Created in the Image of God

Elephants, the Grass & the Teacher with Chinyere Egbe | Created In The Image of God 249

54 min · 25. mai 2026
episode Elephants, the Grass & the Teacher with Chinyere Egbe | Created In The Image of God 249 cover

Beskrivelse

When wars are told in history books, the focus is usually on generals, presidents, and borders. Chinyere Emmanuel Egbe insists the real story lies elsewhere. A Nigerian‑born economist and long‑time CUNY professor who has spent decades teaching statistics and finance in Brooklyn, Dr. Egbe is also the author of Elephants, the Grass and the Teacher, a memoir of growing up during the Nigerian Civil War (1967–1970). In it, he uses a simple image to describe what he saw: the “elephants” — ruling establishments and military elites — decide when wars start and end, but it is the “grass,” the masses of ordinary people and low‑ranking soldiers, that is trampled.In this episode, Dr. Egbe walks through his early life under British colonial rule, the disciplined, justice‑oriented home shaped by his London‑educated teacher father and deeply prayerful mother, and the way that upbringing gave him a rigid sense of right and wrong. He then traces how Nigeria’s negotiated independence in 1960, followed by flawed elections and political crises in the mid‑1960s, spiraled into a military coup and eventually civil war. From his vantage point as a boy in Eastern Nigeria, he witnessed firsthand how decisions made by distant leaders translated into hunger, fear, displacement, and death on the ground.Along the way, he returns again and again to what he calls “divine interventions”: the improbable escapes and narrow misses that kept his family alive when, as a statistician, he now sees the odds should have gone the other way. He reflects on ancient voices like Plutarch and reformers in Rome who also saw commanders treating soldiers like expendable coins, and connects that insight to Paul’s blunt question in the New Testament: “From whence come wars and fightings among you?” For Dr. Egbe, the answer is clear — greed and the struggle of powerful “elephants” over resources God has already provided in sufficient measure for all.The conversation then bridges to his later work: why those wartime experiences drove him toward economics, why he believes education is a moral calling, and how his efforts in Central Brooklyn — from launching degree programs in financial economics to creating a Wall Street‑style trading lab and leading HUD‑funded community projects — are part of the same lifelong response to injustice he first sensed as a child.For listeners who have only known war through headlines, or who wonder what faith and justice look like when you’ve seen conflict up close, this episode offers a rare combination: rigorous economic insight, vivid personal story, and a clear-eyed moral critique of power that still leaves room for gratitude, purpose, and hope. Get full access to Created in the Image of God at wadefransson.substack.com/subscribe [https://wadefransson.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

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259 Episoder

episode From Saigon to “Promised Land” with David Truong | Created In The Image of God 260 cover

From Saigon to “Promised Land” with David Truong | Created In The Image of God 260

Born in Vietnam and forced to flee as a child after the fall of Saigon, David Truong’s life traces a modern Exodus—from war, displacement, and refugee camps to rebuilding in America and discovering a deeper freedom in Christ. After escaping by boat and surviving the uncertainty of camp life, he and his family eventually resettled in the United States, an experience he recounts in his memoir Escape to America, featured on NPR and in regional media.Today David is a husband, father, corporate attorney, and deacon at Dulles Church of Christ, a Bible‑based congregation he helped plant more than 20 years ago. In this episode of Created in the Image of God, he reflects on how God met him in trauma and transition, reshaped his understanding of freedom, duty, and opportunity, and turned a family’s desperate escape into a story of redemptive love and purpose.We talk about memory, migration, and gratitude—what it means to honor the life you narrowly escaped, the life you were given, and the responsibilities that come with both. For anyone wrestling with hardship, origin stories, or the meaning of “promised land” in their own journey, David’s story offers a sober, hope‑filled look at providence, perseverance, and thankfulness. Get full access to Created in the Image of God at wadefransson.substack.com/subscribe [https://wadefransson.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

