Growing Closer to God with Guided Meditation

The Jesus No One Talks About Pt. 2 Series: Clearing Space for Jesus | Monday Devotion

5 min · 25 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio The Jesus No One Talks About Pt. 2 Series: Clearing Space for Jesus | Monday Devotion

Descripción

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2067782/fan_mail/new] Jesus walks into the temple and does something that feels almost backward to how we handle stress: he deals with the space first. Pastor Robert Young takes us to Matthew 21:13 “My house shall be called a house of prayer” and invites us to hear it as a word for our inner life, not just a moment in history. Before Jesus confronts corruption, he restores quiet. Before he challenges injustice, he makes room for presence. That sequence becomes a map for spiritual renewal when life feels crowded and prayer feels squeezed to the edges. We explore the idea that God often begins restoration by clearing space. The clutter is not only physical noise or busy calendars; it can be anxiety, bitterness, distraction, and the constant pressure to perform. If the heart is the temple, what has moved in and taken over the rooms that belong to prayer, presence, and rest? We slow down long enough to notice, because awareness is the first honest step toward change. This is also a practical, guided moment. You are invited to imagine Jesus placing a hand on your shoulder and saying, “Let’s make some room,” then to sit with a simple question: what is currently taking up the space in your heart that belongs to prayer, presence, and rest? We close with an affirmation you can carry into your week: “I make room for God, and God meets me in the space I open,” followed by a closing prayer to help you step back into your day with clarity. If this helped you breathe again, subscribe for more, share it with someone who feels spiritually crowded, and leave a review so more listeners can find it. Support the show [https://www.patreon.com/churchplanting] Consider helping us to take the Gospel to others here: https://patreon.com/churchplanting https://cash.app/$WellnessInstitute [https://cash.app/%24WellnessInstitute] Leave a voicemail question or prayer requests here: (585) 331-3424 Leave an email question, prayer requests or comment here: robyoung51.ry@gmail.com

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Growing Closer to God with Guided Meditation!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

384 episodios

episode The Jesus No One Talks About Series: Pt. 3 Strength in The Garden | Deep Dive with Dan & Sheila artwork

The Jesus No One Talks About Series: Pt. 3 Strength in The Garden | Deep Dive with Dan & Sheila

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2067782/fan_mail/new] We’ve been trained to admire unshakable people the ones who never flinch, never doubt, never show fear. But the Garden of Gethsemane tells a different story, and it’s far more useful for real life. Dan and Sheila dig into Pastor Robert Young’s “The Jesus No One Talks About” and focus on one isolated night where Jesus of Nazareth is not stoic, not polished, and not distant. He is crushed, honest, and fully present to the weight in front of him and that changes how we think about strength.  We walk through why the setting matters: Gethsemane literally means “oil press,” a place built for crushing pressure that releases what’s deepest inside. From there we unpack the “cup” Jesus dreads, not as a vague symbol but as layered suffering physical agony, betrayal and isolation, and the spiritual and theological weight described in the biblical narrative. We also explore Luke’s startling detail about sweat “like drops of blood,” including the rare medical condition hematidrosis and what it signals about extreme stress and anxiety.  Then we tackle the big objection head-on: doesn’t fear make him look weak? Pastor Young’s argument about the incarnation reframes the whole question. If Jesus is truly human, he experiences real vulnerability, and emotional struggle doesn’t equal failure. We also look at the disciples falling asleep, Jesus’ compassion in “the spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak,” and the internal turning point of “not as I will, but as you will.” Finally, we translate it into a practical framework the Gethsemane model for anyone facing a hard diagnosis, a painful decision, or a season that feels like an oil press.  If you want to explore this more deeply, you can contact Pastor Young by clicking the various links in the description box below. Subscribe for more deep dives, share this with a friend under pressure, and leave a review with the line that challenged you most. Support the show [https://www.patreon.com/churchplanting] Consider helping us to take the Gospel to others here: https://patreon.com/churchplanting https://cash.app/$WellnessInstitute [https://cash.app/%24WellnessInstitute] Leave a voicemail question or prayer requests here: (585) 331-3424 Leave an email question, prayer requests or comment here: robyoung51.ry@gmail.com

Ayer19 min
episode The Jesus No One Talks About Series Pt.2: Becoming a Living Temple | Friday Devotion artwork

The Jesus No One Talks About Series Pt.2: Becoming a Living Temple | Friday Devotion

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2067782/fan_mail/new] You can spend years trying to “clean yourself up” and still feel like something is off. We take a different route here: the bold spiritual claim that you are God’s temple and that the work Jesus does in the temple is the same work he continues in you, right now. That means your faith is not only something you think about; it is a living place where heaven touches earth through your life, your choices, and your presence.  We move from teaching into a short guided Christian meditation that helps the idea become felt reality. You will be invited to imagine your whole being glowing with quiet light, as if every room of your inner temple is being filled with God’s presence. Then we picture Jesus walking through with joy, smiling and saying, “This is my house.” It is a simple contemplative practice, but it can open the door to inner healing, spiritual formation, and a calmer way of being when your mind is loud.  We also sit with one direct question: “What does it mean for me today to live as a temple where God dwells?” To carry it into real life, we close with an affirmation you can repeat throughout the day: “I am a dwelling place of God. His presence fills me and flows through me.” If this reflection helps you breathe, reset, or return to God, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find it. Support the show [https://www.patreon.com/churchplanting] Consider helping us to take the Gospel to others here: https://patreon.com/churchplanting https://cash.app/$WellnessInstitute [https://cash.app/%24WellnessInstitute] Leave a voicemail question or prayer requests here: (585) 331-3424 Leave an email question, prayer requests or comment here: robyoung51.ry@gmail.com

