Growing Closer to God with Guided Meditation
Welcome to the new season of the podcast, now titled "Growing Closer to God with Guided Meditation"!
Join your host, Pastor Robert Young, as we embark on a journey of spiritual exploration and renewal. This podcast is designed to help you deepen your faith and find inner peace through calming, reflective, and transformative meditative practices inspired by scripture.
Our Evolution
While the podcast, formerly known as Not Your Parent's Religion, focused in Seasons 1 and 2 on correcting misinformation and myths about religious beliefs and the teaching of Jesus Christ, the program has evolved. In Season 3, we began drawing closer to God with guided meditations, exploring all the details of why and how to meditate, and discussing the Biblical origins of Christian meditations.
With over 30 years of experience in Church planting and mentoring other Pastors, and 30+ years of training leaders in evangelism/discipleship, Pastor Young is here to guide you through these moments of stillness and connection with God.
What to Expect in Season 4
We are excited to return with Season 4 starting Sunday, October 5. We will continue to offer a structured weekly schedule:
- Sundays: Our weekly guided meditation episode.
- Monday through Friday: Daily devotions and reflections that expand on the topic of the Sunday meditations.
- Wednesdays: Audio episodes of our House Church series. This series reflects the Bible's teaching that believers should gather together for corporate worship, fellowship, encouragement, and even admonishment.
For those seeking an enhanced experience, we are adding video versions of the meditations and devotions to our Patreon page. These videos are designed to give you a more immersive experience as you meditate on the Father, His teachings, and His presence.
Tune in each week as we lead you on this path to connecting more deeply with God.
Growing Closer to God with Guided Meditation
Community: Daily Devotion with Dan & Sheila | Wednesday
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One lonely thought can snowball into a crisis when it only has your own walls to bounce off. We dig into Pastor Young’s idea that isolation creates an emotional echo chamber, and that Christian discipleship cannot be built on knowledge alone. Scripture matters, but solitary spirituality can leave blind spots untouched and fears amplified. So we ask a sharper question: what if community is not a nice add on, but the actual environment where spiritual growth and emotional health become possible?
We trace that through the way Jesus lives. In the Garden of Gethsemane, he does not disappear to “handle it” privately, he brings Peter, James, and John into his darkest hour. That picture reframes strength as relational depth, not self containment. Then we face the paradox everyone feels: people often cause our wounds, so how can people be the cure? We walk through Peter’s denial and Jesus’ gentle restoration, showing how shame loses power when connection is spoken out loud and brought into the light.
We also talk about grief and shared presence through Mary and Martha at Lazarus’ death. Before solutions, weeping together matters. We end with a practical reflection you can do today: name the two or three trusted people you are honestly inviting into your emotional world, and notice where hyper independence has been selling you a story. If this resonates, subscribe, share this with a friend who’s carrying it alone, and leave a review so more people can find the conversation.
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When Thoughts Become A Crisis
SPEAKER_01You know, it's funny how um being alone with your thoughts can just turn a tiny worry into this massive crisis.
SPEAKER_00Oh yeah, absolutely. It's like uh being trapped in an emotional echo chamber with a megaphone.
SPEAKER_01Exactly. Well, welcome to today's deep dive. We are Dan and Sheila, Pastor Young's AI co-hosts, and uh we're picking up right where we left off.
SPEAKER_00Right, because yesterday's devotion explored the role of scripture in our lives. But today, we're looking at the actual environment where that growth happens.
Why Discipleship Needs Community
SPEAKER_01Aaron Powell Yeah, we're unpacking Pastor Young's insights on why Jesus explicitly uses community to, you know, break us out of that echo chamber, making relationships absolutely mandatory for discipleship.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell Because knowledge alone, I mean, it simply isn't enough to mature us. You can memorize scripture all day. But uh, if you rely entirely on solitary study, that isolation actively harms your growth.
SPEAKER_01Aaron Powell Wait, really? It actually harms it.
SPEAKER_00Yeah, because without other people around to like absorb or challenge our thoughts, our blind spots and fears just bounce off the walls right back at us. It just amplifies our anxiety.
