Stuff Your Pastor Won't Say

Jesse Mase, Zach Way

Too political for the pulpit, too theological for politics.... spiritual warfare, conspiracies, creation, masculinity, and everyday life collide as Jesse and Zach have conversations about what’s true and what actually matters. No scripts, no polished answers, just two guys working out their convictions and inviting you to think deeper along with them.

Episodes

  1. May 10

    009: True Myth & Story

    Something every good story seems to echo: death and resurrection, good and evil, sacrifice and redemption, truth and deception. In this episode, we talk about the idea of “true myth,” a phrase tied to C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien, and how the gospel is not just another myth, but the true story that all the best stories seem to point back to. We get into why stories like Lord of the Rings, Narnia, The Matrix, and even modern storytelling hit us so deeply, and why some stories feel wrong when they twist good and evil into something muddy. We also talk about how story can be used for truth or deception. If the gospel is the true story, then false stories can train us to believe lies about God, ourselves, and the world. That leads into a deeper conversation about “main character energy,” self-deception, false gods, spiritual discernment, and why Christians need a stronger filter or more discernment for the stories they consume and the stories they believe about their own lives. The commission for this episode: Ask yourself: What do I know in my head is true, but live as if it is fake? And what lie have I started living as if it is true? Story is powerful. It can reveal truth, or it can slowly bend us away from it. So guard your heart, guard your mind, seek discernment, and talk through these things with wise people who will help you stay anchored in what is good, right, and true. 00:00 What True Myth Means05:21 Lewis Tolkien and Gospel Echoes17:23 When Stories Go Off Rails23:12 Main Character Energy and False Gods42:44 Self Help as False Gospel45:32 Princes of Persia and Modern Idols58:58 Story as Weapon and Filter01:09:36 Discernment Without AI

    1h 24m
  2. Apr 29

    008: The Unseen Realm & LOTR

    What if The Lord of the Rings could help us contextualize the unseen realm more clearly? We talk about: Tolkien, Michael Heiser’s The Unseen Realm, the divine council, spiritual hierarchy, evil, corruption and stewardship. This episode is basically Zach taking five business days to make one point because he is thinking out loud and trying to organize a Tolkien thought, a theology thought, and a fatherhood thought in real time. But the point is worth getting to: Evil cannot create. It can only corrupt what God has already made. Tolkien was not writing a theology textbook, but his world gives us a picture of something Scripture says over and over again. God creates order, beauty, and life. Evil introduces dissonance, deception, despair, and corruption. And when people fail to guard what they have been given, evil takes ground. We also talk about how easy it is to live with a flannelgraph version of reality. Clean. Flat. Safe. Simple. But Scripture gives us a bigger and stranger picture than that. There is a real spiritual realm. There are powers and principalities. There is order and hierarchy. There is rebellion and corruption. And above all of it, there is the Most High God who is sovereign over every creature, every kingdom, and every unseen power. Commission: Pick one area of your life where you have been called to be a faithful steward. Then ask a simple question: am I guarding what God has given me? Chapters: 00:00 Nerdy Setup and Sauron’s Deception 02:09 Sauna and Tolkien’s Creation Story 07:12 Divine Council, Elohim, and The Unseen Realm 17:19 Modern Church Blind Spots and Angel Hierarchy 30:21 Dwarves and Divine Mercy 33:28 Genesis 6 and Orc Origins 39:19 Stewardship, Borders, and Despair 52:46 True Myth and the Next Episode

    57 min
  3. Feb 7 ·  Bonus

    What is next?

    As we close out Season 1, this episode zooms out and sets the stage for where the conversation is headed next. We wrestle with identity, the fall, and the consequences that still shape our theology, churches, families, and culture today. From shallow faith and church hurt to the supernatural, mystery, and the limits of what humans can truly know about God, this episode isn’t about neat answers. It’s about asking better questions and refusing a small, manageable version of belief. This conversation opens up threads we plan to explore in future episodes, and we need your help deciding where to go next. Send us a message on Instagram with the topic you want discussed:@stuffyourpastorwontsay@zacheway@djessemase Topics we cover in this episode include: • Deep church vs wide church and why depth often gets sacrificed• The identity of men and women before the fall• The fall and how it distorted work, marriage, authority, and desire• Why shallow faith collapses and leads to deconstruction• Church hurt and whether better discipleship could prevent it• Can God be fully known, or is mystery essential to faith• The danger of shrinking God to be manageable and safe• Orthodoxy vs lived faith, belief vs practice• God as infinite and humans as finite• Why American Christianity avoids power and the supernatural• Signs, wonders, and modern disbelief• Parenting and forming deep belief instead of inherited religion• Genesis as foundation, not metaphor• Male and female design, curse, and redemption• How comfort dulls spiritual awareness• Why “I don’t know” can be a faithful answer

