Hope Mississippi

PODCAST · business

Hope Mississippi

A bimonthly podcast educating Mississippians about the needs of fellow citizens, encouraging residents to work together to change the trajectory of our families and children, and sharing success stories.

  1. 29

    Every Day And Every Way - The Replay!

    This is a replay - a BEST OF if you will - of episode 10 from Season 1. It was our most downloaded episode so far. PLEASE share it with a friend and help us reach 500 downloads for this episode!Former band director David Willson shares the transformative teaching philosophy that changed countless lives over a long career, including 32 years at Ole Miss. From humble beginnings in Jackson, Mississippi, Willson's journey reveals how music education became his pathway out of poverty and into a life of purpose.He was our host, Dawn Beam's band director, and she proclaims that he was such an incredible leader, she would have followed him off the proverbial cliff!  Willson candidly discusses how he revolutionized his teaching after discovering he was "tired of yelling at students." His turning point came when he found Dale Carnegie's "How to Stop Worrying and Start Living" at a thrift store for 25 cents—a book he read twice despite not being "a reader." This sparked the development of his signature "Every Day in Every Way" philosophy centered on goal-setting, positive reinforcement, and consistent enthusiasm.  What sets Willson's approach apart is his deep empathy for students' circumstances. "You have no idea what that student has been through from the moment they woke up till they get to your classroom," he explains. This understanding led him to shift responsibility away from blaming students to examining his own teaching methods. When students struggled, Willson concluded, "I either didn't teach them exactly what I needed them to do or I didn't motivate them to want to do it." As a university educator, Willson trained future band directors with practical tools rather than abstract theories. His mentorship extended beyond graduation, as he maintained relationships with former students, checking in on their progress and offering support. This dedication created a ripple effect, with Willson's influence reaching thousands of young musicians through his students, who went on to become educators themselves. Willson's powerful closing thought serves as both a challenge and inspiration: "One person is going to be that pivotal moment in somebody else's life. Just one little word of encouragement, one arm around somebody, and just saying 'we're going to get this. I won't give up if you won't give up." His story reminds us that educators aren't just teaching subjects—they're shaping lives.Join us for new episodes on the 1st and 15th of each month as we continue sharing stories of transformation from across Mississippi. Each story reminds us that when we contribute our unique gifts, Mississippi rises together.Hope Mississippi's Mission: The sobering reality remains: one in four Mississippi children lives in poverty, and one in five experiences food insecurity. These statistics aren't just numbers—they're our collective challenge. Through these conversations, we discover that Mississippi's transformation occurs through individual commitments to mentor, encourage, and be present for others. The small acts of hope accumulate into the broader "miracles" we celebrate.

  2. 28

    Mary X - Full of Grace

    In this tender and powerful episode of Hope Mississippi, I have the true honor of sitting down with “Miss Mary,” a former foster youth who entrusted me with one of the most heartbreaking and hope-filled stories I have ever heard. I cannot tell you how humbled I am that she trusted me enough to share her story, and I do not take that lightly.Mary opens up about how poverty, family instability, and a parent’s illness led her into foster care, and how placement after placement shaped the way she learned to trust, to feel safe, and to understand love. She speaks with honesty and courage about neglect, abuse, trauma, and the deep wounds left behind when a child’s voice is dismissed by the very systems meant to protect them.But friends, this is not just a story about pain. It is a story about grace.Mary shares how prayer became a lifeline, how surrendering her life to Christ gave her the strength to keep going, and how the Lord met her in some of her loneliest moments. After aging out of foster care without the support so many young adults depend on, she met the man she would marry just one month after high school graduation. What began in hardship became a beautiful testimony of steadfast love, faithfulness, and a 60-year marriage.And that love did not stop with them.Over the course of two decades, Mary and her husband opened their home to more than 100 foster children, offering safety, stability, and compassion to children who needed all three. Their story is a living reminder that God can bring healing, redemption, and purpose out of even the deepest hurt.My prayer is that this conversation encourages your heart, opens your eyes, and stirs all of us to care more deeply for vulnerable children and the families who welcome them in.If this episode speaks to you, please share it with someone who needs hope. Then subscribe, leave a review, and join the conversation: What would it take for more safe, loving foster homes to open their doors?Join us for new episodes on the 1st and 15th of each month as we continue sharing stories of transformation from across Mississippi. Each story reminds us that when we contribute our unique gifts, Mississippi rises together.Hope Mississippi's Mission: The sobering reality remains: one in four Mississippi children lives in poverty, and one in five experiences food insecurity. These statistics aren't just numbers—they're our collective challenge. Through these conversations, we discover that Mississippi's transformation occurs through individual commitments to mentor, encourage, and be present for others. The small acts of hope accumulate into the broader "miracles" we celebrate.

  3. 27

    Easter with the Hendersons

    The Henderson family recently gathered to celebrate Easter. Dorothy Henderson (our mom) went "home" three Easters ago so the gathering can be bitter sweet. As we reflect on the past and embrace the present, memories abound. But perhaps the listener will also find comfort in life and death as they talk about the Hope we celebrate at Easter. Please allow me to introduce our family:Dr. Gene Henderson (our Daddy) has been a pastor for 60 years and has lived a life of service which has inspired all of us. First born sister Gina Palasini, is in sales. She has four kids and four grandkids. She likely did her best to fly under the radar during this recording.Second born Page Hughes, is a pastor's wife married to Les Hughes. She has four kids and I have lost count of how many grandkids Only brother Chip Henderson, pastors Pinelake Church - Mississippi's largest church. He is married to Christy and they have three kids and two grandkids.Our youngest sibling Hope Davis, is a special ed teacher and is married to Bradley. They have one child.With Easter week as the backdrop, we share memories of our mom, the way we gathered around her final season, and how talking honestly about death can actually strengthen a family’s love and clarity.Family can mean the people who raised you, the friends who stayed, and the church community that carried you when you ran out of strength. We sit down together as siblings with our dad and talk about why “family is everything” becomes more than a sweet line when grief shows up at your door. From there, the conversation moves into the heartbeat of Christian faith: the hope of heaven. We wrestle with what heaven might be like, but we get crystal clear on what biblical hope is not. Hope is not wishing. It’s assurance grounded in Jesus Christ, the resurrection, and the promise that death is not the finish line. We talk reunion, comfort for the hurting, and why trusting Christ is like putting your full weight on a chair.We then widen the lens to the family of God and faith in action. We reflect on reconciliation, the witness of John Perkins, and what it looks like to treat people as equals with real dignity. We also name the needs close to home, including poverty and hunger, and ask what we can do right where we live: love without a “gotcha,” serve through a local church, and become hands and feet to people who feel forgotten. If you’ve been craving a faith-based podcast that connects Easter hope to everyday life, press play, share this with someone you love, and subscribe and leave a review so more people can find it.Easter Prayer:Oh Lord, You loved this world so much that you gave your one and only Son, that we might be called your children too. Lord, help us to live in the gladness and grace of Easter Sunday every day. Let us have hearts of thankfulness for your sacrifice. Let us have eyes that look upon Your grace and rejoice in our salvation. Please help us to walk in that mighty grace and tell your good news to the world. All for Your glory do we pray, Lord, Amen.Join us for new episodes on the 1st and 15th of each month as we continue sharing stories of transformation from across Mississippi. Each story reminds us that when we contribute our unique gifts, Mississippi rises together.Hope Mississippi's Mission: The sobering reality remains: one in four Mississippi children lives in poverty, and one in five experiences food insecurity. These statistics aren't just numbers—they're our collective challenge. Through these conversations, we discover that Mississippi's transformation occurs through individual commitments to mentor, encourage, and be present for others. The small acts of hope accumulate into the broader "miracles" we celebrate.