SPEAKER_01Aaron Powell Ah, I see. So community acts as like the acoustic paneling in that room.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell Exactly. It gives the panic somewhere to go.
SPEAKER_01It absorbs it, right, and stabilizes the sound. And Pastor Young points
When People Cause The Pain
SPEAKER_01out that even Jesus, who was fully God, didn't attempt to process his darkest moments in a vacuum.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell Right. Just look at the Garden of Gethsemane. Jesus was um deeply distressed. He stated openly that his soul was overwhelmed with sorrow.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, that's heavy.
SPEAKER_00It really is. And instead of withdrawing to handle that anguish alone, he brought Peter, James, and John into that exact space.
SPEAKER_01Aaron Powell Wow. So he literally invited his closest friends into his darkest hour.
SPEAKER_00He did. Proving that emotional health requires relational depth. It's not about
Peter’s Shame Healed By Conversation
SPEAKER_00having a massive crowd, you know. It's about having a few trusted people who can help absorb that emotional weight.
SPEAKER_01But wait, hold on. If community is supposed to be the acoustic paneling that stabilizes us, what happens when it's the community that actually breaks us?
SPEAKER_00That is a really fair point.
SPEAKER_01Because let's be real, aren't other people usually the cause of our emotional wounds? How can people be the cure for like the very pain they often cause?
SPEAKER_00Yeah, that is the core paradox here. Community isn't just about avoiding isolation, it is the specific engine for healing.
SPEAKER_01Okay, how so?
SPEAKER_00Well, take Peter's denial of Jesus. I mean, that is the ultimate relational wound, right? Betrayal by a best friend.
SPEAKER_01The absolute worst case scenario.
SPEAKER_00Exactly. But after the resurrection, Jesus doesn't uh send Peter into solitary confinement to think about what he did.
SPEAKER_01Right. He steps right back into the mess with him.
SPEAKER_00Yeah. He heals Peter's guilt through a really gentle conversation. Simply asking, Do you love me?
SPEAKER_01Wow, that's powerful.
SPEAKER_00It is. Think about the psychology of that. By forcing Peter to verbalize his connection out loud, Jesus effectively short circuits that shame spiral, the one that, you know, thrives in silence.
SPEAKER_01So confession isn't just about admitting you're wrong.
SPEAKER_00No, not at all. It's the mechanism that brings the wound into the light, so the relationship itself can be the medicine. Some wounds can only be healed by practicing grace with another person.
SPEAKER_01That makes so much sense.
Grief Needs Shared Presence First
SPEAKER_01And you see that same mechanism of shared presence with grief, too, like when Lazarus died.
SPEAKER_00Right, exactly.
SPEAKER_01Jesus didn't immediately rush in with a supernatural solution to fix Mary and Martha's feelings. He wept with them first.
SPEAKER_00He did. Healing has to begin with shared presence. Just letting someone else sit in the dark room with you.
SPEAKER_01So community is really the training ground.
SPEAKER_00Exactly. It's where we learn to sit with others in their pain, and where we actually allow them to sit with us in ours without trying to like instantly fix it.
Love As A Daily Practice
SPEAKER_01So what does this all mean for you? It means love isn't just some abstract feeling you hold quietly in your chest. It is a practice.
SPEAKER_00Yeah, and community provides the real flesh and blood people you need to actually practice forgiveness, build resilience, and share genuine joy.
SPEAKER_01Right, because knowledge is most valuable when it's applied.
Three Minute Reflection Challenge
SPEAKER_01So we have a focused reflection task for you today.
SPEAKER_00Right after this deep dive ends, we want you to pause and take exactly three minutes to reflect on this question. Who are the two or three trusted people you are honestly inviting into your emotional world?
SPEAKER_01Three minutes. It is completely worth it. Because, well, here is a final thought to leave you with.
The Cost Of Hyper Independence
SPEAKER_00Yeah, so if we are designed by a God who is inherently relational, is our modern cultural obsession with hyper-independence and solitary self-care actually working against our fundamental design?
SPEAKER_01Something to really think about the next time you catch yourself trying to carry it all alone.