29 de may de 20265 min
episode The Jesus No One Talks About Series Pt. 2: Making Room for the Outsider | Thursday Devotion artwork

The Jesus No One Talks About Series Pt. 2: Making Room for the Outsider | Thursday Devotion

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2067782/fan_mail/new] Jesus clearing the temple can sound like a moment of pure confrontation, but we hear something else underneath it: protection, welcome, and space-making. When the Court of the Gentiles the one area set aside for outsiders gets taken over, Jesus doesn’t just “clean up.” He restores access. He makes room for the people who have been crowded out. That single move reframes the story from spectacle to invitation, and it raises a hard question: where have we blocked the space that was meant for belonging? From there, we turn the lens inward. Most of us carry an “outsider within” a part of ourselves we avoid, judge, or label as not spiritual enough. It might be the anxious part, the ashamed part, the angry part, or the exhausted part that feels unworthy of prayer. We sit with the idea that Jesus doesn’t only welcome the put-together version of us. He makes room for the hidden parts too, meeting them with kindness rather than contempt. If you’ve ever felt stuck in self-criticism, this is a gentle path toward Christian self-compassion and deeper spiritual formation. We also guide a short imaginative prayer practice: a peaceful room, a long table, and Jesus pulling out a chair for the part of you that feels overlooked. Then we pause for a simple, piercing reflection question: What part of myself have I treated like an outsider that Jesus is inviting to the table? We close with an affirmation you can carry into daily life and a prayer for an inner life marked by belonging. If this brings something up for you, listen through, share it with someone who needs it, and subscribe, rate, and review to help more people find the podcast. What part of you needs a seat at the table today? Support the show [https://www.patreon.com/churchplanting] Consider helping us to take the Gospel to others here: https://patreon.com/churchplanting https://cash.app/$WellnessInstitute [https://cash.app/%24WellnessInstitute] Leave a voicemail question or prayer requests here: (585) 331-3424 Leave an email question, prayer requests or comment here: robyoung51.ry@gmail.com

28 de may de 20265 min
episode The Jesus No One Talks About Series Pt. 2: Jesus Confronts What Harms You | Wednesday Devotion artwork

The Jesus No One Talks About Series Pt. 2: Jesus Confronts What Harms You | Wednesday Devotion

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2067782/fan_mail/new] Jesus flipping tables is one of the most misunderstood moments in the Gospels, and we slow down to hear what it actually reveals about his heart. Reading from John 2:17, we explore a simple but disruptive idea: Jesus’ passion isn’t rage, it’s protective love. When he confronts us, it’s not because he’s against us, but because he’s for us. We talk about what can get in the way between us and the life God is inviting us into: lies we’ve believed, old wounds we keep reopening, and unhealthy patterns we’ve tolerated for far too long. And we name the hard part honestly: when Jesus removes what harms us, it can hurt, not as punishment, but because rescue often involves letting go of what feels familiar. Then we create space to respond with a guided three-minute reflection question: Where do I need to trust that Jesus’ confrontation is actually his protection? We close with a direct prayer asking for courage, surrender, and deeper trust in his love. If you’re looking for a short Christian devotional, a John 2 Bible reflection, or a practical next step in spiritual growth and repentance, this conversation is for you. Subscribe for more, share this with someone who needs courage today, and leave a review so more listeners can find the show. What is one thing you sense Jesus asking you to release? Support the show [https://www.patreon.com/churchplanting] Consider helping us to take the Gospel to others here: https://patreon.com/churchplanting https://cash.app/$WellnessInstitute [https://cash.app/%24WellnessInstitute] Leave a voicemail question or prayer requests here: (585) 331-3424 Leave an email question, prayer requests or comment here: robyoung51.ry@gmail.com

27 de may de 20265 min
episode The Jesus No One Talks About Series Pt. 2: Naming What Has Become Distorted | Tuesday Devotion artwork

The Jesus No One Talks About Series Pt. 2: Naming What Has Become Distorted | Tuesday Devotion

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2067782/fan_mail/new] Jesus flipping tables is one of the most misunderstood scenes in the Gospels, and we wanted to slow it down and let it read us. We start with the temple moment and the line about a “den of robbers,” then ask the uncomfortable question: what if the robbers are not just systems or other people, but the subtle distortions we carry into worship, relationships, and daily life? We talk about how Jesus is not raging at animals or the building itself. He is confronting what happens when something meant to be good gets twisted. That twist can look surprisingly respectable: performance dressed up as devotion, people pleasing disguised as kindness, fear that calls itself caution, self-reliance that looks like strength, and comparison that pretends it is motivation. Over time, those patterns can steal joy, intimacy, and freedom while we keep functioning on the outside. Then we shift into a simple but searching picture: imagine Jesus kneeling beside a table in your heart. On it sit objects representing the distortions you live with. What happens if he gently turns each one over, not to shame you, but to reveal what you cannot see on your own? We close with a short guided reflection question to help you name the “tables” in your life where something good has become distorted. If this resonates, listen through to the end, share it with a friend who needs a reset, and subscribe so you don’t miss what’s next. After you listen, what table would you ask Jesus to turn over first? Support the show [https://www.patreon.com/churchplanting] Consider helping us to take the Gospel to others here: https://patreon.com/churchplanting https://cash.app/$WellnessInstitute [https://cash.app/%24WellnessInstitute] Leave a voicemail question or prayer requests here: (585) 331-3424 Leave an email question, prayer requests or comment here: robyoung51.ry@gmail.com

26 de may de 20265 min