God Loves Small Talk

Christian Podcast Host & Bible Teacher

🚀 God Loves Small Talk is your go-to Christian community and podcast for real spiritual growth and authentic biblical teaching. If you've ever felt spiritually stuck, frustrated with empty religious talk, or hungry for a real connection with God—this podcast is for you. 🔥 "God is always speaking, why can't we hear Him?" The answer isn't louder prayers or chasing emotional highs. It's about recognizing how God speaks in everyday moments—the small, overlooked conversations that hold life-changing revelation. 🔹 No Clichés. No Fluff. Just Real Faith. We strip away the noise of complicated theology and make faith practical, powerful, and actionable. Expect deep insights, hard-hitting truth, and real-life transformation from every episode. 🎧 New Episodes Monday – Friday! 💡 Topics: Christian Growth | Biblical Teaching | Spiritual Breakthroughs 📌 Join the Community & Get Exclusive Content: https://www.godlovessmalltalk.com

  1. 2 DAYS AGO

    Fix The Faucet | Don't Let the Week Leak

    Friday tells the truth about the week. Not how strong you started, but how well you finish. By the end of the week energy is lower and patience is thinner. That's when standards quietly slip. Not a collapse, just a slow coast toward the weekend. 2 Timothy 4:7 says, "I have fought a good fight, I have finished my course, I have kept the faith." Paul isn't celebrating a strong beginning. He's celebrating a faithful finish. You see this in everyday life. Someone can clean their house all week but leave one room messy before guests arrive. The whole house could look great, but that unfinished space is what people notice. The same thing happens with the week. One unfinished responsibility can follow you straight into next Monday.   Paul connects three ideas in that verse: fight, finish, faith. Spiritual maturity isn't proven by talking big. It's proven by endurance. Anyone can start strong, but consistency over time builds credibility.   Jesus modeled the real finish. On the cross He said, "It is finished." Christ didn't stop halfway through the mission. He completed the work the Father gave Him. Because Jesus finished redemption, believers now follow a Savior who shows us what faithful completion looks like.   Think about building a bridge. If every beam is strong but the final bolts are left loose, the structure fails under pressure. Integrity shows up in the details. Finishing touches hold everything together.   In disciplined environments people weren't evaluated by enthusiasm. They were evaluated by completion. Fatigue didn't change the mission. The standard stayed the same—finish the assignment.   Before today ends, close one open loop from this week. Send the message, make the decision, finish the task. No speeches, just follow-through.   https://www.patreon.com/godlovessmalltalk https://open.spotify.com/show/4Vk6QIlNiEG2Y5Vv4p3UVc https://podcasts.apple.com/us/search?term=god%20loves%20small%20talk

    12 min
  2. 3 DAYS AGO

    Stay Above the Noise | Protect Your Alignment

    By Thursday the week has weight on it. Work pressure, family needs, unexpected situations. Nothing catastrophic happened, but little frustrations start piling up. One comment, one interruption, one small irritation. And slowly your internal state begins to shift. Not from one big moment, but from accumulation.   Isaiah 26:3 says, "Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace, whose mind is stayed on thee: because he trusteth in thee." Isaiah connects peace and focus. The mind that stays anchored in God is the mind that remains steady.   You see this in everyday life. One conversation can change your mood. One unexpected problem can change your tone. Nothing huge happened, but your internal climate shifted. Attention moved, and your emotions followed it.   Scripture shows that peace is not random. Peace follows focus. When attention becomes scattered, emotions begin to follow every situation. But when focus stays anchored, stability grows.   Christ is the reason believers can live with that kind of peace. Through the cross Jesus reconciled us to God, and through the resurrection He opened access to the Father. Because of Christ, peace is not something we manufacture. It flows from the relationship He secured.   Think about a thermostat in a house. It doesn't react emotionally to every temperature change. It regulates the environment. When the temperature shifts, it corrects the climate. Focus works the same way in the life of a believer.   In leadership environments one thing becomes clear quickly. If your internal state becomes unstable, your decisions will follow it. Calm leadership doesn't come from personality. It comes from disciplined focus.   Before the day ends, take five quiet minutes. Step away from the noise, put the phone down, and reset your attention on God. Small moments of realignment protect your internal climate.   https://www.patreon.com/godlovessmalltalk https://open.spotify.com/show/4Vk6QIlNiEG2Y5Vv4p3UVc https://podcasts.apple.com/us/search?term=god%20loves%20small%20talk

