
A Man's Need for God
Our goal for A Man's Need for God podcast is to provide our audience the opportunity to hear authentic, and even raw, testimonies of faith, and from there, take a dive into people’s personal relationships with God, and how and why they Need Him. As a priest recently said to Dave, “we need to provide authentic, real testimonials, because a man could be in the depths of a trial right now, and he needs hope - and an authentic connection.” This is not so much theological, although we will speak in the Catholic or Christian context, but more, experiential, personal, honest, vulnerable and real. I want to hear how Christian men depend on God, not half-heartedly, but wholly, whether as a CEO, a politician, a recovering addict, a veteran, a principal, a coach and more, and how that plays out in their day to day life, the struggles they encounter, and the obstacles they overcome by loving God above all things, and making Him their center. I want to take the opportunity to create an environment of vulnerability and honesty, and not without some laughter, that helps people journey with our guests as they share the peaks and valleys of their lives, and how that today, God NEEDS to be the center of all that they do.
A Man's Need for God
Episode 5: Doug Kingsley
I am honored to have Sherborn, MA Police Officer Doug Kingsley join me for an episode on a Man's Need for God podcast - it can be easy to take for granted first responders, and I hope in this conversation, people can have an appreciation for the humanity of first responders, and in Doug's case, being a police officer, and even more, his need for God. Doug has done an incredible job of bringing mental health awareness to the forefront of the first responder community, and in fact, even walked across Massachusetts - 219 miles in total - to bring to light the suicide crisis in the first responder and tactical athlete community, after losing two of his friends by this means. Doug is such a genuine person, who anyone can benefit from listening to this conversation, especially those in the tactical community potentially searching for God in their own lives.