Followed By Mercy
The Followed By Mercy Podcast
Real Grace, Honest Hope
You might notice a new name and a fresh look, but the heart behind this podcast is the same. After years as the World Evangelism Podcast, I sensed God leading me to a deeper, more personal path centered on His relentless mercy and the kind of honest hope that can reach into every hurting place. That’s why this show is now called Followed By Mercy Podcast. The format may shift, and the tone may be a bit more personal, but my mission hasn’t changed: I still believe the world desperately needs to hear the good news of God’s love in Jesus Christ. You are welcome here if you’ve been with me from the beginning or just found us now.
What if God’s love is more personal, stubborn, and relentless than you ever imagined?
Welcome to The Followed By Mercy Podcast, where we get honest about pain, hope, and the kind of grace that finds you right where you are, five days a week. This isn’t about religious performance or church routines. It’s for anyone who’s ever felt worn out, unseen, or unsure if they belong in the story of God’s love. Every conversation is rooted in this reality: God loves you right now, just as you are, and He isn’t giving up on you.
Here’s what you’ll find in every episode:
Experience God’s Relentless Love
Every show starts by reminding you that the Shepherd knows your name, cares about your story, and isn’t offended by your failures or questions. This is personal—it’s about God’s unwavering affection for you.
Find Your Place in His Heart
Once you grasp how fiercely you’re loved, sharing that love with others doesn’t feel forced. It becomes the most natural thing in the world. Real grace overflows.
Prayer That Changes You
We pray together—not just for the world “out there,” but for the battles and hopes you’re carrying right now. These prayers are honest, rooted in Scripture, and meant for hearts that need a gentle touch from the Shepherd.
Discover Your Unique Role
Whether you’re called to go, give, serve, or show kindness in your corner of the world, God’s mercy meets you where you are. You’re not just a bystander. You are His beloved, invited into the story He’s writing.
When life knocks the wind out of you, this is a place to catch your breath. You’ll hear the encouragement that meets you on your hardest days, and your honest questions will be welcomed. No pretending, no heavy-handed advice—just the reminder that your Shepherd is right there with you, walking every step with you, even when you feel like giving up.
Why does this matter? Because some days, it feels like nobody sees you or cares what you’re going through. But the truth is, you have a Shepherd who never takes His eyes off you, lets you slip through the cracks, and never gives up on you. That kind of love can put you back on your feet, and it might be the hope someone else is waiting to see in you, too.
If you’re longing for more than just religious talk—if you want to know you’re not alone and that God’s mercy is following you all the way home, you’re in the right place. Whether you listen in the car, on a walk, or in a quiet moment, let every episode remind you: God’s mercy is after you right now, ready to bring real grace and honest hope.
Subscribe today and join a community to discover what happens when loved people become loving people. The journey’s just beginning, and there’s a place for you here.
Followed By Mercy
Austin Gardner | Restoring the Language of Life to Our Churches
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Is your spiritual language defined by Thanksgiving or "fussing"? Today, Austin Gardner dives into the power of biblical blessing. He shares a personal story from his youth about a woman named Gail who used the "language of blessing" to impact an entire youth group, and how that same grace is available to you today.
Austin walks through the entire arc of Scripture to prove that God is, and has always been, a "Blessing God." From the Garden of Eden to the New Jerusalem, discover how God is working to restore everything sin destroyed—and how He wants to use you as a channel for that blessing.
