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Josh Ott's Podcast

Author: Joshua Ott

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Joshua Ott from Grace Free Church in Cressona, Pennsylvania. #schuylkillcounty #youarelovedhere #gracefreechurch
233 Episodes
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Sin breaks everything, and the pain we experience isn’t random—it’s connected to humanity’s choice to live apart from God. But right in the middle of that brokenness, something powerful shows up—grace. From the very beginning, God doesn’t just explain the consequences; He provides a covering and points forward to Jesus, who ultimately defeats sin and restores us. Yes, the world is broken, but we are not left uncovered—God has already made a way back.
God asks Adam and Eve two powerful questions after their failure: “Who told you that?” and “Did you eat from the tree?” These aren’t questions meant to shame them—they’re an invitation to pause, rewind the tape, and understand how they got there. The same thing happens in our lives. We start believing lies about ourselves, about God, or about our worth, and those lies slowly shape the choices we make. God’s questions lead us toward two healthy responses: recognizing where those lies came from and taking honest ownership of our decisions. When we stop blaming others and bring our failures to God, we discover something surprising—He already knows everything about us and still meets us with grace, forgiveness, and the chance for a fresh start.
Temptation rarely shows up loud and obvious—it starts subtle and escalates fast. The serpent doesn’t just offer fruit; he offers autonomy, control, and the illusion that we can be our own god. And just like that burning bush story gone wrong, what seems small can spiral quickly. Sin always promises more than it delivers and costs more than we expect. At the core, this is about identity and trust—forgetting who God is and who we already are in Him. Every day we face two voices and two choices: life or death, control or surrender. The invitation is simple but powerful—step off the throne of your own life and let God be God again.
Small compromises rarely feel dangerous in the moment. It’s “just a” little bitterness, just a little scrolling, just a little secret, just a little drift. But spiritual and personal blow-ups don’t start with dramatic decisions—they start with subtle ones. The enemy rarely attacks head-on; he whispers, twists what’s good into something restrictive, and slowly blurs what used to feel clear. That quiet drift creates a predictable path toward brokenness. But the story doesn’t end there. From the very first crack, God has been offering a way back, and the path forward begins by anchoring yourself in truth, trusting God’s goodness, and choosing His voice over the one that only steals.
Real joy is almost always tied to relationships. While happiness comes and goes with circumstances, joy is deeper and steadier, even when life is hard. Isolation slowly drains us, while meaningful connection gives purpose, strength, and protection. We weren’t designed to do life alone, and God often works in us through other people. Whether you’re introverted or extroverted, busy or burned out, joy grows best when we stay connected and let others walk with us.
Life moves fast. We plan, rush, and chase what’s next—often missing the joy sitting right in front of us. Joy isn’t something reserved for a calmer season or a future win; it’s a gift meant for right now. Busyness, worry, circumstances, and even our own choices can quietly steal it if we’re not paying attention. Faith doesn’t avoid the mess—it finds Jesus in it. Your faith was made for the mess, and joy is often closer than we think when we slow down, rest, and open our eyes to what God is already doing.
Life doesn’t always move at the pace we want, and when progress feels slow or invisible, it’s easy to wonder if anything is actually happening. But joy isn’t built on quick fixes or surface-level change, but on the deeper work God is doing underneath the surface—especially in seasons that feel dry, confusing, or delayed. Even when life feels stalled, prayer still moves us forward, and trust grows quietly below the surface. Faith doesn’t avoid the mess—it finds Jesus in it. Your faith was made for the mess.
Happiness depends on how life is going; joy runs deeper and can exist even when things feel dry, confusing, or broken. Seasons of wilderness are not signs of failure, but places where God does some of His deepest work. Joy doesn’t come from escaping the dirt of life, but from meeting God in it, choosing to trust His love, and clinging to Him when circumstances don’t make sense. Faith doesn’t avoid the mess — it finds Jesus in it. Your faith was made for the mess.
Christmas often promises a rush of joy, nostalgia, and good feelings—but those highs fade fast. The manger wasn’t meant to be the emotional finish line; it was the beginning of a much bigger story. Through Simeon’s encounter with Jesus, we’re shown the difference between chasing feelings and finding real fulfillment. Simeon wasn’t looking for a holiday buzz—he was waiting for truth, hope, and God’s promises to be fulfilled. And when he finally held Jesus, he understood something deeper: joy would come, but it would come through sacrifice, confrontation, and ultimately the cross. Faith doesn’t avoid the mess — it finds Jesus in it. Your faith was made for the mess.