    15 min
  3. 4 DAYS AGO

    Guard Your Attention | Distraction Is a Strategy

    Wednesday is when the noise starts stacking. Deadlines, opinions, unexpected problems. Nothing catastrophic happens, but your attention keeps getting pulled in different directions. A message here, a notification there, another issue needing your response. Before long your focus is scattered. Many times the real problem isn't pressure, it's distraction.   First Peter 5:8 says, "Be sober, be vigilant; because your adversary the devil, as a roaring lion, walketh about, seeking whom he may devour." Peter isn't describing panic. He's telling believers to stay aware and stay alert. Guard your attention.   Look at how attention works today. Phones buzzing, notifications popping up, messages coming all day. You start a task, something interrupts, and suddenly an hour disappears. Nothing exploded. You were simply distracted.   Peter's instruction to be sober and vigilant means staying mentally clear and spiritually alert. The enemy studies our attention. If he can slowly pull your focus away from what matters, discipline weakens. Most spiritual battles don't start with catastrophe. They start with distraction.   When Jesus faced temptation in the wilderness, the enemy kept trying to redirect His focus—comfort, power, recognition. But Jesus stayed anchored in the Word. Because Christ defeated the enemy, believers now stand in that same victory and learn to imitate His focus.   Think about a pilot flying a plane. If the pilot stops watching the instruments, even briefly, the aircraft begins to drift. The drift isn't dramatic, but over time it changes the destination. Attention works the same way.   In disciplined environments, situational awareness mattered. Small details were checked constantly because small problems grow when ignored. The same principle applies spiritually.   Today protect one block of focused time. Thirty minutes without notifications, scrolling, or interruptions. Give your attention to what matters most. https://www.patreon.com/godlovessmalltalk https://open.spotify.com/show/4Vk6QIlNiEG2Y5Vv4p3UVc https://podcasts.apple.com/us/search?term=god%20loves%20small%20talk   christian community, spiritual growth, biblical teaching, spiritual warfare, guarding attention, first peter 5:8, christian focus, faith discipline

    15 min
  4. 5 DAYS AGO

    Break the Old Loop | Stop Repeating What God Already Freed You From

    Tuesday is where the internal battle shows up. Monday you start strong with clear focus and fresh commitment. But then the old pattern tries to run again. Same reaction, same shortcut, same emotional loop. If nothing interrupts that pattern, Tuesday begins to look exactly like last Tuesday. Ephesians 4:22–24 says, "That ye put off concerning the former conversation the old man… And be renewed in the spirit of your mind; And that ye put on the new man." Paul describes change like changing clothes. Put off the old pattern, renew the mind, and put on the new life. You see this in everyday life. People say they want a different life but keep running the same routine. Same habits, same conversations, same reactions. They pray for change but keep the same system. That's the loop Paul is addressing. Real transformation follows a process. First the old pattern is put off. Then the mind is renewed. Then the new life is put on. That order matters. If the old pattern keeps running, renewal never gains traction. Jesus didn't come just to help people manage the old life. Through the cross the old identity tied to sin lost its authority. Through the resurrection a new life opened. When Paul says put on the new man, he is pointing to the life Christ already secured. Think about a phone running outdated software. Everything glitches. Performance slows. But once the system updates, the whole phone runs differently. Renewal works the same way. When the system changes, the results change. In disciplined environments, repeating the same mistake meant the system had to change. When the pattern changes, performance improves. The same principle applies spiritually. Today notice one reaction that keeps repeating in your life. Pause before it runs again and choose a different response on purpose. Interrupt the loop and watch what changes.   https://www.patreon.com/godlovessmalltalk https://open.spotify.com/show/4Vk6QIlNiEG2Y5Vv4p3UVc https://podcasts.apple.com/us/search?term=god%20loves%20small%20talk