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Restoring The Language Of Life
Austin GardnerWe are talking about the biblical power of blessing and how it is my desire to restore the language of life to our churches. I want to go back to us blessing people. The story of blessing in the Bible starts at the creation and ends at the new creation. I think you're going to be excited to see this today. One of the most powerful words in the Bible is the word blessing. We don't understand it many times because we want to think that blessing means money and comfort and success and prosperity, but the Bible goes into something a lot deeper than that. For the Bible, blessing means God's life and favor and presence flowing into our lives. The Bible's one long story of God's blessing. It begins with blessings and it ends with blessings. The entire story of redemption is about God blessing his humanity that he created and how he's good to us. The first word over humanity was blessing. Let me read this to you. And God blessed them and said unto them, Be fruitful and multiply and replenish the earth and subdue it. That's funny. That's Genesis chapter 1 and verse 28. And he's speaking to them and he says, God blessed you. Wow. That's remarkable. He didn't correct them. He wasn't, his first interaction wasn't correction, it was blessing. The word blessing means to be in favor of, to bestow benefits, to declare prosperity of life, to speak favor over someone. It's like speaking life and destiny over someone. God was declaring for Adam and Eve in the beginning their fruitfulness, their authority, their purpose, and their relationship. Humans were created to live under God's blessing. Isn't that exciting? Isn't that thrilling to see that? Imagine a father, a dad, standing over a newborn child and saying, Your life will be full of good, you will be strong, and bring joy. That's a picture of blessing. God's first words to humanity were life-giving words. Remember what Tozier said. What the first thing you think about when you think of God is the most important thing about us. If we see God as angry or harsh, it causes us to misunderstand the opening chapters of the Bible. I misunderstood them for years. I misunderstood those chapters for years. I saw God as angry and kicking them out of the garden, but it was God who went to them and brought them back. God's first action towards humans was generosity and blessing. And sin broke the flow of blessing. And sin entered into the world, the curse and death and separation. But even in the middle of all of that, God was working to restore blessings. The rest of the Bible tells the story of that restoration, of how God restores it. The next thing I call your attention to is how God blesses Abraham. In Genesis 12, 2 and 3 says, I will make of thee a great nation. I will bless thee. I will make thy name great, and of those thou shalt be a blessing. I'll bless them that bless thee, and curse them that curse thee, and in thee shall all the families of the earth be blessed. Blessing, blessing, blessing, blessing. And we're just in Genesis chapter 12. The whole world will be blessed through you. Blessings has a mission. It always does. God blesses people so that they'll become channels of blessings to others. It's like a river. A river doesn't exist for itself, it flows to the land and it brings life and water and nourishment. And we are rivers of blessings. We exist for the world. God did not bless Abraham just for Abraham. God blessed Abraham for the nations. And then God commands leaders to speak blessings. So you see, the first group of people is really going to use Abraham, blessings. I'm blessing you to be a blessing. And then in Numbers chapter 6, which we've already spent enough time on, I'll just kind of go through that one quickly. But you remember what it said: the Lord bless thee and keep thee, the Lord make his face shine upon thee and be gracious unto thee. The Lord lift up his countenance upon thee and give thee peace. This is known as the priestly blessing. God commanded spiritual leaders to speak blessings to his people. Every line of that blessing gets stronger and it builds towards a final word, peace. The last one is peace, and he give thee peace. Peace, wholeness, harmony, flourishing, life like God intended. Shalom. Archaeologists discovered that exact blessing written on a silver scroll in Jerusalem dating to 600 BC. For over 2,000 years, God's people have spoken these words over others. Kind words can be short and easy to speak, but their echoes are truly endless. Charles Ferguson said that. And the Psalms are blessings. Psalm 1.1, blessed is the man who walketh not in the council of the ungodly, nor sends in the way of the sinners, or sits in the sea of the scornful. Psalms teaches what a blessed life looks like. Blessed people trust God, reject evil, and delight in his word. They line their lives up with God. Jesus redefines blessing. He began his ministry with blessing statements. Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God. That word blessed means deeply fulfilled, happy, spiritually flourishing, possessing divine favor. It's the life that God intends for people to live. Jesus teaching that blessing is not eternal, external success, it's internal transformation. The apostles continued the pattern. Paul ends nearly every letter with a blessing. When I was in high school, a young lady in our youth group, she was older, she's already working a full-time job at the bank. Her name was Gail, and Gail was so kind. And Gail would always write notes. You know, there wasn't text from back then, and there wasn't Facebook or any kind of social media, but she'd always write all of uh other young people in the youth group, and she'd always end it with one of Paul's blessings. Like in Philippians 4.23, the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you all. Amen. The focus is on grace. Grace means God's unmerited favor. Uh so I just want you to realize that from the beginning, God has been blessing. And all the way to the end, he's blessing. Uh, I kind of skipped over this, so I shouldn't have. In Revelation 22, 14, we're now ending the Bible. Blessed are they that do his commandments and they may have the right to the tree of life. He begins with blessings in Eden, and he ends the blessings in the new creation. God restores everything that sin had destroyed. God causes people to become people who bless others. We bless people when we speak encouragement, when we pray for them, when we point them to Christ, when we build them up spiritually. You understand blessing is the language of the Bible. From our side, it's thanksgiving, but we declare blessings of God over other people. I just hope you'll think about this. I've been so accustomed to God fussing at us. These verses are God is loving us. Hope you're enjoying it. I've got three or four more I want to share with you before we change subjects again, as we always do. But God bless you. And you know you know that from my heart I mean that. It's really great. God loves you. God bless you. Continue serving Him. If this is doing anything for you, helping you to all share it with somebody else. Thank you.