Scattered Moments

June 30, 2026 | Moments Almanac | Alberta

3 min · 30 jun 2026
aflevering June 30, 2026 | Moments Almanac | Alberta artwork

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Share Your Thoughts [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2602723/fan_mail/new] June 30: When Darkness Couldn't Silence the Music Two moments. Forty years apart. On June 30, 1934, Adolf Hitler launched the Night of the Long Knives, proving how easily evil can disguise itself as order. Forty years later, on June 30, 1974, Alberta Williams King—the mother of Martin Luther King Jr.—sat at the organ of Ebenezer Baptist Church, playing The Lord's Prayer, when a gunman opened fire. These tragedies were separated by continents, generations, and scale, yet both reveal the same ancient temptation: to forget that every human being bears the image of God. Today's Moments Almanac reflects on history's darkest moments, the hope found in Genesis 1:27, the wisdom of W. H. Auden, and the Gospel's answer to the endless cycle of hatred. Because the darkness may interrupt the music... ...but it cannot silence the Kingdom.

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aflevering June 30, 2026 | Moments Almanac | Alberta artwork

June 30, 2026 | Moments Almanac | Alberta

Share Your Thoughts [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2602723/fan_mail/new] June 30: When Darkness Couldn't Silence the Music Two moments. Forty years apart. On June 30, 1934, Adolf Hitler launched the Night of the Long Knives, proving how easily evil can disguise itself as order. Forty years later, on June 30, 1974, Alberta Williams King—the mother of Martin Luther King Jr.—sat at the organ of Ebenezer Baptist Church, playing The Lord's Prayer, when a gunman opened fire. These tragedies were separated by continents, generations, and scale, yet both reveal the same ancient temptation: to forget that every human being bears the image of God. Today's Moments Almanac reflects on history's darkest moments, the hope found in Genesis 1:27, the wisdom of W. H. Auden, and the Gospel's answer to the endless cycle of hatred. Because the darkness may interrupt the music... ...but it cannot silence the Kingdom.

30 jun 20263 min
aflevering The Poison We Choose to Drink artwork

The Poison We Choose to Drink

Share Your Thoughts [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2602723/fan_mail/new] Bitterness rarely announces itself as bitterness. It often disguises itself as justice, hurt, or the quiet conviction that we have every right to hold on just a little longer. In this spoken-word episode of Scattered Moments, Matt Tullos explores the devastating path resentment can carve through hearts, families, friendships, and even churches—and the greater invitation Christ offers at His table. Drawing from Hebrews 12:15 and Ephesians 4:31–32, this poetic reflection reminds us that forgiveness is not pretending the wound never happened. It is choosing to lay our bitterness beside the broken body of Christ and allowing Him to make all things new. If you've been carrying old hurts, unresolved anger, or the weight of unforgiveness, may this episode encourage you to discover the freedom found only in Jesus. "See to it that no one fails to obtain the grace of God; that no root of bitterness springs up and causes trouble, and by it many become defiled." — Hebrews 12:15

Gisteren6 min
aflevering June 29, 2026 | Moments Almanac | Fire artwork

June 29, 2026 | Moments Almanac | Fire

Share Your Thoughts [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2602723/fan_mail/new] On June 29, two very different fires tell the same story. In 1613, London's Globe Theatre—the stage that gave the world Shakespeare's greatest plays—burned to the ground in less than an hour. The building was lost, but the words escaped the flames. Centuries later, we still speak many of the phrases first heard beneath its thatched roof. Two hundred forty-eight years later, Elizabeth Barrett Browning breathed her last in Florence. Her body had been weakened by decades of illness, but her vision remained clear. In one of her most beloved poems, she reminded us that "Earth's crammed with heaven, and every common bush afire with God." In this episode of Moments Almanac, we explore what survives when fragile vessels fail—whether a theater of timber or a body of flesh. Through Scripture, history, poetry, and hymn, we're reminded that God places eternal treasure in ordinary jars of clay. Scripture: 2 Corinthians 4:7 Hymn: O Worship the King by Robert Grant (1833) Some things the fire simply cannot touch.

Gisteren5 min
aflevering June 28, 2026 | Moments Almanac | Carry artwork

June 28, 2026 | Moments Almanac | Carry

Share Your Thoughts [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2602723/fan_mail/new] What does faithfulness look like? Sometimes it looks like carrying a bucket. Sometimes it looks like carrying a Bible. In this June 28 episode of Moments Almanac, we remember two ordinary people separated by sixteen centuries who simply picked up what the moment required. Irenaeus of Lyon defended the truth of the Gospel when false teachers threatened to reshape it, becoming the earliest Christian writer to clearly affirm Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John as the four authoritative Gospels. Mary Ludwig Hays walked the blistering battlefield at Monmouth, carrying water to exhausted soldiers before stepping to her husband's cannon when he fell. One carried the Word. One carried water. Both remind us that God rarely asks us to be famous. More often, He asks us to be faithful. Join us as we reflect on Jesus' promise of Living Water and consider a simple question that echoes into every ordinary day: What does this moment need—and will I carry it?

28 jun 20264 min
aflevering June 27, 2026 | Moments Almanac | Speak artwork

June 27, 2026 | Moments Almanac | Speak

Share Your Thoughts [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2602723/fan_mail/new] On June 27, two remarkable lives remind us that God delights in giving people a voice. In 1736, a young George Whitefield stepped into the pulpit to preach his very first sermon. He began awkwardly, surrounded by family and friends, but before long the Holy Spirit filled him with boldness. That hesitant beginning would grow into one of the most influential preaching ministries of the Great Awakening. More than a century later, Helen Keller was born in Tuscumbia, Alabama. Deaf and blind from early childhood, she lived in a world without words until one unforgettable moment unlocked the gift of language. She would go on to become one of the world's most recognized authors, advocates, and speakers. Their stories ask a simple question: How is God calling you to use your voice today? Today's Scripture: Psalm 51:15 "Open my lips, Lord, and my mouth will declare your praise." Take heart. Notice the scattered moments. Share the grace.

27 jun 20264 min