Bonus #3: The Effective Ministry Podcast

I was recently interviewed on The Effective Ministry Podcast – a podcast aimed at helping people minister to youth and children well. I’ve put it here on this feed for your interest, and also to commend The Effective Ministry Podcast to anyone involved in helping Kids and Teens know about Jesus.

You can find The Effective Ministry Podcast on your listening app and also here.

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Transcript
Dave:

G'day Dave here.

Dave:

I know it's been a few weeks since our last

Dave:

episode.

Dave:

The good news is that very soon we're going to

Dave:

kick off with a new series.

Dave:

We're going to be looking at the first half of

Dave:

John's gospel and exploring the life of Jesus.

Dave:

While you're waiting for that, I thought I'd

Dave:

put up something a little bit different here.

Dave:

I was recently interviewed on the Effective

Dave:

Ministry podcast.

Dave:

The Effective ministry podcast is an excellent

Dave:

podcast aimed at helping people think about ministering to youth and children.

Dave:

It's a ministry of Youth Works, the.

Dave:

Youth and Children ministry wing of the Sydney Anglican Church, and they cover a whole

Dave:

variety of things.

Dave:

I've really benefited from some of their other

Dave:

episodes that they've published.

Dave:

They're always interviewing thoughtful people

Dave:

who are trying to help young people know Jesus.

Dave:

If you're involved with that in any way, as a parent, grandparent, Sunday school teacher,

Dave:

youth group leader, pastor, chaplain, I'd encourage you to think about the effective

Dave:

ministry podcast.

Dave:

You should be able to find it.

Dave:

On whatever app you're listening on at the moment.

Dave:

I hope you enjoy this.

Tim Beilharz:

Welcome back to the effective ministry podcast, the podcast that helps you

Tim Beilharz:

have an effective youth and children's ministry in your local church.

Tim Beilharz:

My name is Tim Beelharts.

Tim Beilharz:

I'm a children's ministry advisor for youth

Tim Beilharz:

works in Sydney and I'm back from holidays.

Tim Beilharz:

Apologies for the lack of episodes over the

Tim Beilharz:

last two weeks.

Tim Beilharz:

I had hoped that I would get something edited

Tim Beilharz:

and uploaded for while I was away, but that did not quite eventuate as I had hoped.

Tim Beilharz:

Hopefully you were able to fill your eardrums with enough other content.

Tim Beilharz:

I know that I'm never short of podcast episodes in my feed to listen to while I'm

Tim Beilharz:

driving or running or walking the dog.

Tim Beilharz:

And speaking of other podcasts, today I'm

Tim Beilharz:

joined on the podcast by Dave Whittingham, who is the host of two excellent podcasts, stories

Tim Beilharz:

of a faithful God and stories of a faithful God for kids.

Tim Beilharz:

Dave reached out to me at our email address, effectiveministrypodcastoutouthworks.net dot,

Tim Beilharz:

and he expressed his appreciation for this podcast and said that what he's been working

Tim Beilharz:

on in his own podcast is to have some content with the vision to help parents and children

Tim Beilharz:

engage with the Bible.

Tim Beilharz:

I've given both of these feeds a good listen

Tim Beilharz:

and was greatly encouraged by the work that Dave is doing.

Tim Beilharz:

So I called up Dave and we had a chat about the podcast and how families might use them as

Tim Beilharz:

an extra resource during the week to help young people grow in their knowledge, love and

Tim Beilharz:

obedience to King Jesus.

Tim Beilharz:

Now, how does this help you have an effective

Tim Beilharz:

youth and children's ministry in your local church?

Tim Beilharz:

Well, we know that as ministry leaders, we only have a short time with our young people

Tim Beilharz:

each week.

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But the amount of time that they have with

Tim Beilharz:

their families and the amount of time that they spend on digital media far outweighs the

Tim Beilharz:

time that we have with them.

Tim Beilharz:

So being able to resource children and

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families with extra ways to dig deep into gods word is an important way that we can fulfil

Tim Beilharz:

our ministry to children and teenagers.

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So enjoy this episode with Dave Whittingham

Tim Beilharz:

and stick around at the end of the episode for a sneak peek at one of the episodes of his

Tim Beilharz:

podcasts, stories of a faithful God for kids.

Tim Beilharz:

I'm here with Dave Whittingham.

Tim Beilharz:

Thanks for coming on the podcast, Dave.

Dave:

Oh, thank you for having me.

