Tag

Prodigal Son

2 episodes tagged "Prodigal Son".

Stop putting pillows at the bottom of their pit
0:44
Addiction & Recovery

Stop putting pillows at the bottom of their pit

Are you helping them, or are you just getting in God's way? Let's talk about the hard truth of the Prodigal Son. 🛑📖 Look at Luke 15. When the prodigal son squandered his life, his father didn't chase him down. He didn't send him a Venmo payment or negotiate with the pigs. He let him hit rock bottom. The text says he only "came to his senses" because he was starving. If the father had sent a care package, the son never would have come home. Sometimes, your "help" is the exact thing preventing their repentance. God is trying to use rock bottom to wake them up, but you keep putting pillows at the bottom of the pit. It's time to step back and let God do His work. 💬 Let me know in the comments: Have you ever had to let someone you love hit rock bottom? How hard was it? 👇 If you needed to hear this today, hit that LIKE button and SUBSCRIBE for more raw truth on faith, boundaries, and breaking toxic cycles.

A Father Running in Shame for His Son
1:29
Trauma & Childhood Wounds

A Father Running in Shame for His Son

I want to talk about the part of the prodigal son story we usually skip—the father. The pain of watching your child walk away. Knowing they’re about to wreck their life. The father didn’t chase him. But the instant the son turned back, he ran. In that culture, old men didn’t run. It was shameful. And he took that shame on himself to cover his son’s shame. Some of you are holding grudges against your parents—or even your own kids. Here’s the hard truth: generational trauma ends with forgiveness. If you don’t forgive your father, you’ll become him. Resentment binds you to the person you hate; forgiveness is how you detach. And for your kids, you break the cycle by modeling repentance—owning it, apologizing, and making it right. That’s real strength. That’s how the curse ends. If this hit home, like, comment, and subscribe for honest conversations about faith, fatherhood, and healing. —Michael, Sober Psychology