  4. 26

    Mother and Son Hope Dealers

    When life hits hard, clear help and a steady voice can change everything. We sit down as mother and son to trace Sam’s switch from insurance to the law, why three weeks of practicing together confirmed our purpose, and how the right words at the right time help clients stand taller. You’ll hear what “being a hope dealer” looks like in real cases—calming a room, making choices visible, and walking with people through their worst days until the ground feels solid again.Music runs through our story like a second language. Sam shares how growing up on drums and guitar turned into leading worship at Mosaic Church, why an old family line about music easing sorrow still matters, and how a single hymn can carry someone through a week of doubt. We talk about serving without a spotlight, letting songs do their quiet work, and the strange way melodies return hope to the very people who offer them. Along the way, we share the moments that formed our grit: a flooded house that became a blessing, lean years that felt like daily manna, and an election loss that opened a better road overnight.We’re opening a new office in Ocean Springs to serve the Gulf Coast with practical legal help and a people-first approach. Mississippi needs are complex—families under strain, kids in poverty, neighbors carrying grief—and our aim is simple: show up, explain the path, and fight for outcomes that restore dignity. If your hope meter has been running low, try our favorite practice: look back for the evidence of goodness in your own story and name it. Then pass it forward. Listen, share with a friend who needs encouragement, and leave a review so more people can find a path back to hope.Join us for new episodes on the 1st and 15th of each month as we continue sharing stories of transformation from across Mississippi. Each story reminds us that when we contribute our unique gifts, Mississippi rises together.Hope Mississippi's Mission: The sobering reality remains: one in four Mississippi children lives in poverty, and one in five experiences food insecurity. These statistics aren't just numbers—they're our collective challenge. Through these conversations, we discover that Mississippi's transformation occurs through individual commitments to mentor, encourage, and be present for others. The small acts of hope accumulate into the broader "miracles" we celebrate.

  5. 25

    Cathy Clark | For the Lord and for the Law

    One statistic can stop you cold: one in four Mississippi children lives in poverty, and one in five faces food insecurity. That’s the reality Cathy Clark chose not to look away from. Teacher. Advocate. Pastor’s wife. Law student. She planted both feet in hard soil and decided to move.In this episode, Cathy shares her Hattiesburg roots, the ministry that taught her how to sit with pain, and the moment that redirected her future. In 2021, a family friend was wrongfully convicted and sentenced to life without parole. With no legal training, Cathy and a small circle of believers organized through Zoom and Facebook, combed through records in a church study room, and uncovered the truth: jurors had lied during voir dire. The result? A new trial. A change of venue. An acquittal. A restored career. A restored future. It’s a rare look at what happens when community, courage, and careful attention to facts intersect with faith.That case changed her trajectory. Now pursuing a law degree, Cathy sees the courtroom as a place for both clarity and compassion. She speaks candidly about family law, the emotional storms clients carry, and the responsibility of wise counsel to steady people when their lives feel unmoored. As a nontraditional pastor’s wife on the front lines, she embodies service that doesn’t end when the verdict is read.We widen the lens to Mississippi’s broader challenges—poverty, hunger, mental health—and offer practical ways to engage: connect families to resources, advocate for thoughtful legislation, and show up consistently for someone who feels alone.If you care about justice reform, faith in action, or practical hope for hard places, this conversation will challenge and encourage you. Listen. Share it with someone who needs courage. Leave a review to help others find these stories.And then ask yourself: what baton will you carry next?Join us for new episodes on the 1st and 15th of each month as we continue sharing stories of transformation from across Mississippi. Each story reminds us that when we contribute our unique gifts, Mississippi rises together.Hope Mississippi's Mission: The sobering reality remains: one in four Mississippi children lives in poverty, and one in five experiences food insecurity. These statistics aren't just numbers—they're our collective challenge. Through these conversations, we discover that Mississippi's transformation occurs through individual commitments to mentor, encourage, and be present for others. The small acts of hope accumulate into the broader "miracles" we celebrate.

  6. 24

    Rev. Carlos Wilson | Hope You Can Touch

    A quiet Navy office. A Gideon Bible. A young man searching for more.In this episode of Hope Mississippi, Pastor Carlos Wilson shares how a private spiritual awakening became four decades of public service, and a ministry rooted in hope you can actually see and touch. From rural Mississippi to Hattiesburg’s east side, faith looks like fresh paint on a weathered porch, new roofs over old homes, and a park where families gather under open sky. If you’ve ever wondered how calling turns into community change, this story offers blueprints, not platitudes.Carlos reflects on meeting Flo, his partner in life and ministry, and the steady courage that grows from a marriage built on patience, prayer, and persistence. We explore contentment as a learned strength in a state where too many children go without, and why joy doesn’t wait for perfect conditions. From Pride to the East Side to Power of the Hour, he shows how small, consistent acts of service can restore dignity and rebuild neighborhoods one win at a time.We unpack the origin of Chain Park, the setbacks, the near-misses, the unlikely partnerships, and how collaboration between churches, neighbors, and city leaders turned vision into common ground. Mentorship surfaces throughout: preachers who shaped his voice, the decision to value clarity over performance, and the daily discipline of encouragement, texts, handshakes, and simple hellos that keep people going.We also step into the sacred work of racial reconciliation through Mission Mississippi and shared worship across congregations, learning to listen across styles, rhythms, and histories without losing what makes each tradition sing. This is ministry that uses every tool available, saws, songs, spreadsheets, and smiles, to build belonging.Subscribe for more stories of practical faith. Share this episode with someone who believes communities can change. And leave a review with one gift you plan to use for your neighbors.Let’s keep turning hope into places people can stand.Join us for new episodes on the 1st and 15th of each month as we continue sharing stories of transformation from across Mississippi. Each story reminds us that when we contribute our unique gifts, Mississippi rises together.Hope Mississippi's Mission: The sobering reality remains: one in four Mississippi children lives in poverty, and one in five experiences food insecurity. These statistics aren't just numbers—they're our collective challenge. Through these conversations, we discover that Mississippi's transformation occurs through individual commitments to mentor, encourage, and be present for others. The small acts of hope accumulate into the broader "miracles" we celebrate.

  7. 23

    Glass Ceilings, Prayer Circles, And A Butterfly Book

    Mississippi doesn’t need more silos; it needs a shared table. We sit down with community leader and author Tina Lakey to discuss practical hope and how coordinated mentoring, cross‑denominational partnerships, and consistent prayer can move the needle on poverty, food insecurity, and youth outcomes across the state. From the work at the Methodist Children’s Home to the bold vision of Unite Mississippi, we walk through real models that bring people together and keep the focus on serving children and families.Tina’s leadership story pulls back the curtain on what it takes to break barriers. She rose from a frontline role to become the first woman in management at CenterPoint Energy in Mississippi, then led a multi‑state division. Her core lesson is disarmingly simple: trust people, learn fast, and lead as service. That same posture fuels her work today, mentoring in schools, partnering with churches and law enforcement, and building coalitions that measure progress in changed lives, not press releases.We also explore the heart behind her devotional project, Conversations with God. Born from grief after her mother’s passing, Tina’s daily writings grew into a community and then a book that readers use to start their mornings. She shares the messy middle, publishing hurdles, spiritual resistance, and the persistence required to keep showing up. With a refreshed edition on the way and a new volume in development, she offers a roadmap for anyone called to turn personal healing into public help.If you’ve wondered how to help beyond weekends and hashtags, this conversation gives you next steps: mentor one student, join a prayer luncheon that drives action, adopt ten anchor scriptures to guide your year, and choose service over titles. Subscribe, share this with a friend who cares about Mississippi’s future, and leave a review with the one action you’ll take this week.Join us for new episodes on the 1st and 15th of each month as we continue sharing stories of transformation from across Mississippi. Each story reminds us that when we contribute our unique gifts, Mississippi rises together.Hope Mississippi's Mission: The sobering reality remains: one in four Mississippi children lives in poverty, and one in five experiences food insecurity. These statistics aren't just numbers—they're our collective challenge. Through these conversations, we discover that Mississippi's transformation occurs through individual commitments to mentor, encourage, and be present for others. The small acts of hope accumulate into the broader "miracles" we celebrate.