Dave:

It's exciting.

Tim Beilharz:

Absolute pleasure.

Tim Beilharz:

Do you want to give us a short intro to

Tim Beilharz:

yourself? How did you become a Christian?

Tim Beilharz:

How did you get into ministry?

Dave:

Yeah, didn't grow up in a christian family.

Dave:

First heard the gospel in SRE, so shout out to all the SRE teachers and God kept putting

Dave:

people in my way.

Dave:

So Sre Christian campsite youth works, but

Dave:

they were camp Howard camps back then.

Dave:

Started going to church, but it all came

Dave:

together for me in hearing a Bible story, funnily enough, but someone told the story of

Dave:

Simon Peter as he rejected Jesus.

Dave:

They spoke in the first person as though they

Dave:

were Simon Peter.

Dave:

And here was a guy who knew all this stuff

Dave:

about Jesus and should have responded appropriately, but wasn't doing that.

Dave:

And I thought, I know all that stuff and I'm not responding appropriately.

Dave:

And so I had to do business with Jesus and actually treat him as he really is.

Dave:

Yeah.

Dave:

So that was about year eight and been great

Dave:

since then.

Dave:

Got into ministry.

Dave:

I studied primary teaching after school and I really enjoyed hanging out with kids, teaching

Dave:

kids that sort of thing, but became convicted that if I could use those teaching skills to

Dave:

teach people about Jesus, then I should do that.

Dave:

And so people encouraged me in that direction, and that's the direction I went.

Tim Beilharz:

Fantastic.

Tim Beilharz:

We're here to talk particularly about your

Tim Beilharz:

podcast series.

Tim Beilharz:

There's the two versions of here, stories of a

Tim Beilharz:

faithful goddess and stories of a faithful God for kids.

Tim Beilharz:

Can you tell us, what are these podcasts? What are they seeking to achieve?

Dave:

Yes.

Dave:

So both podcasts are retelling Bible narrative.

Dave:

Retelling Bible stories.

Dave:

I tell the same stories in both, but in

Dave:

slightly a different way.

Dave:

The stories of a faithful God is very much a

Dave:

deep dive.

Dave:

So they're longer episodes, anywhere from half

Dave:

an hour, but more likely up towards an hour, a lot more detail.

Dave:

But in saying that it's not meant to be like a dry commentary, I'm trying to retell the story

Dave:

with all the drama and action and vibrancy that God does in telling the story.

Dave:

And so trying to use that and capture that and help us hear those stories in a fresh way.

Dave:

The kids one I'm doing in just shorter, bite sized chunks, but again, trying to get the

Dave:

detail and grapple with the detail so that we can hear that in a new, exciting way.

Dave:

I think there's a danger, particularly for kids, as we teach kids, that we start telling

Dave:

stories in the same way and they hear it the same way over and over again.

Dave:

And it's a, it's quite a condensed way.

Dave:

And so when they get towards the end of

Dave:

primary school, they start to think, I've heard all these stories before, you know, and

Dave:

I can leave the Bible behind with me in primary school as I head off, because I know

Dave:

it all and I want to help them and help us hear that.

Dave:

Actually, no, God has so much to say and it's really exciting and wonderful.

Tim Beilharz:

What was inspired you to go in this direction, to use your ministry gifts,

Tim Beilharz:

your skills, your primary teaching, youre theological study and put it towards this

Tim Beilharz:

effort, where did that come from?

Dave:

Yeah, I was thinking about that, and there are so many things that have sort of

Dave:

come together for it.

Dave:

One, I love stories.

Dave:

I love reading stories, whether they be fiction or history particularly.

Dave:

I was sitting in a car with a couple of christian guys and they said, oh, you know,

Dave:

one of them said, what are you reading at the moment?

Dave:

And one guy was reading a, about prayer and how to be a better prayer and how to make that

Dave:

part of his life.

Dave:

Another guy was reading about how to, how to

Dave:

be a better christian husband and how to bring the Bible to bear on that.

Dave:

Then they said, dave, what are you reading? And I said, oh, I'm reading a book called a

Dave:

thousand years of annoying the French.

Dave:

And it was a history book about the history

Dave:

of, between England and France, because I just love stories.

Dave:

So that was one thing at Moore College.

Dave:

When I was going through there, I realized

Dave:

that all these stories that I love reading, all the skill of good storytelling, God

Dave:

actually does.

