Episodios

  • Psalm Day 19 | What to do When You Think God Has Given Up on You | Joe Consford
    Feb 11 2026
    What do you do when God was faithful before… but heaven feels silent now? Psalm 85-89 walks straight through that tension—and it doesn’t rush the answer. Stay with me. 🎶 (Pre-Recorded Intro) 🎧 Episode Intro Welcome back to The Morning Meditation Podcast. I’m Joe Consford. Today is Psalm Day 19 in our 30-day schedule, and we’ll be reading Psalms 85 through 89. These psalms don’t all sit in the same emotional place. Some remember revival. Some plead for mercy. Some wrestle with promises that feel delayed. Tomorrow, we’ll read Revelation 19, where every promise finally stands fulfilled. But today reminds us what it feels like to live between the promise and the victory. Let’s read. 📖 Scripture Reading (KJV) Psalm 85 (KJV text in paragraph form) Psalm 86 (KJV text in paragraph form) Psalm 87 (KJV text in paragraph form) Psalm 88 (KJV text in paragraph form) Psalm 89 (KJV text in paragraph form) (As usual, this section stays clean—no commentary, no headings spoken—just Scripture.) 🕯️ Story / Meditation Psalm Day 19 feels like a conversation God allows His people to have out loud. Psalm 85 remembers mercy already given. Psalm 86 pleads for help right now. Psalm 87 lifts our eyes to what God is building. Psalm 88 is brutally honest—dark, unresolved, and painful. Psalm 89 circles back to the covenant and asks the hard question: If God promised, why does it hurt like this? That matters. Because faith isn’t pretending the night doesn’t exist. Faith is trusting God inside the night. Psalm 88 ends without a neat bow. Psalm 89 ends clinging to God’s word even when circumstances argue back. And that’s why tomorrow matters. Revelation 19 doesn’t cancel the pain of Psalm 88— it answers it. 🧭 Three-Point Reflection 1. Remember what God has already done Psalm 85 doesn’t start with fear—it starts with memory. God’s past faithfulness is fuel for present faith. 2. Speak honestly when the darkness lingers Psalm 88 teaches us that silence isn’t required for reverence. God can handle truthful prayers. 3. Hold the promise even when fulfillment feels delayed Psalm 89 anchors everything to God’s covenant. Circumstances change—but God’s word does not. 🔚 Episode Outro (Tomorrow Tease) Today was Psalm Day 19—Psalms 85 through 89. Songs of memory, struggle, honesty, and hope. Tomorrow, we read Revelation 19, where the waiting ends, the King appears, and every promise stands fully fulfilled. If today showed us what faith feels like in the tension, tomorrow shows us why the tension was worth it. I’ll see you tomorrow.
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    18 m
  • What Happens When the Gospel Changes a City | Acts Chapter 19 | Joe Consford
    Feb 11 2026
    What happens when the gospel doesn’t just change hearts—but starts emptying temples, shutting down businesses, and turning a whole city upside down? Acts 19 shows us the kind of faith that can’t stay quiet… and can’t stay harmless. (Pre-Recorded Intro) (Play standard show intro) Episode Intro (spoken live) Welcome back to The Morning Meditation Podcast. Today we’re reading Acts chapter 19, and tomorrow we’ll slow things down with Psalm Day 19 from our 30-day schedule. Acts 19 is one of those chapters that reminds us the Christian faith was never meant to be a private hobby. When the gospel shows up in Ephesus, it doesn’t tiptoe—it collides with culture, religion, money, and pride. And by the end of the chapter, the whole city is in an uproar. Let’s read it together. Scripture Reading — Acts 19 (KJV) (Read the full chapter, clearly and unhurriedly. Let the weight of the narrative do the work.) Story / Meditation Acts 19 shows us something we don’t talk about enough: Real spiritual power disrupts comfortable systems. Paul arrives in Ephesus and immediately finds religious people who are sincere—but incomplete. They believe, but they don’t fully understand. So Paul teaches them patiently, and the Spirit moves mightily. Then something unexpected happens. People begin burning their books—publicly. Not because Paul told them to. Not because of a rule. But because conviction finally outweighed comfort. And that’s when the trouble starts. The gospel doesn’t just confront false gods—it threatens livelihoods. Silversmiths start losing money. Idols stop selling. And suddenly the city isn’t asking, “Is this true?” They’re asking, “How is this affecting us?” That question still reveals the heart today. By the end of the chapter, Ephesus is in chaos—not because Christianity failed, but because it worked. Truth has a way of exposing what we truly worship. Three-Point Reflection 1. Sincere belief still needs truth The men Paul meets weren’t hostile—they were incomplete. Good intentions are not a substitute for biblical understanding. Growth begins when humility replaces assumption. 2. The gospel changes behavior, not just beliefs The books were burned because people didn’t want their old lives anymore. When Christ takes first place, some things don’t just fade away—they get surrendered. 3. When Christ is exalted, idols always protest Ephesus didn’t riot because Paul attacked them. They rioted because the gospel threatened what they valued most. Resistance often means truth is landing where it matters. Outro + Tomorrow Tease Acts 19 reminds us that real Christianity isn’t noisy—but it’s never neutral. When Jesus is preached clearly, something always shifts. Tomorrow, we will read Day 19 in our 30 day Psalms reading schedule. This is Joe Consford and the Morning Meditation, Ill see you tomorrow! (Pre-Recorded Outro) (Play standard show outro)
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    12 m
  • Good Intentions | Proverbs 19 | Joe Consford
    Feb 10 2026
