{"version":1,"type":"rich","provider_name":"Libsyn","provider_url":"https:\/\/www.libsyn.com","height":90,"width":600,"title":"220: A Podcast You and I Want to Listen To","description":" Have you noticed how everyone seems to have a podcast these days? Most of them just don\u2019t appeal to me. So, in 2018, I created one that does\u2014 a podcast I want to listen to and one you\u2019ll want to listen to as well. I\u2019m going to give you an example of what I mean shortly. Welcome to Season Nine and episode 220 But first, I\u2019m John Certalic and you are listening to episode 220 of You Were Made for This, a podcast about \u2026 well, \u2026 stick with me and you\u2019ll soon find out soon. It\u2019s been quite a number of months since I recorded any new episodes on a regular basis. It\u2019s not been for want of anything new to say\u2014no, it\u2019s just the opposite. There are so many things I would like to talk to you about. Things like how bandages are so poorly designed these days, the alumni directory I just signed up for\u2026for my grade school. And how come we don\u2019t see hitchhikers anymore? Topics like these interest me, but I don\u2019t think they\u2019d be a podcast you would want to listen to. So I decided that before I recorded any new episodes, I needed to retool and decide on a clear, distinct focus for moving forward. I needed to spend more time thinking about what the podcast should be about that would make me want to listen to it. Several possibilities excited me at first. But after a few days or weeks, they all lost their luster, and my interest in them waned. Nothing seemed to click. In the meantime, I spent several months writing weekly blog posts for our website, which you can still read. &amp;nbsp;Returning to the beginning Finally, after a lot of indecision,I found myself drawn back to the title of the podcast we came up with back in 2018: \u201cYou Were Made for This.\u201d&amp;nbsp; I began reflecting more about the title\u2019s meaning. Maybe the central unifying theme moving forward was right under my nose in the title. I know that the focus of the first 219 episodes was finding joy in the relationships God intends for us. That\u2019s been the focus since 2018\u2014 it\u2019s the This we are made for.&amp;nbsp; I still think this is a pretty important This. But now I\u2019m feeling the need for a different, yet related and expanded this in a podcast you and I would want to listen to. Especially as I think more about all that this implies. The word this implies a singularity of purpose. It connotes a decree of certainty and confidence.&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; When you hear someone talk about this you know what you\u2019re getting. It\u2019s also personal, this is. It\u2019s honest and authentic. You can\u2019t say the same about that.&amp;nbsp; That is an external word. It\u2019s impersonal, less connected to any of us.&amp;nbsp; There\u2019s an aloofness about that. I don\u2019t think I could listen very long to You Were Made for That. It\u2019s not a podcast I would want to listen to. It just sounds too cold. Kind of bossy, too. Like my third-grade teacher sternly waving her ruler at me. An important question There\u2019s something warm and inviting about this, which is important to me in a podcast I want to listen to. I\u2019m guessing it\u2019s important to you, too. But it does raise the question of what is the this we were made for. The answer found in the first 219 episodes is that in some form or other, each show talked about finding joy in our relationship with people, with ourselves with the&amp;nbsp; world we live in, and most importantly, our relationship with God. &amp;nbsp; It\u2019s this last relationship I\u2019ve been drawn toward more closely in recent months. Our relationship with God is the basis for all other meaningful relationships. But considering the many aspects of our relationship with God can seem like water bursting out from a spiritual fire hydrant. The older I get, though, the more I see our relationship with God like a splash pad in our neighborhood park, where, like young children, we run in and out of, sprayed by the overhead sprinklers, cooling us off on a hot summer day. We learn a little about a piece of our relationship with God, then step outside the spiritual splash pad to think and reflect. And then run back in later when we\u2019re ready for more. A fundamental truth A podcast I want to listen to would discuss a fundamental truth about our relationship with God that I don\u2019t hear talked about much. Namely, that all of us are created in God's image and likeness. Because of this, we are made to reflect his image and likeness in the way we live and interact with each other. We were made for this. I see God as like a diamond, with many different facets that reflect brilliance when the light shines on them all together. Each of us is like one of these facets made to reflect particular characteristics of God. Not all of them, of course, but at least one, probably more.