1. In the fourth episode, Dan and Debi sit down with Gretchen Ronnevik to ask what all is wrapped up in “daily bread.”
  2. In the third episode, the reverend Paul Walker outlines why we ask God "thy Kingdom come."
  3. In the second episode, Ken Jones explains the first petition of the Lord's Prayer.
  4. In episode 1, Dan and Debi talk with Donavon Riley about Luther's exposition of the Lord's Prayer.
  5. Meditation is part of what C.S. Lewis calls the "baptism of the imagination." In Christ, we belong to him, all the parts of us--even our brain.
  6. This is a prayer which orients us in the morning to offer our lives to God with trust and thanksgiving.
  7. Chad talks about the practice of prayer and the offering of incense.
  8. Whether it is the awkwardness of praying aloud in a group, starting a prayer journal and then forgetting about it, using prewritten prayers, or having notecards, we often feel like we aren't that good or consistent in prayer.
  9. Walking on water is what we need. Jesus does it. We got baptism. Float through it all as the Modest Mouse song says!
  10. They’re just psalms! It’s OK to pray them! They’re psalms! Gillespie and Riley take a listener request. They read and discuss the collects of Thomas Cranmer. Why pray? What should be the content and focus of prayer? How does old Adam fight against God’s Word when the new man prays?
  11. On this episode we talk about Cinderella, the difference between circumstance and identity, God's gifts found in ordinary objects, and our longing for the "happily ever after" ending. We were inspired by an essay by J.R.R. Tolkien called “On Fairy Stories”. Ultimately, these fun stories stir up simple truths about ourselves, our God, and the greatest story we know in the Gospel of Jesus Christ.