Cross Culture Crisis

PODCAST · religion

Cross Culture Crisis

"Welcome to Cross Culture Crisis—the podcast where we cut through the chaos of current events, politics, and culture with the sharp edge of a biblical worldview. Here, we don’t just react to the headlines; we interrogate them through the lens of Scripture, asking: What does this say about the human heart? How do we navigate this toxic climate as followers of Christ? And above all, how do we reconcile the boiling cultural temperature to the cool, unchanging truth of the Cross—the Gospel that redeems what’s broken and calls us to a better way?

  1. 23

    From Battlefields to the Cross: My Story of Grace, Brokenness, and Redemption

    This week on *Cross Culture Crisis* is different. Instead of breaking down culture, I’m sharing my personal testimony — the honest story of how God’s grace found me in the middle of 21 years in the Army, through seasons of brokenness, doubt, and searching, and ultimately led me to the foot of the cross and into ministry. From military life to launching the Cross Culture podcast, I talk openly about the prevenient grace that drew me, the justifying grace that saved me, and the sanctifying grace that continues to transform me. If you’ve ever wondered whether God can use someone with a messy past and real struggles, this episode is for you.---This title is personal, intriguing, and ties into your military background while pointing to the Gospel. The description is warm, inviting, and seeker-friendly while staying true to the podcast’s voice.

  2. 22

    Why Dating and Relationships Feel Broken — And What the Gospel Actually Offers

    Dating in 2026 feels exhausting. Between swipe fatigue, situationships, ghosting, and the pressure to keep our options open, we’re more connected than ever—and somehow more alone. In this episode of Cross Culture Crisis, we diagnose why modern dating isn't working. We look at the data behind the "dating recession," deconstruct the counterfeit gospels of autonomy (try-before-you-buy, self-fulfillment first), and explore how fatherlessness and shifting cultural roles have left us confused about covenant love. But the problem isn’t dating itself—it’s that we’ve been asking the wrong questions about what it’s actually for. Discover how the Gospel offers a better story: dating as rehearsal for covenant marriage, reflecting Christ's sacrificial love for His Church. Plus, practical steps using the "3-Question Filter" to help you date with intentionality starting today.🔑 Key Scriptures Referenced:• Genesis 1:27–28 (Male and female created in God's image)• Genesis 2:24 (Leaving and cleaving; one flesh union)• Ephesians 5:25–32 (Marriage as a picture of Christ and the Church)• Colossians 3:18–19 (Mutual honor in marriage)• 1 Peter 3:1–7 (The grace-filled dance of mutual respect)• Titus 2:3–8 (Intergenerational mentoring and covenant roles)📊 Sources & Data Cited:• Institute for Family Studies – 2025 National Dating Landscape Survey (31% active daters; 63% men under 30 single vs. 34% women; low approach confidence).• U.S. Census / Fatherhood Statistics – Roughly 1 in 4 U.S. children (approx. 18-19 million) grow up in father-absent homes.• Pew Research Center, 2023 – Approx. one-third of U.S. adults have used dating apps; usage is heaviest among ages 18–34.🎯 This Week's Action Step:Try the 3-Question Filter:Can I see myself in covenant with this person?Is this drawing me closer to Christ or pulling me away?Am I willing to invite community accountability into this?Join the conversation in our Facebook group or Discord! We're walking through the crisis together toward the cross.#CrossCultureCrisis #ChristianDating #Relationships #GospelAndCulture #WesleyanHoliness

  3. 21

    Man in a Box: Unmasking ‘Toxic Masculinity’ and Rediscovering Godly Manhood

    In a culture swinging between shaming men and glorifying dominance, what does it actually mean to be a man? We examine the real struggles facing young men —falling behind in education, tragically high suicide rates, and the pull of online extremes — then turn to Scripture for a better way. Through a biblical lens, we diagnose the brokenness on both sides of the debate and present a vision of manhood that is strong yet gentle, responsible yet humble, and rooted in the sacrificial love of Christ. If you’re tired of the culture war shouting match and longing for a vision of manhood that actually leads to flourishing — for men, women, and families— this episode is for you. Take one practical step this week toward Christlike manhood — or supporting it in the men around YOU. #BiblicalManhood #ChristianPodcast #CrossCultureCrisisSources & Scriptures Referenced:CDC National Vital Statistics System (2023 data on suicide rates)National Student Clearinghouse Research Center (undergraduate enrollment trends)Oregon State University research on masculine norms (Steven Sanders, 2024–2026)Genesis 3; Ephesians 5:25–28; 1 Corinthians 16:13–14; 1 Corinthians 13:4–8; 1 Timothy 3:4–5; 2 Thessalonians 3:10; Ephesians 6:10–18