    Some people ruin their lives loudly. Others do it quietly—one small decision at a time. Proverbs 19 shows us how good intentions, bad choices, and impatience slowly pull a life off course. Stay with me, because by the end, we’ll see the one kind of wisdom that never fails. 🎶 (Pre-Recorded Intro) (Use your standard locked intro here) 🎙 Episode Intro Welcome back to The Morning Meditation Podcast. Today, we’re reading Proverbs 19, a chapter that doesn’t shout—but it cuts deep. This proverb deals with everyday life: money, anger, parenting, patience, and the danger of moving too fast without wisdom. Tomorrow, we’ll step into Acts 19, where truth collides head-on with culture, religion, and power. But first—let’s listen carefully to the wisdom God gives us today. 📖 Scripture Reading (KJV) Proverbs 19 Better is the poor that walketh in his integrity, than he that is perverse in his lips, and is a fool. Also, that the soul be without knowledge, it is not good; and he that hasteth with his feet sinneth. The foolishness of man perverteth his way: and his heart fretteth against the LORD. … Hear counsel, and receive instruction, that thou mayest be wise in thy latter end. There are many devices in a man’s heart; nevertheless the counsel of the LORD, that shall stand. (Continue full chapter as read in your recording) 🌄 Story / Meditation Proverbs 19 is painfully honest about human nature. It tells us that people often rush ahead without knowledge—and then blame God when things fall apart. They make decisions quickly, ignore counsel, follow feelings, and when the consequences come, their heart “fretteth against the LORD.” That phrase matters. We don’t usually get angry at God in the beginning. We get angry after our plans fail. This chapter keeps repeating a quiet warning: Speed without wisdom leads to regret. God values integrity more than success. Patience more than brilliance. Listening more than reacting. And right in the middle of this chapter is a promise we forget too easily: “The counsel of the LORD, that shall stand.” Not your plans. Not your hustle. Not your shortcuts. God’s counsel stands—long after emotions fade and consequences arrive. 🧭 3-Point Reflection 1. Good intentions are not the same as good direction Zeal without knowledge is dangerous. Wanting something badly does not make it wise. 2. Rushing often creates the very pain we blame on God When we hurry past counsel, we usually end up angry—at circumstances, people, or the Lord Himself. 3. God’s counsel is steady when everything else shifts People change. Money disappears. Feelings lie. But the counsel of the LORD still stands. 🔚 Episode Outro (Tomorrow Tease) Today, Proverbs 19 warned us about impatience and ignored wisdom. Tomorrow, in Acts 19, we’ll watch what happens when truth confronts a whole culture—and everything starts to shake. That’s tomorrow on The Morning Meditation Podcast. I’ll see you there. 🎶 (Pre-Recorded Outro) (Use your standard locked outro here)
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    9 m
  • What Happens in A Single Hour | Revelation Chapter 18 | Joe Consford
    Feb 9 2026
    Everything the world tells you is unshakable will eventually fall. Revelation 18 shows us what collapses in a single hour—and if you stay to the end, we’ll talk about the one thing that never falls. (Pre-Recorded Intro) Morning Meditation Podcast intro plays Episode-Specific Intro Good morning, and welcome back to the Morning Meditation Podcast. Today we’re in Revelation chapter 18, one of the most sobering chapters in all of Scripture. This chapter isn’t about speculation or headlines—it’s about certainty. God shows us the final collapse of a system the world trusted, admired, invested in, and depended on. And what’s striking is how fast it falls. Scripture Reading – Revelation 18 (KJV) (Read the full chapter aloud in your normal Scripture-reading cadence) Story / Meditation Revelation 18 is the sound of a world coming apart. Merchants weep. Kings mourn. Sailors stand at a distance. Why? Because everything they built their lives on disappears in one hour. This wasn’t a godless system in their eyes. It was admired. It was powerful. It was profitable. It felt permanent. But God calls it something else. He calls it Babylon—a system built on pride, wealth, pleasure, and self-sufficiency. A world that says, “I sit a queen… and shall see no sorrow.” And then, suddenly, sorrow comes. What Revelation 18 exposes is this truth: Anything that replaces God eventually collapses under its own weight. The tragedy isn’t just that Babylon falls. The tragedy is how many people mourn the loss of comfort instead of rejoicing in the justice of God. And right in the middle of the chapter, God speaks to His people: “Come out of her, my people…” That’s not just future language. That’s a present warning. Don’t anchor your hope to what God has already scheduled for destruction. Three-Point Reflection 1. What looks permanent to man is temporary to God Babylon didn’t fall slowly. It fell suddenly. What we trust today can be gone tomorrow. 2. God judges systems that replace Him Babylon wasn’t neutral. It shaped values, desires, and worship. When anything takes God’s place, judgment follows. 3. God always calls His people out before He brings judgment “Come out of her, my people.” God never abandons His own—but He does call them to separate before the fall. Episode Outro / Tomorrow Tease Revelation 18 reminds us that the world’s greatest illusions don’t crumble quietly—they collapse loudly. Tomorrow, we shift gears into Proverbs 19, where God shows us wisdom that doesn’t fall, riches that don’t fade, and instruction that still stands when everything else is gone. I’ll see you there. (Pre-Recorded Outro) Morning Meditation Podcast outro plays
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    11 m
  • Revelation 18 Explained | What Will Fall and What Will Never Fall | Joe Consford
    Feb 3 2026
    🔊 10-Second Storyteller Teaser (Hook-Driven) Everything the world tells you is unshakable will eventually fall. Revelation 18 shows us what will fall — and if you stay to the end, we’ll see what will never fall.

