
Worship Is Warfare
Failed to add items
Add to basket failed.
Add to Wish List failed.
Remove from Wish List failed.
Follow podcast failed
Unfollow podcast failed
-
Narrated by:
-
By:
About this listen
Send us a text
What if worship isn’t a feeling but an allegiance—one that reshapes your heart, your habits, and how you spend your time and money? We dive into the sweeping call to love God with heart, soul, and strength and unpack how that plays out in ordinary life: parenting through interruptions, singing when you don’t feel like it, building daily liturgies that stick, and turning homes and resources into outposts of grace. Tiffany shares a raw moment of singing “I surrender” and realizing she hadn’t—and how repentance, renouncing lies, replacing them with truth, and renewing the mind became a simple, repeatable path back to a true heart posture.
We talk bodies as instruments of worship—why kneeling matters, why gratitude can lead feelings, and why consistent rhythms are more like strength training than spiritual fireworks. From prayer journals with kids to listening to Scripture when the house is loud, we offer practical patterns that grow real resilience. We also reframe “peace.” The Prince of Peace doesn’t anesthetize; he reconciles and then sends us into hard places with a different kind of courage. That peace is covenantal, not merely emotional—a settled trust that frees us to obey when comfort resists.
Finally, we push against common counterfeits: comparison culture, curated perfection, politics-as-purpose, porn, and the lure of numbing habits. Strength in the Kingdom means resources offered and multiplied—hospitality that stretches budgets, fences that bless neighbors for decades, meals that turn into discipleship. When heart posture flows into daily liturgy and then into generous strength, households, churches, and communities actually change. Subscribe, share with a friend who needs courage for their daily rhythms, and leave a review with one practice you’ll start this week.
Email us at: tjbhpodcast@gmail.com
Support the show