&amp;nbsp; I\u2019d like to listen to a podcast about what this looks like, and I\u2019m guessing you might, too. &amp;nbsp; But I don\u2019t want to listen to a \u201chow-to\u201d format. I\u2019ve grown weary of reading and hearing about \u201c5 steps to do this,\u201d or \u201c3 ways to accomplish that\u201d. I need a break from lists and directives. Instead, I want to listen to a podcast that shows, rather than tells. A podcast with stories and examples. I\u2019m guessing you may be up for that, too. Okay. Now for that story I mentioned earlier. It\u2019s an example of the joy found in reflecting well the character of God. We\u2019ll be talking about stories like this in upcoming episodes because that\u2019s the kind of podcast I want to listen to, and I bet you do, too. The&amp;nbsp; one I have for you today is from a brief article by Stacey Graham in The Wall Street Journal entitled \u201cMy Brother\u2019s Hero and a Stranger\u2019s Kindness.\u201d My Brother\u2019s Hero and a Stranger\u2019s Kindness  \u201cMy father, a high school football, basketball, and baseball coach, loved baseball player Willie Mays. He even named one of our cats after his favorite athlete. \u201cEvery August throughout the 1960s he would pile my sister and I into the car at 4:30am and drive us from our small town of 1500 in rural Oregon to Candlestick Park in San Fransisco where we would watch the Giants - and the great Willie Mays in his prime - play a Friday night game. The trip of 952 miles took us more than nine hours. We were always so excited. \u201cWe had a routine. After the game, we always stayed in the same nearby hotel and ate all our meals at the same diner. We would always head back to the park for the Saturday doubleheader. It was thrilling to see Willie hit home runs in person rather than on our black-and-white TV. \u201cOur younger brother - Fritz - who liked his father loved Willie - didn\u2019t join us until he turned 5 and was deemed old enough. If he had been any more excited the first time we brought him along, he might have exploded. \u201cThat Saturday morning in 1969, we stopped as usual at the diner for breakfast. Fritz noticed, in a booth near the front door, two gray-haired black men having coffee. My brother, having grown up in a place with no racial diversity, had neverencountered anyone black in person. \u201cSuddenly, Fritz ran screaming toward the unsuspecting customers yelling at the top of his lungs, \u2018Dad, it\u2019s Willie Mays!\u2019 \u201cBless his heart, one of the gentlemen accepted the honor of playing the role of the future hHall of Famer. At Fritz\u2019s request, he signed a napkin, \u2018Willie Mays.\u2019I saw both men smiling and laughing. I think they had as much fun as my brother. \u201cMy family will always be grateful for this unforgettably generous gesture. The man could have mater-of-factly told Fritz it was a case of mistaken identity. Instead, he went along with the harmless charade and pretended to be Fritz\u2019s hero. \u201cThis memory came back to me in full force when Willie Mays died last June at 93 [in 2024]. I remembered the man in the booth at the diner. I cried and said a prayer for both.\u201d  Why I love this story I just love this story. I love it because of the power of a memory that\u2019s over 50 years old that still evokes emotion. It\u2019s what I want to see in a podcast I listen to - a story that makes me think and feel something. I love the story because of the people described in it. I found each of them to be inspiring in their own unique way. Is it just me, or can you see or hear from this article how each of the characters reflects one aspect of God's character? I\u2019m eager to share with you what I see in each of them, but it will have to wait until episode 221 next time. Stories like this unfold around us all the time. They are everywhere - people reflecting the image and likeness of God in ways that inspire us to do the same. Closing As we close up shop for today, I\u2019d love to hear your thoughts concerning the type of podcast you would want to listen to. I hope today\u2019s show stimulated you to think more about what you are made for. Doing so will help you experience the joy of being the person you were created to be, a person who reflects the character of God. Well, that\u2019s it for today. If you\u2019re not on our email list and would like to know in advance when new episodes drop, go to JohnCertalic.com\/follow and enter your email address and name. Lastly, if you think of it, try spreading a little relational sunshine around the people you meet this week. Spark some joy for them. It\u2019s part of God\u2019s character to do so. And I\u2019ll see you again next time. Goodbye for now. Other episodes or resources related to today\u2019s shows 163: What You and I Need Most ","author_name":"You Were Made for This","author_url":"https:\/\/www.johncertalic.com","html":"<iframe title=\"Libsyn Player\" style=\"border: none\" src=\"\/\/html5-player.libsyn.com\/embed\/episode\/id\/36774020\/height\/90\/theme\/custom\/thumbnail\/yes\/direction\/forward\/render-playlist\/no\/custom-color\/88AA3C\/\" height=\"90\" width=\"600\" scrolling=\"no\"  allowfullscreen webkitallowfullscreen mozallowfullscreen oallowfullscreen msallowfullscreen><\/iframe>","thumbnail_url":"https:\/\/assets.libsyn.com\/secure\/item\/36774020"}