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5
A Legacy of Love and the Path to Healing
Focus on Chapters 18–19Joyce's full story, her death, Ken's grief, and how God brought morning after mourning. The most personal episode. End with Ken's hope for whoever reads — or listens.
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4
The Man Who Gave It Away
Chapters 15–17 and 20Missions, mentorship, fatherhood, grandfather. This is the Others Lord episode. Why did he keep saying yes? What did his kids and grandkids actually see?
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3
The Entrepreneur
Chapters 11–15:The businessman, the innovations, Sound-Off, Firecap, all of it. What was he actually building and why? What did it cost him? What surprised even him? Make it feel like a true entrepreneurship story with faith woven through every risk.
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2
The Insecure Boy Who Became Someone (School Years)
(Chapters 4–5)This is the episode about what it costs to grow up when no one tells you that you’re enough — and what happens when one person finally does.Open with Ken transferring from his small country school to the big Holland Christian school in sixth grade. He called himself “scared of his own shadow.” A poor farm kid who didn’t even have indoor plumbing yet — too embarrassed to invite anyone home. A senior girl mocked him for wearing the same shirt two days in a row and he wanted to crawl into a hole.Tell the story of his father honestly, the way the book does — John Jipping was a devout Christian, a hard worker, a man who could strike up a conversation with anyone. But at home, every idea Ken had was knocked down. He never felt smart enough or good enough. The book says it plainly: Ken believed his dad thought he wasn’t very smart.So he acted out. Walk through the pranks: the Duz soap incident, the seven super balls bouncing off the blackboard, the fishing line strung across the study hall to trip the teacher, the typewriter roller rigged to humiliate the “old maid” — and then fixed before she could prove it. The spiked apple cider. The Ex-Lax chocolate at senior initiation, which permanently ended that tradition.Then the story that changed everything: Dale Bierema, Ken’s close friend, killed when his car was hit by a train on the way to a basketball game. The night before, Ken had turned down the invitation to go to the movies with him. He went home and lay on his parents’ bed and cried out, “Lord, why him and not me?” He made a vow that day — he’s been to a movie theater fewer than ten times in his life since.And then: the last line of the chapter. “What really made the difference? A gal by the name of Joyce Zwiers.” Let that land before you move on.
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1
Dutch Ancestry and the Family Homestead (The Early Years)
Focus es on Chapters 1–4: Ken's Dutch heritage, Graafschap farm childhood, the mischievous kid, and the insecure student. Start with the historical roots of the Jipping family and end with Ken on the edge of adulthood. Linger on the small sensory details — farm life, family dynamics, the texture of growing up Dutch Reformed in Michigan.
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
A tribute to a beloved man
HOSTED BY
Nate Gerstner
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