PODCAST · religion
The Lyric and The Light
by Leena and Dionne
A weekly space where faith and music meet. Each episode, we will take one song- from timeless hymns to modern worship- and pair it with the living truth of Scripture.
-
12
Put Your Socks On And Bring The Kids
Kids in church can be beautiful, distracting, hilarious, and holy all at once, and we’re not interested in pretending otherwise. We talk candidly about what happens when children stay in the sanctuary, why some kids thrive in Sunday school, and how worship, prayer, and community can shape faith long before a child can explain theology. If you’ve ever felt judged because your child whispered too loud, changed seats five times, or couldn’t focus through a long sermon, you’ll feel seen here.A moment at the altar changes the whole tone: a nearly seven-year-old granddaughter walks up holding her baby doll and starts worshipping with her hand lifted, simply copying what she sees. That one picture opens up a bigger conversation about Christian parenting, grandparent discipleship, and the quiet power of “small Sundays” that stack up over years. We also share practical convictions about screen time in church, why fidgets can help, and how worship music often reaches kids before preaching does.From there, we go deeper into why protecting kids matters to Jesus, what children’s ministry is really for, and how hard testimonies can shape the way we pray over the next generation. We talk about grief, forgiveness, and noticing glimpses of God even in the darkest chapters, while still longing for our kids to find Jesus without having to be shattered first.If this conversation hits home, subscribe to The Lyric And The Light, share it with a parent or grandparent who needs encouragement, and leave a review so more families can find it. What’s your stance on kids staying in church versus going to Sunday school?
-
11
“Graves, Grace, and Gray Areas”
A colorful idea for a Christian retreat meal got labeled “demonic,” and it forced us to ask a question most churches avoid: when does conviction protect faith, and when does it turn into control? We start with the everyday stuff Christians argue about, the words we say when we’re frustrated, the jokes we make, the shirts we wear, and why some people hear disrespect where others hear harmless humor. That quickly leads into the real story: a Dia De Los Muertos inspired Coco theme meant to honor people who served before us. We slow down and do the work. We talk cultural context for Day of the Dead, why remembrance is not the same as worship, and how intention matters. Then we read Bible passages that point both ways: hope-filled remembrance like Hebrews 12:1 and 1 Thessalonians 4:13–14, and serious warnings like Deuteronomy 18:10–12 and Isaiah 8:19 about consulting the dead and spiritual counterfeits. We also unpack the relational side of it: how Matthew 18 calls us to go to each other first, and how spiritual language can become a weapon when people talk down from a soapbox. From Halloween to Easter eggs to “worldly” art, we name what’s open-handed and what’s closed-fisted. The center stays clear: Jesus Christ, crucified and risen, salvation by grace through faith. To bring it home, we talk Ezekiel 37, the song “Rattle,” and what resurrection power looks like right now through healing, sobriety, restored health, and joy returning to places that felt dead. If this conversation challenges you, share it with a friend, subscribe, and leave a review, then tell us: where have you seen conviction bring life rather than division?
-
10
-
9
-
8
Many Names, One God
What do you call God when life gets loud—Yahweh, Father, Waymaker, Prince of Peace? We open with prayer and dive into the names of God, then trace how each name reveals something real: provision before the need, healing that reaches the heart, peace that stands inside chaos. Along the way, we share a raw adoption story that turns worship lyrics into lived proof—how a last-minute phone call, deep grief, and unlikely timing became a thread of providence that led to family, faith, and a calling.We move from songs to Scripture, grounding the names in the Bible: Exodus 3 for “I AM,” Genesis 22 for Jehovah Jireh, Exodus 15 for Jehovah Rapha, Judges 6 for Jehovah Shalom, and Isaiah 9 for Jesus as Wonderful Counselor and Mighty God. We wrestle with the hard parts too: how to talk about the Trinity with kids, why some Old Testament laws feel distant, and how personal convictions still matter without sliding into legalism. Psalm 22 reframes the cry “My God, my God” as both anguish and fulfilled prophecy, inviting skeptics to see the surprising coherence of history and hope.Stories make truth stick, so we talk about The Chosen and House of David as on-ramps to curiosity—seeing Jesus laugh, weep, and challenge His friends can pull you back to the text with fresh eyes. If “Father” heals you, use it; if “Yahweh” steadies your breath, pray it. Let the name match the need, and expect God to meet you with presence, provision, and peace.If you’re curious, hurting, or just ready to breathe again, press play. Then tell us: what name do you run to and why? Subscribe for more, share this with a friend who needs hope, and leave a review to help others find the conversation.
-
7
If Rocks Can Cry Out, Why Not Code?
