• Do what with a Heifer? - Genesis 15
    Jan 8 2026
    Follow the F260 reading plan at fbbonifay.comIn this episode of A Good Cup of Coffee, Noah Wagner and Seth Pippin continue walking through the church’s Bible reading plan, Replicate Ministries’ Two-60, and lead listeners into a deep dive of Genesis 15. Along the way, they draw important context from Job 38–42 and Genesis 11, highlighting God’s sovereignty, the nature of faith, and the weight of God’s covenant promises.The discussion centers on God’s unilateral covenant with Abram—why God opens with “fear not,” how faith is credited as righteousness, and how the ancient covenant ceremony ultimately points forward to the New Covenant in Christ. A brief coffee segment and sponsor highlight round out the episode.⸻Reading Plan and ContextThis week’s readings: • Job 38–42 • Genesis 11 • Genesis 15–17Note on Job: • Though placed later in Scripture, Job’s events occur early in biblical history—within the Genesis timeframe⸻Job 38–42 — God’s Sovereignty and Human HumilityGod Speaks (38–39): • God answers Job with a sweeping creation discourse • “Were you there…?” questions emphasize God’s wisdom and power • Examples include the earth’s foundations, the seas, and even animals like the ostrichGod’s Power Displayed (40–41): • Job is humbled • Behemoth and Leviathan demonstrate God’s unmatched authority over creationRestoration (42): • Job repents without accusing God of wrongdoing • God rebukes Job’s friends for misrepresenting Him • Job is restored and blessed abundantlyKey emphasis: • Job wrestles honestly but does not sin against God • True community should point suffering people back to God’s sovereignty, not shallow explanations⸻Genesis 11 — Tower of Babel (Brief Context) • More than a children’s story • Reveals human pride, rebellion, and sin’s nature • God’s response restrains humanity’s self-exaltation • Encouragement to reread the passage carefully for overlooked details⸻Genesis 15:1–6 — Promise, Fear, and FaithContext (Genesis 14): • Abram refuses the king of Sodom’s riches so God alone receives glory • God initiates the encounter: “The word of the Lord came to Abram in a vision”“Fear not, Abram”: • Possibly addressing the awe of God’s presence • Possibly calming Abram’s unspoken fears • God knows our needs before we voice themThe Heir Question: • Abram’s concern: he has no child • Eleazar of Damascus will not be the heir • God promises Abram a biological sonStars Promise: • Abram is brought outside and told to count the stars • Emphasis is not literal math but God’s immeasurable fulfillmentFaith and Righteousness: • “He believed the Lord, and He counted it to him as righteousness” • Righteousness is credited by trusting God’s promise, not by works • A foundational truth that points forward to the gospel⸻Genesis 15:7–21 — Covenant Ceremony and God’s Unilateral PromiseRequest for Assurance (v. 8): • Abram asks, “How am I to know…?” • Not doubt, but a desire for reassurance that God graciously providesAncient Covenant Ritual (vv. 9–11): • Animals are split and arranged • Traditionally, both parties would walk between the pieces • Symbolized a self-curse if the covenant was brokenProphetic Revelation (vv. 12–16): • Abram falls into a deep, God-caused sleep • God foretells Israel’s future: • Enslavement for 400 years • Deliverance with great possessions • Abram’s peaceful death • Judgment delayed until the Amorites’ sin is completeGod Alone Walks the Path (vv. 17–21): • A smoking fire pot and flaming torch pass between the pieces • Abram does not walk through — God binds Himself alone • The land promise is clearly defined and named⸻Theological Insights and Application • God initiates grace: He approaches first and calms fear • Faith is not blind: God welcomes honest questions and gives assurance • Unilateral covenant: Abram contributes nothing — God shoulders the promise • Human failure vs. God’s faithfulness: Israel fails; we fail — God does not • New Covenant fulfillment: What Abram could not keep, Christ fulfills perfectlyStudy encouragement: • Context matters •...
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  • The Woman you gave me made me do it - Genesis 2:18-3:6
