Willingdon Church Podcast

Three Babblers Babbling about Babel | Preachers Through Your Speakers EP 32

46 min · 29 mei 2026
aflevering Three Babblers Babbling about Babel | Preachers Through Your Speakers EP 32 artwork

Beschrijving

Silas, Pastor Ray and Pastor Brett chat about Pentecost, the Tower of Babel and the Holy Spirit! We're taking a break for our Summer Series, but please email us at ask@willingdon.org for any questions you have during the summer.  00:00 Intro 00:52 Babel or Babel 02:25 Sermon Summary 14:42 Feat of Weeks 17:25 Gathered worship before Pentecost 19:59 Does every Human have the Holy Spirit? 32:07 Well Educated vs Gifted Teaching 40:12 Looking forward to Ecclesiastes  45:30 Outro

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Alle afleveringen

108 afleveringen

aflevering 5 Essentials for Wise Worship - Ecclesiastes 5:1-7 artwork

5 Essentials for Wise Worship - Ecclesiastes 5:1-7

My heart and mind are full of so many things. Distractions. Dreams. Worries. Demands. Ideas. Joys. Busy thoughts. The things of life: Laundry, dishes, oil changes, emails, text messages, transporting children, parenting, planning meals, a full-time job, a good dose of sitting in traffic, health concerns, wondering about the future, occasional doomscrolling on Youtube. Lots of times, my brain is pretty full and if you could hear everything in my brain (or me yours), you might wonder how my brain would possibly hear anything more from anyone. You might wonder the same about yourself. That’s pretty natural I think. And it certainly reflects the common western cultural tendencies for bustling busyness and measuring our worth in all of our accomplishments. We like to be busy. And we also don’t like it. What’s the most common response to the question: How are you? The response I hear more than any other: BUSY. Busy days. Busy people. Busy brains. None of these things that I listed above as things that fill my brain are wrong or evil (except maybe dishes, or Youtube) – but what they can create in us, when all clumped together and piled on to one another – is a distracted and divided heart – and habits that can negatively influence how we approach our relationship with the Living God. This passage invites each of us to reorient our hearts appropriately.  1. Guard our steps as we enter worship  2. Talk less, listen more 3. Keep our dreams properly ordered 4. In our dealings with God, don’t overpromise and underdeliver 5. Stand in awe of God

Gisteren29 min
aflevering The Wisdom of a Threefold Strand - Ecclesiastes 3:16-4:16 artwork

The Wisdom of a Threefold Strand - Ecclesiastes 3:16-4:16

In seasons of severe suffering, we experience life at the extremities. We have mountaintop moments where we see farther and more clearly than ever before. We have days where we can say with full conviction, “God has made everything is beautiful in its time. I have eternity in my heart. I know God is sovereignly accomplishing his purposes. I can rest in Him.” And then there are deep valley moments where we are in the depth of despair, where nothing makes sense and everything is dark. As we turn to the second half of chapter 3, the Preacher enters the valley of despair once again. He’s looking at life horizontally, from the perspective of one “under the sun.” This is repeated five times. Over and over again, he writes “I saw” (6x) or “I said in my heart” (2x). He looks horizontally at the harsh realities of evil, injustice, and death, and then the mad foolishness of the human treadmill, and finds more reasons to say that everything is meaningless (5x). In his reflections, he oscillates between the extremities of deep faith conviction and very unsettling questions. How do you move forward when you don’t understand why God has made life this way? 1. The Harsh Realities of Evil, Injustice, and Death (3.16-4.3) 2. The Mad Foolishness of the Treadmill (4:4-8, 4:13-16). 3. The Wisdom of Bonded Relationship (4:9-12)

28 jun 202636 min
aflevering Beautiful In Its Time - Ecclesiastes 3:1-15 artwork

Beautiful In Its Time - Ecclesiastes 3:1-15

Can you step back, look at the past year, and say, “Thank you, God. This was beautiful”? In 1965, the folk-rock band the Byrds recorded Pete Seeger’s "Turn! Turn! Turn! To Everything There is a Season”. The lyrics of the song follow the Preacher’s most famous poem, found here in Ecclesiastes 3:1-8, almost word for word. The song topped the Billboard charts and became an anthem of the 1960s peace movement. Some fathers will remember. The thoughts and phrases of the Preacher’s poem have found their way into the language of our pop culture. It’s a beautifully balanced rhythmic lilt, 14 lines pitting actions and emotional states against their opposites and intended to include everything in between. What matters are not the 28 individual elements, but all the elements taken as a whole - the multiples of 7 symbolizing completion or perfection. Within the whole, we see a gentle ebb and flow of different moods and experiences. Some things we long for, others shock us.   Ecclesiastes 3 gifts us with a vision of the whole tapestry of life. We are invited to step back and look at life with all its rhythms and turns. For some of us this is difficult. For some, it may be too painful, too unsettling. The text invites us to … 1. Step Back to See the Whole 2. Embrace the Mystery of Longing to See it All 3. Revere the One Who Does Reflection Questions 1. Where are you on your spiritual journey today? * Are you wrestling with the barbed wire? * Are you grateful for the longing for eternity that God has placed in your heart? * Are you in a place of reverence and awe? * Are you grateful for God’s good gifts? * Are you trusting God to weave together the threads of your life? 2. How is God inviting you to respond to Him today?

22 jun 202633 min
aflevering The Quest: Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For - Ecclesiastes 1:12-2:11 artwork

The Quest: Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For - Ecclesiastes 1:12-2:11

What am I supposed to do with my life? What’s the whole point of living anyway? These are the big questions of life raised by the author of Ecclesiastes. But his quest to find answers left him frustrated and disillusioned – he calls it an unhappy business that God has assigned to humanity. This was bound to be the case because his was a research project conducted ‘under the sun’ – an exploration made apart from God.  Nevertheless, his account of his futile quest has much to teach us. His seek-and-search mission for an answer to purpose of life led him to examine wisdom and knowledge, experiment with various forms of pleasure before throwing himself completely into work and the accumulation of wealth. But none provided the answer he was looking for. He was striving after the wind, and it left him empty. 1. The Futility of Human Wisdom 2. The Folly of Pleasure 3. The Failure of Production Reflection Questions 1. Reflect on a time when achieving a personal goal (e.g., career or academic success, a purchase) left you feeling empty. How does the author’s conclusion in Ecclesiastes 2:11 challenge your view of earthly pursuits? 2. How can you intentionally experience life as God intended when faced with anxiety about unanswered questions or unmet desires? 3. Jesus’ words to his followers in Mark 8:34-37 directly address the big questions of meaning raised by the author of Ecclesiastes. How does Jesus’ message speak to you personally?

7 jun 202634 min