    Today we’re reading Revelation 18 in the King James Version.

    Tomorrow, we’ll move into Proverbs 19. Revelation 18 pulls back the curtain on something every generation struggles with — mistaking appearance for permanence.

    What looks strong, profitable, admired, and secure is not always what lasts. 📜 Scripture Reading (KJV) Revelation 18:2 Babylon the great is fallen, is fallen, and is become the habitation of devils… Revelation 18:10 Alas, alas that great city Babylon, that mighty city! for in one hour is thy judgment come. (Read Revelation 18 in full, King James Version) ☕ Story / Meditation Babylon did not look fragile. It looked unstoppable. It shaped the economy. It influenced kings. It promised comfort, wealth, and security. That’s why its fall is so shocking. In Revelation 18, the grief isn’t over sin — it’s over loss. Merchants weep because the system they trusted collapsed. Kings stand afar off because the power they depended on vanished in a moment. Everything the world said would stand… fell. But notice something important — God was not shaken by Babylon’s fall. He was not scrambling. He was not reacting. He was revealing. Revelation 18 does not exist to frighten believers. It exists to free them — to loosen our grip on what will not last so we can hold tightly to what will. 🪞 Three-Point Reflection 1️⃣ What looks unshakable is often the most temporary Babylon fell quickly because it was never rooted in truth. 2️⃣ Collapse exposes what we trusted to hold us The mourning reveals misplaced confidence, not broken hearts. 3️⃣ What will never fall is not built by human hands God’s kingdom does not collapse — it outlasts. 🎙️ Outro — What Will Never Fall So what does never fall? God’s Word. God’s kingdom. God’s wisdom. Tomorrow, as we open Proverbs 19, we’ll see how to live wisely inside a world that doesn’t last — choosing paths, values, and priorities that remain standing when everything else gives way. Until then, remember this truth: What the world builds will fall. What God establishes will never be shaken.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    9 m
  • Psalm Day 18 Explained | Finding Stability When Life Feels Fragile | Joe Consford
    Feb 2 2026
    If your life feels fragile right now, today’s scripture reading and meditation will remind us who has been holding every generation together. Grab your Bible and follow along….