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  • An Unexpected Christmas, Pt. 2 - Luke 2:1-21
    Dec 10 2025
    In the season finale of A Good Cup of Coffee, Noah Wagner and Seth Pippin conclude “The Unexpected Christmas” series by walking through Luke 2:1–21. The episode connects everyday gift stories and coffee banter to the heart of Christmas: the incarnate Son’s humble birth, God’s sovereign providence, the angelic announcement to marginalized shepherds, and the proper human response to the gospel. The hosts close with a clear invitation to trust Christ and a call for believers to live obedient, worshipful lives, along with season wrap-up updates.⸻Coffee Stop + Sponsor NotesFresh Grounds Coffee Visit • Lunch: pressed panini-style sandwiches (optional salt, pepper, oregano). • Dessert: tiramisu mousse.Drinks • Noah: Iced Americano — black and strong. • Seth: • Previous day: Cortado (roughly 50/50 espresso and milk). • Usual order: Café con leche (Cubano-style espresso with ~20g sugar, frothed, topped with a little half-and-half). • Today: Custom iced “dirty hot chocolate” (house hot chocolate mix, espresso, chocolate, vanilla). • Wanted it stronger in a 16 oz instead of a 24 oz. • Described as having a strong Christmas vibe.Banter • Cold, rainy Florida week. • Complaints about missing sweatshirts and condiments. • Starbucks name mishaps: “Seth” → “Sef,” “Noah” → “noodle,” plus overpriced and confusing drinks.Sponsor Highlight — Fresh Grounds Coffee • Affordable and accessible. • Freshly roasted beans, ground in-house. • Freshly prepared food (not frozen). • Local, relational — they know customers by name. • Delicious coffee and food. • Mission-driven: exists to further God’s work in Bonifay and beyond.Official coffee provider of the podcast.⸻Personal Gifts & the Greatest GiftSeth’s Memorable Gifts • Crossbow. • PlayStation 4. • Early electric scooter. • Favorite by use: the “green machine” drift trike.Noah’s • Guitar (now in need of repair). • Favorite experience gift: VIP concert tickets in Charlotte with Q&A and floor access — attended with his mom.Transition • Gift-giving traditions often reference the wise men (who came later). • Focus shifts to the first Christmas and God’s greatest gift: the birth of Jesus.⸻Luke 2:1–7 — God’s Providence and the Humility of the IncarnationThe Setting • Census decree from Caesar Augustus, carried out under Quirinius, governor of Syria. • Forces Mary and Joseph to travel from Nazareth to Bethlehem (~70 miles on foot). • God uses a pagan government to fulfill Micah 5:2 — Messiah born in David’s city.Why the Census? • Maintain Roman control. • Display imperial power through population records. • Primary purpose: taxation (compared to an IRS filing system).The Birth • No room at the inn (likely due to census overcrowding — acknowledged as speculation). • Jesus born in a stable area, likely a cave for livestock. • Wrapped in swaddling cloths; laid in a manger (feeding trough).Theology • The incarnation reveals radical humility (Philippians 2). • God the Son enters the world not as a king, but as a vulnerable infant. • Foreshadows His ultimate obedience: death on a cross for our salvation.⸻Luke 2:8–14 — Angels and the ShepherdsThe Announcement • “Good news of great joy… for all the people.” • The child is named: Savior, Messiah, Lord. • Sign: a baby wrapped in cloths, lying in a manger. • Heavenly host praises God: “Glory to God in the highest…”Why Shepherds? • Socially marginalized and often despised. • Viewed as unclean and unreliable; some sources note they could not testify in court. • Yet essential to society (food production; sacrificial lambs).God’s Pattern • Not elites, priests, or kings — but shepherds. • Not the temple — but a field. • After centuries of silence — direct angelic proclamation. • The word translated “bring good news” is the root of evangelize.⸻Luke 2:15–21 — The Shepherds’ Response1. Immediate Obedience • They go “with haste.” • Risk livelihood by leaving flocks. • Faith produces urgency.2. Witness • They make known what they were told. • People are amazed — even though shepherds were ...
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  • An Unexpected Christmas, Pt. 1 - Luke 1:26-56