  4. 20

    The Cross and the Crowd: A Good Friday Service

    On this Good Friday, we pause the headlines and turn our full attention to the cross. In a world still echoing with the anger and cries of “No Kings” protests, we walk through the final hours of Jesus’ life — from the Garden of Gethsemane, through the trial before Pilate, to the hill called Golgotha where the true King was crucified. This special episode is our full Good Friday service: raw, reverent, and unhurried. We don’t soften the suffering. We don’t rush past the darkness. But we also don’t leave the cross without hearing the words “It is finished” and the quiet hope that follows. Whether you’re a longtime believer wrestling with doubt, a seeker trying to understand why the cross matters, or simply someone who needs to sit in the weight of what Jesus did, you are welcome here. This isn’t just a story from 2,000 years ago. It’s the answer to every kingdom we try to build without Him.

  5. 19

    Discipleship in the Age of Outrage: How to Follow Jesus When Everyone Is Choosing Barabbas

    They screamed for Barabbas.Not because they loved him. But because he promised to fight. He promised to win. He promised a kingdom built on power, not a cross.And if we're honest? We're still choosing Barabbas.This past weekend, millions took to the streets in the "No Kings" protests. The anger was real. The concerns were legitimate. But for the Christian, it raised an ancient question: When the pressure is on and the crowd is loud, who do we choose?In this episode of Cross Culture Crisis, we dig into:• Why both the left and the right keep reaching for "the revolutionary" instead of the suffering King• The biblical difference between defending the vulnerable and destroying your enemy• What it actually looks like to follow Jesus when everyone else is picking sides• Four concrete steps you can take this week—no budget requiredThe world will keep offering Barabbas. Jesus still offers the cross.Which will you choose?Key Scripture References:• Luke 23:18–19 — The crowd chooses Barabbas• Matthew 27:15–26; Mark 15:6–15; John 18:38–40 — The trial of Jesus• John 18:36 — "If my kingdom were of this world, my followers would be fighting"• Nehemiah 4 — Defending while rebuilding• Luke 9:23–26 — Take up your cross daily• Matthew 28:18–20 — The Great Commission• Luke 22:42 — "Not my will, but yours be done"• Mark 14:50 — The disciples scatterSources & Further Reading:• Augustine, City of God, Book XIX• Ed Stetzer, Christians in the Age of Outrage• W. Oscar Thompson Jr., Concentric Circles of Concern (revised by Claude V. King)• Robby Gallaty & Chris Swain, ReplicateBarabbas video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b56TbMIJs1E

  6. 18

    The God Who Fits

    What if the God you want isn't the God who is?A movement is sweeping through American Christianity. Leaders raised in the church are publicly reimagining the faith — claiming the Bible isn't authoritative, God can be renamed, exclusivity is immoral, hell is incompatible with love, and the church's failures invalidate its message.These claims are resonating with millions. They answer the 2 AM questions. They relieve the tension. They make God more acceptable to modern sensibilities.But is it true?In this episode, we do something rare. We listen carefully. We take these claims seriously. Then we test them — not against our preferences, but against Scripture, tradition, reason, and experience.What emerges is a pattern: a god who never disagrees with you, never disrupts your politics, and never asks for surrender. A god who fits.That's not Christianity. That's a shrine to the self.If you're deconstructing, questioning, or just searching for truth — this episode is for you. The God who breaks you can also remake you. But the god you construct can never save you.