1. juli 20261 h 7 min
episode From Hustle to Holy Habits with Jason Heinritz | Created In The Image of God 259 cover

From Hustle to Holy Habits with Jason Heinritz | Created In The Image of God 259

Jason Heinritz grew up in a conservative Christian home in Waukesha, Wisconsin—church on Sundays, sports and good grades through the week. But underneath the wholesome exterior, he learned to draw his worth from performance: being liked, being captain, winning. In college, that drive found a perfect outlet in direct sales with Cutco Cutlery, where he quickly became a top producer and then a successful office owner.Through his twenties, Jason lived the classic “work hard, party hard” script: binge‑drinking weekends, achievement‑driven hustle, and a faith life largely reduced to an hour on Sunday. He still called himself a “Jesus guy,” but his real priorities were trips, trophies, and building his own kingdom. The breaking point came when he got engaged in a relationship built on chemistry and convenience more than shared calling—and realized, just months before the wedding, that he couldn’t honestly bring God into a future he was already compromising.In this episode, Jason unpacks that wake‑up call and the year of reset that followed: calling off the wedding, stepping back from dating, diving into Scripture, morning routines, and wholehearted surrender. We trace how God led him from divided loyalties into a life of “holy habits”—launching the Wake Up Jesus People movement, the 40 Forge Challenge, and the journal and practices now helping believers move from hustle to sustainable rhythms with Jesus.If you’re tired of living split between your public success and your private soul, Jason’s story is a practical, hopeful invitation to let God reorder your days—so you can live with deeper peace, purpose, and joy in a noisy, distracted world. Get full access to Created in the Image of God at wadefransson.substack.com/subscribe [https://wadefransson.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

29. juni 202649 min
episode Oasis & the Half‑Caste Kid with Steve Chalke | Created In The Image of God 257 cover

Oasis & the Half‑Caste Kid with Steve Chalke | Created In The Image of God 257

If you ask Steve Chalke why Oasis exists—a network of churches, schools, housing projects, youth work, anti‑trafficking initiatives, and community hubs serving tens of thousands across the UK—he’ll take you back to a teenage boy walking home in South London. The son of a South Indian railway worker and a white English mother, Steve grew up in poverty, watching his father passed over for jobs and literally watched people cross the street to avoid him. At school his nickname was “half‑caste,” and teachers in his “dump” of a secondary school told students people like them weren’t worth educating; they’d work with their hands, not their heads.At 14, Steve started attending a Friday‑night youth club at a local Baptist church because he was infatuated with a girl named Mary. One evening her friend walked across the hall to inform him, in front of everyone, that Mary thought he was “ugly.” Crestfallen, he trudged home—only to realize that, whatever Mary thought, the story he was hearing at that little church was radically different from the one he heard at school. There, he was told he’d never amount to much. At church, he heard that he was made by God, that his life had meaning and purpose. On that walk home, he made a decision that would mark the rest of his life: he would keep going to the youth group even if Mary never spoke to him again; he would follow Jesus; he would become a church leader; and when he grew up, he would start a school that was worth going to, a house for kids who had never been loved, and a hospital.In this episode, Steve tells how that teenage vow slowly became reality. After training for ministry at Spurgeon’s College and serving as a youth pastor, he and his new wife Cornelia did something most would call reckless: they left the security of a large church job and, with no money, launched a 501(c)(3)–style charity from scratch. In 1985 they opened a sixteen‑bedroom house for 16–18‑year‑olds who had been abused, neglected, and passed around the care system. Cornelia named it “Oasis,” because that’s what they wanted it to be—a place of shelter and life in a desert of indifference. From that single house, Oasis has grown over four decades into a family of charities employing more than 6,000 staff, educating 35,000 children in some of the UK’s most disadvantaged neighborhoods, and running churches, youth work, housing projects, and justice initiatives—including work in the criminal justice system and anti‑trafficking efforts.Along the way, Steve has become one of Britain’s most outspoken public Christians: fronting national TV and radio broadcasts, serving as a UN special adviser on human trafficking, launching the STOP THE TRAFFIK coalition, and writing over 40 books that challenge the church on issues like atonement, racism, inclusion, and LGBTQ+ affirmation. In conversation with Wade, he unpacks his conviction that Christian faith is always personal but never private—that the gospel must show up in concrete action for justice, reconciliation, and the common good, or it has betrayed Jesus. He reflects on how his own story of exclusion fuels his passion for radically inclusive communities, why he believes churches must be embedded in their neighborhoods as “hubs” of holistic care, and how theology, sociology, and psychology all have a role in reimagining what it means to love our neighbors.For listeners wondering what it looks like to take Jesus’ call to love the least of these seriously—not just in words but in structures and systems—this episode offers both inspiration and provocation. Steve’s life is a testimony that a 14‑year‑old’s kitchen‑table decision, rooted in the simple belief that every person bears God’s image, can grow—through risk, failure, perseverance, and grace—into an oasis for thousands. Get full access to Created in the Image of God at wadefransson.substack.com/subscribe [https://wadefransson.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

