The Open Space Podcast

Suffering in the Christian Life | Nick Froese

32 min · 4 jun 2026
aflevering Suffering in the Christian Life | Nick Froese artwork

Beschrijving

Nick Froese explores how the deepest lessons of faith are often taught through seasons of profound suffering. Drawing from the life of the Apostle Paul and the compassion of Jesus, Nick challenges our cultural "allergy to suffering" by showing that God's power is made perfect in our weakness. This episode features moving personal testimonies and a reflection on Psalm 23, inviting listeners to trust that the Good Shepherd is present even in life's darkest valleys.

Reacties

0

Wees de eerste die een reactie plaatst

Meld je nu aan en word lid van de The Open Space Podcast community!

Probeer gratis

Probeer 14 dagen gratis

€ 9,99 / maand na proefperiode. · Elk moment opzegbaar.

  • Podcasts die je alleen op Podimo hoort
  • 20 uur luisterboeken / maand
  • Gratis podcasts

Alle afleveringen

17 afleveringen

aflevering To Lack Nothing | Amanda Brumlow artwork

To Lack Nothing | Amanda Brumlow

In this episode, Amanda from the EveryHeart Movement in Grand Rapids, Michigan, teaches from Psalm 23 and explores what it means to truly believe the words, "The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want." Through Scripture and personal testimony, this message examines the tension between God's promises and the places where we still feel lack. From the Garden of Eden to Israel in the wilderness to the life of Jesus, Amanda reveals how our deepest struggles often come back to one question: can we trust the Father's care? Rather than taking control into our own hands, we are invited to surrender, depend on God, and find our satisfaction in Christ. This teaching is a call to return to the Shepherd, trust His leadership, and discover what it means to truly lack nothing.

Gisteren26 min
aflevering Anxiety and Peace | Isaac Josue artwork

Anxiety and Peace | Isaac Josue

This episode is a message for anyone who feels worn down by anxiety, pressure, or the quiet belief that they should be doing better by now. Drawing from Philippians 4, Isaac reflects on the kind of peace Scripture describes as being beyond understanding. Not a peace that comes from having everything under control, but a peace that guards our hearts and minds even while life still feels heavy. Through Scripture and lived experience, this message challenges the idea that faith means the absence of struggle. Instead, it points to a deeper invitation found in Philippians 4: to bring our worries to God, to practice trust, and to receive a peace that does not depend on circumstances changing first. Rather than offering quick fixes, this conversation creates space to breathe, to question, and to re-center on what it actually means to trust God when your emotions haven’t caught up yet. If you’ve ever felt discouraged by your own anxiety, unsure if your faith is “enough,” or tired of carrying what you were never meant to hold alone, this message is for you.

15 jan 202639 min
aflevering Revival Looks Like Repentance | Ryan Murray artwork

Revival Looks Like Repentance | Ryan Murray

In this message, we open Luke 7:36–50 and step into a dinner party where Jesus is anointed by a woman known only as “a sinner.” Surrounded by religious leaders, social judgment, and unspoken tension, her response to Jesus becomes the model Jesus himself ties to the proclamation of the gospel. This teaching explores what revival truly looks like in this moment. Not hype, performance, or trend-driven Christianity, but repentance that is honest, costly, and transformative. Through cultural context, Greek language insight, and a close reading of the text, we see how repentance is not a way to earn grace, but the response to grace already given. The message also addresses confusion around sin, repentance, and identity in Christ. It walks through key passages in 1 John and Romans to clarify what it means to be saved, to still wrestle with sin, and to live under a new master. Repentance is framed not as shame, but as worship, a life poured out at the feet of Jesus. We close by moving from one dinner party in Luke 7 to another at the Lord’s Supper, where Jesus’ posture toward sinners, including Judas, reveals the depth of his mercy and love. This message invites us to remember the woman Jesus eternally linked to the gospel and to ask ourselves what it looks like to respond to that same mercy today. Revival looks like repentance.

15 dec 202539 min
aflevering Life is Meaningless Without the Shepherd | Isaac Josue artwork

Life is Meaningless Without the Shepherd | Isaac Josue

In this episode we look at the life of King Solomon. The man who had everything. Wisdom, wealth, pleasure, projects, status, and influence. Yet after chasing every desire of his heart, Solomon looked back and said it was all vanity and like trying to catch the wind. His story exposes what happens when we try to build a life on things that cannot satisfy. We compare Solomon’s journey to ours today. Many of us climb career ladders, chase relationships, look for comfort in sex, drinking, drugs, success, or even good things like family, creativity, and doing good. But when the people we love fail or leave, or when the things we build collapse, our purpose collapses with them. Nothing this world offers can hold the weight of our desire for peace. From there we turn to Psalm 23 and the life God invites us into. The Lord is my Shepherd. True peace is found in intimacy with Him. I shall not want. God meets the desires that nothing else can fill. He leads me. He restores me. He protects me. He satisfies me. Even in the valley of the shadow of death, we do not lose peace because He is with us. Psalm 23 shows us that the life we long for is not built on achievement or pleasure. It is built on relationship with a Shepherd who heals our wounds, shapes our purpose, and gives us a prosperity that death cannot touch.

24 nov 202531 min