Hey there, my friend.
Speaker AWelcome to the podcast.
Speaker AThis is Brian Del Turco, Jesus Smart X the podcast episode 365 and we have something a little different today.
Speaker AIt's a little bit different.
Speaker AI'm pulling from the latest Smart Edit newsletter, a few elements from that newsletter that I produce.
Speaker AAnd if you're not subscribed yet, I really hope you will be.
Speaker AI think you need to be.
Speaker AThe Smart Edit exists to spark our development in Christ.
Speaker AIt's not just, you know, content and ideas to consider, but truth and reality to live in.
Speaker AIt's free, it's weekly, five minutes to grow, and you can subscribe@jesussmart.com SmartEdit we're doing this episode today, what could be called Direct to Drive.
Speaker AI'm not going to be doing any editing.
Speaker AIt's just a time management issue this week and workflow.
Speaker ABut Direct to Drive and so no music except, etc.
Speaker ABut I think you're going to enjoy the content.
Speaker AThere's some powerful elements in this newsletter.
Speaker ABefore we get to that, I want to mention a news item, something that's really remarkable.
Speaker AAccording to Edison Research's Share of Ear Study okay, Edison Research Share of Ear Study we have hit a historic tipping point.
Speaker AAmericans in America now.
Speaker AAmericans now spend more of their spoken word listening time with podcasts than with traditional talk radio.
Speaker APodcasts are at roughly 40% of spoken word audio time, I guess on a monthly basis.
Speaker AAnd it edges out AM FM talk radio at 39%.
Speaker AThat's an inflection point.
Speaker AIt's been tracking towards this and now it's officially flipped.
Speaker AOne expert I was listening to recently thinks that trend is just going to continue to give you a point of reference.
Speaker ABack in 2015, AM FM talk radio held 75% of spoken word listening versus podcasting at only 10%.
Speaker ABut by quarter four, 2025.
Speaker AThis is quarter four, 2025, it flipped for the first time.
Speaker A39% radio, 40% podcast.
Speaker AWe're living in a podcasting revolution.
Speaker AThat's really what it's what what this is saying.
Speaker AI'm grateful you're part of it here with Jesus Smart Ex.
Speaker AAnd if you know of friends or contacts, relatives, enemies, anybody, anybody, put it on your pet.
Speaker APut some earbuds in your pet headphones.
Speaker AHey, let's, let's get the message to everybody.
Speaker AGo ahead and would appreciate it if you would share about either this episode or the podcast in general, or any specific episode that you enjoy and think adds a lot of value.
Speaker AJesus Smart X the Podcast if you missed Last Week's episode, episode 364.
Speaker AIt's called Grease the Groove.
Speaker ASpiritual Strength training for Extreme times.
Speaker AGo back and catch that.
Speaker AWe explored how micro spiritual workouts throughout your day can build a resilient, responsive faith and a strong spirit.
Speaker AI think it's excellent.
Speaker AI'm seeking to employ this protocol in my own days.
Speaker AThere's edges that need attention in my life, and I got to stop thinking that, hey, I need huge blocks of time to address this in prayer.
Speaker AThat can happen.
Speaker ABut I think we need to really start greasing the groove with these micro prayers, micro blocks of time.
Speaker AYou know, scripture intake, prayer, meditation, journaling, other things that we can do, anything.
Speaker AThis concept of greasing the groove, which comes from athletics, can be applied to anything, and it is being applied to everything today.
Speaker BSo, as I mentioned, this episode is
Speaker Aa little bit different.
Speaker AWe're pulling from the newsletter featuring some.
Speaker ASome elements there, and I think you're going to enjoy this.
Speaker AHere's the first element.
Speaker AIt's called holy provocation sharpened for this time.
Speaker AYou see, what I began to think about is the body of Christ was never really meant to be passive nor polite.
Speaker ANow, kindness is a fruit of the Holy Spirit.
Speaker AThere's no doubt about that.
Speaker ABut you can be kind, discerning, resolute, and impactful at the same time.
Speaker AThere's a couple verses in the New Testament which actually specifically address this.
Speaker AHebrews 10, 24 and 25.
Speaker AThe kingdom calls us to provoke one another toward love and good deeds that were meant to walk in.
Speaker AAnd this New Testament word for provoke means it carries the sense of stirring up, urging somebody on, exciting somebody toward action.
Speaker ANow, here's the question for me, for you.
Speaker AAre we open to being a kingdom provocateur?
Speaker AA provocateur?