22. juni 202655 min
episode Life Worth Living with Miroslav Volf | Created In The Image of God 256 cover

Life Worth Living with Miroslav Volf | Created In The Image of God 256

Miroslav Volf’s theology was born not in an ivory tower, but in the cracks of a fractured world. Raised in post–World War II Yugoslavia by a Pentecostal pastor father and a Bible‑soaked mother, he spent his earliest years in a tiny apartment shared with a Serbian nanny, Milica Branković—“the angel of my childhood,” as he calls her. In a country still marked by violence between Croats (largely Catholic) and Serbs (largely Orthodox), that little household quietly embodied a different possibility: people from groups taught to distrust one another living together in love, prayer, and mutual care. It was, in hindsight, a living parable of reconciliation.As a teenager, Volf resisted the weight of his parents’ faith, only to encounter Christ for himself at sixteen—unexpectedly, in a Swedish tent meeting where he barely understood half the sermon. The change was profound enough that when he returned home, his emotionally astute mother simply looked at him and said, “What happened to you? You’re a different person.” From there, his path wound through underground theological study in communist Yugoslavia, philosophy at the University of Zagreb, a master’s degree at Fuller Theological Seminary in California, and advanced work in Tübingen, Germany on the deepest questions of God, self, and other. All of it unfolded against the backdrop of a homeland sliding into ethnic war.In this episode, Volf and Wade explore how those experiences gave rise to the themes that now define his work: exclusion and embrace, identity and otherness, and the possibility of a life “worth living” in a deeply divided age. Volf explains why he sees the gospel’s heart not in withdrawal or domination, but in the crucified Christ who absorbs enmity and opens his arms in welcome—a pattern he famously unpacked in Exclusion and Embrace, and has continued to develop through the Yale Center for Faith & Culture’s work on flourishing and public faith. They discuss how theology must be tested in the “laboratory” of real life—war, injustice, politics, and everyday relationships—and why cheap calls to reconciliation that ignore justice are as dangerous as justice pursued without any hope of reconciliation.Drawing on insights from Flourishing and Life Worth Living: A Guide to What Matters Most, Volf invites listeners—believers and skeptics alike—to wrestle with questions modern life often pushes aside: What is a good life? What are we for? How do we live with our enemies, our neighbors, and even ourselves without being consumed by resentment? Throughout, he returns to the conviction that a truly Christian vision of life is both deeply realistic about evil and radically hopeful about God’s power to create a future of joy, justice, and embrace.For anyone struggling to make sense of faith in the face of violence, culture wars, or personal hurt, this conversation offers more than abstract answers. It traces the journey of a man who has seen exclusion up close and still dares to imagine—and work for—a world shaped by reconciliation rather than revenge. Get full access to Created in the Image of God at wadefransson.substack.com/subscribe [https://wadefransson.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

18. juni 202652 min