  8. 22

    Van Jones: From Hoop Dreams To An Ice Cream Ministry

    What if the detour is the assignment? In this episode of Hope Mississippi, Dawn visits with Van Jones to trace a winding path—from the Mississippi Delta to Southern Miss basketball, through a career-ending injury, and into a calling that stretches from classrooms to church pews, from an ice-cream counter to a lakeside retreat. The throughline is simple but demanding: excellence, service, and unity.Van opens up about growing up cramped but deeply loved, chasing the wrong heroes until basketball introduced structure, accountability, and mentorship. After collegiate success, a freak ankle injury erased professional dreams and ushered in a season of depression—until a coaching opportunity changed everything. From there, Van poured discipline and care into rebuilding high-school programs and mentoring students who still call him years later. Alongside his wife, Nicole, he launched the After School Academics and Arts Program, blending tutoring, daily devotions, and character education for more than a thousand students and hundreds of staff members.That same heart for people carried into entrepreneurship as ministry. In Purvis, their ice-cream and sandwich shop exists to build unity through food, fun, and fellowship—a true third space where people feel seen and encouraged. Just down the road, Blue Hollow Lake Retreat offers canoes, trails, and quiet cabins for couples, churches, and nonprofits seeking rest, reflection, and restoration. Van also shares how early public-speaking training, pastoral mentorship, and a memorable first sermon—washing his wife’s feet—shaped his approach to preaching: simple, visual, and actionable.We close with a charge rooted in Mississippi but meant for anywhere: unity and diversity aren’t just ideals—they’re the new economy. When churches, businesses, and neighbors adopt schools, collaborate across lines, and put service first, hope scales fast.If this story moved you, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review to help others find the message. Then tell us: what “what if” will you act on this week?Join us for new episodes on the 1st and 15th of each month as we continue sharing stories of transformation from across Mississippi. Each story reminds us that when we contribute our unique gifts, Mississippi rises together.Hope Mississippi's Mission: The sobering reality remains: one in four Mississippi children lives in poverty, and one in five experiences food insecurity. These statistics aren't just numbers—they're our collective challenge. Through these conversations, we discover that Mississippi's transformation occurs through individual commitments to mentor, encourage, and be present for others. The small acts of hope accumulate into the broader "miracles" we celebrate.

  9. 21

    Stories Change Us More Than Success Ever Could

    Big goals don’t require every skill—just the courage to start and the wisdom to ask for help. That’s the heartbeat of our year: we moved from an idea to two living, breathing podcasts by teaming up with people who knew what we didn’t, and the result unlocked stories that changed how we see Mississippi and each other.We share the unlikely chain of events that took us from a conference hallway to a working show, highlighting how tech guidance and brave marketing made the difference. Hillary’s production savvy and Amanda’s fearless approach to promoting Stephen's books gave us a blueprint for consistent publishing and thoughtful outreach. Along the way, we learned that collaboration isn’t a shortcut; it’s the engine. If you’re dreaming up a project—a book, a clinic, a neighborhood event—there’s someone out there who loves the part you dread.The stories themselves re-centered our purpose. A priest with Irish farm roots mirrored the rhythms of Southern life. A man who journeyed from prison to a governor’s stage showed that redemption can ripple for decades. Lorie's path through addiction, homelessness, and drug court reminded us that recovery often starts when one person believes in you at the right moment. These conversations exposed the quiet power of ordinary kindness: a text sent on a hard day, a blanket handed off in winter, a clinic appointment that keeps a family steady. We reflect on a hometown park turned amphitheater, on adoptions finalized years ago, and on the simple practice of asking better questions in everyday places.If you need a nudge, take this one: begin with what you have, invite others to bring what you don’t, and let small acts stack up. Subscribe to the show, share this episode with a friend who could use a lift, and leave a review so more people can find these stories of hope and possibility.Join us for new episodes on the 1st and 15th of each month as we continue sharing stories of transformation from across Mississippi. Each story reminds us that when we contribute our unique gifts, Mississippi rises together.Hope Mississippi's Mission: The sobering reality remains: one in four Mississippi children lives in poverty, and one in five experiences food insecurity. These statistics aren't just numbers—they're our collective challenge. Through these conversations, we discover that Mississippi's transformation occurs through individual commitments to mentor, encourage, and be present for others. The small acts of hope accumulate into the broader "miracles" we celebrate.

  10. 20

    When Systems See People, Hope Rises

    The numbers are stark—one in four kids in poverty, one in five facing food insecurity—but statistics don’t tell you how hope returns. Lorie’s story does. Meet a former nurse who lost custody of her daughter, lived unsheltered for years, and spiraled into meth‑induced delusion. When hope seemed lost, an auto burglary charge became the unlikely doorway to drug court, where structure, compassion, and accountability helped her reclaim stability, voice, and purpose.We walk through each step with Lorie: growing up as the eldest in a single‑parent home, an untreated ADHD diagnosis that came too late, and a teen eating disorder that morphed into alcoholism. When background checks stalled her nursing license, stress and shame compounded. She turned to meth to outrun alcohol, then to the streets where danger and access fed the cycle. A compassionate judge paused before shipping her off to prison and asked: Would you try drug court? That invitation changed everything. Housing support, clear expectations, regular testing, and a bench that listened turned punishment into a pathway. Lorie even faced a relapse with honesty, and the court responded with consequences and continued care rather than abandonment.We talk candidly about CPS', “reasonable efforts,” and how trauma‑informed courts can protect children while preserving a parent’s humanity. Lorie names what works: judges who see people, programs that treat addiction as a disease, and communities that stay close enough to hold you accountable and cheer you on. Today Lorie is working in private care, appealing for nursing license restoration, and advocating for others to get the help she once lacked. If you care about addiction recovery, drug court, child welfare, and second chances in Mississippi, this conversation offers practical insight and a real reason to believe.If this moved you, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a review telling us what hope looks like in your community. Your voice helps more stories like Lorie’s be heard.Join us for new episodes on the 1st and 15th of each month as we continue sharing stories of transformation from across Mississippi. Each story reminds us that when we contribute our unique gifts, Mississippi rises together.Hope Mississippi's Mission: The sobering reality remains: one in four Mississippi children lives in poverty, and one in five experiences food insecurity. These statistics aren't just numbers—they're our collective challenge. Through these conversations, we discover that Mississippi's transformation occurs through individual commitments to mentor, encourage, and be present for others. The small acts of hope accumulate into the broader "miracles" we celebrate.

  11. 19

    MS State Bar 7 - Justice | Faith | Rural Renewal

    At the 2025 Mississippi Bar Convention, former State Supreme Court Justice Dawn Beam sat down with more than twenty leaders in law, policy, and public service—capturing three days of extraordinary conversations for a special seven-part series of her Hope Mississippi podcast. This is Part Seven, the final installment in this series until 2026. Meet us in Biloxi!What does hope look like inside a justice system? It looks like a judge protecting a child’s settlement. It looks like a high school student arguing a case from memory with confidence and grace. It looks like a prosecutor praying with a family before trial and still fighting for accountability. In this episode, we sit down with attorney Kye C. Handy and prosecutor Ian Baker to explore the moments that turn curiosity into a calling—and a calling into service.Kye C. Handy invites us into her path from Jackson to private practice, guided by female judges who modeled excellence and care. She pulls back the curtain on the Young Lawyers Division: HBCU outreach, statewide mock trial, and pro bono efforts that meet real needs. If you’ve ever wondered how to spark the next generation of advocates, you’ll hear a practical blueprint: show up in classrooms, bring students into courtrooms, and say yes to the small invitations that lead to big changes.Ian Baker shares how faith informs his work without softening his resolve. Accountability and compassion can coexist when victims’ voices are honored and defendants are treated as people. He reflects on career pivots, a family rooted in public service, and why Mississippi offers space for anyone to lead boldly. Together we confront an urgent challenge—the rural lawyer shortage—and outline collaborative fixes so wills, guardianships, and small business needs don’t require a long drive and a longer wait.If you care about justice, youth opportunities, or community leadership, this episode offers a grounded and hopeful roadmap. Subscribe, share with a friend who’s considering law school or small-town practice, and leave a review to help more Mississippians find their path to serve.Join us for new episodes on the 1st and 15th of each month as we continue sharing stories of transformation from across Mississippi. Each story reminds us that when we contribute our unique gifts, Mississippi rises together.Hope Mississippi's Mission: The sobering reality remains: one in four Mississippi children lives in poverty, and one in five experiences food insecurity. These statistics aren't just numbers—they're our collective challenge. Through these conversations, we discover that Mississippi's transformation occurs through individual commitments to mentor, encourage, and be present for others. The small acts of hope accumulate into the broader "miracles" we celebrate.