    14 min
  5. 6 DAYS AGO

    Start With What's In Your Hand | Stop Waiting for Perfect

    Monday exposes something quickly. Everybody has plans. Everybody has intentions. But a lot of people still don't move. They wait for the perfect moment, the perfect schedule, the perfect conditions. But life rarely pauses long enough for perfect timing. Responsibility keeps moving, and the week keeps going whether we feel ready or not. Zechariah 4:10 says, "For who hath despised the day of small things?" God was reminding His people not to overlook small beginnings. When the temple was being rebuilt the work looked small, slow, and unimpressive. But God was showing them that faithful beginnings matter more than impressive appearances. You see this in real life all the time. People say they want a better life or stronger faith, but they keep waiting for the moment to feel right. "I'll start when work slows down." "I'll start when money gets better." "I'll start when things calm down." But life rarely slows down like that. Movement usually starts right in the middle of responsibility. God often builds big outcomes through small consistent obedience. Even Jesus entered the world quietly. No palace. No spotlight. Just a humble beginning carrying the greatest mission in history. God moves through faithful obedience. Think about construction. Nobody celebrates the foundation when it's being poured, but that unseen work holds the entire building together. Small faithful work supports big results. In disciplined environments trust isn't built through big speeches. Trust grows when people consistently handle small responsibilities well. Consistency builds credibility.   Before today ends take one step forward with what's already in your hands. Finish the task. Send the message. Start the work. Small movement today creates momentum tomorrow.   https://www.patreon.com/godlovessmalltalk https://open.spotify.com/show/4Vk6QIlNiEG2Y5Vv4p3UVc https://podcasts.apple.com/us/search?term=god%20loves%20small%20talk

    15 min
  6. 6 MAR

    Close the Gap | Don't Leave the Week Half-Built

    Friday reveals the gap. The gap between what you intended and what you actually executed. Most people don't collapse at the end of the week—they coast. They slow down because the finish line is close. But "almost finished" is where standards quietly erode. Scripture says in the Ecclesiastes 7:8, "Better is the end of a thing than the beginning thereof: and the patient in spirit is better than the proud in spirit." The excitement of starting something feels powerful, but the Bible places greater value on finishing. Beginnings are emotional. Endings reveal maturity. You can start Monday with focus and energy, but by Friday the discipline begins to loosen. You tell yourself it has been a long week. You say you did enough. You promise yourself you will tighten things up next time. But unfinished effort compounds. Small details remain open. Messages go unsent. Decisions stay half-made. None of it looks like dramatic failure. It looks like quiet erosion. Solomon reframes the standard. Not beginnings—endings. Anyone can initiate something. Completion requires patience. And patience is what outlasts pride. This is not about earning God's favor. It is about stewarding responsibility well. God consistently builds on reliability. Think about a bridge with one missing bolt. From a distance everything looks solid. But when weight hits the structure, that missing bolt becomes the difference between stability and collapse. Integrity is not tested in theory. It is tested when pressure arrives. In disciplined environments, enthusiasm was never the measurement. Closure was. Fatigue did not lower the standard. The mission still required completion. That mindset changes how you finish a week. So the identity shift is simple. We are not people who fade at the finish. We are people who close strong. That difference builds trust with others and stability inside our own lives. The enemy understands this as well. He rarely needs to defeat you outright. Drift works better. If unfinished tasks quietly roll into next week, momentum slowly disappears. Completion shuts that door. Before today ends, identify one gap from this week. Close it. No speech. No announcement. Just execution. And if you want weekly structure that helps reinforce discipline, spiritual growth, and real follow-through inside a Christian community committed to biblical teaching, that is exactly what we build inside God Loves Small Talk. Finish what you started.   https://www.patreon.com/godlovessmalltalk https://open.spotify.com/show/4Vk6QIlNiEG2Y5Vv4p3UVc https://podcasts.apple.com/us/search?term=god%20loves%20small%20talk