    Dec 3 2025
    Noah and Seth kick off a two-week Christmas series titled “The Unexpected Christmas,” intentionally slowing down Luke 1 to recover awe at the incarnation. They address the danger of over-familiarity with the Christmas story and highlight Mary’s faith, the virgin birth, and the theological implications of Jesus being fully God and fully man. The episode also includes a sponsor segment for Fresh Grounds Coffee and closes with practical applications and four major takeaways.⸻Light Banter + SponsorHoliday Chatter • Favorite Christmas songs (“Have a Holly Jolly Christmas”). • Old vinyl records (Bing Crosby, Johnny Cash, Elvis). • Kids’ movies (Cars, Toy Story, Scooby-Doo). • Florida “cold front” jokes.Coffee Orders • Noah: “Christmas cookie” latte (cookie butter). • Seth: Tiramisu hot latte. • Starbucks name fails: “SEF,” “noodle.”Sponsor — Fresh Grounds Coffee (Bonifay) • Affordable, not overpriced or confusing. • Fresh-roasted, fresh-ground beans; fresh-made food (not frozen). • Staff know customers by name. • Exists to further the mission of God locally and beyond.⸻ Series Setup — Avoiding Over-Familiarity • Two-episode Christmas series. • Brief holiday break; new episodes return in January. • Goal: Slow down Luke 1 so listeners regain wonder at the incarnation.⸻ TEXT: Luke 1:26–33Gabriel announces to Mary that she will conceive Jesus: • He will be called Son of the Most High. • He will receive David’s throne. • His kingdom will have no end.Key introductions: Gabriel, Mary (a virgin in Nazareth), Joseph (betrothed; Davidic lineage).⸻Historical–Cultural ContextNazareth • Looked down upon; heavy Gentile presence. • Reinforces God’s pattern of choosing unlikely people and places.Mary’s Virginity • Highlights impossibility of natural conception; God must intervene.Betrothal in the First Century • Legally binding like marriage. • Breakage required formal divorce. • Pregnancy could bring: • Social shame • Family rejection • Lifelong hardship • Possible stoning (rare by this time but still a known threat)Joseph’s Lineage • Of David’s royal line (Matthew 1). • Mary also appears connected to Davidic ancestry. • Reinforces messianic fulfillment from both parents’ lines.⸻ “How Can This Be?” — Luke 1:34–38Mary: “How can this be, since I am a virgin?”Gabriel explains: • Holy Spirit will come upon her. • Power of the Most High will overshadow her. • Jesus will be holy — the Son of God. • Cites Elizabeth’s miraculous conception: • “For nothing will be impossible with God.”⸻THEOLOGY OF THE VIRGIN BIRTH1. Adam’s Line and Sin Nature • Humanity inherits corruption from Adam. • Virgin conception breaks this chain.2. Jesus’ Unique Person • Fully human (born of a woman). • Fully God (conceived by the Holy Spirit). • Without inherited sin — uniquely qualified to save.3. Substitution & Sufficiency • Fully human → can stand in our place. • Fully God → powerful enough to conquer sin. • OT sacrifices insufficient (Hebrews 9). • Jesus is the perfect once-for-all sacrifice.4. Fulfilled Prophecy • Isaiah 7. • God proves His faithfulness to His promises.5. Mary’s Response“Behold, I am the servant of the Lord; let it be to me according to your word.” • Radical obedience. • Trust amid uncertainty and danger.⸻Elizabeth — God’s Confirming Sign • Once barren, now pregnant in old age. • A tangible reminder that God overcomes human impossibility.⸻The Holy Spirit Then and Now • Same Spirit who overshadowed Mary now indwells believers. • Pre-Pentecost encounters were rare. • Now believers receive the Spirit at salvation (Acts 1). • Spirit empowers obedience, witness, and faithfulness.⸻Mary’s Magnificat (Luke 1:46–55) • Mary rejoices in “God my Savior.” • Highlights God’s mercy, covenant faithfulness, and power. • God is the hero — not Mary. • She praises before knowing the outcome. • A model of worship in uncertainty.⸻KEY TAKEAWAYS1. God Uses Unlikely PeopleMary and Joseph — ordinary, humble, ...
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  • We Don't Have a Harvest Problem - Thanksgiving 2025
    Nov 26 2025