Life rarely hands out clear directions—especially around the holidays. When you want clarity but all you have is confusion, it can feel unsettling: detours you didn’t plan for, decisions you’re afraid to get wrong, and “why is this happening now?” moments that mess with your peace. Mary and Joseph didn’t receive a detailed plan—they were given an inconvenient push, and God still used it to move them exactly where they needed to be. The reminder is simple: you may feel lost, but you’re not abandoned. God can direct even when you don’t understand it, and the “Caesars” in your life don’t get the final say. Faith doesn’t avoid the mess — it finds Jesus in it. Your faith was made for the mess.
Life rarely gives us “easy,” even at Christmas. But instead of removing the hard stuff, God meets us in it with purpose. Mary’s story shows that God calls ordinary, unprepared people into something bigger than themselves—and that calling often arrives wrapped in uncertainty, discomfort, and mess. Her response of surrender, trust, and courage shows us how to follow God when life is anything but simple. But faith doesn’t avoid the mess; it finds Jesus right in the middle of it. Your faith was made for moments just like these.
We’re all really good at remembering what went wrong and almost blind to how often God has actually shown up for us. Forgetting His track record fills our hearts with fear, anxiety, and worst-case thinking, while remembering it fills us with courage and peace. When we don’t intentionally remember His faithfulness, something else takes over—control, regret, worry, or doubt—and we end up missing the good things He’s trying to lead us into. God doesn’t ask us to take blind leaps; He invites us to trust the patterns of His goodness in our lives and to remember how He’s carried us through the mess before. Faith doesn’t avoid the mess—it finds Jesus in it, remembers what He’s already done, and steps forward with a grateful, steady heart.
Faith doesn’t shut down when life gets messy—it’s actually made for it. In John 9, Jesus meets a man born blind, turns a painful lifelong struggle into a place for God to show up, and shows us that our hard seasons aren’t punishment but invitations to trust Him, take the next step, worship in the middle of the chaos, and see Him more clearly—even in the mud. Faith doesn’t avoid the mess—it finds Jesus in it. Your faith was made for the mess.
Ten men with leprosy cry out to Jesus from a distance, and He tells them to go show themselves to the priests—before they’re even healed. As they walk, healing comes, but only one, a Samaritan, returns to thank Him. The story reminds us to stop seeking Jesus just for what He can do and start seeing Him for who He is. Real faith calls out, obeys before results, responds with gratitude, and lets Jesus make us whole inside and out.
Jesus isn’t impressed by big numbers or loud moments—He notices trust and surrender. In a temple culture where giving had become a show, a poor widow quietly drops in two tiny coins—everything she had—and Jesus calls it “more.” Her story flips our idea of value and success, challenging us to loosen our grip on control, comfort, and security. God’s math is different: He weighs trust and multiplies surrender. Even small, hidden acts of faith can move big things when placed in His hands.
Real change rarely happens solo. When a paralyzed man couldn’t reach Jesus on his own, four friends carried him, climbed a roof, ripped it open, and lowered him down. Jesus saw their faith, forgave him, and healed him. Stop living on islands—surround yourself with “crazy good friends,” and be that kind of friend for others. Breakthrough faith moves, carries, creates new paths when doors are blocked, and celebrates loudly when God comes through. It’s practical, gritty, and deeply communal.
When life feels unfair and your prayers hit a wall, what do you do? We dig into the story of a mom who refused to give up when everything went quiet. She doesn’t have all the right words or background—just raw desperation and stubborn faith. Jesus doesn’t shame her; He pushes her deeper until her belief becomes real, not borrowed. It’s a story about holding on when you want to walk away, trusting that even a tiny bit of hope—a “crumb”—can change everything. When life goes silent, don’t shut down. Lean in. Keep asking. Let the pressure forge something real inside you.
Kicking off “Nameless Faith,” we zoom in on the Roman centurion — a man whose name we don’t get, but whose faith amazed Jesus. He’d tried everything, hit a wall, and still believed Jesus could heal from a distance with just a word. That’s the heart of real faith: not treating Jesus as a helpful teacher when life wobbles, but trusting Him as Lord with actual authority. Your past, your drift, your distance—none of it disqualifies you. God’s word won’t fail. Learn His promises, trust them in your situation, and let your faith outlive your name.
Baptism Sunday is all about saying “yes” to God’s invitation and celebrating new life. Acts 8 shows us that God always moves first—pursuing, stirring, and setting things in motion. Our role? Simply respond. Sometimes faith is slow and steady, sometimes it’s a bold leap, but baptism is the moment to go public and declare, “I belong to Jesus.” It’s not about perfection, it’s about taking the next step—and cheering on others who do the same.
Our lives are cluttered tables—piled with stuff that never really satisfies. Fasting clears the space so God can fill it. It’s not ‘if’ but ‘when’ you fast—Jesus expected it to be part of our rhythm of soul care. We’ll try all kinds of diets to fix our bodies; why not fast to strengthen our souls?
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