    Good morning, and welcome back to The Morning Meditation Podcast. Today is we’re reading Psalms 86 through 90 in the King James Version.

    These psalms were written by people who understood instability — enemies, uncertainty, wandering, and waiting. And yet, they speak with calm confidence. Why? Because their trust wasn’t in what was stable around them, but in Who was steady above them. 📜 Scripture Reading (KJV) Psalm 90:1 Lord, thou hast been our dwelling place in all generations. Psalm 90:2 Before the mountains were brought forth, or ever thou hadst formed the earth and the world, even from everlasting to everlasting, thou art God.

    (Read Psalms 86–90 in full, King James Version) ☕

    Story / Meditation Fragility is not a modern invention. The writers of these psalms lived through exile, conflict, sickness, loss, and unanswered questions. They knew what it was like to feel small in a shifting world. And yet, instead of beginning with fear, Psalm 90 begins with memory. “Lord, thou hast been our dwelling place in all generations.” A dwelling place isn’t something you build in a moment of panic. It’s where you live. It’s where you return. It’s where you are safe when the road has been long. Moses — a man who spent decades in the wilderness — didn’t say God gave them an easy journey. He said God gave them a place. Not walls of stone, but a presence that outlasted every season. When life feels fragile, Scripture reminds us that we are not the first generation to feel this way — and God has never failed one yet. 🪞 Three-Point Reflection 1️⃣ Fragility is human — faith is historical Every generation has felt weak. God has never been weak. 2️⃣ Stability is found in God’s presence, not control The psalmist didn’t trust plans, power, or protection — he trusted the Lord Himself. 3️⃣ Rest grows when perspective widens When we remember God’s faithfulness across generations, today’s troubles shrink to their proper size. 🎙️ Outro — Looking Ahead Thank you for slowing down with God’s Word today. Tomorrow, we’ll read Revelation 18, where everything built on human strength collapses — and God alone remains standing. Until then, rest in this truth: If God has held every generation together, He can hold you today.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    13 m
  • Acts 18 Bible Study | God’s Encouragement in Times of Opposition | Joe Consford
    Jan 30 2026
    Sometimes the work doesn’t move forward with a sermon… Sometimes it moves forward because someone simply stays faithful when it gets hard. 🎙️ Intro Welcome back to The Morning Meditation Podcast. Today we’re reading Acts chapter 18 — a chapter that reminds us God often works quietly, steadily, and through ordinary faithfulness. Tomorrow, we’ll slow things down and read Psalm Day 18 from our 30-day Psalms schedule. Let’s begin with the Word of God. 📖 Scripture Reading — Acts 18 (KJV) (Read Acts 18 in full, King James Version, without interruption) “Be not afraid, but speak, and hold not thy peace: For I am with thee, and no man shall set on thee to hurt thee: For I have much people in this city.” — Acts 18:9–10 (KJV) ☕ Story / Meditation Acts 18 shows us a side of ministry we don’t always talk about. Paul is discouraged. Opposition is strong. The work feels slow. And what does God do? He doesn’t send fireworks. He doesn’t change the city overnight. Instead, God sends:
    • A job — tentmaking
    • Friends — Aquila and Priscilla
    • A promise — “I am with thee”
    • And time — Paul stays a year and six months
    This chapter reminds us that faithfulness often looks boring… until you realize God is building something lasting. Sometimes the most spiritual thing you can do is stay. 📝 3-Point Reflection 1️⃣ God sustains His servants in ordinary ways Paul worked with his hands. God used honest labor to support gospel work. Faithfulness doesn’t always look dramatic — sometimes it looks consistent. 2️⃣ God strengthens us through people Aquila, Priscilla, Silas, Timothy — ministry was never meant to be solo. God often answers prayer by sending the right people at the right time. 3️⃣ God reassures us when fear creeps in “Be not afraid.” Even Paul needed that reminder. Fear doesn’t mean failure — it means you’re human. 🔔 Outro Acts 18 teaches us that staying faithful matters — even when progress feels slow. Tomorrow, we’ll turn to Psalm Day 18, a powerful psalm of deliverance, strength, and praise — straight from our 30-day Psalms schedule. Thanks for spending this time in God’s Word today. I’ll see you tomorrow morning.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    9 m