    Hosts, Context, and Sponsor • Noah Wagner — returning after family health issues • Seth Pippin — co-host • Lyndon filled in the week beforeRelease timing: Wednesday before ThanksgivingSponsor: Fresh Grounds CoffeeLocal, affordable, fresh-roasted, grinds in-house, offers good food, knows customers by name, and exists to further the mission of God locally and globally.⸻Thanksgiving Foods and TraditionsNoah’s Thoughts • Loves turkey — “we only have it once a year.” • Prefers smoked turkey; baking this year. • Tips: brine for days, baste often, inject with butter. • Deep-fried turkey also a favorite. • Loves leftovers.Seth’s Thoughts • Prefers ham day-of; loves turkey mostly as leftovers (sandwiches). • If money weren’t an issue: prime rib or brisket. • Jokes that turkey being “high-maintenance” says something.Family and Logistics • Multiple family meals can be draining. • Seth once gained 10 pounds in one day between morning and night weigh-ins. • Noah planned Tennessee travel but stayed local due to his son’s hospitalization. • Noah and Deanna ended up with a “small turkey” that was actually 21 pounds.Seasonal Shift • No Christmas music until after Thanksgiving. • Except Noah helped decorate early because his wife is pregnant with twins.⸻Coffee SegmentNoah • Gingerbread shaken espresso — loves the seasonal flavor.Seth • Iced white mocha with brown sugar, cinnamon, sweet cream splash, caramel drizzle, brown butter toffee cold foam. • “Basically a dessert, but incredible.” • Usual orders: brown sugar shaken espresso; dirty chai. • Reminder: drink what you like — just don’t call frappes “coffee.”⸻American Thanksgiving: Historical Roots • 1620: Pilgrims flee religious persecution, cross 66 days on Mayflower, arrive late; nearly half die during winter. • 1621: Wampanoag help settlers plant and fish; after harvest, Bradford proclaims a thanksgiving feast (3 days; venison, local fowl). • 1623: Another thanksgiving after drought. • 1789: Washington proclaims national day of thanks. • 1863: Lincoln makes Thanksgiving a permanent holiday.Theme across all: Thanking God for provision.⸻ Biblical Foundation: Feast of Weeks (Pentecost)Deuteronomy 16:9–12 • “Pentecost” = 50 days after Passover. • Harvest thanksgiving: bring a freewill offering as the Lord blesses. • Celebrate with family, servants, Levites, foreigners, widows, and orphans. • Remember slavery; respond with joy, obedience, and generosity.Emphasis: God provides the harvest.⸻Acts 2 Pentecost: Harvest of SoulsTimeline: • Passover → Crucifixion & Resurrection • Ascension (Acts 1) → “Wait for the Spirit” • 50 days after Passover → PentecostEvent Highlights • Sound like rushing wind; tongues as of fire. • Jews from “every nation under heaven” in Jerusalem for the feast. • Miracle of languages: everyone hears the gospel in their own language. • Two views: 1. Apostles speak actual languages they never learned. 2. Apostles speak but hearers miraculously understand. • Either way: known languages, understood content — “the mighty works of God.” • Peter preaches; crowd asks, “What shall we do?” • Response: Repent and be baptized. • About 3,000 saved that day.Point: As God brings in the harvest of crops, He brings in a harvest of souls.⸻Living It Out: Gratitude and EvangelismWhy Christians Should Be Most Thankful • God provides life, food, safety, breath, and ultimately salvation. • Once “dead in sin,” now made alive in Christ.Daily Thankfulness Rhythms • Mealtime prayers. • Bedtime prayers with kids. • Thanking God even for withheld desires. • Journaling gratitude.Thanksgiving as an Evangelism Bridge • Ask people: “What are you thankful for?” • Then share what you’re thankful for: God’s provision, salvation, Jesus Himself.⸻Matthew 9:35–38 — The Harvest Is Plentiful • Jesus sees crowds “harassed and helpless.” • Says harvest is plentiful, laborers are few. • Pray for the Lord to send laborers — then go.Not a harvest problem — a laborer problem.⸻Simple Evangelism Framework: BOB • B — ...
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  • Handling "Not Okay" - Mark 5:25–34
    Nov 25 2025