Speaker AOr are we just going to ride the pews, be passive, be kind and polite, and not in a godly way, agitate for change, change and transformation which meets this hour.
Speaker AIt's not intentional offense, though I'm going to be honest.
Speaker ASome may be offended because they, you know, when they're challenged, what it is is a holy push toward leveling up.
Speaker ADid you happen to see the intensity of the gold medal hockey game, men's hockey game in the Olympics?
Speaker AThe United States defeated Canada in overtime.
Speaker AYou can be assured that those teammates do not coddle one another to experience that level of winning.
Speaker AThey sharpen each other.
Speaker AExcellence was demanded because the winning mission required it.
Speaker AAnd there are edges in your life, in my life, that we need to win on, that we need to reconcile and bring for the kingdom.
Speaker AMaybe it's getting out of debt so we can be freed up with space and time to help facilitate our kingdom contribution that we bring to the table.
Speaker AIt could be anything though.
Speaker AProverbs 27:17 says iron sharpens iron and one person sharpens another.
Speaker AI think there's a proverb which says that faithful are the wounds of a friend.
Speaker AYou know, in the Old Testament, Joel, the prophet Joel prophesied that there would be a time, and we're in that time now when God would pour out his spirit and your sons and your daughters will prophesy.
Speaker AProphecy does more than speak words.
Speaker AIt reveals the heart of God.
Speaker BIt can reveal the condition of the church, the pulse of society, certainly the
Speaker Acondition of our hearts.
Speaker BIn a real sense.
Speaker AProphecy, or having a prophetic point of view and having the trust between members in the body of Christ giftings can be employed.
Speaker AIt's getting closer, prophecy is getting closer to God's point of view on something.
Speaker AAnd that's what, that's what we want.
Speaker BThat's what leads us to more fruitful,
Speaker Asuccessful, impactful prayer and even prayer born action steps.
Speaker ABut too often our quote, I'm putting it in air quotes now, an audio only podcast, but I'm telling you air quotes.
Speaker AOkay, Churchianity,
Speaker Bwhat it tends to default
Speaker Ato and drift toward is comfort, institutional self protection, hopefully not, but sometimes leadership, ambition, which begins to eclipse really what Jesus is building or fear of disapproval.
Speaker APaul said in Ephesians 4:15 that we can speak the truth in love, and as we do, we will grow to become in every respect.
Speaker AThis is the actual verse in the niv.
Speaker AWe will grow to become in every respect the mature body of him who is the head, that is Christ.
Speaker AWe love the church, Christ is building her.
Speaker BBut love does not compromise love, sacrifices, it calls upward.
Speaker AWhen did we begin to think that love is love?
Speaker ABut it's never based in reality or truth.
Speaker AReal love is based in ultimate reality and it has the highest good in view.
Speaker AAnd here's what I, if I'm going to be honest with you, here's what
Speaker BI just can't seem to escape and that's this.
Speaker AThe thought that if we're going to meet this hour that we are in, if we're going to be faithful, we're going to have to harden ourselves a little bit and begin to more progressively walk worthy of the calling of Christ together as members of the body of Christ.
Speaker AThere's no reason why in a godly way, spouses cannot challenge each other.
Speaker AFriends, members in the church, that tight band of believers that you run with, maybe that project team that you're leading, you know, there's, there's simply no reason.
Speaker AAnd we just need to become more secure, more about excellence, more about the ambition of Christ himself and just not feel that we have to get into some kind of safe space and that we can never be confronted or can never confront or challenge.
Speaker AYour voice matters, your courage matters.
Speaker AAnd your willingness to receive challenge from others matters too.
Speaker BSo this is one of the features
Speaker Ain the newsletter, the longest one.
Speaker AWe'll get to several more here, but here's the call to action for this feature.
Speaker AGo ahead and feel free to ask the Holy Spirit to show you where your voice can awaken, encourage and strengthen others, and where your voice and my voice, I'm looking in the mirror where we need to receive, right?
Speaker ASizing, correction or sharpening, it's going to help us.
Speaker AIt's going to elevate our Kingdom game, if we can put it that way.
Speaker AThere's another related smart edit newsletter called the Proximity Effect, the main feature in that newsletter.
Speaker AAnd that's the importance of drawing near to the right people and the effect that they have on you and that you have on them.
Speaker BSo this feature is what we call
Speaker Aa Kingdom dynamic feature or sort of the big idea of each newsletter issue.
Speaker BAnd that's it.