Dave:

He is an awesome storyteller and he's even

Dave:

shaped history to tell those stories really, really well.

Dave:

I mean, just think about the tension of when, when God tells a story about Jesus and Lazarus

Dave:

and Jesus hears that his really good friend is sick, and so obviously, you know what he's

Dave:

going to do? He's going to go down and visit him.

Dave:

But instead, Jesus stays.

Dave:

He sits still for two days.

Dave:

And you think, what's going to happen? That's God telling the story and shaping

Dave:

history to tell the story really well.

Dave:

There are things about myself personally that,

Dave:

you know, as I preached, people said, you know, you're easy to understand and listen to.

Dave:

And people from non english speaking backgrounds as well, sometimes they struggle a

Dave:

bit more with us white Aussie blokes.

Dave:

But for whatever reason, they found that

Dave:

helpful.

Dave:

I think I had a growing awareness.

Dave:

You know, as evangelicals, we're very bookish people.

Dave:

We think a lot.

Dave:

We think deeply about things, but at the same

Dave:

time, we also.

Dave:

We do a lot of hand wringing and think there

Dave:

are certain sections of society that we're not very good at reaching.

Dave:

And we try and wonder, why is that? As I sort of thought about those sort of

Dave:

things, discovered some things, like, 44% of Australians are functionally illiterate.

Dave:

That means they can't read the instructions on the Panadol packet.

Dave:

They can't read the street signs they're going to.

Dave:

That's 44%.

Dave:

And then a whole bunch of other people will

Dave:

never pick up a book, even though they can.

Dave:

And we often want to put a book in people's

Dave:

hands, and there's good things about that.

Dave:

I mean, we're people of the book, we're people

Dave:

of the Bible.

Dave:

But for so many people in our society, they're

Dave:

just not up for that.

Dave:

And I was starting to discover podcasting and

Dave:

how good podcasting is.

Dave:

I was listening to a lot of history podcasts

Dave:

and thinking, oh, we've got stories to tell.

Dave:

So that was.

Dave:

That was exciting.

Dave:

And my last job, last ministry job, has been

Dave:

as a chaplain and a chaplain in a school.

Dave:

And as I was doing that, I was putting

Dave:

together free resources for kids to listen to at home.

Dave:

So I set up a playlist of songs on Spotify, and I had all these non christian parents

Dave:

coming up to me and saying, hey, we're listening to all these songs in the car.

Dave:

And we find it a bit weird because, you know, we've never heard any of that stuff.

Dave:

But I thought, so people want to hear that sort of stuff.

Dave:

They're listening to stuff in their car.

Dave:

They're looking for content.

Dave:

Let's do it with Bible stories.

Dave:

But I didn't have the time to do it while I

Dave:

was, you know, school is just really busy.

Tim Beilharz:

Yeah.

Dave:

So I didn't have the time.

Dave:

But then when that position came to an end, I

Dave:

was like, oh, I can do this now.

Dave:

I can put the time into making some quality

Dave:

podcasts and got really excited about doing that.

Tim Beilharz:

You've started to touch on this, but what is the particular value of the

Tim Beilharz:

podcasting format, particularly when you're trying to reach families or children as well

Tim Beilharz:

as the adults?

Dave:

Yeah, look, you can listen to podcasts anywhere, anytime.

Dave:

People are doing it in their cars, people are doing it as their kids are going to sleep,

Dave:

people are doing it as they're walking to work or driving to school.

Dave:

So it's wonderful in that sense.

Dave:

You need to be able to sit down to read a

Dave:

book, but for a podcast, you can do it while you're doing something else.

Tim Beilharz:

So, yeah, as you said, you've got these two different streams.

Tim Beilharz:

So there's the stream for adults, which goes in depth.

Tim Beilharz:

There's a bit longer stream for kids, which bite sized chunks more accessible for children

Tim Beilharz:

in terms of language and storytelling.

Tim Beilharz:

Did you have an in mind which one was going to

Tim Beilharz:

come first and the other one spun off that, or was it intentional to build them both

Tim Beilharz:

together? Where did that thinking come from?

Dave:

Yeah, I think originally I was thinking about the kids one because of that role as the

Dave:

chaplain.

Dave:

I was thinking, here is a tool that I can use.

Dave:

But then I thought, well, if I'm going to do all the work and the research for getting a

Dave:

passage ready, I may as well do some double dipping and do it for adults as well.