    Host Seth Pippin welcomes Lyndon Glover for a Scripture-driven conversation on what to do when we are “not okay.” Centering on Mark 5:25–34—the woman healed after twelve years of suffering—the episode emphasizes going to Jesus first, choosing faith over fear, knowing God’s fatherly love in hardship, preparing spiritually before trials, and leaning on church community. Listeners are encouraged toward honest prayer, seeking help, and rooting themselves in the hope of Romans 15:13.⸻Participants & Context • Host: Seth Pippin • Co-Host: Noah Wagner — absent this week • Guest: Lyndon Glover, student at a Baptist university, serving in student ministry; may begin an internship in JanuaryPersonal Updates: • Finals week stress for Lyndon and his girlfriend Elizabeth • Seth’s grandmother is in the hospital after a major car accident, “slowly getting better”⸻Coffee / Tea Segment • No coffee today: Seth has a berry tea with honey from David at Fresh Grounds due to a sore throat; notes Florida’s weather swings (20s → 70s). • Lyndon’s coffee tastes: iced mochas (no whip) and quality black coffee; learned good beans/fresh roasts while selling South American coffees at a farmer’s market. • Critiques Starbucks’ over-roasting and heavy sugar masking flavor. • Seasonal favorite: peppermint mocha with Elizabeth. • Coffee as ministry: shout-out to David at Fresh Grounds; invitation to hear his testimony episode.⸻Topic Framing — When You’re “Not Okay” • Common experiences: stress, sickness, emotional turmoil, accidents, burnout. • Emphasis on exegesis (drawing truth from Scripture) instead of eisegesis (reading our opinions into the text). • Core question: How does Jesus respond to hurting people, and how should we respond in our own moments of not being okay?⸻Scripture Study — Mark 5:25–34Recap of the Story • A woman has suffered a bleeding condition for 12 years. • She has “suffered under many physicians,” spent all she had, and only gotten worse. • She hears of Jesus, reaches through a crowd, touches His garment, and is instantly healed.Cultural Context • Her condition made her ceremonially unclean—social isolation, stigma, and shame. • Touching anyone in that state was forbidden; entering a crowd was risky. • She approaches Jesus anyway—faith stronger than fear.Jesus’ Response • Jesus senses power go out and calls her forward. • She confesses trembling. • Jesus responds with fatherly tenderness:“Daughter, your faith has healed you. Go in peace and be freed from your suffering.”Key Takeaways • Go to Jesus first, not last. • Even small faith (mustard seed) is powerful when directed toward Christ. • God knows our suffering and meets us with love. • Wholehearted trust is precious to Him (contrast: lukewarm faith). • Note on miracle-workers: Scripture includes examples of false signs (e.g., Exodus), but this account shows true, Messianic power and the purpose behind it.⸻Applying the Text — Faithful Responses to Not Being Okay1. Go to God First • Prayer should be our first instinct, not our backup plan. • Talk to God before posting, venting, or self-medicating.2. Prepare in Calm Seasons • Some cling to God in trials but drift in peace; others praise in peace but fall apart in crisis. • Believers must train spiritually before the storm. • Analogy: Athletes don’t start conditioning in the fourth quarter—they prepare beforehand.3. Community & Accountability • Avoid using “God told me” as a shield for your will; invite wise counsel. • Seek mentors, pastors, and “seasoned saints” who pray faithfully and listen to the Spirit. • We’re part of a body—not meant to struggle alone.4. Mental, Emotional, and Physical Care • If you broke your leg, you’d use crutches without shame—mental/emotional struggles deserve the same compassion. • College example: Joe Lenamood checks students’ spiritual habits first (prayer, Scripture), because consistency correlates with resilience. • Technology and social media amplify anxiety; the enemy exploits unguarded moments.⸻Theological Anchors • Origin of suffering: Result of sin entering the world (Genesis). God didn’t create brokenness. • God’s sovereignty: Like in Job, the enemy only operates with God’s allowance; God often walks with us rather than removing hardship immediately....
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  • The Love of Christ Compels You - 2 Corinthians 5:1-21
    Nov 12 2025