  12. 18

    MS State Bar 6 - “How Many Kids Did You Jail Today?”

    At the 2025 Mississippi Bar Convention, former State Supreme Court Justice Dawn Beam sat down with more than twenty leaders in law, policy, and public service—capturing three days of extraordinary conversations for a special seven-part series of her Hope Mississippi podcast. This is Part Six of Seven.What does it really take to keep kids safe and families whole when poverty, addiction, and untreated mental illness pull them apart? In this episode, we begin with Judge Walt Brown of Adams County, then move into candid, heart-level discussions with family law attorney Jeremy McNinch and former Mississippi Bar President Blake Teller. Together, they trace a line from the youth court bench to private practice, showing how hope isn’t abstract—it’s built daily through practical tools, patient relationships, and courageous choices.Judge Brown opens the curtain on youth court’s real center of gravity—neglect, not delinquency—and exposes the everyday obstacles most people never see: no car to reach court, no childcare for class, no path out of generational poverty. He shares how a local coalition extends treatment beyond a thirty-day stopgap and why peer-support specialists transform outcomes by walking alongside families between hearings, answering late-night texts, and speaking truth as people who’ve lived it. He also faces the most challenging question head-on: when does a child’s stability require severing parental rights—and who will step forward to love, and then let go?With Jeremy McNinch, the lens shifts to family law's emotional and spiritual weight. He reveals why listening can be as powerful as litigating, how faith steadies families in crisis, and why leaving the door open to resolution often heals more than courtroom brinkmanship ever could.Finally, Blake Teller widens the view to the profession—the Mississippi Bar’s renewed focus on civility, mentorship, and closing rural justice deserts through law-school outreach and internships that lead young lawyers into small-town practice. Expect grounded wisdom and actionable hope: fund a treatment program, mentor a struggling parent, consider foster care, or—if you’re a lawyer or student—bring your skills to a Mississippi community that needs you most.Subscribe, share this conversation with a friend who cares about kids and communities, and leave a review with one action you’ll take to spread hope where you live.Join us for new episodes on the 1st and 15th of each month as we continue sharing stories of transformation from across Mississippi. Each story reminds us that when we contribute our unique gifts, Mississippi rises together.Hope Mississippi's Mission: The sobering reality remains: one in four Mississippi children lives in poverty, and one in five experiences food insecurity. These statistics aren't just numbers—they're our collective challenge. Through these conversations, we discover that Mississippi's transformation occurs through individual commitments to mentor, encourage, and be present for others. The small acts of hope accumulate into the broader "miracles" we celebrate.

  13. 17

    MS State Bar 5 - Sweaty Suits and Straight Talk

    At the 2025 Mississippi State Bar Convention, former State Supreme Court Justice Dawn Beam interviewed over 20 people in 3 days to bring you a special 7-part series of her Hope Mississippi podcast. This is part five of seven.  Hope isn’t a slogan here; it’s a practice you can feel in the room. We sit down with Judge David McCarty of the Mississippi Court of Appeals, Mississippi Gaming Commission Executive Director Jay McDaniel, and family-law veteran Richard Roberts to explore how justice, integrity, and everyday mentorship create real pathways forward—especially when the stakes are personal and the margin for error is thin.Judge McCarty takes us behind the robe to the human pressure of getting cases right: the late nights, the worry, and the relief that the Court of Appeals exists to share the load and honor every appeal with careful review. He makes a compelling case for diversity on the bench, not as a buzzword, but as a practical safeguard against blind spots. When colleagues with different life experiences challenge each other, reason improves and public trust grows. He also shares a simple habit: a nightly gratitude journal, which helps him maintain perspective amid Mississippi’s beauty and its inequities.Jay McDaniel connects legal training to real-world regulation, explaining how analytical thinking and ethics guide hard calls in gaming: enforcing rules, addressing gray areas, and balancing tourism, tax revenue, and problem gambling resources. His reflection on Katrina-era leadership demonstrates how adaptive law and clear priorities helped casinos and thousands of families rebuild stronger on the Coast. For students and mid‑career professionals, his message is energizing: your background is a springboard, not a barrier.Richard C. Roberts III then opens the door to family law, where counsel often means cooling the room before you heat up the record. He explains why reputation and professionalism are non‑negotiable in a small legal community and how wise decisions in the most emotional moments can save years of pain. When clients can’t see past the storm, a steady lawyer helps them find the path, and sometimes, to their surprise, the light returns.If you believe your word is your bond, if you care about fair courts, and if you’ve ever needed someone to open a door for you, this conversation will meet you where you are and nudge you a step forward. Subscribe, share this with a friend who needs a lift, and leave a review with one word that gives you hope today.Hope Mississippi's Mission: The sobering reality remains: one in four Mississippi children lives in poverty, and one in five experiences food insecurity. These statistics aren't just numbers—they're our collective challenge. Through these conversations, we discover that Mississippi's transformation occurs through individual commitments to mentor, encourage, and be present for others. The small acts of hope accumulate into the broader "miracles" we celebrate.Join us for new episodes on the 1st and 15th of each month as we continue sharing stories of transformation from across Mississippi. Each story Join us for new episodes on the 1st and 15th of each month as we continue sharing stories of transformation from across Mississippi. Each story reminds us that when we contribute our unique gifts, Mississippi rises together.Hope Mississippi's Mission: The sobering reality remains: one in four Mississippi children lives in poverty, and one in five experiences food insecurity. These statistics aren't just numbers—they're our collective challenge. Through these conversations, we discover that Mississippi's transformation occurs through individual commitments to mentor, encourage, and be present for others. The small acts of hope accumulate into the broader "miracles" we celebrate.

  14. 16

    MS State Bar 4 - Faith, Justice, and Leadership

    At the 2025 Mississippi State Bar Convention, former State Supreme Court Justice Dawn Beam interviewed over 20 people in 3 days to bring you a special 7-part series of her Hope Mississippi podcast. This is part four.  Mississippi's legal community is built on faith, service, and mentorship, values that shine through in conversations with three remarkable legal professionals at the Mississippi Bar Convention.Amanda Green Alexander shares her remarkable journey from Kokomo, Mississippi to becoming a groundbreaking defense attorney. As a Black woman operating a defense firm for 20 years, she's carved a unique path guided by biblical principles: "Do Justly, Love Mercy, Walk Humbly." Alexander challenges misconceptions about defense work, emphasizing that ethical advocacy means acknowledging legitimate claims and finding fair resolutions. Her story demonstrates how attorneys can maintain integrity while zealously representing clients.Dean Fred Slabach of Ole Miss Law School brings critical perspective on legal education and rural access to justice. Describing law degrees as teaching "analytical thinking and problem-solving" applicable across professions, Slabach also addresses the growing crisis of "legal deserts," rural communities without attorneys. He details innovative programs designed to encourage young lawyers to serve these areas, including internships and financial incentives that have proven successful in other states.Circuit Judge Michelle D. Easterling offers powerful reflections on mentorship and hope within the justice system. Crediting numerous female role models who shaped her career, she now makes it her mission to mentor others. Perhaps most movingly, Judge Easterling describes keeping a folder of thank-you notes from defendants she treated firmly but fairly, who later found recovery and stability—tangible evidence that "everyone deserves a second chance."Throughout these conversations, a vision emerges of legal practice that balances justice with mercy, and professionalism with compassion. For those considering legal careers, these leaders emphasize that success comes not just from technical skill but from reliability, integrity, and willingness to serve communities where one attorney can make an enormous difference.How might your legal career bring hope to Mississippi? Listen now to be inspired by these servant leaders who are transforming communities through the law.Hope Mississippi's Mission: The sobering reality remains: one in four Mississippi children lives in poverty, and one in five experiences food insecurity. These statistics aren't just numbers—they're our collective challenge. Through these conversations, we discover that Mississippi's transformation occurs through individual commitments to mentor, encourage, and be present for others. The small acts of hope accumulate into the broader "miracles" we celebrate.Join us for new episodes on the 1st and 15th of each month as we continue sharing stories of transformation from across Mississippi. Each story reminds us that when we contribute our unique gifts, Mississippi rises together.Join us for new episodes on the 1st and 15th of each month as we continue sharing stories of transformation from across Mississippi. Each story reminds us that when we contribute our unique gifts, Mississippi rises together.Hope Mississippi's Mission: The sobering reality remains: one in four Mississippi children lives in poverty, and one in five experiences food insecurity. These statistics aren't just numbers—they're our collective challenge. Through these conversations, we discover that Mississippi's transformation occurs through individual commitments to mentor, encourage, and be present for others. The small acts of hope accumulate into the broader "miracles" we celebrate.