Dave:

But also, I think there are different sort of adults.

Dave:

So there are adults who are going to sit down, they're going to listen to a podcast that's

Dave:

going to tell them, here are five points you need to know about the Trinity.

Dave:

Here are ten points on your doctrine of scripture, and that's going to really be

Dave:

helpful for some people.

Dave:

But so much of the Bible is narrative, and God

Dave:

teaches through narrative.

Dave:

And I think often, particularly as

Dave:

evangelicals, we might miss out on the some of that.

Dave:

And so to be able to sit in the story, even as an adult, and enjoy hearing the way that God

Dave:

brought that information to us, I think we can really enjoy that.

Dave:

Like, you know, you take a topic like the Trinity.

Dave:

How does God start teaching about the Trinity in the New Testament?

Dave:

Well, he gives us four gospels and he says, just watch Jesus over three years and see,

Dave:

look, here he is praying to the father, he's praying to God, and yet he's calming the

Dave:

storm, which is something only God can do.

Dave:

Oh, and now he wants to ask his father to send

Dave:

the spirit.

Dave:

And so I guess you see it within the framework

Dave:

of the narrative, and you get to enjoy the good story as that develops and grows.

Dave:

Had lots of reasons for doing it for adults as well.

Tim Beilharz:

As I've listened to a number of episodes, the children's version was very easy

Tim Beilharz:

to listen to, action packed.

Tim Beilharz:

You got a great storytelling voice.

Tim Beilharz:

It comes across really clearly.

Tim Beilharz:

I was listening to the adults one.

Tim Beilharz:

I was thinking, oh, I really like this as well.

Tim Beilharz:

Again, easy to listen to.

Tim Beilharz:

It's very narrative.

Tim Beilharz:

But the question in my mind was, I wonder what the process is like for you as you prepare to

Tim Beilharz:

a storytelling podcast on Exodus or Elijah or Jonah, as opposed to doing a sermon.

Tim Beilharz:

So, you know, you've got ministry experience.

Tim Beilharz:

You've preached in churches, you've done

Tim Beilharz:

regular adult ministry, quote unquote, as well as children's ministry.

Tim Beilharz:

What's that process like for you as you've developed the scripting for one man, 45

Tim Beilharz:

minutes, 50 minutes narrative podcast instead of a sermon?

Dave:

So, in terms of preparation and presenting, preparation is exactly the same as

Dave:

for, you know, if I'm leading a Bible study or preaching or anything like that, you know, I

Dave:

need to understand the passage and do my own work there.

Dave:

But in terms of presenting and bringing this out, there are a couple of things.

Dave:

Some things are harder than, say, if I'm preaching.

Dave:

Some things are more fun.

Dave:

Um, so the harder thing is that I actually

Dave:

don't know the people I'm speaking to.

Dave:

Um, it's been listened to in 24 different

Dave:

countries, and, you know, is someone over in America, are they dying of cancer?

Dave:

Uh, is their marriage falling apart? I don't know.

Dave:

Um, so, you know, when you're.

Dave:

When your pastor is preaching to you, they are

Dave:

actually bringing the word of God to you specifically.

Dave:

And that comes out in their preparation and in, uh, in how they're presenting it.

Dave:

So I do miss that, and I miss seeing people face to face and chatting to people

Dave:

afterwards.

Dave:

But on the flip side, there's some really good

Dave:

things.

Dave:

So I get to sit a lot more in the passage,

Dave:

have a lot more time, have that deeper dive in the passage.

Dave:

So, for example, there's a passage in exodus that I recently preached on in a local church,

Dave:

and that was probably a 25 minutes sermon, and about a third of that was explicitly me

Dave:

talking about some of the pastoral implications of that passage.

Dave:

So two thirds of that 25 minutes sitting in the passage, whereas when I did podcast on

Dave:

that, the podcast went for an hour, and maybe five to 10% of that was specifically drawing

Dave:

out some pastoral implications.

Dave:

The whole thing is pastoral, but most of it

Dave:

was spent sitting in the passage enjoying God, enjoying the, I guess, the narrative structure

Dave:

and flow of that and having God tell us the story in that way.

Dave:

And so those are really different experiences in terms of the presentation.

Tim Beilharz:

You've done theological study, you've done primary school education study.

Tim Beilharz:

I'm just thinking pedagogically.

Tim Beilharz:

I remember hearing years ago someone making

Tim Beilharz:

the quip, you know, God could have just given us the list of doctrines as a bullet points,

Tim Beilharz:

but he didn't.

