Dad Jokes and Discernment: The Podcast

Episode 41: You Don’t Hate Your Job—You’ve Confused It With Your Work (Colossians 3:23)

43 min · 27 de abr de 2026
Portada del episodio Episode 41: You Don’t Hate Your Job—You’ve Confused It With Your Work (Colossians 3:23)

Descripción

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2519360/fan_mail/new] In this episode of Dad Jokes and Discernment, we step into one of the most practical (and honestly most overlooked) tensions in the Christian life: what we do for a living, and what we’re actually called to do in it. It started with a real conversation about burnout, frustration at work, and the emotional weight that comes from trying to stay faithful in environments that feel draining, repetitive, or even meaningless at times. From there, the discussion shifts into something deeper—how many believers unintentionally blur the line between their job and their work, and how that confusion can quietly shape our attitude, our joy, and even our faith. Using Colossians 3:23 as the anchor—“Whatever you do, work heartily, as for the Lord and not for men”—we unpack what it actually means to work unto God in real life, not just in theory. This isn’t about pretending every job is easy or pretending frustration doesn’t exist. It’s about learning to distinguish between the structure we work inside of (our job) and the purpose God has placed within it (our work). We also step back into the bigger biblical story of work itself. In Genesis, work is not introduced as punishment but as purpose—man is placed in the garden to tend and keep it. But after the fall, that work becomes harder, heavier, and more frustrating. Still, it is not meaningless. The curse didn’t remove work—it distorted it. And then we look at Christ. Through John 19:30, “It is finished,” we see that Jesus doesn’t just save souls—He reorders how His people live and labor. We don’t work to earn God’s approval; we work from it. That changes how we show up on Monday just as much as it changes how we show up on Sunday. Along the way, we talk honestly about burnout, complaining, gratitude, spiritual drift, and what it looks like when Christians lose sight of the difference between burden and calling. We also wrestle with the tension of doing hard, sometimes frustrating work while still honoring God in the middle of it—not with fake positivity, but with real conviction. This episode is a reminder that you may not always love your job, but you are still called to love God through your work. And sometimes, the difference between frustration and faithfulness comes down to where your focus is anchored. If you’ve ever felt tired, stuck, overlooked, or just worn down by work, this conversation is for you. 👉 Topics covered: *  Burnout and frustration in Christian work life  *  Job vs. work: what’s the difference biblically?  *  Work in creation, the fall, and redemption  *  Biblical labor and purpose in Colossians 3:23 *  Christ’s finished work and how it reshapes ours  *  How Christians can avoid a complaint-driven mindset  *  Finding meaning in everyday responsibility  Wherever you are—on the job site, in the office, in the field, or just trying to make it through the week—this episode is a call to reframe your work through the lens of Scripture and remember who you’re ultimately working for.

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episode Episode 47: Looking for Jesus in the Wrong Place | Tail Light Troubles, Elijah, and the Empty Tomb artwork

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Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2519360/fan_mail/new] In this episode of Dad Chokes and Discernment, we explore the tension between pride, patience, and the harvest God calls us into. From Matthew 9:36–38, we look at Jesus’ words that “the harvest truly is plentiful, but the laborers are few,” and what that means for believers today. We talk about how pride quietly puts us in control of our own lives, how impatience pushes us to force what God may be asking us to wait on, and how both can keep us from faithfully stepping into the work God has already prepared. Through biblical examples like Nebuchadnezzar in Daniel 4, Abraham and Sarah in Genesis 16, and the call to trust God’s timing in Proverbs 3:5–6, we see a consistent pattern: God is more interested in shaping the worker than rushing the harvest. We also discuss what it looks like to actually be “laborers in the field,” not just observers of it, and how humility and patience prepare us for meaningful service in God’s kingdom. If you’ve ever struggled with waiting, control, or wondering if God is moving too slowly, this conversation is for you.