  15. 15

    Stories from the State Bar - Part Three

    At the 2025 Mississippi State Bar Convention, former State Supreme Court Justice Dawn Beam interviewed over 20 people in 3 days to bring you a special 7-part series of her Hope Mississippi podcast. This is part three. What happens when dedicated individuals refuse to accept a broken system? In this powerful episode, we journey across Mississippi to witness extraordinary transformations born from crisis. We explore Mississippi's commitment to its youth, a lawyer/CPA who runs a summer program for kids in an abandoned YMCA building, and a bank's blind acts of faith in humanity after Katrina.Attorney and Youth Court Judge Renee Porter takes us inside Marion County's remarkable youth court revolution. After three preventable child deaths revealed critical gaps in the system, Porter and her colleagues implemented new protocols that evaluate every child abuse hotline call. The results speak volumes—children in state custody reduced from 350 to just 20 through prevention plans, family reunification, and community partnerships. "It's not a shame to be poor," Porter emphasizes, "but we cannot afford to lose another child when solutions exist."The inspiration continues with James L. Henley Jr., who transformed an abandoned 27-acre YMCA into Fresh Start Christian Church, now a vibrant youth center serving the inner-city community of Jackson. For 18 years, his programs have provided structure, education, and opportunity to children with nowhere else to go during school breaks. Henley shares touching success stories, including a former participant who, now a Walmart manager, donated hundreds of food items because "they kept me out of trouble when I was young."Finally, Joy Phillips recounts the extraordinary innovations that emerged during Hurricane Katrina while she served as general counsel for Hancock Whitney Bank. When disaster wiped out infrastructure, the bank established makeshift branches within 48 hours, even literally "laundering" contaminated cash to meet community needs. Their compassionate approach to emergency loans and cash advances resulted in minimal losses and the acquisition of thousands of new customers.These stories highlight Mississippi's greatest resource: its resilient and creative people, who refuse to surrender to circumstances. What challenges in your community could be transformed through similar collaboration and determination?Hope Mississippi's Mission: The sobering reality remains: one in four Mississippi children lives in poverty, and one in five experiences food insecurity. These statistics aren't just numbers—they're our collective challenge. Through these conversations, we discover that Mississippi's transformation occurs through individual commitments to mentor, encourage, and be present for others. The small acts of hope accumulate into the broader "miracles" we celebrate.Join us for new episodes on the 1st and 15th of each month as we continue sharing stories of transformation from across Mississippi. Each story reminds us that when we contribute our unique gifts, Mississippi rises together.Hope Mississippi's Mission: The sobering reality remains: one in four Mississippi children lives in poverty, and one in five experiences food insecurity. These statistics aren't just numbers—they're our collective challenge. Through these conversations, we discover that Mississippi's transformation occurs through individual commitments to mentor, encourage, and be present for others. The small acts of hope accumulate into the broader "miracles" we celebrate.

  16. 14

    Stories for the State Bar - Part Two

    At the 2025 Mississippi State Bar Convention, former State Supreme Court Justice Dawn Beam interviewed over 20 people in 3 days to bring you a special 7-part series of her Hope Mississippi podcast.The foundation of hope often lies in the belief that tomorrow can be better than today—and that you can play a role in making it so.This powerful concept comes alive in Part Two of our Stories from the State Bar series, through intimate conversations with three Mississippi Chancery Judges who reveal how justice, fairness, and personal commitment create pathways to hope across our communities.Judge E. Vincent Davis opens with profound insights on consistency from the bench. "When people feel like they got a fair shake, they're okay with it," he explains, highlighting how perception shapes hope. Davis doesn't shy away from acknowledging the challenges facing rural Mississippi, where fewer attorneys mean barriers to court access. His response? Planting seeds in young people's minds about legal careers—seeds that may take years to sprout but eventually bear fruit, just as they did in his own journey.From the small town of Lucedale comes Judge Mark A. Maples, whose story embodies service-oriented leadership. Raised by a circuit judge father who asked nightly, "What good deed did you do today?" Maples carries this legacy into his approach to family conflicts. With wisdom from his 36 years in private practice, he views each case as good people at difficult crossroads seeking solutions. "Find your passion. Try to leave things better than you found them," he challenges listeners, offering a straightforward formula for creating hope.Judge Cynthia L. Brewer's remarkable journey from a broken military family to the chancery bench demonstrates resilience in action. Moving constantly as a child, she developed a mission "to make people like me" that evolved into making a difference through law. Her late husband's charge to "uplift everyone who comes into your life" continues to guide her judicial philosophy. A recipient of the prestigious Susie Buchanan Award (2025), Judge Brewer advocates for supporting women in law while celebrating the joy of mentoring new attorneys.These conversations illuminate how hope flourishes when people believe in fair processes, commit to serving others, and dedicate themselves to improving their communities. What difference will you make today? How might your actions create ripples of hope that extend far beyond what you can see? The path begins with a simple commitment: leave the world better than you found it.Hope Mississippi's Mission: The sobering reality remains: one in four Mississippi children lives in poverty, and one in five experiences food insecurity. These statistics aren't just numbers—they're our collective challenge. Through these conversations, we discover that Mississippi's transformation occurs through individual commitments to mentor, encourage, and be present for others. The small acts of hope accumulate into the broader "miracles" we celebrate.Join us for new episodes on the 1st and 15th of each month as we continue sharing stories of transformation from acroJoin us for new episodes on the 1st and 15th of each month as we continue sharing stories of transformation from across Mississippi. Each story reminds us that when we contribute our unique gifts, Mississippi rises together.Hope Mississippi's Mission: The sobering reality remains: one in four Mississippi children lives in poverty, and one in five experiences food insecurity. These statistics aren't just numbers—they're our collective challenge. Through these conversations, we discover that Mississippi's transformation occurs through individual commitments to mentor, encourage, and be present for others. The small acts of hope accumulate into the broader "miracles" we celebrate.

  17. 13

    Hope Rising: Stories From the State Bar- Part One

    At the 2025 Mississippi State Bar Convention, former State Supreme Court Justice Dawn Beam interviewed over 20 people in 3 days to bring you a special 7-part series of her Hope Mississippi podcast.In part one, Dawn hosts three compelling conversations that showcase how hope manifests in unexpected places. Podcast producer Hillary Kane reveals the behind-the-scenes magic that brings these stories to listeners. Reminding us that everyone possesses unique gifts to contribute. Whether polishing audio or practicing law, our individual talents can amplify messages of hope when directed toward community challenges.Dean Jim Rosenblatt shares his remarkable journey from southwest Mississippi farm boy to Army JAG Corps officer to Mississippi College School of Law leadership. His philosophy of lifelong mentorship, appearing at everything from bar exams to weddings, demonstrates how consistent encouragement creates lasting hope. Through programs like adoption clinics, law students transform families while still in school, proving that legal professionals can impact thousands rather than dozens. Judge Vincent Davis's story is one of transformation through education. After losing his mother at a young age, teachers "adopted" him, with one persistent educator repeatedly telling him he should become a lawyer. That voice eventually led him to law school despite his initial lack of interest. His most profound moment as an assistant district attorney came when pursuing justice for a murder victim's family in a case others considered unwinnable, bringing hope through accountability when it seemed impossible.Hope Mississippi's Mission: The sobering reality remains: one in four Mississippi children lives in poverty, and one in five experiences food insecurity. These statistics aren't just numbers—they're our collective challenge. Through these conversations, we discover that Mississippi's transformation occurs through individual commitments to mentor, encourage, and be present for others. The small acts of hope accumulate into the broader "miracles" we celebrate.Join us for new episodes on the 1st and 15th of each month as we continue sharing stories of transformation from across Mississippi. Each story reminds us that when we contribute our unique gifts, Mississippi rises together.Join us for new episodes on the 1st and 15th of each month as we continue sharing stories of transformation from across Mississippi. Each story reminds us that when we contribute our unique gifts, Mississippi rises together.Hope Mississippi's Mission: The sobering reality remains: one in four Mississippi children lives in poverty, and one in five experiences food insecurity. These statistics aren't just numbers—they're our collective challenge. Through these conversations, we discover that Mississippi's transformation occurs through individual commitments to mentor, encourage, and be present for others. The small acts of hope accumulate into the broader "miracles" we celebrate.