    Hosts Noah Wagner and Seth Pippin welcome Alex Dickerman, Executive Pastor at First Baptist Bonifay, to discuss 2 Corinthians 5. Together they unpack Paul’s view of suffering and Spirit-empowered ministry, the Holy Spirit’s role as the believer’s guarantee, the call to live by faith, the beauty of being made new in Christ, and the charge to embrace the ministry of reconciliation.Participants • Noah Wagner — Host • Seth Pippin — Host • Alex Dickerman — Guest (Executive Pastor, FBC Bonifay; husband and father)Context: Alex is preparing to teach 2 Corinthians 5 to the church’s college group this week.⸻Context and ThemesPaul’s opponents in Corinth questioned his legitimacy because of his suffering. Paul responds that suffering and the Spirit’s power actually go hand in hand. • Parallel drawn to 2 Timothy — endurance and faithfulness in hardship. • In the American church, lack of persecution can dull urgency; true discipleship should still cost something.⸻2 Corinthians 5:1–10 — Our Heavenly Dwelling • “Earthly tent” vs. “eternal house”: believers long for the eternal and for mortality to be swallowed up by life. • The Holy Spirit is the seal and down payment — our guarantee of what’s to come. • “Sealed, secured, promised.” • The threefold salvation: justified (past), sanctified (present), glorified (future) — echoing Romans 8. • “We walk by faith, not by sight.” Faith produces distinct lives — how we use our time, money, and priorities.Practices for Listening to the Spirit: • Ask daily in prayer: 1. “God, what do You want me to know today?” 2. “What do You want me to do?” • Silence and solitude: intentionally quiet the noise. • Example: Robby Gowdy grew to two hours daily in silence during a hard ministry season. • Prayer room: create space to listen and obey simple Spirit nudges. • From The Pause curriculum: the world shouts; God speaks softly—disciples must be intentional listeners.⸻Pleasing God and the Judgment Seat • “Whether at home or away, we make it our aim to please Him.” • The judgment seat of Christ: rewards for what’s done in faith. • God delights in faith-filled obedience — even imperfect steps. • Move from “God’s probably mad at me” → “I want to please Him.”⸻2 Corinthians 5:14–17 — Love of Christ and New Creation • “For the love of Christ controls us.” Christ’s love compels obedience, not fear. • One died for all; therefore, all died — believers no longer live for themselves. • “If anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation.” • Testimonies of transformation: • FARM Ministry (Faith-based Addiction Recovery Ministry) — men once enslaved to addiction now lead in the church. • Example: worship leader once imprisoned now leading worship at SBC. • No one is too far gone. Grace levels the ground — both the visibly broken and the “respectably sinful” need the same mercy.⸻2 Corinthians 5:18–21 — Ministry of Reconciliation • God reconciles us through Christ and entrusts us with the message. • “We are ambassadors for Christ, God making His appeal through us.” • Link to Romans 10 — people can’t believe unless they hear. • The church must model and expect evangelism: • Foundations Class: moving year-round, every third week focused on going and serving. • Three Circles tool by Jimmy Scroggins — simple and reproducible gospel sharing. • Encourage immediate witness: after trusting Christ, tell someone right away. • Everyday evangelism: use consistent contexts. • Example: older believer asked full-service gas attendants, “Son, have you made that all-important decision to give your life to Christ?”⸻Motivation and Sustaining Zeal • “Great Exchange” (v. 21): Christ became sin so we could become His righteousness — our deepest motivation. • Keep the fire fresh through daily communion with the Spirit. • Like a favorite restaurant — you share what you love because you keep returning. • If accountability structures are missing, start small groups for shared encouragement.⸻Closing ScriptureGalatians 2:20 — “I have been crucified with Christ… I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave Himself for me.”⸻Next Steps • Alex teaches 2 Corinthians 5 to the college group this week. • Church ...
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  • David From Fresh Grounds … On the Pod?
    Nov 5 2025