  7. 17

    When Jesus Didn't Say That

    What if the systems we've built to care for the vulnerable are structurally incapable of doing what the Church was called to do?In this episode, we dig into the fraud exposed in California's daycare and hospice systems—where providers billed the state for people they never saw, reduced to numbers on a claim form. But this isn't just a story about government failure. It's a story about what happens when care becomes a transaction and the person in need becomes a billing code.Then we go deeper. Matthew 25 is the go-to passage for anyone arguing that Jesus commands government welfare. But does the text actually say that? We walk through the passage carefully—looking at who's being judged, who "the least of these" really are, and what kind of care Jesus actually describes. Along the way, we confront a harder question: Have we outsourced mercy to the state and then complained when the state does it badly?This episode is a call to reclaim what biblical charity actually means—voluntary, personal, and costly. Because the state can write a check. It cannot hold a hand. That part is yours.Key Scriptures: Matthew 25:31-46, 2 Corinthians 9:7, Exodus 25:2, Deuteronomy 15:10, Romans 13, James 1:27Topics Covered:Government welfare and structural failureMatthew 25 and the "least of these"Biblical charity vs. taxationChurch abdication and the call to personal mercyPractical steps to meet needs directlyPrimary Investigation Cited:Nick Shirley – California Daycare and Hospice Fraud InvestigationScriptural References:Matthew 25:31-46 – The Sheep and the Goats; basis for the exegetical argument about personal vs. institutional care.2 Corinthians 9:7 – "Each one must give as he has decided in his heart, not reluctantly or under compulsion, for God loves a cheerful giver." (ESV)Exodus 25:2 – "From every man whose heart moves him you shall receive the contribution." (ESV)Deuteronomy 15:10 – "You shall give to him freely, and your heart shall not be grudging when you give to him." (ESV)Romans 13:1-7 – The role of the state; used to distinguish the state's sword from the Church's cup of cold water.James 1:27 – "Religion that is pure and undefiled before God the Father is this: to visit orphans and widows in their affliction." (ESV)Theological Framework:Wesleyan Quadrilateral – Scripture, Tradition, Reason, Experience (used implicitly in the News in Focus analysis).Arminian-Wesleyan Holiness Theology – Emphasis on free will, voluntary giving, and the formation of the heart through charitable action.Early Church Historical Reference – Christians rescuing exposed infants and staying during plagues; widely documented in early Church history (e.g., Dionysius of Alexandria's letter on the Cyprian plague, referenced in general historical scholarship).Conceptual Sources:Distinction between State (Romans 13) and Church (Mercy) – Rooted in classical Christian political theology, including Augustine's City of God and Lutheran two-kingdoms doctrine, though the episode frames it in accessible terms.Critique of Bureaucratic Care – The argument that systems designed for process rather than relationship produce exploitation draws on conservative and libertarian critiques of the welfare state (e.g., Thomas Sowell's work on incentives and systems).

  8. 16

    Is Asmongold Right? The Algorithm, the Narrative, and the War for Your Mind

    Have you ever scrolled through your phone and realized forty-five minutes vanished? Or watched a news report that left you feeling... managed?In this episode of Cross Culture Crisis, we confront the quiet erosion of human agency happening in the age of algorithms and curated narratives. From the Twitter Files to the subtle framing choices of legacy media, we diagnose the systems designed to shape your perception—and the biblical mandate to resist them.We explore:The Theology of Choice: Why the Imago Dei means you are a soul to be persuaded, not an object to be programmed.The Gatekeepers: How "Trust and Safety" became the modern equivalent of shutting the kingdom door.The Uncontrollables: Why figures like Tim Pool and Asmongold terrify the system—not because they're always right, but because they refuse to be managed.The Church's Silence: Why secular creators are often on the front lines of narrative defense while the Church remains silent.The Discernment Dashboard: Four voices to add to your information diet to rebuild your ability to test all things.This isn't just a technology problem. It's a soul problem. The cross offers us forgiveness—but it also offers us our minds back.Key Scriptures: Deuteronomy 30:19, Matthew 23:13, Romans 12:2, Galatians 5:1.Action Step: This week, pick one voice from the "Discernment Dashboard" mentioned in the episode and test what they say against Scripture and reason.Sources: Scripture ReferencesDeuteronomy 30:19 (CSB) – The biblical mandate for choice and human responsibility.Matthew 23:13 (CSB) – Jesus' warning to the gatekeepers who shut the kingdom.Isaiah 1:18 – God's invitation to reason together (honest persuasion).Romans 12:2 (NIV) – The call to non-conformity and mind renewal.Galatians 5:1 (ESV) – Freedom in Christ versus slavery.1 Thessalonians 5:21 (CSB) – The command to test all things.Basham, Megan. Shepherds for Sale: The Evangelical Leaders Trading the Truth for a Leftist Agenda. HarperCollins, 2024.Huxley, Aldous. Brave New World. Chatto & Windus, 1932. (Referenced contextually regarding conditioning).Sowell, Thomas. Knowledge and Decisions. Basic Books, 1980. (Specifically the concept of "trade-offs").The Social Dilemma. Directed by Jeff Orlowski. Netflix, 2020. (Featuring Tristan Harris on "persuasion technology").Taibbi, Matt. "The Twitter Files." Series of reports published on Substack, 2022–Present.Shellenberger, Michael. "The Twitter Files." Series of reports published on Substack, 2022–Present.CNN. "Pennsylvania teenagers charged in NYC protest bombing case." March 2026. (Deleted social media post; article with editor's note).Phillip, Abby. On-air correction and X post regarding NYC bombing target. CNN, March 2026.NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch. Official statement on NYC bombing incident as ISIS-inspired terrorism. March 2026.Epstein, Robert. "The Search Engine Manipulation Effect (SEME) and Its Impact on the Outcomes of Elections." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), vol. 112, no. 33, 2015, pp. E4512-E4521.Franklin, Benjamin. "Those who would give up essential liberty, to purchase a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety." Pennsylvania Assembly: Reply to the Governor, 1755.Tim Pool. Independent Journalist, Host of "Timcast IRL."Asmongold. Twitch Streamer and Content Creator.Ruslan. Artist, Musician, and Cultural Commentator.Google Trends. Search data for phrases "Why do I feel so manipulated?" and "Is social media making me crazy?" (Cited as reaching 5-year highs).