  18. 12

    ABLE Accounts: Your Path to Financial Independence

    Josh Woodward from the Mississippi Department of Rehabilitation Services explains how ABLE (Achieving a Better Life Experience) accounts allow people with disabilities to save money without losing crucial public benefits like SSI and Medicaid. These revolutionary accounts provide financial freedom for individuals who have previously been restricted by the $2,000 asset limit, giving them independence and control over their financial lives.• ABLE accounts allow people with disabilities to save up to $19,000 per year.• Account holders can maintain SSI benefits with a max balance of up to $100,000; for Medicaid, the max is $235,000.• Disability onset must currently be before age 26, expanding to age 46 in January, 2026.• Money in ABLE accounts can be used for qualified disability expenses.• Unlike special needs trusts, ABLE accounts give direct control to the individual.• ABLE accounts can be opened with just $25.• Anyone can contribute to someone's ABLE account – family, friends, or organizations - and it is a tax deduction.• Mississippi ABLE is offering $100 contributions to the first 20 new accounts opened in August.For more information about Mississippi ABLE, visit mississippiable.com or contact Josh Woodward directly at [email protected] or (601) 853-5257.Join us for new episodes on the 1st and 15th of each month as we continue sharing stories of transformation from across Mississippi. Each story reminds us that when we contribute our unique gifts, Mississippi rises together.Hope Mississippi's Mission: The sobering reality remains: one in four Mississippi children lives in poverty, and one in five experiences food insecurity. These statistics aren't just numbers—they're our collective challenge. Through these conversations, we discover that Mississippi's transformation occurs through individual commitments to mentor, encourage, and be present for others. The small acts of hope accumulate into the broader "miracles" we celebrate.

  19. 11

    Every Day in Every Way: Building Hope Through Music

    Former band director David Willson shares the transformative teaching philosophy that changed countless lives over a long career, including 32 years at Ole Miss. From humble beginnings in Jackson, Mississippi, Willson's journey reveals how music education became his pathway out of poverty and into a life of purpose.He was our host, Dawn Beam's band director, and she proclaims that he was such an incredible leader, she would have followed him off the proverbial cliff!  Willson candidly discusses how he revolutionized his teaching after discovering he was "tired of yelling at students." His turning point came when he found Dale Carnegie's "How to Stop Worrying and Start Living" at a thrift store for 25 cents—a book he read twice despite not being "a reader." This sparked the development of his signature "Every Day in Every Way" philosophy centered on goal-setting, positive reinforcement, and consistent enthusiasm.  What sets Willson's approach apart is his deep empathy for students' circumstances. "You have no idea what that student has been through from the moment they woke up till they get to your classroom," he explains. This understanding led him to shift responsibility away from blaming students to examining his own teaching methods. When students struggled, Willson concluded, "I either didn't teach them exactly what I needed them to do or I didn't motivate them to want to do it."  As a university educator, Willson trained future band directors with practical tools rather than abstract theories. His mentorship extended beyond graduation, as he maintained relationships with former students, checking in on their progress and offering support. This dedication created a ripple effect, with Willson's influence reaching thousands of young musicians through his students, who went on to become educators themselves.  Willson's powerful closing thought serves as both a challenge and inspiration: "One person is going to be that pivotal moment in somebody else's life. Just one little word of encouragement, one arm around somebody, and just saying 'we're going to get this. I won't give up if you won't give up." His story reminds us that educators aren't just teaching subjects—they're shaping lives.Join us for new episodes on the 1st and 15th of each month as we continue sharing stories of transformation from across Mississippi. Each story reminds us that when we contribute our unique gifts, Mississippi rises together.Hope Mississippi's Mission: The sobering reality remains: one in four Mississippi children lives in poverty, and one in five experiences food insecurity. These statistics aren't just numbers—they're our collective challenge. Through these conversations, we discover that Mississippi's transformation occurs through individual commitments to mentor, encourage, and be present for others. The small acts of hope accumulate into the broader "miracles" we celebrate.

  20. 10

    Eddie Spencer | From Prison to Purpose PART TWO

    Reverend Eddie Spencer shares his powerful journey from childhood poverty to ministry, including his recent battle with cancer and sepsis that brought him near death yet deepened his faith and peace in Christ.• God has a plan to use each of us uniquely—your testimony, whatever it includes, can impact someone who needs exactly your perspective• Eddie's path included service with Young Life, opening three restaurants in the Mississippi Delta, and eventually pastoring multiple churches• Despite coming from generational poverty, Eddie's life was transformed by mentors who invested in him, showing how we can be God's hands and feet• Eddie faced a life-threatening battle with sepsis and prostate cancer, spending 42 days in the hospital and losing 83 pounds• We should not use our weaknesses as excuses not to change—God can transform any aspect of our lives if we surrender it to Him• When we align our desires with God's will, He provides exactly what we need, not necessarily what we think we want• Eddie's peace in the face of terminal illness comes from certainty about his salvation—"to be absent from the body is to be present with Christ"If you have not given your life to the Lord Jesus Christ, don't continue to put it off. There is nothing but a step between us and death. Search your heart—if you do not know the Lord Jesus Christ as your Savior, just ask Him to come in and forgive your sins, and He will change your life.Join us for new episodes on the 1st and 15th of each month as we continue sharing stories of transformation from across Mississippi. Each story reminds us that when we contribute our unique gifts, Mississippi rises together.Hope Mississippi's Mission: The sobering reality remains: one in four Mississippi children lives in poverty, and one in five experiences food insecurity. These statistics aren't just numbers—they're our collective challenge. Through these conversations, we discover that Mississippi's transformation occurs through individual commitments to mentor, encourage, and be present for others. The small acts of hope accumulate into the broader "miracles" we celebrate.

  21. 9

    Rev. Eddie Spencer | From Prison to Purpose PART ONE

    Eddie Spencer's life story reads like a modern parable of redemption. From a childhood marked by humiliation and poverty to a young adulthood filled with violent crime, Spencer's trajectory seemed fixed. But what happens when divine intervention meets a willing heart?The turning point came in first grade when classmates mocked him for wearing secondhand "girl shoes"—the only footwear his family could provide. This single moment ignited a rage that would fuel years of criminal behavior. By 17, Spencer was facing decades behind bars, with multiple stays at training schools already behind him. "I thought that the lifestyle that I have chosen, this is where I would be basically all my life, a thug, a gangster," Spencer recalls. Yet in 1982, everything changed when he stopped bargaining with God and instead offered unconditional surrender. What followed was an extraordinary transformation that saw him not only reform his own life but also become instrumental in changing countless others.Perhaps most remarkable is how Spencer's ministry flourished both inside prison walls and after his 1988 release. From the prison sergeant who once beat him but later sent troubled inmates his way, to the muscular football player who approached him years later saying "you speaking changed my life," Spencer's testimony has proven a powerful catalyst for transformation.The divine poetry of his release date—January 14, 1988—being the exact same date he would later lead prayer at Governor Reed's inauguration twelve years later, showcases the full-circle journey of a man who found his purpose through pain.Listen as Dawn Beam uncovers this riveting story of second chances, and discover how a life once destined for destruction became a beacon of hope for thousands of troubled youth across Mississippi.Join us for new episodes on the 1st and 15th of each month as we continue sharing stories of transformation from across Mississippi. Each story reminds us that when we contribute our unique gifts, Mississippi rises together.Hope Mississippi's Mission: The sobering reality remains: one in four Mississippi children lives in poverty, and one in five experiences food insecurity. These statistics aren't just numbers—they're our collective challenge. Through these conversations, we discover that Mississippi's transformation occurs through individual commitments to mentor, encourage, and be present for others. The small acts of hope accumulate into the broader "miracles" we celebrate.

