Podcast Episode: Faith, Gratitude, And Love

Pip: Get Encouraged is doing what it says on the tin this week — Chris Miller has been writing about storms, gratitude, kindness, and freedom, and somehow none of it feels like a motivational poster.

Mara: That's the territory we're covering today: finding assurance when life gets hard, noticing the beauty that's already around us, choosing love in a chaotic world, and reflecting on what freedom really means.

Pip: Let's start with what to do when the water is rising.

Holding Steady Through the Storm

Mara: The question here is whether God's presence actually changes anything when life gets difficult — not in theory, but in the middle of the hardship itself.

Pip: Isaiah 43:2 is the anchor, and the setup matters: God isn't promising an easy road. The verse reads, "When you pass through the waters, I will be with you; and through the rivers, they shall not overflow you. When you walk through the fire, you shall not be burned, neither shall the flame kindle upon you."

Mara: Notice the word "when," not "if." The post makes this explicit — God doesn't promise the absence of hard seasons, only His presence through them. That reframe is the whole point.

Pip: Noah, the Israelites at the Red Sea, Shadrach and his friends in the furnace — the pattern holds across the whole story. The waters are temporary; the presence isn't.

Mara: And the piece on building bigger barns extends this in an unexpected direction — it's a warning that stockpiling security can become its own kind of storm, one we create ourselves by losing sight of what actually lasts.

Pip: From floods to gratitude — the view from creation is next.

Creation, Beauty, and Giving Thanks

Mara: The thread running through these posts is attention — specifically, what happens when we slow down enough to notice what's already there.

Pip: Psalm 19:1 does the heavy lifting: "The heavens declare the glory of God; the skies proclaim the work of his hands." Creation isn't decoration; it's testimony.

Mara: The post on recognizing daily blessings puts a human face on the cost of not paying attention — a father who grumbles before every prayer, until his daughter asks which one God actually believes.

Pip: That question lands harder than most sermons.

Mara: It does. Both posts point the same direction: slow down, look around, and thank God for ten specific blessings today. The practice matters as much as the principle.

Pip: Speaking of practice — kindness is next, and it turns out there are seven ways to do it.

Kindness as a Daily Decision

Pip: The tension in this segment is real: the world is loud and chaotic, and choosing kindness can feel like bringing a candle to a wildfire. These posts argue it's exactly the right tool.

Mara: The post on embracing kindness in a chaotic world grounds everything in a specific model. Jesus touched a man with leprosy when others avoided him, fed a hungry crowd rather than sending them home, and the post names why: "Jesus was compelled by love and moved by compassion."

Pip: That phrase — compelled by love, moved by compassion — is doing a lot of work. It's not describing an occasional mood; it's describing an orientation.

Mara: Philippians 2:5 is the challenge the post issues directly: adopt the same attitude as Christ Jesus. Not admire it. Adopt it.

Pip: Which is where the practical piece comes in. The post on seven ways to be messengers of love takes that challenge and breaks it into actual decisions — choosing patience over anger, speaking words that heal, refusing to spread gossip.

Mara: First Corinthians 13 is the spine there: "Love does not delight in evil, but rejoices with the truth. It always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres. Love never fails."

Pip: That list of seven isn't abstract. Pray for people you struggle with. Persevere with difficult relationships. Perform one act of kindness before the day ends without expecting anything back.

Mara: The post frames love explicitly as a decision, not a feeling — especially when frustration or bitterness would be the easier response. That's the whole argument in one line.

Pip: Freedom deserves the same kind of attention — and that's exactly where we land next.

Freedom, Justice, and What God Sees

Mara: Juneteenth is the anchor here — not as history lesson alone, but as a lens for understanding what freedom means and why it matters to God.

Pip: The post goes straight to the historical weight: on June 19, 1865, enslaved people in Galveston, Texas finally heard the news that had been true for more than two years. The delay is the point.

Mara: And the scriptural parallel is direct. Exodus 3:7 — "I have surely seen the affliction of my people… and have heard their cry." God was not absent from their suffering. He was working toward deliverance.

Pip: The post connects that to John 8:36 and the freedom Christ brings — not as a pivot away from the historical reality, but as an extension of the same truth: every person carries dignity, and justice reflects the heart of God.

Mara: The call is practical: pray for healing, choose understanding over anger, treat every person as someone made in the image of God. Freedom is worth celebrating, and love is always worth living out.


Pip: Presence in the storm, beauty in the ordinary, kindness as a daily choice, freedom as something worth protecting — that's a week's worth of reminders that hold together.

Mara: All of it points the same direction: pay attention, and then act on what you see.

Pip: More of that next time.

Leave a comment