  • Proverbs 18 Explained | The Power of Words, Listening, and a Quiet Soul | Joe Consford
    Jan 29 2026
    “Today, we’re reading Proverbs 18. This chapter speaks often about words—spoken words, listened-to words, and the voices we allow to shape us. As we listen, let’s not rush past familiar phrases, but allow God’s wisdom to speak freshly to our hearts.” 4️⃣ Scripture Reading (KJV) Proverbs 18 Through desire a man, having separated himself, seeketh and intermeddleth with all wisdom. A fool hath no delight in understanding, but that his heart may discover itself. When the wicked cometh, then cometh also contempt, and with ignominy reproach. The words of a man’s mouth are as deep waters, and the wellspring of wisdom as a flowing brook. It is not good to accept the person of the wicked, to overthrow the righteous in judgment. A fool’s lips enter into contention, and his mouth calleth for strokes. A fool’s mouth is his destruction, and his lips are the snare of his soul. The words of a talebearer are as wounds, and they go down into the innermost parts of the belly. He also that is slothful in his work is brother to him that is a great waster. The name of the LORD is a strong tower: the righteous runneth into it, and is safe. The rich man’s wealth is his strong city, and as an high wall in his own conceit. Before destruction the heart of man is haughty, and before honour is humility. He that answereth a matter before he heareth it, it is folly and shame unto him. The spirit of a man will sustain his infirmity; but a wounded spirit who can bear? The heart of the prudent getteth knowledge; and the ear of the wise seeketh knowledge. A man’s gift maketh room for him, and bringeth him before great men. He that is first in his own cause seemeth just; but his neighbour cometh and searcheth him. The lot causeth contentions to cease, and parteth between the mighty. A brother offended is harder to be won than a strong city: and their contentions are like the bars of a castle. A man’s belly shall be satisfied with the fruit of his mouth; and with the increase of his lips shall he be filled. Death and life are in the power of the tongue: and they that love it shall eat the fruit thereof. Whoso findeth a wife findeth a good thing, and obtaineth favour of the LORD. The poor useth intreaties; but the rich answereth roughly. A man that hath friends must shew himself friendly: and there is a friend that sticketh closer than a brother. 5️⃣ Story / Meditation Most of us think this chapter is about talking. But if you listen closely, Proverbs 18 is just as much about listening. It warns about people who speak before they hear… about voices that wound instead of heal… about words that go deep—far deeper than we expect. Verse 14 asks a haunting question: “A wounded spirit who can bear?” Physical weakness can be endured. Busy days can be survived. But a wounded spirit quietly drains strength from the inside out. And that wound often comes from voices— voices we trust, voices we replay, voices we never challenged. Then, right in the middle of it all, Scripture gives us a contrast: “The name of the LORD is a strong tower: the righteous runneth into it, and is safe.” Some voices tear down. Some words confuse. But God’s voice becomes a place of refuge. The wisdom here isn’t just watch what you say. It’s be careful who and what you listen to—because words shape the soul. 6️⃣ Three-Point Reflection 1. Familiar words still carry power Truth doesn’t lose strength because we’ve heard it before. 2. Listening is a spiritual discipline Wisdom begins when we slow down long enough to hear rightly. 3. God’s voice is a refuge When other voices wound, the Lord’s name remains a safe place. 7️⃣ Outro + Tease Tomorrow “Today, Proverbs 18 reminded us that words can wound—or protect. Tomorrow, as we move into Acts 18, we’ll see how God’s Word strengthened servants who faced opposition, discouragement, and uncertainty.”

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    7 m