  22. 8

    Amy Lancaster | Transforming Lives One Neighbor at a Time

    What does it look like when faith moves beyond Sunday services to transform an entire community? Amy Lancaster of We Will Go Ministries shares a powerful story of answering God's unexpected call to serve not overseas, but in downtown Jackson—their "Jerusalem."The journey began when Amy and her husband David sold their home and prepared for international missions, only to hear God redirect them to Jackson's deepest needs. What started with simply giving neighbors sandwiches has grown into a comprehensive ministry that feeds 30,000 people annually, provides daily children's programming, and engages thousands of volunteers in meaningful service.Against the sobering backdrop where one in four Mississippi children live in poverty, We Will Go creates spaces of hope by restoring abandoned buildings and offering practical assistance to approximately 900 families monthly—many headed by grandparents supporting multiple generations on meager fixed incomes. Yet their approach transcends mere charity. "We sit with every single neighbor and pray with them," Amy explains, emphasizing the dignity of relationship over transactional giving.Perhaps most compelling is how the ministry dismantles barriers to service. "Maybe we've made it too hard," Amy reflects, encouraging listeners to simply "start with something." Whether reading to a child, tending a community garden, or replacing a fence, every skill becomes valuable in God's hands. The impact flows both ways, as volunteers—from church groups to corporate teams—often find themselves deeply transformed through these encounters.Amy's own family embodies this transformation. All three Lancaster children, now adults with professional degrees, have chosen to return home and join We Will Go using their skills in accounting, ministry leadership, and media.Ready to discover how your unique gifts might bring hope to your community? Visit wewillgo.org to explore volunteer opportunities that match your interests and availability. As Amy reminds us, "God doesn't have a plan B. His plan is to use me and you to be the difference in the world."Join us for new episodes on the 1st and 15th of each month as we continue sharing stories of transformation from across Mississippi. Each story reminds us that when we contribute our unique gifts, Mississippi rises together.Hope Mississippi's Mission: The sobering reality remains: one in four Mississippi children lives in poverty, and one in five experiences food insecurity. These statistics aren't just numbers—they're our collective challenge. Through these conversations, we discover that Mississippi's transformation occurs through individual commitments to mentor, encourage, and be present for others. The small acts of hope accumulate into the broader "miracles" we celebrate.

  23. 7

    The Science of Hope: Cindy Cheeks is Changing Lives in Mississippi's Child Welfare System

    What happens when government agencies, churches, and community members break down silos and work together? Lives transform, families reunite, and hope takes root in even the most challenging circumstances.Dawn Beam and Cindy Cheeks dive deep into the science of hope and its practical application in Mississippi's child welfare system. With startling statistics—one in four Mississippi children living in poverty and one in five experiencing food insecurity—they reveal how economic hardship directly feeds the state's foster care system, with over 70% of removals stemming from poverty-related issues rather than abuse.Hope science isn't just wishful thinking; it's a research-backed approach that defines hope as "the belief that tomorrow can be better than today and you have the power to make it so." Through compelling stories, Dawn and Cindy showcase remarkable collaborations: transportation officials offering commercial driver training to parents seeking stability, housing authorities creating pathways to homeownership, and church groups wrapping around young mothers with practical support and mentorship.What makes this conversation particularly powerful is the blend of systemic solutions and deeply personal experiences. Cindy vulnerably shares her journey of reconciliation with her estranged son during his final months, discovering how the very principles of hope she taught others—identifying goals, recognizing pathways, and maintaining willpower through support—sustained her through profound grief.Whether you're a community leader looking for collaborative models, a person of faith wondering how to serve effectively, or someone simply needing encouragement that difficult circumstances can change, this episode offers both practical frameworks and heartfelt inspiration. Every one of us has something valuable to contribute to those struggling around us—what will your contribution be?Join us for new episodes on the 1st and 15th of each month as we continue sharing stories of transformation from across Mississippi. Each story reminds us that when we contribute our unique gifts, Mississippi rises together.Hope Mississippi's Mission: The sobering reality remains: one in four Mississippi children lives in poverty, and one in five experiences food insecurity. These statistics aren't just numbers—they're our collective challenge. Through these conversations, we discover that Mississippi's transformation occurs through individual commitments to mentor, encourage, and be present for others. The small acts of hope accumulate into the broader "miracles" we celebrate.

  24. 6

    From Birmingham's Civil Rights Era to Mississippi's Classrooms: Martha Cherry's Life of Service

    Reverend Martha Cherry's life reads like a journey through America's most pivotal moments of the last century. From witnessing the bombing of Birmingham's 16th Street Baptist Church where her friend Carol Robertson died, to studying under Dr. King's sister at Spelman College when he received the Nobel Peace Prize, Cherry's path has intersected with history at remarkable turns."I drew from my faith that we were going to have a brighter future," Cherry reflects, describing how hope sustained her through childhood fear amid bombings and civil unrest. That same hope would later carry her through unimaginable personal tragedy when both her pregnant granddaughter and grandson were murdered in separate incidents.Rather than allowing grief to define her, Cherry transformed her pain into purpose. "My healing took place by talking about it," she explains. Now working in Hattiesburg Public Schools, she connects with children facing poverty and trauma. "These children need somebody to listen to what they have to say," Cherry emphasizes, recognizing that in a state where one in four children lives in poverty, simply being present can change trajectories.Cherry's forthcoming book, "Tear Down These Walls," challenges faith communities to move beyond comfort zones and address real-world problems. "We need to leave our gated communities and magnificent church buildings to go where the problems are," she urges, calling Christians to year-round engagement rather than seasonal charity.Through her remarkable journey from office administrator to police chaplain to educator and minister, Cherry demonstrates how seemingly disconnected experiences form a divine pattern. "God takes all of these experiences we have in life and they just come together like pieces of a puzzle," she shares. Her story reminds us that despite our differences, "We all hurt the same" – and in recognizing our common humanity, we find the strength to build hope together.Be the change you want to see in the world. Get involved with your local community – you'll make a difference while receiving tremendous hope and joy in being God's hands and feet.Join us for new episodes on the 1st and 15th of each month as we continue sharing stories of transformation from across Mississippi. Each story reminds us that when we contribute our unique gifts, Mississippi rises together.Hope Mississippi's Mission: The sobering reality remains: one in four Mississippi children lives in poverty, and one in five experiences food insecurity. These statistics aren't just numbers—they're our collective challenge. Through these conversations, we discover that Mississippi's transformation occurs through individual commitments to mentor, encourage, and be present for others. The small acts of hope accumulate into the broader "miracles" we celebrate.

  25. 5

    Faith, Family, and Community: Scottie Tyrone's Vision for Mississippi

    Dawn Beam welcomes Elder Scottie Tyrone for a heartfelt conversation about building hope through faith, community service, and crossing racial divides in Mississippi. Their profound discussion explores how genuine connections and spiritual transformation can bring healing to individuals and communities facing significant challenges.• Lincoln Park church serves as a "hospital" where people can come as they are for healing and hope• Miraculous testimonies of cancer patients experiencing unexpected recovery through prayer and faith• Scottie's powerful ministry to Dawn's family during her mother's end-of-life celebration (the tambourines came out!)• Breaking racial barriers by focusing on spiritual connections rather than physical differences• Using musical gifts through "Tasteful Tuesday" and "Thankful Thursday" to encourage others• The Zamar Awards program honoring unrecognized musicians who faithfully serve their communities• Lincoln Park's expansion vision for community outreach, including a shelter, feeding program, and youth center• Addressing Mississippi's challenges, where one in four children live in poverty• The importance of both asking for help when needed and extending help to othersIf you have gifts, get involved in meeting the needs of your community. If you are hurting, know there's a body of Christ around you in Mississippi available to help.Relevant Scripture: James 4:2You desire but do not have, so you kill. You covet, but you cannot get what you want, so you quarrel and fight. You do not have because you do not ask God.Contact: (601)[email protected]://sites.google.com/view/scottietyroneministries/homeJoin us for new episodes on the 1st and 15th of each month as we continue sharing stories of transformation from across Mississippi. Each story reminds us that when we contribute our unique gifts, Mississippi rises together.Hope Mississippi's Mission: The sobering reality remains: one in four Mississippi children lives in poverty, and one in five experiences food insecurity. These statistics aren't just numbers—they're our collective challenge. Through these conversations, we discover that Mississippi's transformation occurs through individual commitments to mentor, encourage, and be present for others. The small acts of hope accumulate into the broader "miracles" we celebrate.