Speaker AI hope you find that actually inspiring.
Speaker AHoly Provocation sharpened for this time.
Speaker AWe have a section in this most recent newsletter which we call Signals and Shifts.
Speaker AAnd I'll just briefly touch on a few of the points here that we feature there.
Speaker AAnd there's links you can chase in this section.
Speaker AAn encouraging point is that Millennials and Gen Z are driving a Bible reading comeback.
Speaker AAccording to Barna Weekly, Bible engagement among US adults has rebounded to 42% and that is a listen, a 12 point jump from its 15 point or 15 year low back in 2024.
Speaker BSo from 2024 it jumped 12 points.
Speaker BThat's now up to 42%.
Speaker BAnd this has been documented by numerous reporting and research.
Speaker BThere is a Bible reading resurgence going on and we think that this is indicative of people are searching for meaning.
Speaker AOkay, Another point we have in this
Speaker BSignals and Shifts section is Jonathan Cahn issues a warning that the dragon of Revelation 12 is rising.
Speaker BHe says the dragon is a mega figure, but we need to remember that victory is meant to be the natural state of authentic Christ followers.
Speaker BBut you can chase that link there.
Speaker BSo signal and shifts, we have something there.
Speaker BAnother link, 25 tips that save money from a resource called the Penny Hoarder.
Speaker AMy wife's name is Penny.
Speaker BIt's not her website, but the penny Hoarder.
Speaker BMy wife's not a penny hoarder, she's a penny spender.
Speaker BBut anyway, 25 tips that save Money and this this section signals and ships quick hits where faith, culture and global
Speaker Acurrents intersect and we try to curate
Speaker Bsome resourcing there that see things in
Speaker Aa new way, pray in a new
Speaker Bway, act with kingdom clarity in a new way.
Speaker BSo that's a feature in the newsletter.
Speaker BHey, we also have another inspirational piece in this newsletter called Enemy.
Speaker BDon't rejoice too soon.
Speaker BI don't know if you have an enemy or if you feel like you have an enemy or something's going on and you can't quite figure it out and you don't know where it's coming from and you suspect spiritually or even practically, there is, there is an enemy to my life.
Speaker BWell, I kind of feel that often.
Speaker BI didn't have a great night last night.
Speaker BI had some insomnia and I sometimes, I don't know, I got to get the courage to get out of bed and pray at 3am instead of just laying there.
Speaker BBut you know, it says in Micah 7, 8, do not rejoice over me, my enemy.
Speaker BWhen I fall, I will arise.
Speaker BWhat a confession.
Speaker BIt goes on.
Speaker BWhen I sit in darkness, the Lord will be a light to me.
Speaker AHa.
Speaker BWhat a verse.
Speaker BMicah 7, 8.
Speaker BWell, worthy of memorizing and praying and confessing.
Speaker BDo not rejoice over me, my enemy.
Speaker BWhen I fall, I will arise.
Speaker BWhen I sit in darkness, the Lord will be a light to me.
Speaker BAnd so the idea here in this, in this little feature is don't get comfortable just yet, O enemy, because the story isn't over.
Speaker BYou may feel chaos right now.
Speaker BAnd you know in Genesis 1:2, the earth was formless, it was void.
Speaker BDarkness was on the face of the deep.
Speaker BThe Hebrew language there conveys a meaning of chaos and sterility and just breakdown.
Speaker BAnd the Spirit of God was hovering over the face of the waters.
Speaker BIt says, now we know there is chaos in the macro in the world today, right?
Speaker BWars.
Speaker AWe have geopolitical realignment going on.
Speaker BWe're still suffering the aftershocks of the pandemic.
Speaker BEconomic instability.
Speaker BThere's exposure going on in society, exposure going on in the church, cultural upheaval.
Speaker BNations are shifting.
Speaker BThe church is being refined and judged.
Speaker BThere may also be chaos in the micro of your life.
Speaker BAnd I predict that there is.
Speaker BIt's my belief that what goes on in the macro often filters down into the micro of our lives.
Speaker BAnd God is working at both levels.
Speaker BYou know, there may be setbacks, personal setbacks, or closed doors, or unseen battles.
Speaker BYou carry battles that nobody knows about.
Speaker BBut here's what this segment wants to encourage.
Speaker BThe dawning of Genesis reveals the pattern.
Speaker BGenesis 1, 2.
Speaker BAnd then beginning with verse 3 and following, the Holy Spirit hovers.