Tim Beilharz:

He gave us narrative.

Tim Beilharz:

From your educational and pedagogical perspective, what's going on there?

Tim Beilharz:

Like, what is it about narrative that actually teaches us about God and his character?

Tim Beilharz:

Why didn't God just give us an encyclopedia with dot points that he told us everything

Tim Beilharz:

that we needed to know? What's going on with narrative?

Dave:

Yeah, that's a good question.

Dave:

I didn't know you were gonna ask me that one.

Dave:

Look, when I married my wife, there's a roundabout way to get there.

Dave:

When I married my wife, I'd known her for, I don't know, three years, maybe three, four

Dave:

years.

Dave:

And she knew certain things about me and we

Dave:

made promises to each other and that was good.

Dave:

But now, after 24 years of marriage, the

Dave:

things that she knows about me are so much more and so much deeper and richer, more

Dave:

embarrassing in lots of ways, but she knows me really, really well.

Dave:

If we just got the dot points, you can, you know, anyone can say stuff about them, about

Dave:

themselves, and it might be true, it might not be true, but when you have that lived

Dave:

experience, when you see it happening day to day and year to year, you actually see, is

Dave:

that true? Is that trustworthy?

Dave:

So if God, so stories of a faithful God, if God says, hey, I'm really faithful, and that's

Dave:

all you had to go on, how would you know if that's true?

Dave:

But actually, God's given us a story from creation to now to the end of creation, where

Dave:

he shows time and time again that he's faithful, you know, he could say that he's

Dave:

loving, but how do you know if that's, know if that's true?

Dave:

Well, look at the cross.

Dave:

Look at the story of the cross and what

Dave:

happens there and the, the detail of what Jesus, through demonstrating that love.

Dave:

So you could, you could take that of any characteristic and they all come out through

Dave:

that narrative, which is then backed up by all the other stuff in the Bible where God just

Dave:

states it, but in the narrative, you see it in action and you know that you know, God can't

Dave:

hide at that point, and he's telling us the truth.

Tim Beilharz:

We'll continue with the rest of the podcast soon, but before we do, I'm here

Tim Beilharz:

with my colleague Al James, who is also the director of House conference, which is coming

Tim Beilharz:

up really soon on the 27th to the 29 August.

Tim Beilharz:

Al, for those of us who do not yet know,

Tim Beilharz:

remind us what House conference is.

Al James:

Yeah, House conference is essentially this.

Al James:

It's a theology to practice conference for kids and youth ministry, where we think hard

Al James:

about a theological topic and then we, we work hard to move towards the practice of youth in

Al James:

kids ministry.

Tim Beilharz:

We often think about the practical issues of children's in youth

Tim Beilharz:

ministry, but why is it important that we start with theology?

Al James:

Well, that's exactly as you say.

Al James:

We do think about the practical issues of kids

Al James:

in youth ministry, and it's really tempting, or something we often do, is we think about

Al James:

the pragmatics, the things, the tasks that we're going to do in kids and youth ministry,

Al James:

and then kind of reflect later on the theology and kind of retrofit our theology.

Al James:

But at Youth west, we really think that it's important that we start with theological

Al James:

principles and then we move from those principles to the practice of youth and

Al James:

children's ministry.

Al James:

We want to make sure we get the horse before

Al James:

the cart, not the cart before the horse.

Tim Beilharz:

Every year we pick a different theological theme to wrestle with.

Tim Beilharz:

What is the theme of this year's conference?

Al James:

Yeah, this year we're looking at the doctrine of sin, and the subtitle we've got is

Al James:

the uncomfortable truth, because it could be such a hard thing to talk about.

Al James:

Our society doesn't like talking about sin at all, and yet we know it's such an essential

Al James:

and actually a freeing doctrine when we get it right.

Al James:

So we want to look at a really, I guess, a robust and a holistic understanding of the

Al James:

doctrine of sin.

Al James:

And so Michael Jensen and Tom Habib are going

Al James:

to take us through various aspects of that.

Al James:

Michael's going to be looking at the language

Al James:

of sin.

Al James:

I'm looking at a theology of recovering the

Al James:

language of sin.

Al James:

And then Tom Habib is going to take us through

Al James:

a theology of sin in the Book of John.

Tim Beilharz:

So it's a lot to wrestle with.

