Knowing The Way
About

Send us Fan Mail

A sign in Minneapolis says, “The bus does not stop here,” and it exposes something many of us do without noticing: we define ourselves by the places we refuse to go. From the way churches talk about belief to the way we talk about each other, “no” can start to sound like the whole message. We take that moment and turn it into a clearer, more hopeful question: where does the bus stop, and what actually nourishes Christian faith? 

We then move into John 14 during the resurrection season, when Jesus prepares the disciples for his absence. Thomas asks what all of us ask at some point, especially in grief or change: how do we know where you’re going, and how do we get there? Jesus answers, “You know the way,” and then says the line that has launched a thousand arguments: “I am the way, the truth, and the life.” Rather than getting stuck in an exclusivity debate that goes nowhere, we look for what “the way” looks like on the ground, in ordinary decisions and relationships. 

That’s where the stories carry the weight. We talk about the Sierra Service Project, mission trips, learning to build and repair homes, and what happens inside you when you stop watching from a distance and start serving with your hands. We share a powerful act of generosity, a truck given to a teenager who couldn’t afford a car, and the quiet ministry of a church community supporting someone through medical recovery. These moments turn big Christian theology into practical discipleship, lived compassion, and a faith you can recognize by its fruit. 

If you’re hungry for a more grounded, less combative way to talk about Jesus, press play. Subscribe, share this with a friend who needs encouragement, and leave a review with your take: where have you seen “the way” made real?

Support the show