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Ever feel like you're doing everything right and still missing the party?

This episode examines the often-overlooked elder brother in Luke 15 not as a villain, but as a mirror reflecting our own quiet exhaustion. We explore how performance-based religion sneaks into our faith, draining joy and transforming the church from a refuge for the broken into a stage for the polished.

With honest language and practical insight, we trace the slow drift from grace to scorekeeping: when worship grows stiff, confession dries up, and love turns selective. We name the fears behind our judgment: the need to appear strong, the terror of being found imperfect, and the exhaustion of endless comparison.

But we don't stop at diagnosis. We offer a path back to the Father's heart, showing why loud stances on sin don't heal weary souls, but a culture of mercy can. From leaders modeling repentance to congregations where truth is safe, we explore what it looks like to celebrate every time someone comes home.

The goal isn't to lower holiness, it's to lift grace to its rightful place as the power that transforms.

Whether you relate more to the prodigal or the elder sibling, the invitation is the same: come into the feast. Receive before you perform. Let delight replace duty as your engine.

This is for anyone who's tired of keeping score and ready to rediscover the music of mercy.

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