Tim Beilharz:

We're going to have fun on that topic this

Tim Beilharz:

year.

Tim Beilharz:

Al, for you, what is one of the highlights

Tim Beilharz:

when it comes to thinking about house?

Al James:

The absolute highlight for me is that we get to wrestle with all of the content

Al James:

that we're being given all the way through, and we do that with our colleagues, we talk on

Al James:

tables about all of the stuff that we're looking at, but then we take all of that

Al James:

wrestling and then we intentionally with our colleagues, land that theology in the practice

Al James:

of youth and children's ministry in really specific ways.

Tim Beilharz:

Well, I'm convinced.

Tim Beilharz:

How can I get tickets to house?

Al James:

Well, registration is open until August 11, so you can go to youthworks.net

Al James:

house and register there.

Tim Beilharz:

Excellent. Well, I'm looking forward to seeing you there, Al, and seeing

Tim Beilharz:

our listeners as well.

Tim Beilharz:

Thank you very much.

Al James:

Thanks, Tim.

Tim Beilharz:

You talked there about the different characteristics of God, and this is

Tim Beilharz:

going to be my next question.

Tim Beilharz:

You've called your series stories of a

Tim Beilharz:

faithful goddess.

Tim Beilharz:

You could have said stories of a loving God,

Tim Beilharz:

stories of a compassionate God, stories of a just God.

Tim Beilharz:

There's lots of different characteristics which are all true of God's character.

Tim Beilharz:

What is it particularly about? Faithfulness.

Tim Beilharz:

Why pick that one as your title?

Dave:

Yeah, yeah.

Dave:

There were lots of good options and tossed a

Dave:

lot around.

Dave:

In the end, I figured, yeah, we're saved by

Dave:

faith alone and we continue as christians through faith alone, through trusting goddess.

Dave:

And we trust God because he's trustworthy.

Dave:

And so if someone is not a Christian, I want

Dave:

them to know that this God, you're not meant to take this sort of leap into the dark.

Dave:

You can trust him because he really is trustworthy.

Dave:

He's faithful.

Dave:

If you're continuing as a Christian, don't

Dave:

forget that he's faithful.

Dave:

So in whatever moment of your life there is,

Dave:

you know, if you're dying of cancer, God is faithful.

Dave:

If you're appointing a minister in church and God's told you that the key characteristic to

Dave:

look for in that minister is godliness, do you trust him or do you want to look for

Dave:

everything that the world looks for? There are all sort of sorts of pastoral

Dave:

situations.

Dave:

Sin comes out of our lack of trust of God.

Dave:

So Adam and Eve had the choice, you know, is God telling us the truth when he says we'll

Dave:

die if we eat that fruit, or is he lying? Do we trust him or not?

Dave:

And they said, he's lying, he's not trustworthy.

Dave:

And so they sinned.

Dave:

And that was devastating.

Dave:

On the flip side, when David's going through horrible times, he reflects back on what God's

Dave:

done in the past, and he says, you know what? God has been faithful.

Dave:

I read about the stories of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.

Dave:

I see what he's done and I know he was trustworthy then, and so I can trust him now.

Dave:

And so that characteristic, you could pick up on any characteristic, but that seems at the

Dave:

heart of the christian life.

Dave:

You know, John, in his gospel, he talks about

Dave:

why he wrote his gospel and he says, so that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ.

Dave:

You know, it's like trusting, and there's a great thing there in the Greek of, you know,

Dave:

some texts make it sound like so that you can start believing in some, you know, is it so

Dave:

that you continue to believe? But actually in the context of John's gospel,

Dave:

both are completely true, aren't they? And that's what we need to keep having.

Dave:

And so let's keep reflecting on God and saying I can trust him in all these situations.

Dave:

But of course, as we do that, we keep bouncing into all the other characteristics of God

Dave:

because none of them stand alone.

Dave:

We see his power, we see his love, we see his

Dave:

justice, we see his mercy.

Tim Beilharz:

That's great.

Tim Beilharz:

One of our principles at Youthworks is to have

Tim Beilharz:

churches partner with parents.

Tim Beilharz:

And that's a really key thing that we're

Tim Beilharz:

trying to do with this particular episode, is to honour you and the ministry you're doing.

Tim Beilharz:

And it's one of the ways that most of us who are listening are in parish children's and

Tim Beilharz:

youth ministers, and we can be equipping parents and partnering with them and helping

Tim Beilharz:

them walk alongside their kids and continue to just offer them in the home.