  9. 15

    The Strike and the Cry: Justice Without Bloodlust

    Is it possible to support a necessary military strike and still have a heart that breaks for the enemy?This week, Cross Culture Crisis diagnoses the real story behind the U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran. We walk through the event through the lens of the Wesleyan Quadrilateral—Scripture, Tradition, Reason, and Experience—to understand why a decisive, efficient strike against the IRGC was a necessary restraint of evil.But we also deconstruct two myths clouding our vision: the myth that Iran has always been a desert of radicalism, and the myth that Western performative activism equals actual solidarity. We separate the machine of the regime from the Image of God in the streets.This episode is a call to the American Church: Support the sword when it protects the innocent—but never lose the tear that mourns the brokenness that makes the sword necessary.Key Scriptures: Romans 13, Matthew 5:9, Matthew 26:52, Psalm 72:12-14, Zechariah 7:9, 2 Peter 2:19Action Steps:Pray specifically for the Iranian people and the underground churchPartner with Elam Ministries or FrontiersTake the Tear and Prayer Challenge

  10. 14

    When Worlds Collide: The Decay of the Salt

    Why does violence feel less like a shocking anomaly and more like the next logical step in our cultural argument? In this episode of Cross Culture Crisis, we diagnose the terrifying news of the Mar-a-Lago shooting not just as a security failure, but as a symptom of a nation that has lost its shared moral operating system.We are witnessing the collision of two rival worldviews: the "Remnant," rooted in the Imago Dei and objective truth, and the "New Order," rooted in subjective power and self-deification. We trace the decay of the "Hinge Virtue"—the Fear of the Lord—and explain why trying to keep the fruit of Christian virtue while chopping down the tree always leads to chaos.Join us as we dive deep into Scripture, original language (Yirah and Phobos), and the cultural moment to find a foundation that will not shake.Key Quotes:"We are no longer arguing about policy; we are living out the collision of two different religions.""Virtue is not a social construct; it is a reflection of God's character.""The Fear of the Lord isn't terror; it's the safety rail that keeps us from falling off the cliff."

  11. 13

    The Altar of Moloch: Decoding the Language of Sacrifice

    Diagnosing the crises of our culture with empathy, deconstructing its idols with clarity, and pointing both seeker and saint to the cross where true hope is found.The ancient Canaanites sacrificed children to Moloch, believing the innocent could buy power for the guilty. We look back in horror, but what if that spirit never died? What if it just went underground, learned to wear a suit, and started speaking in code?This week, we open the Epstein files—not for gossip, but for a spiritual autopsy. We examine the coded language, the commodification of the human body, and the chilling pursuit of immortality through the vitality of the young. From the bronze furnaces of Carthage to the modern elite's obsession with longevity, the script is always the same: the destruction of the vulnerable to sustain the powerful.But the Church cannot afford to be shocked. We must be sober. Join us as we run the evidence through the Wesleyan Quadrilateral and confront the darkness with the only light that overcomes it.In this episode:The Great Question: How do we maintain sanity when language is weaponized to hide evil?News in Focus: A Wesleyan Quadrilateral analysis of the Trivers emails and the logic of commodification.Culture Check: Decoding the "pizza" references, the Disney inversion, and the modern quest for eternal life.Letter to the Church: Why political saviors fail and why silence is complicity.Bridge to Action: Concrete steps to identify trafficking in your zip code and stand in the gap.