Speaker BThen the decreed word comes over chaos and brings, let's use the New Testament word, cosmos, from chaos to cosmos.
Speaker BCosmos is order, design, beauty.
Speaker BIt may be a right sizing in your life, a realignment, sort of a breaking down of the vessel, and then a rebuilding and reshaping on the potter's will into something more beautiful, more capacity.
Speaker BBut we see this pattern in early Genesis.
Speaker BHoly Spirit hovering.
Speaker BAnd then the decreed word, the redesigning word from the Father coming over our chaos and bringing cosmos.
Speaker BAnd we can pray this over the church, and we can pray this over our countries, as it says in Micah 7, 8, you may fall, but you will rise.
Speaker BThere may be chaos, but God speaks over you.
Speaker BAnd the church itself may be disrupted and purified, but will rise in greater clarity and power as we, as the members of the church, rise.
Speaker BSo, enemy, don't rejoice too soon.
Speaker BThat's a little feature in the newsletter, this most recent one, and we can pray simply something like this, Holy Spirit, hover over my personal world.
Speaker BAnd now here you can just insert an issue in the blank space.
Speaker BAnd then Father, decree your redesigning word over me.
Speaker BI receive it.
Speaker BSo, enemy, don't rejoice too soon.
Speaker BWe have a very small feature called kaizen, the Japanese word, and I'll get to that in just a second.
Speaker BRight after that, we're going to be talking about three different forms of eating.
Speaker BAre you eating to fill your body, feed your pleasure, or soothe your stress?
Speaker BBut kaizen, just a short bit here,
Speaker Ais a Japanese term.
Speaker BIt's often translated continuous improvement.
Speaker BAnd what it is, the concept of kaizen is a absolute refusal to settle into the plateau of what we could call arrested development.
Speaker BWhere does this come from?
Speaker BWell, it comes from Japan, as I mentioned, and it's rooted in Japan's remarkably efficient manufacturing culture, especially Post World War II, as that began to develop.
Speaker BAnd the principle of kaizen applies just as powerfully to other areas of life, like anything writing, music, athletics, art, our own spiritual development business and more.
Speaker BIt means continuous improvement.
Speaker BHow can I improve this continuously?
Speaker BYou know what's wrong about it?
Speaker BThat I can improve what's right about it, that I Need to add, and here's a great verse in Colossians 3:10, which I think echoes this and mirrors it and really is a core value in the Jesus ethic in the kingdom culture.
Speaker BColossians 3:10.
Speaker BPut on the new self who is being renewed to a true knowledge according to the image of the One who created him.
Speaker BSee, our new nature that we receive, that is awakened at our born again experience is not static, it's dynamic and it's constantly being renewed.
Speaker BWe could say that the principle of Kaizen is at play.
Speaker BContinuous renewal.
Speaker BAnd what is the benchmark?
Speaker BWhat is our benchmark?
Speaker BChrist himself.
Speaker BSo what about continuous refinement and development in Christ's kingdom?
Speaker BKaizen?
Speaker BI love that.
Speaker BAnd now, finally, in today's episode, let's just feature one more element in the newsletter.
Speaker BRecently we like to feature elements that are related to wellness and to optimizing our bodies and our psychology as well as our spirit.
Speaker BThis one has to do with eating.
Speaker BIt's very interesting to me.
Speaker BThere's actually a field called nutrition psychology.
Speaker BI didn't know this.
Speaker BNutrition psychology identifies three primary eating behaviors.
Speaker BOkay, we're just going to touch on these.
Speaker BHomeostatic eating, hedonic eating, and emotional eating.
Speaker BOkay, let's just briefly, briefly define each.
Speaker BEach one of these three homeostatic eating is our normal, natural biological hunger.
Speaker BOur body requires energy, right?
Speaker BTo think clearly, to work diligently, to serve, faithfully carry out our calling.
Speaker BWhen blood sugar drops and true hunger signals in our body arise, and a lot of this is hormonal eating restores our strength and our capacity.
Speaker BThat's homeostatic eating.
Speaker AHedonic eating.
Speaker BWhat does that word sound like?
Speaker BHedonic?
Speaker BWell, it comes from hedonism.
Speaker BBut hedonism is not just negative.
Speaker BThe pursuit of pleasure can also be a positive thing.
Speaker BAnd that's how it's being used here.
Speaker BHedonic eating is pleasure driven.
Speaker BThere's nothing wrong with pleasure in eating.
Speaker BYou know, taste, enjoyment, the brain's reward system in moderation.