    10 min
  7. 5 MAR

    Protect Your Thermostat | Peace Is a Position

    Thursday isn't loud because of chaos. It's loud because life has been stacking all week. Small pressures. Unfinished tasks. Subtle comparisons. Nothing dramatic. Just enough to shift your internal climate. And if your inner world shifts, your outer leadership will follow. You ever notice how you can be doing well, but one conversation, one irritation, one unexpected moment suddenly changes your tone? That's not failure. That's climate shift. Philippians 4:7 says, "And the peace of God, which passeth all understanding, shall keep your hearts and minds through Christ Jesus." Peace doesn't just visit. It guards. Hearts and minds. That's internal security. The real problem is you can look like you have it together and still be unsettled. Productive but irritated. Present but distracted. Effective but tense. It's not a full crisis. It's climate change. Small disturbances become internal weather, and before long your tone shifts faster than your wisdom. Paul says the peace of God will keep you. That word means guard. Peace isn't passive; it's protective. But it only guards what you place under Christ. You don't maintain peace by force. You maintain it by focus. And this peace isn't something you manufacture with positive thinking. It was purchased. Because Christ carried the storm of judgment on the cross, the believer can live under a different climate. Reconciliation with God creates stability in the soul. Think about a thermostat. A thermostat doesn't react to every temperature change. It regulates. It senses the shift and then corrects the environment. Without regulation, every fluctuation become Leadership works the same way. If you don't regulate your internal state, you project instability outward. Calm isn't personality. It's governance. When your inner climate is unstable, your decisions will be too. Believers are not people ruled by atmosphere. We are people who lean on Christ to set the temperature of our hearts. We don't absorb every mood or every moment that passes through the room. We guard the ground of our heart and mind. The enemy rarely storms the gate loudly. Most of the time he shifts the climate quietly. If he can alter your internal temperature, he can alter your tone, your patience, and your decisions. Guarding peace shuts down that subtle sabotage. Before this day ends, step away for five intentional minutes. No device. No noise. Reset your internal climate. Bring your heart and mind back under Christ and let His peace regulate what the world tried to disturb.   Consistent peace doesn't happen by accident. It grows through structure, discipleship, and accountability inside a healthy Christian community focused on spiritual growth and biblical teaching. That's exactly what we're building inside God Loves Small Talk.   Guard your inner climate.       https://www.patreon.com/godlovessmalltalk https://open.spotify.com/show/4Vk6QIlNiEG2Y5Vv4p3UVc https://podcasts.apple.com/us/search?term=god%20loves%20small%20talk

    12 min
  8. 4 MAR

    (R) Don't Rest Before You Press

    Nehemiah 6:3 says, "I am doing a great work, so that I cannot come down: why should the work cease, whilst I leave it, and come down to you?" Let that sink in. Sometimes, the most spiritual thing you can do is keep working. The enemy doesn't always show up with destruction—he shows up with distractions. You were locked in. You were building something great. You had momentum. Then a text came through. A funny video. An opinion. A discouraging voice. A false opportunity. And suddenly, the press stopped. Nehemiah had people trying to pull him down from the wall. They weren't threatening to kill him, just inviting him to have a conversation. But Nehemiah saw it clearly: "If I come down to talk, the work stops." Some of you keep stopping for conversations that are killing your call. You've given too much attention to the wrong voices. The devil couldn't destroy you, so he tried to distract you. And the most dangerous thing about a distraction—it looks harmless. You're not burnt out. You're not finished. You're just letting notifications dictate your anointing. Put your phone on Do Not Disturb and press. Not later. Now. God is building something in you, through you. Your schedule is the shovel. Your discipline is the hammer. Your wall is rising—don't come down. You don't need another sign. You need to press.   Links: Patreon → https://www.patreon.com/godlovessmalltalk Spotify → https://open.spotify.com/show/4Vk6QIlNiEG2Y5Vv4p3UVc Apple Podcasts → https://podcasts.apple.com/us/search?term=god%20loves%20small%20talk

    15 min

About

🚀 God Loves Small Talk is your go-to Christian community and podcast for real spiritual growth and authentic biblical teaching. If you've ever felt spiritually stuck, frustrated with empty religious talk, or hungry for a real connection with God—this podcast is for you. 🔥 "God is always speaking, why can't we hear Him?" The answer isn't louder prayers or chasing emotional highs. It's about recognizing how God speaks in everyday moments—the small, overlooked conversations that hold life-changing revelation. 🔹 No Clichés. No Fluff. Just Real Faith. We strip away the noise of complicated theology and make faith practical, powerful, and actionable. Expect deep insights, hard-hitting truth, and real-life transformation from every episode. 🎧 New Episodes Monday – Friday! 💡 Topics: Christian Growth | Biblical Teaching | Spiritual Breakthroughs 📌 Join the Community & Get Exclusive Content: https://www.godlovessmalltalk.com