Tim Beilharz:

We know the home is so important in terms of faith formation.

Dave:

Yeah, I got four kids and I think I was listening to one of your previous podcasts

Dave:

where a couple of parents talked about how they had no formula for parenting.

Dave:

And I think that's right.

Dave:

But if you want to help your kids, be

Dave:

Christian, one of the key things to do is to love Jesus yourself and keep working out how

Dave:

to, how to live for Jesus yourself.

Dave:

And so don't think, oh yeah, I've got to tell

Dave:

my kids the Bible stories.

Dave:

Think first, how am I reflecting on God and

Dave:

getting to know God better? So I want to encourage parents to listen to

Dave:

those longer podcasts, keep coming back to that enjoyment of God, but then listen with

Dave:

your kids and listen to those kids ones and help them to enjoy it.

Dave:

I mean, I've been talking to parents about ways that they're using it and it's all sorts

Dave:

of different ways.

Dave:

So don't stop reading the Bible.

Dave:

I want to say that really firmly.

Dave:

Don't stop having your sort of Bible time with

Dave:

your kids next to you and snuggling in and reading the Bible for yourselves, but use the

Dave:

podcast at any other time.

Dave:

So there's some.

Dave:

There's one family where they listen to it as the kids are getting ready for school.

Dave:

And that used to be a really hectic time, but now they're calm and they listen to that.

Dave:

There are some families where the kids can't go to sleep unless they've listened to an

Dave:

episode.

Dave:

And the parents are getting really sick of the

Dave:

jokes, hearing the jokes over and over again.

Dave:

But that's okay.

Dave:

The kids love them.

Dave:

I know one dad who's listening with his

Dave:

daughters, and it's just a new, fresh way, just a different way to get more bible into

Dave:

your life.

Dave:

Now the family are doing it over dessert.

Dave:

We want to get more bible into our lives.

Dave:

This is a way to do it.

Dave:

But also I want to encourage people to use it for evangelism.

Dave:

So a lot of people won't step into a church or they won't go to a course or pick up a bible

Dave:

or that sort of thing.

Dave:

Talk to your kids about how we could use this

Dave:

for evangelism.

Dave:

If they go to a christian school, if they go

Dave:

to a anglican school, whatever it is, get them talking to the chaplain saying, hey, we're

Dave:

listening to this.

Dave:

Can we promote it?

Dave:

And you might find kids that are from completely non christian homes don't listen to

Dave:

anything else like this.

Dave:

Just start to listen to it because they really

Dave:

like it.

Dave:

And talk to your kids about how they can

Dave:

become advocates for tools that will help their friends hear the gospel.

Tim Beilharz:

Absolutely.

Tim Beilharz:

Dave, thank you so much for jumping on the

Tim Beilharz:

podcast.

Tim Beilharz:

We're going to have a listen now to a bit of a

Tim Beilharz:

snapshot of one of those stories of a faithful God for kids so people can get a good glimpse

Tim Beilharz:

of what it's like, and they can recommend that in good conscience to their families and the

Tim Beilharz:

people in their churches.

Tim Beilharz:

But thanks so much for jumping on, Dave.

Tim Beilharz:

Really appreciate it.

Dave:

Awesome.

Dave:

Thank you so much for having me on.

Dave:

Okay, are you ready for the showdown?

Dave:

Here it goes.

Dave:

Elijah is called a meeting at a place called Mount Carmel.

Dave:

King ahabs there, the 450 prophets of Baal are there, 400 prophets of Asherah are there, and

Dave:

all the people of Israel are there.

Dave:

Elijah gets up in front of all the people and

Dave:

he gives them a really simple speech.

Dave:

He tells them to stop flopping around between

Dave:

Baal and the Lord, work out which one is God and go with him.

Dave:

This is what he says in verse 21.

Dave:

He says, how long will you try to serve both

Dave:

Baal and the Lord? If the Lord is the true God, follow him.

Dave:

But if Baal is the true God, follow him.

Dave:

It's pretty simple, isn't it?

Dave:

It's like if you were standing in front of two things.

Dave:

On one side, you've got chocolate ice cream.

Dave:

On the other, there's a lump of wood, and it's

Dave:

dessert time.

Dave:

And your sister's like, look, work out which

Dave:

one you want to eat, grab it and go.

Dave:

But you really want to eat both the ice cream

Dave:

and the wood.

