The Summit

The Summit RI

We exist to engage young adults at different stages and equip them with the truths of the Bible. 

الحلقات

  1. ٥ يونيو

    Words Matter

    One sentence can change a friendship, a reputation, or the direction of your whole life. That’s why we went straight into James 3 and took an honest look at the tongue: the smallest “tool” we use, and the one with the biggest blast radius when we use it carelessly. Gian unpacks why teachers and influencers face stricter judgment, then connects that warning to modern platform culture where anyone can post, go viral, and shape people without the accountability that character requires.  We talk about how words aren’t just sounds, they’re heart indicators. When we get pressed, embarrassed, or angry, our speech often exposes what’s really going on inside. And we don’t stop at personal mistakes. We trace how “just words” can become ideologies, laws, and cultural habits, then bring it home to everyday life: rage bait, comment section debates, church criticism, workplace complaining, and the kind of “spill the tea” gossip that feels normal until trust is gone.  To make it practical, we use a simple framework: bite, don’t break, build. We learn when to bite our tongue with wisdom and strength, why “venting” can become slander, and how a gospel changed heart leads to life giving speech. We close with concrete ways to build people up: share the gospel with gentleness and respect, encourage with specifics, ask better questions, and speak highly of others when they’re not around. If this challenged you, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review with the one speech habit you’re trying to change.

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  2. ١١ مايو

    Suffering with Wisdom

    A loud, cuddly dog who refuses to listen turns into a mirror for a much bigger problem: we’re great at hearing, and not so great at doing. We’re surrounded by unlimited Christian content, Bible teaching, podcasts, and “wisdom” on demand, yet it’s shockingly easy to walk out unchanged. So we slow down and start a new walk through the Book of James with one driving idea: truth should always lead to action, not just information. We dig into James 1:1-12 with real context. James isn’t flexing his connection to Jesus; he calls himself a servant, and that humility matters. He’s writing to scattered believers under pressure, facing rejection, instability, and suffering. Then he drops the line that still feels jarring: “Count it all joy when you meet trials.” We talk about what steadfastness actually means, why endurance is rare in our culture, and how God can use hardship to refine faith the way fire purifies metal. From there, James reframes what we should ask for when life hurts. Not just strength, but wisdom: grace applied, perspective that knows the end of the story. We wrestle with doubt, double-mindedness, and the temptation to treat God like one option among many. And we land on what truly lasts when wealth, status, health, and plans fade, plus a personal story from the NICU that puts endurance and love into real-life terms. If you want practical Bible study that aims for spiritual growth, Christian resilience, and faith in action, press play. Subscribe, share this with a friend who’s going through it, and leave a review. What part of suffering do you need wisdom for right now?

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  3. ٣ مارس

    Single, Not Stuck

    What if single life isn’t a hallway to hurry through but a room filled with purpose, joy, and power? We open up about the quiet lies many Christians absorb—like “you’re just waiting” or “now is your time to live for yourself”—and replace them with a richer, biblical vision. Drawing from 1 Corinthians 7, Psalms, and lived experience, we reframe singleness and marriage as equal gifts from God, each with its own beauty and responsibility. We get practical about contentment, not as a vague vibe but as a concrete way of life: delighting in God, making a clear-hearted decision to trust Him, and discovering that Christ is enough even while we long for good things. You’ll hear how to resist entitlement, why “marriage will fix me” is a myth, and simple rhythms for enjoying God right now—from unhurried Bible “dates” with coffee and worship to everyday choices that put the Giver above the gifts. We also talk mission: the unique time and capacity singles carry to host, disciple, build community, and pursue the lost without apology. A deeply personal story of grief asks the hardest question—if marriage never comes, is God still good?—and shows how the cross anchors a fierce yes. Finally, we zoom out: marriage is a signpost pointing to a greater union with Christ, where pleasure lasts and tears end. When you see the destination, you stop worshiping the sign. Walk away with fresh courage to hold desire with open hands, live fully present, and seek first the kingdom. If this conversation encouraged or challenged you, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find it. What truth about singleness do you want to practice this week?

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  4. ٢٠ فبراير

    Dating, Marriage, And Meaning

    Ever felt the gap between what dating apps promise and what your heart actually needs? We open a live Q&A with a simple anchor: if Jesus designed marriage, then love has to look like his—sacrificial, promise-keeping, and tested over time. From the first question—“Am I ready for marriage?”—we trace a straighter path through the noise: dating as data-gathering for a covenant, not a stage for butterflies and curated vibes. We wrestle with the consumer mindset that trains us to treat people like options and highlight how option fatigue undermines commitment. Instead of profiles and punchy bios, we look for character under pressure, faith practiced in community, and humility that actually repents. We talk frankly about being “equally yoked,” not as gatekeeping but as alignment with purpose: making disciples together, raising future believers, and saying yes to hard, generous acts that outlast fleeting chemistry. Singleness gets pride of place. Paul’s words about undivided devotion remind us that a full life is not contingent on a wedding date. We explore how waiting can be preparation, how discontent follows you into marriage if Jesus is not enough, and why purpose-driven living beats timeline anxiety. Then we go straight at lust: marriage won’t fix porn or impulse. Formation will—confession, accountability, and boundaries that train desire toward long-term joy. We call out the “just talking” non-commitment loop, and we drill down on opposite-sex friendship boundaries that protect future covenants without demonizing friendship. Practical? Absolutely. We share clear red and green flags: sobriety, consistency, teachability, church involvement, and how someone handles stress or celebration. We offer a simple filter—friends don’t let friends date strangers—because community reveals what a profile can’t. If you’re tired of swipes and ready for depth, this conversation points to a better way: promise over feelings, formation over fantasy, and mission over mere compatibility. If this helped you rethink love and dating, subscribe and share it with a friend. Leave a review with the one idea you’re taking into your next step—we want to hear it.

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We exist to engage young adults at different stages and equip them with the truths of the Bible. 

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