What if the question isn’t “Can AI worship?” but “How do we worship faithfully when new tools enter the room?” We dive straight into the heart of a growing debate around AI-assisted Christian music, sparked by the soulful, chart-climbing work of Solomon Ray. Along the way, we share a joyful detour from Night to Shine, then get practical about ministry realities—like licensing hurdles, local creativity, and how tech can empower voices that don’t read notation or produce in a studio.Together we draw a clear line: the Holy Spirit indwells people, not software. That means AI belongs in the instrument category, not the author category. We open Scripture to show how God has always used surprising vessels—a burning bush, Balaam’s donkey, a budding staff—not because the objects were holy, but because He is. From there we unpack what truly defines worship: alignment with God’s Word, the intentions of the heart, and the One to whom the song is offered. If lyrics exalt Jesus and call the church to truth, their origin doesn’t sanctify them—their faithfulness does.We also talk craft and conscience: fears that AI might cheapen creativity, live performance versus studio polish, and why some songs labeled “Christian” still center the self more than the Savior. One of us shares how AI helped turn a poem into an original worship song for community events, avoiding heavy licensing costs while keeping the message scripturally grounded. The takeaway is simple and freeing: test every lyric, keep what is good, and let your worship be embodied, thoughtful, and bold. Tools should never replace devotion; they should remove barriers so more people can offer true praise.If you care about authentic worship, creative integrity, and the future of church music, this conversation invites you to think deeply and respond with grace. Listen, share with a friend who’s curious or skeptical, and tell us where you land. And if this resonated, subscribe, leave a review, and join the dialogue—your voice helps shape what we explore next.
-
6
Surrender, Simple And Complete
What if surrender isn’t a single dramatic moment but a steady rhythm that reshapes every day? We open our hearts to the hard parts—praying out loud when it feels awkward, wrestling with worship that values polish over presence, and the quiet ache of waiting for purpose to appear. Then we trace the roots of the beloved hymn I Surrender All and follow its invitation into a living practice: letting go, listening for God, and finding ministry in the ordinary.You’ll hear a raw story of hitting a wall—hospital stays, financial strain, and the weight of unspoken fears—followed by a real release that led to unexpected healing and a new habit of daily surrender. We talk candidly about church music: when excellence serves the room and when radical authenticity moves the heart. Both matter. Both can point us to Jesus. We also get practical about serving the unhoused with blessing bags, local resources, and a posture of dignity and warmth, remembering Hebrews 13:2 and the call to welcome strangers.Purpose, it turns out, often looks like small faithful steps. Driving rideshare while praying for passengers. Playing hymns that anchor a day. Hosting a women’s gathering that invites pajamas, no makeup, and deep work over polish. Along the way, we lean on scriptures like James 4:7 and Romans 12:2 to frame surrender as transformation, not defeat. If you’ve wondered how to start, we keep it simple: speak honestly to God, release what’s breaking you, and watch for the quiet ways He meets you.If this resonates, share it with a friend who needs courage to let go. Subscribe for more conversations that bring faith into everyday life, and leave a review to help others find their way here. What does surrender look like for you today?
-
5
-
4
Two Friends Explore Faith, Music, And What It Means To Walk With Jesus
Start here if you want faith that breathes. We open our first episode with a simple prayer and an honest promise: no perfect formulas, no performative faith. Just two women who love Jesus, love worship music, and love the kind of community that shows up in public parks, nursing homes, and Uber rides with a quiet yes.We introduce our ministries and why unity across churches matters, especially when life feels noisy. From Phil Wickham’s homesick hope to the bright lift of Kane and the steady joy of Maverick City, we talk about how worship songs don’t just sound good—they train our hearts. You’ll hear a raw testimony of deliverance at 3:30 a.m., how removing temptation made room for peace, and why some chains fall fast while others loosen over time. This isn’t theory; it’s the real work of following Jesus when you’re tired, tempted, or just unsure.Make Room becomes our anchor. We dig into its surrender, the line that rattles comfortable religion, and the gritty choice to let God rearrange our routines. Calling shows up as seasons, not a single spotlight: a street-preacher moment in a car, a park filled with voices, a hallway of handshakes on Sunday morning. We wrestle with walking beside Jesus versus letting him lead, the pull between zeal and burnout, and what service looks like beyond our comfort zones.If you’re craving relationship over ritual, music that points you home, and a faith you can live in the middle of a messy world, you’re in the right place. Press play, share it with a friend who needs hope, and subscribe so you don’t miss what comes next. And if this encouraged you, leave a rating and a review—tell us which lyric God used to reach you today.
-
3
We're indexing this podcast's transcripts for the first time — this can take a minute or two. We'll show results as soon as they're ready.
No matches for "" in this podcast's transcripts.
No topics indexed yet for this podcast.
Loading reviews...
ABOUT THIS SHOW
A weekly space where faith and music meet. Each episode, we will take one song- from timeless hymns to modern worship- and pair it with the living truth of Scripture.
HOSTED BY
Leena and Dionne
CATEGORIES
Loading similar podcasts...