Episodes with Paul Zink.
Bitterness28mBreaking the Cycle of Bitterness: Choosing Healing, Legacy, and Freedom in Christ
Bishop Paul Zink, founder of a premier Jacksonville church and the acclaimed Providence School, joins Philip Cameron for a conversation that cuts straight to the heart of spiritual and emotional freedom. Together they unpack why bitterness, regret, and unforgiveness act as parasites on the soul — and why breaking free is not passive but a deliberate, daily choice. Bishop Zink opens with a striking declaration: "Depressed and fearful people never create a positive outcome." From there, the conversation moves through the power of thought life as prophecy, the danger of picking at old wounds, and the liberating truth that "legacy is more powerful than DNA." Philip illustrates bitterness with a vivid nature analogy — wildebeest on the Serengeti Plains, circling helplessly after a brain parasite robs them of direction — while hyenas and lions wait at the edges. It is a picture of what unresolved bitterness does to a believer's forward momentum. Drawing on the call of Philippians to forget what lies behind and press toward the high calling, both men urge viewers to choose forgiveness, release regret, and refuse to let past wounds define their future. If you are stuck in a cycle of bitterness or fear, this episode offers a practical, faith-filled path to healing and freedom in Christ.
Prophetic36mBuilding Faith & Future – How Bishop Paul Zink Turned Prophetic Vision into Kingdom Legacy
Bishop Paul Zink, apostolic leader of New Life Christian Fellowship in Jacksonville, Florida, joins Philip Cameron for a powerful conversation about how God-given prophetic vision becomes lasting kingdom legacy — even when doubt, fear, and the "paralysis of analysis" threaten to stop it cold. Bishop Zink opens by sharing a conviction the Lord impressed on him that morning: "Your thoughts identify the spirits that are trying to control your life." Drawing on Proverbs 23:7 — "As a man thinks in his heart, so is he" — he unpacks why believers must actively judge, reject, and accept thoughts rather than passively absorb them, especially in an era of rising youth violence and suicide. The conversation turns to the founding of Providence School (prov.org) on Hodges Boulevard in Jacksonville — an 1,800-student K–12 institution that began with a spontaneous prophetic utterance in a Sunday service and grew into an $11 million campus built from nothing. Bishop Zink recounts the moment a retired art teacher, facing heart and brain surgery, discovered that her doctor was a former Providence student she had taught — a living parable of sowing seeds into the future. If you are wrestling with a God-given vision, this episode is your call to press through the twilight season and trust the harvest ahead.
Faith35mOpen the Door of Your Mind: Bishop Paul Zink on Kingdom Faith
Bishop Paul Zink, apostolic leader of New Life Christian Fellowship in Jacksonville, Florida, joins Philip Cameron for a conversation that cuts straight to the heart of why believers fall short of their God-given destiny. The core diagnosis? "Most closed doors with God exist in the mind of the people he's trying to speak to." Drawing on John 10:10, Bishop Zink unpacks how the enemy's primary strategy is to steal kingdom thoughts before they can take root — and why the church too often defaults to fear instead of faith. The discussion moves from the story of the twelve spies in the Promised Land to Moses at the burning bush, illustrating how divine moments go unrecognized when our thinking is too small. Bishop Zink — who built Providence School in Jacksonville from nothing into an 1,800-student, $30-million debt-free campus — speaks from hard-won experience about overcoming naysayers, land battles, and every natural obstacle. "Faith requires you to trust and act without understanding," he declares, challenging pastors and leaders to stop managing church business and start leading kingdom business. The episode closes with a powerful call for ministers to intentionally create atmospheres of faith where the Holy Spirit is welcome to move. If you are a pastor, church leader, or believer wrestling with a vision that feels too big, this conversation will stretch your thinking and ignite your faith.
Faith33mLegacy of Faith: Bishop Paul Zink on Building the Church and the Next Generation
Bishop Paul Zink, founder of New Life Christian Fellowship in Jacksonville, Florida and the acclaimed Providence School, joins Philip Cameron for a timely and faith-stirring conversation about living as citizens of a kingdom that transcends earthly turmoil. As global markets shake and cultural anxiety rises, Bishop Zink anchors the discussion in Jesus' own words from John 18:36 — "My kingdom is not of this world" — reminding believers that Wall Street is not the main street of God's economy and that our invisible means of support are more real than anything the natural eye can see. The conversation moves from kingdom economics to the power of revelation-driven faith. Bishop Zink draws a sharp distinction between reasonable thinking and faith by revelation: "Once we get something revealed, that's when we sink our teeth into it and give everything we've got to it." Philip shares a defining personal moment at age 18 when his father challenged him to sell his brand-new car to fund Scotland's first Spirit-filled Bible school — a moment that unlocked a lifetime of generational giving and vision. Together they explore multi-generational ministry, the danger of excuse-making, and Moses' pivotal decision at the burning bush as a model for stepping from one world into God's. If you are looking for courage to trust God beyond what you can see, this episode delivers it.
Prophecy34mDaily Faith with Philip Cameron: Special Guest Bishop Paul Zink
Bishop Paul Zink, overseer of New Life Christian Church in Jacksonville, Florida, joins Philip Cameron for a wide-ranging conversation about the spiritual forces shaping our world and the urgent call for the church to engage in supernatural warfare — not just political action. Drawing on decades of pastoral experience, Bishop Zink warns that "it's more than biblical philosophy against woke philosophy — it's a spiritual nature," urging believers to recognize the demonic character behind ideological movements like wokeism and globalism. Bishop Zink points to the current geopolitical moment as the "beginning of sorrows" described in Scripture, noting that the nations mentioned in biblical prophecy are the very ones dominating today's headlines. He reflects on a pivotal lesson from Dr. David Yonggi Cho's prayer movement in Seoul, South Korea — where 250,000 believers in a single prayer gathering helped push back the threat at the DMZ — as proof that intercession, not military or political mechanisms alone, is what protects nations. He also recommends the film Nefarious as a must-watch for every minister seeking to understand demonic influence on human thought. The conversation closes with a stirring challenge: the church must raise up intercessors and prayer warriors in every city and region, building a spiritual border wall against the powers of darkness. Don't miss this prophetic, grounded conversation with one of America's most respected pastoral voices.
Faith36mDaily Faith with Philip Cameron: Special Guest Pastor Andrew Davis
Bishop Paul Zink, apostolic overseer of New Life Christian Fellowship in Jacksonville, Florida, joins Philip Cameron for a wide-ranging conversation on what it truly means to live by conviction rather than convenience. Drawing on decades of pastoral ministry and his role as founder of Providence School — a $23 million, debt-free campus now serving 1,800 students from preschool through high school — Bishop Zink delivers a clarion call to the modern church: "We live by conviction, not convenience." Bishop Zink unpacks why so many believers have settled for a spectator faith, watching from the sidelines while the harvest goes unreached. He challenges the skepticism creeping into congregations today, reminding listeners that "faith is not reasonable — if it's reasonable, it doesn't take faith." The conversation turns to multi-generational ministry, faithful legacy, and the surprising story of a Zulu Nation king who came to Christ simply because Bishop Zink's church kept the light on. Whether you're a pastor, a parent, or a believer wrestling with the cost of commitment, this episode will stir you to deeper devotion. Learn more about New Life Christian Fellowship at newlifechristianfellowship.org.