    INTRO

    • Welcome listeners back to A Good Cup of Coffee.

    • Mention: recording locally in Bonifay with guest David from Fresh Grounds.

    • Briefly set up the theme: “Today we’re talking missions, coffee, and how community happens one cup at a time.”

    • Mention drinks on air (fun icebreaker): caramel apple butter “Deanna,” dirty vanilla chai, and David’s latte with extra shot.

    • Quick shoutouts to local Bonifay staples (Holiday, M&W, Big John’s/Donut Land).

    DAVID’S STORY & BACKGROUND

    • Missionary kid roots in Brazil; dual citizenship.

    • Parents’ ministry: evangelism, teaching, youth/music.

    • Time in West Africa—Cape Verde, Guinea-Bissau, Senegal.

    • Boarding school in Senegal where he met Michelle.

    • Sixteen years of ministry overseas (started as dorm parents → youth ministry).

    • Learned discipleship through example and daily life.

    • Why they left: mission shift + father’s dementia → call back home.

    FRESH GROUNDS ORIGIN STORY

    • Return to Bonifay → working factory job → pastoral visit leads to coffee shop role.

    • No prior café experience, but passion for people and gospel mission.

    • Opened June 2020, sustained by Carmel Church (David on staff, not payroll).

    • Tight margins, community-supported, accessible prices, faith-driven focus.

    • Real impact: pastors meet there, students gather, gospel conversations happen.

    MISSIONS THROUGH COFFEE

    • Philosophy: “Let the kingdom lead, not your ambitions.”

    • Use your gifts and daily work as worship—whether brewing espresso or teaching.

    • Example: excellence in small details as spiritual discipline.

    • Real-life witness from factory job: living out faith draws curiosity.

    • Encourage listeners: your workbench or classroom can be a mission field.

    • Passages mentioned: Acts 1:8 and Romans 12:4–8.

    COFFEE HOT TAKES

    • Creamer = good if balanced.

    • Cold brew: overrated or not? (mixed opinions).

    • Simplicity is key—good coffee shouldn’t be complicated.

    • “Perfect cup” depends on setting, not perfection—Nescafé under a tree vs. traffic latte.

    • Fun story: Meredith training David on-the-fly during first long shift.

    COMMUNITY AND STUDENT MINISTRY CONNECTION

    • Connection with FCA and local schools.

    • Encouragement to students: seek first the kingdom in career, money, and relationships.

    • Challenge: don’t trade eternal rewards for short-term comfort.

    • Example: Paul’s tentmaking—work that sustains mission.

    WRAP-UP

    • Recap: mission, coffee, and calling.

    • Shoutout to Michelle and Fresh Grounds team.

    • Upcoming: host heading to a Fresh Grounds meeting, David returning for a future episode.

    • Tease shipment of “good coffee” from the host’s dad to settle the “bad coffee” debate.

    • Closing verse idea: “Whatever you do, do it all for the glory of God” (1 Cor. 10:31).

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