    1h 15m
  4. Jan 30

    005: The Fall

    The fall didn’t just introduce sin. It fractured work, marriage, desire, and identity. In this episode we finish the Genesis 3 narrative by looking at what God says after Adam and Eve eat the fruit. Is this a set of punishments, or an explanation of how life now works outside of God’s original design? We walk through the curse on the serpent, the multiplied pain of childbearing, the breakdown of harmony between men and women, and the transformation of work from worship into toil. The focus is on the tension introduced between desire, authority, and leadership, and how that continues to shape marriage, gender conflict, and culture today. We debate natural consequence versus punitive judgment, explore how the fall attacks core aspects of male and female identity, and encourage to not to live as victims of the curse. We end with a call to remember who you were designed to be and to resist letting brokenness define your work, relationships, or sense of purpose. This episode closes Season One and sets the foundation for the deeper, stranger, and more controversial conversations coming in Season Two.  00:00 Introduction and Recap 01:12 The Curse of the Serpent 03:00 The Curse of Eve 04:04 The Curse of Adam 06:51 Theological Implications and Debates 10:26 Natural Consequences vs. Punitive Judgments 20:27 Desire and Rule: Gender Dynamics 29:11 Modern Reflections and Cultural Shifts 29:58 Third Wave Feminism and Regret 30:33 Cultural Responses and Time Telling the Truth 32:11 Biblical Curses and Their Implications 33:18 The Identity of Adam and Eve 40:41 The Nature of Eden 47:08 Animals and Spiritual Sensitivity 54:59 Call to Action: Embracing Identity Despite the Curse

    1 hr
  5. 11/18/2025

    001: Imago Dei

    This episode opens by going straight to the beginning. We talk through Genesis 1:26–28 and why understanding where we come from shapes how we move through the world. We unpack identity, purpose, dominion, male and female, and why modern culture feels so directionless. We share real conversations from work, from friends, and from parenting, where people feel lost, overwhelmed, or unsure who they are, and we connect that to the deeper crisis of not knowing our origin story. We talk about the tension we’ve both felt in the church, not in a bitter way but in an honest way. The width-over-depth model, the consumer mindset, the burnout, and how a lot of people deconstructed because they were never taught how to think theologically or live out their faith outside Sunday morning. We explore why understanding creation matters for the arguments people have about gender, identity, responsibility, and agency. We touch on the curse in Genesis 3, the male and female design, and how ignoring those categories has shaped our culture. We also dig into theology, mystery, and the limits of human understanding. Some things are clear, some things raise questions, and some things we just won’t ever fully box up. We talk about why that shouldn’t collapse someone’s faith, why the American church often treats God as small and manageable, and why people freak out when they reach the limit of what they can mentally explain. We reflect on seminary stories, apologetics, deconstruction, and the difference between knowing about God and actually trusting Him. The point of the episode is simple. If we don’t understand who God is, who we are, and what we were made for, then nothing else makes sense. Identity gets blurry. Faith gets thin. Politics becomes ultimate. Culture becomes loud. And people drift. We’re trying to bring clarity. We’re trying to give language to things people feel but haven’t said out loud. And we’re inviting listeners to walk through these conversations with a friend, not alone. If this episode hits something in you, share it with someone who thinks like you or challenges you. Talk about it together. Don’t isolate. Don’t white-knuckle your faith. We’re starting at the beginning because everything else builds from here.

    1h 25m
  6. Trailer

    000: Intro

    This intro sets the stage for what Stuff Your Pastor Won’t Say actually is and why it exists. We talk about the moment we both felt a push to do more, to step into something beyond work, parenting, and the busyness of life. That shared call is what sparked this project. We walk through how our backgrounds shaped us, from being homeschooled to punk scenes, carpentry, missions work, and eventually leadership roles in business and operations. The theme running through all of it is responsibility, clarity, and using our gifts with other people instead of trying to muscle through life alone. We also unpack the tension we’ve felt with the modern church. Not in a bitter way, but in an honest way. We’ve seen burnout, the outsourcing of faith to staff, the consumer mindset, the focus on width instead of depth, and the corporate models that don’t always match Scripture. We talk about why so many people deconstructed, why some are drifting back now that they have kids, and why the current church model doesn’t always prepare families for the world they’re raising kids in. We share the frustration of watching pastors be expected to be experts in everything while being disconnected from normal work and normal pressures. The point isn’t to attack pastors, but to say the things people feel but rarely voice. We explain why this podcast matters. We want to wake people up, not with shock value, but with clarity and courage. We want to give language to thoughts people haven’t been able to articulate and help them step into the conversations they’ve avoided. We want to help men stop going alone, stop hiding behind church programs, and start taking ownership of their faith, their families, and their influence. Our hope is that listeners share this with a friend so they can process it together instead of trying to sort through these topics in isolation. We outline the heart of the show: honest conversations about faith, culture, politics, responsibility, family, and the church. Lay theology and lay politics shaped by real life. We’re not running a church or a nonprofit, and we have no donors or tithing to protect. That freedom lets us say the things normal people say privately but never hear from a pulpit. Our goal is simple. Obedience, clarity, and service. If the gospel is true, it should shape real life. If people feel asleep, we want to help them wake up. If they feel isolated, we want to help them find someone to walk with. If they feel stuck, we want to give them the courage to move. The episode ends with a simple challenge. Don’t listen alone. Share this with someone who’s your kind of weird, someone who thinks like you or pushes you. Let it spark a real conversation. If you want to go fast, go alone. If you want to go far, go together. This podcast exists to help you do the second one.

    1h 27m

Trailer

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
2 Ratings

About

Too political for the pulpit, too theological for politics.... spiritual warfare, conspiracies, creation, masculinity, and everyday life collide as Jesse and Zach have conversations about what’s true and what actually matters. No scripts, no polished answers, just two guys working out their convictions and inviting you to think deeper along with them.