Finding balance between solitude, community, engagement, and abstinence • How personality and spiritual temperament influence the way we connect with God • Adjusting spiritual practices to fit different seasons of life • The value of both enjoyable practices and challenging practices in spiritual formation Key Thought: "We must find God in the contours of our actual lives, not the lives we wish we had, used to have, or plan to have." Reflection Questions: 1. Are there any spiritual expectations you're placing on yourself that fit the life you wish you had rather than the life God has actually given you today? 2. What is one small, sustainable practice you could begin this week that would help you be with Jesus in the season you are in right now? Final Thought: A healthy rule of life is not built through grand resolutions but through faithful steps. Spiritual growth is rarely dramatic. More often, it is the quiet accumulation of small acts of faithfulness over time.

12. kesä 202620 min
jakson "Beyond Going Through the Motions: Building a Trellis for Spiritual Growth" kansikuva

"Beyond Going Through the Motions: Building a Trellis for Spiritual Growth"

KINGDOM CORNER PODCAST Reading Room Series: Practicing the Way Episode Title: Continuing the Practices (Part 3): Building a Trellis for Transformation Episode Summary In this episode of The Kingdom Corner Reading Room, we continue our journey through John Mark Comer's book Practicing the Way. Matt explores several of the core practices that have shaped followers of Jesus for centuries: prayer, fasting, Scripture, community, generosity, service, and witness. More than religious activities, these practices are invitations to meet God in His transforming presence. The goal is not simply to "do more" but to arrange our lives in such a way that being with Jesus and becoming like Him naturally flows into doing as He did. Matt also shares a personal spiritual inventory, reflecting on areas of strength, areas of growth, and the importance of allowing the Holy Spirit to lead the process of transformation rather than falling into legalistic striving. Key Themes Discussed • Prayer as communion with God, not merely asking for things • Four dimensions of prayer: talking to God, talking with God, listening to God, and simply being with God • Fasting as praying with the body and breaking the power of the flesh • Scripture as the primary means of renewing the mind • Community as God's design for healing and spiritual formation • Generosity as participating in God's self-giving love • Service as a pathway to freedom from self-centeredness • Witness as extending God's hospitality and welcome to others • Conducting a personal spiritual inventory • Moving beyond "going through the motions" into genuine transformation Key Quotes "We can offer any of these activities or practices to God in hope that He will fill these spaces with His transforming presence." "You have to show up for prayer, and you have to show up regularly." "Fasting truly is a lost discipline whose time has come." "We generally sin alone, but we heal together." "It is happier to give than to receive." "The goal is not simply doing the practices. The goal is becoming like Jesus." Reflection Questions 1. Which of the nine practices is currently strongest in your life, and which one needs the most attention? 2. Are these practices flowing out of a relationship with Jesus, or have they become routine religious activities? 3. Where might God be inviting you to become more intentional in prayer, fasting, Scripture, generosity, service, or community? 4. What practical step could you take this week to create more space for God's transforming presence? Scripture References • Psalm 46:10 • Romans 12:1-2 • Philippians 2:13 • Mark 10:45 • Acts 20:35 Final Thought Transformation rarely happens by accident. Just as a trellis supports the growth of a healthy vine, spiritual practices create space for God to shape our hearts. The invitation is not to strive harder, but to intentionally place ourselves before God and trust Him to do what only He can do.

11. kesä 202630 min
jakson "The subtle Collapse: When Success Becomes The Test" kansikuva

"The subtle Collapse: When Success Becomes The Test"

In this episode of The Kingdom Corner, we continue the Stewardship of Power arc by looking at the life of Solomon and the subtle danger of success. Solomon began well. He asked God for wisdom, not wealth, power, or fame. Yet over time, blessing became a test. Wealth multiplied. Influence expanded. His reputation grew. But beneath the surface, his heart began to drift. This episode explores how success can become just as dangerous as adversity when it slowly replaces dependence on God. We look at Solomon’s divided heart, the warning of Laodicea, the confession of Ecclesiastes, and the historical example of Ulysses S. Grant, whose success as a general created new tests as president. The central question is simple but searching: after all God has entrusted to us, does He still have our heart? Key Scriptures: 1 Kings 3:5–14 1 Kings 11:1–13 Revelation 3:14–22 Ecclesiastes 12:13–14 James 1:14–15 Reflection Questions: 1. What blessing, success, opportunity, or area of influence has God entrusted to me in this season? 2. Am I stewarding it as an owner, or as a servant of the King? 3. What voices or influences are shaping my decisions right now? 4. Am I as dependent upon God today as I was when I first began seeking Him? At the end of his life, Solomon discovered that wisdom, wealth, achievement, and influence were never the destination. They were tests. The destination was always God. If you receive encouragement & Blessing from our efforts Please consider supporting the efforts here at the kingdom Corner Podcast www.buymeacoffee.com/pZ923Ye7Ge

9. kesä 202653 min