I’d Rather Meet A Whale Than My Neighbor cover art

I’d Rather Meet A Whale Than My Neighbor

I’d Rather Meet A Whale Than My Neighbor

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What if the person you least want to love is the very one you’re called to pursue? We open with a raw confession about writing a hard name on a card and the Jonah-like urge to run the other way, then follow Jesus into Luke 15 where lost sheep, a lost coin, and a lost son reveal the pulse of heaven. The thread is relentless: God moves first, searches thoroughly, and throws a party when one heart turns home. That vision collides with our inner Pharisee and our older-brother logic, the part of us that wants fairness more than family and audits more than celebration.

Together, we linger in the prodigal story’s details—the pigsty hunger, the rehearsed apology, the father’s sprint, the robe, ring, and sandals that signal full restoration. We ask why grace feels so offensive when it lands on someone we resent, and we name the risks of gatekeeping dressed up as discernment. Along the way, you’ll hear the humbling moment a co-worker’s honesty exposed judgment behind kind words, and how that encounter re-shaped a ministry posture from crowd-chasing to person-seeking. Babies don’t walk on day one; spiritual growth is a process, with setbacks, stumbles, and second chances.

If you’ve ever felt torn between conviction and compassion, this conversation offers a clarifying center: search for the one, pray for the one, and celebrate small beginnings. Success isn’t a stage or a tally; it’s presence, pursuit, and patience. Whether you identify with the runaway or the rule-keeper, there’s a seat at the table and music from the house inviting you in. Listen, share with a friend who needs hope, and if this moved you, subscribe and leave a review so others can find their way home too.

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