Speaker AHedonic eating is good.
Speaker BYou know, shared meals are beautiful.
Speaker BCelebration, enjoyment.
Speaker BPleasure is not the enemy.
Speaker BHere's, here's, here's the enemy.
Speaker AExcess.
Speaker BAnd Philippians 3:19 says that it's possible to make your stomach your God.
Speaker BOkay, so we just need to understand this.
Speaker BHomeostatic eating is our baseline.
Speaker BHedonic eating is good in measure from time to time.
Speaker BEpistolic.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker BBut not a controlling factor.
Speaker BLet's talk about the third one, emotional eating.
Speaker BWhat we do with emotional eating is we are actually trying.
Speaker BFood is Becoming a substitute.
Speaker BIt's becoming a substitute.
Speaker BWe're attempting to regulate our mood in some way, like stress, boredom.
Speaker BI mean, do you ever get bored late at night and want to eat half a gallon of ice cream?
Speaker BI mean, loneliness fatigue can drive the choice rather than real hunger.
Speaker BYou know, I know if I can stop eating at 7 and I'm horribly inconsistent with this, I win the day.
Speaker BIt's no problem for me to eat well throughout the day until 7 o'.
Speaker AClock.
Speaker B7 o' clock is my temptation zone.
Speaker BIf I can just get to bed without eating after 7pm, I can lose weight, I sleep better, I feel better the next day, my body chemistry is better, my, you know, my sugar levels better.
Speaker BAll of the major markers are better if we can stop eating at 7 o'.
Speaker BClock.
Speaker BBut you know, really emotional eating is a pattern.
Speaker BIt's similar to smoking.
Speaker BYou know, it's a coping mechanism.
Speaker BExcessive drinking, it soothes us temporarily, but it does not really strengthen us.
Speaker BAnd over a lifetime and over years, it hurts us.
Speaker BSo there's a link to an article there on emotional eating.
Speaker BHow to stop it.
Speaker BHere's what the scripture says in First Corinthians 10:31.
Speaker ATherefore, whether you eat or drink or whatever you do, do it all to
Speaker Bthe glory of God.
Speaker BThere is a theology of food.
Speaker AOkay?
Speaker BFood is stewardship.
Speaker BWhen we eat to the glory of God, are we eating primarily for strength and longevity and mission or something else?
Speaker BAll right, excellent.
Speaker BWell, that is just a.
Speaker BYou know, several main features in this most recent newsletter, Excuse me, and formation,
Speaker Agrowth and development happen when a renewed
Speaker Bmind turns into obedience.
Speaker BThat's what we're really after.
Speaker BSo we are after ideas and content in the newsletter, not just for content sake or to just, you know, consume content and use that as a feel good substitute for actual change.
Speaker BIt is being challenged, being stirred up, sharpening our thinking.
Speaker BAnd if this episode has done that, done this for you, please consider sharing it with someone you think would value it.
Speaker BThat personal connection is powerful.
Speaker BAnd with podcasts now surpassing traditional talk radio in spoken word listening, you're part of a movement that's really transformational.
Speaker BIt's reshaping how people receive content and truth.
Speaker BAnd we just want to use this influence.
Speaker BAnd seriously, if you're not subscribed to the Smart Edit newsletter yet, I would love for you to get on the list.
Speaker BYour email is confidential.
Speaker BIt'll never be shared, it'll never be sold.
Speaker BNothing of that nature.
Speaker BEvery week I'm curating Kingdom Insights.
Speaker BI was just praying the other day, Lord just give me the ideas, give me the content.
Speaker BBring to me what you want to be shared.
Speaker BWe're curating these things.
Speaker BSignals and shifts in our culture, globally, even practical wisdom, stimulation toward growth.
Speaker BIt's free, it's weekly.
Speaker BIt really takes you about five minutes to work through it and I think it will sharpen sharpen us.
Speaker BYou can subscribe@jesuss smart.com smart edit now.
Speaker BThe full show notes and the transcript for this episode will be@jesussmart.com 365 as always, we remind ourselves that Jesus is brilliant.
Speaker BThe future belongs to Him.
Speaker BSo does the present.
Speaker BHe knows how this life works best right now.
Speaker BIt's a witness to him, to his superior reality and to his kingdom which is coming in its in its fullness.
Speaker BAnd as we continue to walk with him, we will catch his brilliance in unique ways right where we are at right now.
Speaker BI'm grateful to walk it out with you and I'll catch you next time.