  26. 4

    Chickens, Gardens, and Healing Hearts: Not Your Average Children's Home

    Nestled on 42 acres in Purvis, Mississippi, Homes of Hope stands as a beacon of possibility for vulnerable children across the state. In this deeply moving conversation, Executive Director Dr. Scott Hanberry reveals how this unique residential ministry is transforming lives by providing much more than shelter – they're cultivating genuine hope.Unlike traditional institutional settings, Homes of Hope creates actual family environments where children live in single-family homes with dedicated house parents who provide stability, safety, and unconditional love. "We serve at-risk children from all over Mississippi and their families," Hanberry explains, emphasizing that family reunification remains a priority whenever possible.Using trust-based relational intervention, staff help children move from a constant state of fight-or-flight into a place where healing and growth become possible. As Hanberry poignantly notes, "Hope is thinking of the future, and many of these kids come in a state of survival." What sets this ministry apart is its holistic approach to development. From gardens and chickens that teach responsibility to innovative partnerships with local universities for tutoring, every aspect of campus life serves a deeper purpose. Even recreational spaces like their new fire pit facilitate healing conversations, which Hanberry describes as "therapy we couldn't pay for."The most powerful moments come through success stories – a young woman with undiagnosed dyslexia now thriving in college, house parents gifting a minivan to help reunite a family, and teenagers recognizing their time at Homes of Hope not as an obstacle but as "a springboard into successful adult life."Ready to make a difference? Discover how you can Pray, Provide resources, or Participate directly in this transformative work. As Hanberry reminds us, "We're not all called to be foster parents, but we're all called to do something."To learn more about Homes of Hope or to arrange a tour, call 769-456-7021 or email Scott at [email protected] scripture: James 1:27  Pure and undefiled religion before God the Father is this: to care for orphans and widows in their misfortune and to keep oneself unstained by the world.Join us for new episodes on the 1st and 15th of each month as we continue sharing stories of transformation from across Mississippi. Each story reminds us that when we contribute our unique gifts, Mississippi rises together.Hope Mississippi's Mission: The sobering reality remains: one in four Mississippi children lives in poverty, and one in five experiences food insecurity. These statistics aren't just numbers—they're our collective challenge. Through these conversations, we discover that Mississippi's transformation occurs through individual commitments to mentor, encourage, and be present for others. The small acts of hope accumulate into the broader "miracles" we celebrate.

  27. 3

    Finding Strength in Forgiveness with Dwight Owens

    Dwight Owens shares a powerful message of hope and resilience, drawing from personal experiences of trauma and loss, while emphasizing the importance of collaboration in building a brighter future for Mississippi. The episode discusses overcoming adversity, the impact of education, the struggles faced by the disability community, and the transformative power of forgiveness.• Importance of spreading hope in communities facing challenges • Personal story of overcoming trauma and finding purpose • The role of education in rising above poverty • Addressing race relations through dialogue and understanding • The need for collaboration and kindness in healing communities • Experiences within the disability community and advocating for change • The power of forgiveness and moving forward from pain • Engaging with young people to inspire change and resilience • Collective action as a means to uplift others and create lasting changeRead Dwight's book - Still StandingRelevant Scripture - Corinthians 1:4He comforts us in all our troubles so that we can comfort others. When they are troubled, we will be able to give them the same comfort God has given us.Join us for new episodes on the 1st and 15th of each month as we continue sharing stories of transformation from across Mississippi. Each story reminds us that when we contribute our unique gifts, Mississippi rises together.Hope Mississippi's Mission: The sobering reality remains: one in four Mississippi children lives in poverty, and one in five experiences food insecurity. These statistics aren't just numbers—they're our collective challenge. Through these conversations, we discover that Mississippi's transformation occurs through individual commitments to mentor, encourage, and be present for others. The small acts of hope accumulate into the broader "miracles" we celebrate.

  28. 2

    Hope Mississippi's Origin Story with Dawn and Stephen Beam

    HOPE MISSISSIPPI is a bimonthly podcast educating Mississippians about the needs of fellow citizens, encouraging residents to work together to change the trajectory of our families and children, and sharing success stories.Dawn and Stephen Beam are successful professionals (now retired) seeking to improve conditions in their beloved Mississippi. What started many years ago with the "WHAT IF" meetings evolved into an ambitious non-profit and now an uplifting "feel good" podcast. After decades of church-sponsored missions to Central America, the Beams were inspired to channel their energy and efforts to their home state of Mississippi.To get the whole story, listen to the episode!In HOPE MISSISSIPPI's pilot episode, our host, Retired Mississippi Supreme Court Justice Dawn Beam, welcomes the show's first guest, Stephen Beam. In addition to being Justice Beam's husband, Stephen is an author and a retired physician. He is passionate about being a force for good. Their journey is impressive, and their banter is engaging, sincere, and often humorous. The Beams share their respective humble beginnings and HOPE MISSISSIPPI's origin story. They are leading Mississippians by example and are convinced that with collaboration and communication, small acts of service can have a massive impact on those without hope.HOPE MISSISSIPPI spotlights generational poverty, food scarcity, education, racial division, and other socio-economic issues that negatively affect many communities.HOPE MISSISSIPPI also shares success stories and ways to do our small part for the greater good.The opposite of HOPE is APATHY.Relevant Scripture: Matthew 25:40 “The King will reply, 'Truly I tell you, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me.'" Suggested reading:  "Hope Rising: How the Science of HOPE Can Change Your Life." https://bit.ly/HellmanBookJoin us for new episodes on the 1st and 15th of each month as we continue sharing stories of transformation from across Mississippi. Each story reminds us that when we contribute our unique gifts, Mississippi rises together.Hope Mississippi's Mission: The sobering reality remains: one in four Mississippi children lives in poverty, and one in five experiences food insecurity. These statistics aren't just numbers—they're our collective challenge. Through these conversations, we discover that Mississippi's transformation occurs through individual commitments to mentor, encourage, and be present for others. The small acts of hope accumulate into the broader "miracles" we celebrate.

  29. 1

    Hope Mississippi - TRAILER

    Dawn and Stephen Beam are successful professionals (now retired) seeking to improve conditions in their beloved Mississippi. What started many years ago with the "WHAT IF" meetings evolved into an ambitious non-profit and now an uplifting "feel good" podcast. After decades of church-sponsored missions to Central America, the Beams were inspired to channel their energy and efforts to their home state of Mississippi.In this trailer episode, you will learn about how the HOPE MISSISSIPPI pocast came to be and Dawn Beam's hope and prayer for Mississippi.God bless and enjoy!Join us for new episodes on the 1st and 15th of each month as we continue sharing stories of transformation from across Mississippi. Each story reminds us that when we contribute our unique gifts, Mississippi rises together.Hope Mississippi's Mission: The sobering reality remains: one in four Mississippi children lives in poverty, and one in five experiences food insecurity. These statistics aren't just numbers—they're our collective challenge. Through these conversations, we discover that Mississippi's transformation occurs through individual commitments to mentor, encourage, and be present for others. The small acts of hope accumulate into the broader "miracles" we celebrate.

Type above to search every episode's transcript for a word or phrase. Matches are scoped to this podcast.

Searching…

No matches for "" in this podcast's transcripts.

Showing of matches

No topics indexed yet for this podcast.

Loading reviews...

ABOUT THIS SHOW

A bimonthly podcast educating Mississippians about the needs of fellow citizens, encouraging residents to work together to change the trajectory of our families and children, and sharing success stories.

HOSTED BY

Dawn Beam

URL copied to clipboard!