  12. 12

    Was Jesus a Refugee? A Biblical Diagnosis of a Political Slogan

    In a world of borders, refugees, and walls, one of the most common political slogans is "Jesus was a refugee." It’s used to connect the central figure of our faith to one of today's most polarizing debates. But what if this simple statement, while well-intentioned, is missing the main point of the biblical story?In this episode of Cross Culture Crisis, we perform a careful biblical diagnosis of the claim. We move past the political meme to uncover the historical, theological, and prophetic truth of Matthew 2. Using the Wesleyan Quadrilateral as our guide, we explore:The Great Question: Are we reading the Bible through the lens of our politics, or allowing the Bible to shape our politics?News in Focus: A historical and theological look at the Holy Family's flight to Egypt, including the meaning of the word "fugitive" and Jesus as the "true Israel."Culture Check: Deconstructing the idol of "Jesus the Political Activist" and discovering four deeper principles: the sanctity of life, God's sovereignty, the mandate of hospitality, and Jesus as the ultimate stranger.Letter to the Church: A prophetic warning against weaponizing Scripture and an exhortation to a higher calling.Bridge to Action: Three concrete, local steps to live out these truths in your community this week.Join us as we replace simplistic labels with the profound, multi-dimensional truth of Scripture, and find a vision for public witness rooted not in outrage, but in the glory of the Gospel.

  13. 11

    Stop Apologizing for the Foundation: What Holds America Together?

    What if the Church's greatest weakness isn't a lack of answers, but a lack of confidence? In a culture that demands we apologize for our beliefs, this episode is a prophetic challenge to do the opposite. We're called to be a city on a hill, but you can't see a city that's hiding its light. Join us as we ask the foundational question: What truly holds a nation together? We diagnose the three biblical assumptions that built America—Imago Dei, Human Depravity, and a Higher Law—and expose the secular replacements that are causing our culture to crack. This is a call for the Church to reclaim the gospel as the only cure for what ails our nation and to stop apologizing for the only foundation that can last. Featuring a prophetic warning from Alexis de Tocqueville and concrete steps to become a foundation-builder in your community.

  14. 10

    Justice or Gospel? The Worldview Battle Inside the Church

    Woke ideology is sweeping into the Church, while Gen Z is running toward tradition. It sounds like a contradiction, but it reveals the same deep hunger. In this episode, we diagnose the worldview battle happening inside the Church, critique specific examples with grace and truth, and point to the unshakeable hope of the biblical Gospel as the only anchor in a storm of cultural confusion.

  15. 9

    The Operating System: Why Your Worldview Matters

    Why do you feel disarmed in conversations about faith? It's not a lack of conviction; it's a clash of invisible operating systems. In this episode, we diagnose the five fundamental questions every worldview must answer—Origin, Identity, Purpose, Morality, and Destiny. We'll unpack God's brilliant two-part revelation in Psalm 19 and give you a three-step toolkit to test any idea for truth. Learn why the biblical story of Creation, Fall, Redemption, and New Creation isn't just one view among many, but the only framework that truly works. This isn't about winning arguments; it's about finding the courage to engage with clarity, compassion, and the unshakable hope of the Gospel.

  16. 8

    Infiltration Exposed: Defending America's Biblical Freedoms

    How can we be a nation that says, “Give me your tired, your poor,” while protecting the very freedoms that make that welcome possible from an ideology that seeks to replace them?This week, we confront a reality many sense but few name clearly: the infiltration of Political Ideologies in America. Drawing on the powerful testimony of Ayaan Hirsi Ali—a woman who lived under and now bravely opposes the erosion of freedom—we diagnose the conflict between Sharia law and the U.S. Constitution.Using the Wesleyan Quadrilateral, we examine the facts, expose the "Red-Green Alliance," and break down the rhetoric of movements like "Globalize the Intifada." This isn't about fear; it's about discernment. We'll explore the biblical foundations of our own system of government and call the Church to a posture of courageous love and informed civic engagement.Join us as we navigate this crisis with clarity, defend biblical freedom, and point both seeker and saint to the true hope found only at the cross.Key Topics:Ayaan Hirsi Ali's testimonySharia Law vs. The U.S. ConstitutionThe Wesleyan Quadrilateral: Scripture, Tradition, Reason, ExperienceThe "Red-Green Alliance" and "Globalize the Intifada"The biblical roots of American governmentA call to discernment and incarnational loveClips from Ayaan Hirsi Ali attributed to: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3jtAGdZQLi4

