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Truth & Tone

Podkast av Erik & Bekah Buchterkirchen

engelsk

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Les mer Truth & Tone

In a cultural moment marked by noise and reaction, Truth & Tone creates space for careful reflection grounded in Scripture, shaped by the historic Christian faith, and attentive to the lived realities of the local church. Hosted by Erik Buchterkirchen, a pastor theologian, and Bekah Buchterkirchen, a writer and communicator, the show engages thoughtful conversation, believing how we speak matters as much as what we say. Through honest conversations on marriage, ministry, culture, and Christianity, Truth & Tone is for Christians who want to think clearly, speak charitably, and live faithfully in a fractured world.

Alle episoder

11 Episoder

episode OUTRO: Season 1 Reflections and Looking Ahead cover

OUTRO: Season 1 Reflections and Looking Ahead

In this closing episode of season one, Erik and Bekah reflect on the journey of launching Truth & Tone. They share what they learned along the way, where they felt stretched stepping into something new, and how the conversations shaped them personally and pastorally. They also look ahead to what’s coming in season two and why they are grateful for the listeners who have joined them in thoughtful, charitable engagement throughout the season. If this podcast has been meaningful, subscribing and leaving a rating helps others discover the show and enter the conversation.  Listeners are also invited to visit www.truthandtone.com [http://www.truthandtone.com/] to learn more and share ideas for future topics they would like the show to explore. Thank you for listening and for being part of the Truth & Tone community! We’ll be back soon for season two!

1. mai 2026 - 22 min
episode Does Going to Church Still Matter? Church Attendance, Belonging, and Formation cover

Does Going to Church Still Matter? Church Attendance, Belonging, and Formation

For many people today, church attendance has become more occasional than habitual. Shifting schedules, demanding seasons of life, health concerns, and emotional fatigue all shape our capacity to gather. The question beneath the data is not simply how often people attend church, but why gathering still matters at all. In this episode, Erik and Bekah reflect on the real barriers that make showing up difficult. They name the lived realities of parents, singles, those carrying grief, and those navigating seasons where church feels complicated rather than comforting. Church attendance is not treated as a simple moral equation, but as something shaped by bodies, seasons, and belonging. The conversation explores a quieter question many carry beneath the surface. Am I known here? Drawing from the early church and the biblical vision of shared life, this episode emphasizes that Christian gathering was never meant to be passive. From the beginning, it was participatory, relational, and formative. Listeners are invited to consider not only whether they are attending, but how gathering might become a place of belonging, formation, and shared faithfulness over time. Resources Mentioned in This Episode: * Gallup (2024). Church Attendance Has Declined in Most U.S. Religious Groups [https://news.gallup.com/poll/642548/church-attendance-declined-religious-groups.aspx?utm_source=chatgpt.com] * Going to Church in the First Century [https://amzn.to/4thhCZU] by Robert Banks Subscribe to the show to receive future episodes, and visit www.truthandtone.com [http://www.truthandtone.com/] to learn more. You can follow us on Substack [https://truthandtone.substack.com] to take the conversation further.

28. april 2026 - 43 min
episode How to Talk About Faith Without Offending People: Respectful Conversations About Religion cover

How to Talk About Faith Without Offending People: Respectful Conversations About Religion

Conversations about faith can feel high-stakes. Many of us want to share what we believe, but hesitate out of fear of offending, being misunderstood, or saying the wrong thing. Others feel the pressure to prove a point, only to find the relationship strained in the process. In this episode, we explore what it looks like to talk about faith in a way that holds both conviction and care. We reflect on the difference between winning an argument and understanding a person, the role of empathy in meaningful dialogue, and why perspective-taking can actually deepen rather than weaken our beliefs. Through personal stories and thoughtful reflection, we consider how to engage people of different beliefs with humility, curiosity, and clarity. What might change if our goal shifted from being right to being present? Resources Mentioned in This Episode: Theo of Golden (https://amzn.to/3QQWNWs) by Allen Levi Jesus and the Law of Moses: The Gospels and the Restoration of Israel Within First-Century Judaism (https://amzn.to/4exPfSq) by Paul Sloan Barna Group. (2019). Almost half of practicing Christian Millennials say evangelism is wrong. https://www.barna.com/research/millennials-oppose-evangelism/ (https://www.barna.com/research/millennials-oppose-evangelism/?utm_source=chatgpt.com) Barna Group. (2018). Sharing faith is increasingly optional to Christians. https://www.barna.com/research/sharing-faith-increasingly-optional-christians/ (https://www.barna.com/research/sharing-faith-increasingly-optional-christians/?utm_source=chatgpt.com) Seeking Allah, Finding Jesus: A Devout Muslim Encounters Christianity (https://amzn.to/4vYh6BN) by Nabeel Qureshi I Beg to Differ: Navigating Difficult Conversations with Truth and Love (https://amzn.to/41K2lEK) by Tim Muehlhoff Subscribe to the show to receive future episodes, and visit www.truthandtone.com (http://www.truthandtone.com/) to learn more. You can follow us on Substack (https://truthandtone.substack.com/) to take the conversation further.