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Episode 45: You Can Be Religious and Still Lost (Matthew 7 Breakdown)

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2519360/fan_mail/new] In this episode of Dad Jokes and Discernment, we dive into one of the most sobering passages in all of Scripture: Matthew 7:13–23, where Jesus speaks about the narrow gate and the broad way, and delivers the warning that not everyone who says “Lord, Lord” will enter the Kingdom of Heaven. What does it really mean to be on the narrow way? Can someone be deeply religious and still be lost? How do we distinguish between true salvation and mere outward Christianity? We walk through Jesus’ teaching in Matthew 7: *  The narrow gate vs. the broad road *  The reality that few find life while many walk toward destruction *  The warning about false prophets and fruit that looks good but isn’t *  And the most unsettling words Jesus speaks: “I never knew you; depart from Me.” Along the way, we also wrestle with what it means to follow Christ in everyday life—how repentance, faith, and obedience relate to salvation, and how easy it is to confuse activity for allegiance. This is not just a theological discussion—it’s a call to self-examination. Are we trusting in Christ alone, or in our religious performance? 📖 Anchor Scripture: Matthew 7:13–23 (KJV)  🎙️ Topics: Narrow Way, Gospel of Jesus Christ, Salvation, False Assurance, Christian Living, Repentance, Faith vs Works, Kingdom of God If this episode challenges you, encourages you, or makes you rethink your walk with Christ, share it with someone and take time this week to read Matthew 7 for yourself.

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episode Episode 44: Micah 6:8 Bible Study | What God Actually Requires: Justice, Mercy, and Humility Explained artwork

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Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2519360/fan_mail/new] Micah 6:8 is one of the most quoted verses in Scripture—but it’s also one of the most misunderstood. In this episode of Dad Jokes and Discernment, we walk through the courtroom scene of Micah 6, where God brings a case against His own people. The issue isn’t that they weren’t religious enough—it’s that their religion had become empty, external, and disconnected from their hearts. God asks a piercing question: “What have I done to you?” and then reminds His people of His faithfulness—deliverance, leadership, and provision they continually ignored. What follows is a powerful contrast between what man thinks God wants… and what God actually requires. When the people ask how to make things right—more sacrifices, more offerings, even extreme religious acts—God shuts it all down with one clear command: Do justly. Love mercy. Walk humbly with your God. We break down what each of those actually means in real life—not as church phrases, but as daily obedience. From workplace integrity to forgiveness, from leadership to personal humility, this passage cuts straight into modern Christianity and challenges us to examine whether we are living transformed lives or just performing religion. We also connect Micah 6:8 with Jesus’ own words in Matthew 15 and Matthew 7, showing that God has always cared more about the heart than outward appearance. This episode is a call to reality:  Not more religious activity—but real repentance, real mercy, and real humility before God. If you’ve ever wondered what God actually expects from you beyond church attendance and good behavior, this conversation will challenge you.

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Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2519360/fan_mail/new] Motherhood is often described in simple terms—but real life is anything but simple. In this Mother’s Day special episode of Dad Jokes and Discernment, we sit down with two incredible mothers to talk honestly about parenting, adoption, faith, and the beautiful chaos that holds it all together. From foster care and adoption journeys to biological motherhood, trauma, grace, and the everyday unpredictability of raising kids, this conversation pulls no punches. It’s raw, funny, deeply personal, and rooted in the reality that no parent has it all figured out—but God is still faithful through it all. We talk about: *  Adoption and foster care stories that redefine what “family” means  *  The emotional weight and grace required in motherhood  *  How faith reshapes parenting in hard seasons  *  The humor and chaos of raising kids in real time  *  Why “perfect parenting” is a myth—but faithful parenting matters  Whether you’re a mom, dad, guardian, or someone who’s been shaped by a mother’s love, this episode will challenge, encourage, and remind you that God works through imperfect families in powerful ways. 👉 If this episode encouraged you, share it with a mom who needs it today.

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