Dave:

It's craziness, but that's what the people of

Dave:

Israel are like.

Dave:

And you can tell from their response.

Dave:

Elijah's put things really simply and obviously.

Dave:

And how do the people respond? With silence.

Dave:

They say nothing.

Dave:

Like when you've been caught doing something

Dave:

really silly and you stand there looking guilty, but you really want to keep doing the

Dave:

silly thing.

Dave:

Elijah says, okay, okay, okay.

Dave:

Let's have a competition to work this out once and for all.

Dave:

We'll even make sure that it's much easier for Baal than for the Lord.

Dave:

I mean, there's only one of me.

Dave:

Baal has 450 prophets.

Dave:

This should be easy for Baal.

Dave:

Here's what we're gonna do.

Dave:

You bring two bulls, one for each team.

Dave:

The prophets of Baal can choose first, so I

Dave:

don't sneakily get the better one.

Dave:

We'll both sacrifice the bulls, chop them up,

Dave:

and put them on an altar for our God.

Dave:

You prophets of Baal, you pray to Baal, and

Dave:

I'll pray to the Lord.

Dave:

And whichever God sets fire to the wood, he's

Dave:

the real God.

Dave:

And all the people say, great, we love that

Dave:

idea.

Dave:

Again, Elijah wants to make it as easy as

Dave:

possible for Baal.

Dave:

So he says to the prophets of Baal, look,

Dave:

there are so many of you.

Dave:

How about you go first, get your sacrifice

Dave:

ready? Pray to Baal, but don't set the wood on fire.

Dave:

No cheating.

Dave:

Verse 26 says, so they took the bull that was

Dave:

given to them and prepared it.

Dave:

They prayed to Baal from morning until noon.

Dave:

Uh, what? They're praying from morning until the middle

Dave:

of the day.

Dave:

That feels like a long time.

Dave:

They're obviously really into it.

Dave:

They're dancing around the altar.

Dave:

They're shouting out, Baal, answer us.

Dave:

Baal, answer us.

Dave:

Baal, answer us.

Dave:

For hours and hours and hours, and the Bible

Dave:

tells us, but there was no sound.

Dave:

No one answered.

Dave:

How different is that to the Lord God of Israel?

Dave:

Remember when Elijah prayed and asked God to raise a dead boy to life?

Dave:

That's much harder than starting a small fire.

Dave:

But God answered then for the prophets of

Dave:

Baal.

Dave:

This is starting to get a little bit

Dave:

embarrassing.

Dave:

And Elijah wants to help that along, to show

Dave:

just how silly it all is.

Dave:

He starts making fun of them.

Dave:

He says, hey, pray louder.

Dave:

He's a God, after all.

Dave:

Maybe he's too busy thinking, or he's gone on a long trip, or he's sleeping.

Dave:

Maybe.

Dave:

Maybe he's on the toilet.

Dave:

He's saying, perhaps you've just got to bang

Dave:

on the door of heaven really loudly for Baal to hear you.

Dave:

He's just being silly.

Dave:

But that's exactly what they try and do.

Dave:

They work really hard to make Baal notice them.

Dave:

Verse 28 says this so the prophets prayed louder.

Dave:

They cut themselves with swords and spears until their blood flowed.

Dave:

This was the way they worshipped.

Dave:

Ouch. Isn't that sad? They think they have to hurt themselves to get

Dave:

Baal to pay any attention to them.

Dave:

It's so different to God, who sent Jesus to

Dave:

die for us so we wouldn't have to suffer any punishment.

Dave:

These prophets rave on for hour after hour after hour, yelling louder and louder, cutting

Dave:

themselves, dancing wildly, right up until the sun's going down.

Dave:

And then in verse 29, we read, but no voice was heard.

Dave:

Baal did not answer.

Dave:

No one paid attention.

Dave:

Now it's the Lord's Turn.

Al James:

The effective ministry podcast is a production of youth works in Sydney.

Al James:

We want to see effective youth children's ministry in every church.

Al James:

One of the ways that you can help us do that is by letting people know about this podcast

Al James:

in all the usual ways, like comment, share and review on your favourite social media and

Al James:

podcasting platform.

Al James:

If you've got comments, thoughts or questions

Al James:

for this podcast, you can email us@effectiveministrypodcasthworks.net and also

Al James:

check out youthworks.net for other ways that youthworks can help you have effective youth

Al James:

and children's ministry in your church.

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