21. april 2026 - 52 min
episode Unlearning Transactional Faith: The Deals We Make with God cover

Unlearning Transactional Faith: The Deals We Make with God

For many people today, church attendance has become more occasional than habitual. Shifting schedules, demanding seasons of life, health concerns, and emotional fatigue all shape our capacity to gather. The question beneath the data is not simply how often people attend church, but why gathering still matters at all.   In this episode, Erik and Bekah reflect on the real barriers that make showing up difficult. They name the lived realities of parents, singles, those carrying grief, and those navigating seasons where church feels complicated rather than comforting. Church attendance is not treated as a simple moral equation, but as something shaped by bodies, seasons, and belonging.   The conversation explores a quieter question many carry beneath the surface. Am I known here? Drawing from the early church and the biblical vision of shared life, this episode emphasizes that Christian gathering was never meant to be passive. From the beginning, it was participatory, relational, and formative.   Listeners are invited to consider not only whether they are attending, but how gathering might become a place of belonging, formation, and shared faithfulness over time.   Resources Mentioned in This Episode: * Gallup (2024). Church Attendance Has Declined in Most U.S. Religious Groups [https://news.gallup.com/poll/642548/church-attendance-declined-religious-groups.aspx?utm_source=chatgpt.com] * Going to Church in the First Century [https://amzn.to/4thhCZU] by Robert Banks Subscribe to the show to receive future episodes, and visit www.truthandtone.com [http://www.truthandtone.com/] to learn more. You can follow us on Substack [https://truthandtone.substack.com] to take the conversation further.

14. april 2026 - 35 min
episode Pornography in Marriage: Shame and the Long Work of Healing cover

Pornography in Marriage: Shame and the Long Work of Healing

Pornography is one of the most difficult subjects to talk about honestly, especially within the church. It often lives at the intersection of secrecy, shame, and pain. Avoiding the conversation does not protect people. It leaves many isolated, confused, and quietly suffering. In this episode, Erik and Bekah are joined by researcher and friend, Dr. Jessica Journaey, whose work examines the impact of pornography within heterosexual, monogamous relationships. They discuss what current research is revealing about pornography’s relational cost, including patterns of secrecy, betrayal, diminished intimacy, increased conflict, and long term dissatisfaction. The episode pays particular attention to how women often experience a partner’s pornography use, not only as a sexual issue, but as a relational rupture marked by deception and loss of trust. The conversation also addresses shame and moral incongruence within Christian contexts. Many believers experience deep internal conflict when behavior contradicts deeply held convictions. When churches lack safe, informed spaces for honesty, that tension often drives people further into hiding rather than toward healing. The episode also emphasizes the necessity of community. Lasting change rarely happens in isolation. Healing accelerates when secrecy gives way to shared honesty, accountability, and embodied empathy. In a culture marked by loneliness and digital substitution, the church has an opportunity to respond with wisdom, compassion, and hope. This episode invites listeners to move beyond shame and silence toward truth, care, and the long work of healing that leads to genuine freedom. Resources mentioned in this episode include: * Research by Dr. Jessica Journaey * Dr. Paul J. Wright’s study on media consumption and pornography: Paul J. Wright, Robert Tokunaga & Debby Herbenick (2023) But Do Porn Sites Get More Traffic than TikTok, OpenAI, and Zoom? [https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/00224499.2023.2220690], The Journal of Sex Research, 60:6, 763-767 * Barna Group research on pornography use among Christians: Barna Group. (2024). Over half of practicing Christians admit they use pornography [https://www.barna.com/trends/over-half-of-practicing-christians-admit-they-use-pornography/]. Subscribe to the show to receive future episodes, and visit www.truthandtone.com [http://www.truthandtone.com/] to learn more. You can follow us on Substack [https://truthandtone.substack.com] to take the conversation further.

7. april 2026 - 1 h 5 min
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