  17. 7

    Facing Our Goliaths: Precision, Justice, and Hope Amid Venezuela’s Turning Point

    A precise U.S. operation. A leader captured. Streets erupt in celebration while global condemnation follows. How do we find clarity in a crisis this complex? This week on Cross Culture Crisis, we diagnose the events in Venezuela through the lens of Scripture, tradition, reason, and experience. We’ll uncover the cultural Goliaths of exaggerated narratives, national pride, and the temptation to trust in resources for our salvation. Join us as we move past the outrage to find a humble, justice-filled hope that points not to worldly power, but to the cross where the ultimate battle has already been won.

  18. 6

    The Fraud Nobody Wants to Talk About: Minnesota’s $250M Scandal

    $250 million meant to feed hungry kids… stolen.When the story broke, it was almost buried. When people spoke up, they were called bigots. The mess is real, and the confusion is deep.This week on Cross Culture Crisis, we’re not just looking at the Minnesota fraud scandal. We’re diagnosing the cultural idols that let it happen: Unchecked Compassion, Narrative Protection, and the Betrayal of Trust by the very leaders meant to protect us.This isn’t about outrage. It’s about clarity. It’s about finding a hope that isn’t shaken by human failure.

  19. 5

    Fear Not: The Christmas Answer to a World of Dread

    In a Christmas season overshadowed by headlines, uncertainty, and a quiet sense of dread, we pause to let the ancient story speak afresh.This special edition of *Cross Culture Crisis* weaves together Matthew’s and Luke’s accounts of Jesus’ birth—not the sanitized greeting-card version, but the raw, honest one: a vulnerable baby born under Roman occupation and Herod’s tyranny, angels proclaiming “Fear not” to terrified shepherds, wise men quietly defying a murderous king, and a young family fleeing into the night as refugees.Amid glory and threat, joy and danger, we find the only foundation for a peace the world cannot give and cannot take away: Immanuel—God with us.Join us by the candlelight as we name our fears, listen to the story, and discover how worship, not control, becomes the path from great fear to great joy.A hopeful, Scripture-rich Christmas meditation for seekers, skeptics, and weary believers alike.Merry Christmas—the Light has come, and the darkness will not overcome it. ✺

  20. 4

    When Evil Strikes the Celebration

    Friends, it’s been a heavy week. The news from Australia and California feels like a punch to the gut. It’s the kind of news that makes you want to lock the doors and pull the covers over your head. In this week’s new episode of Cross Culture Crisis, we’re sitting with that fear and pointing to the one, true hope we have in Jesus. If you’re feeling anxious or heartbroken, I think this conversation will bring some clarity and comfort.

  21. 3

    When Compassion Becomes Defiance

    The headlines are filled with talk of borders and citizenship. But the question people are really asking is deeper: "Can we be both compassionate and secure? Is there a way to love our neighbor that doesn't create chaos?" We're diving into that tension on this week's episode of Cross Culture Crisis. #CrossCultureCrisis #Borders #Sojourners #GreatQuestion

  22. 2

    When They Cheer the Killer

    This week on Cross Culture Crisis, we're doing a deep dive into the glorification of violence, from the assassination attempts on a President to the celebration of a CEO's killer. We're not picking a political side; we're picking the truth. We'll explore the three-fold evil of political demonization, cultural celebration, and the self-righteous heart. Most importantly, we'll walk through what the Bible *really* says about justice, vengeance, and loving our enemies, and how the cross provides the only lasting solution for our broken culture and our own hearts. Tune in for a challenging but hope-filled conversation, plus a powerful "Letter to the Church" that will call you to action.

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

"Welcome to Cross Culture Crisis—the podcast where we cut through the chaos of current events, politics, and culture with the sharp edge of a biblical worldview. Here, we don’t just react to the headlines; we interrogate them through the lens of Scripture, asking: What does this say about the human heart? How do we navigate this toxic climate as followers of Christ? And above all, how do we reconcile the boiling cultural temperature to the cool, unchanging truth of the Cross—the Gospel that redeems what’s broken and calls us to a better way?

HOSTED BY

David

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