Revival.
Episodes focused on spiritual awakening, outpourings of the Holy Spirit, and the call for the church to return to God in prayer and repentance.
Revival36mJC Worley on Faith Deconstruction and America's Post-Christian Crisis
JC Worley, lead pastor of Go Church in Sharpsburg, Georgia, joins Philip Cameron for a sobering and urgent conversation about one of the most dangerous spiritual trends reshaping America: faith deconstruction. Pastor Worley defines deconstruction as "the process of questioning, doubting, or ultimately rejecting certain aspects of the Christian faith," and draws a sharp distinction between healthy discipleship questions and the wholesale abandonment of biblical truth. Drawing on Pew Research projections, Worley warns that all four of their modeled scenarios point to America becoming a post-Christian nation by 2045 — within our lifetimes. He identifies the hallmarks of deconstruction: denying the authority of Scripture, choosing subjective over objective morality, abandoning church community, and reframing every negative church experience as spiritual abuse. He also raises a thought-provoking question — could this sweeping spiritual pandemic be connected to the great apostasy described in 2 Thessalonians, the "great falling away" that precedes the return of Christ? Philip adds a firsthand warning from Scotland, once called "the land of the book," where today less than one percent of the population is born again. The conversation is a clarion call for pastors, church leaders, and every believer to reclaim the authority of Scripture before America crosses a point of no return. Visit mygochurch.com to learn more about JC Worley and Go Church.
Church28mJames Coffey on Outward-Focused Church Growth and Community Outreach
James Coffey, pastor of The Harbor Church in LaFollette, Tennessee, joins Daily Faith to share the remarkable story of how a Tuesday-night outreach meeting in a hotel room became a thriving, community-transforming congregation. James and his wife never set out to plant a church — they wanted to start an outreach ministry in Campbell County, Tennessee, a region that ranked number three in the nation for opiate addiction and number one in the state for two consecutive years. What grew out of that burden became The Harbor Church, now operating out of a 36,000-square-foot former Roses department store in the center of town. James explains how The Harbor's "Hope Center" runs a food pantry, addiction recovery programs, a thrift store in Woodson's Mall, and clothing drives serving 13 county schools — all fueled by the conviction that "90% of who we are and what we do has to be outside of the four walls of this building." He shares the one number that drives every ministry decision: the 86–87% of Americans, according to Barna research, who do not attend church — roughly 38,000 people in Campbell County alone. "We are here to complete, not compete," James says, challenging churches to stop measuring success by Easter attendance and start pursuing the unchurched, the addicted, and the forgotten. Visit The Harbor Church online at www.theharbor.tn.org.
Revival28mPastor John Ramirez on the Manifestation of God's Power in the Church Today
Pastor John Ramirez — surgeon, bi-vocational pastor of Trendy Christian Center in Forest Hill, Louisiana, and founder of the Louisiana Outpouring conference — joins Philip Cameron for a bold, Spirit-filled conversation about why the Church must move beyond words into the manifest power of God. Ramirez draws a striking parallel between Jesus and the seven other men in His day who claimed to be the Messiah: "The thing that separated Jesus from the rest was He raised the dead, He healed the sick, He cast out demons — it was the manifestation of His ministry that changed how people saw Him." He argues that a church without supernatural demonstration is a church that cannot hold the next generation, and that the answer to cultural darkness is not accommodation but a brighter light — echoing the principle that the darker the night, the more visible even a single match becomes. The conversation turns prophetic as Ramirez describes an imminent, worldwide move of God so vast that "the buildings will not be big enough" and congregations will spill into parking lots and street corners. He also issues a direct challenge to pastors: stop trying to be loved by the world and start facilitating encounters with the Holy Spirit. Pastors are invited to the Louisiana Outpouring conference, June 8–10, 2023, at louisianoutpouring.com and tccministries.com.
Revival28mRobert Preston on Planting a Revival Church Steps from Bourbon Street
Robert Preston, founder and pastor of City Revival Church at 433 Dauphine Street in the French Quarter of New Orleans, Louisiana, sits down with Philip Cameron to share the extraordinary story of how God called him to one of America's most spiritually dark cities — and how a supernatural chain of answered prayer led him to the exact building he had quietly claimed in faith. Preston describes New Orleans as "the closest thing to Hell on Earth that there really is in America," a city drawing nine million visitors a year into a culture of lawlessness, witchcraft, and immorality just steps from his church door. Yet he and his wife surrendered to the call while still in Bible College, praying, "Lord, we'll go anywhere you send us." That dangerous prayer launched a journey rooted in the faith of Hudson Taylor — starting with almost nothing but the promises of God. The episode centers on a stunning miracle: Preston and his wife laid hands on a specific building, wrote down its address (433 Dauphine Street) in a prayer journal, told no one — and received it over a single phone call through a connection to Pastor Rusty Nelson of the Rock Family Worship Center in Huntsville, Alabama. Today, City Revival Church is seeing people saved, healed, delivered, and filled with the Holy Spirit in the heart of the French Quarter. Pastors and churches can book Robert Preston or plan a mission trip to New Orleans at cityrevivalnola.com.
Revival28mTransformative Power of Love, Healing, and Hope
Glenn Davis, lead pastor of Countryside Christian Church in Clearwater, Florida, joins Philip Cameron to share the remarkable story of a mass baptism service that drew over 500 people to Clearwater Beach — with more than 200 baptized in a single night. It was, as Glenn describes it, "like a revival meeting on Clearwater Beach," a culmination of years of faithful, persistent ministry. Glenn opens up about the explosive growth of his Wednesday night youth ministry, where between 300 and 500 teenagers gather weekly and 20 to 40 young people give their lives to Christ every single service. He explains why Gen Z is responding: "They want an authentic move of God. They're not looking for some big show. They are looking to get in the presence of God." The conversation takes a deeply personal turn as Glenn recounts the painful journey behind his book Ordinary Guy Extraordinary God — available on Amazon — including his brother's unexpected death from an accidental overdose in 2014, a two-year battle with depression and anxiety, and a massive seizure in 2016 that God used to restore his joy and calling. Glenn also shares how Countryside Christian Church leaned into daily worship and the Word during COVID, emerging stronger than before. Visit countryside.cc to connect with Glenn and his church.
Revival28mRevival, Hope & Healing
Pastor Matthew Cutter of Believers Fellowship Church in Springfield, Missouri joins Philip Cameron for a faith-stirring conversation about the real and present revival breaking out in the local church today. A third-generation Pentecostal preacher who once told God he would never pastor, Cutter shares how God had other plans — and how his congregation has already documented 11 miracles in a single year, including a stage-four breast cancer diagnosis that vanished after prayer at the Western Wall in Jerusalem. Cutter draws from 2 Chronicles 7:14 — "If my people who are called by my name will humble themselves and pray, seek my face, and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven and heal their land" — calling it a divine will and testament available to every believer. He cites sobering Barna Research data showing that fewer than 1% of churchgoers believe Jesus lived a sinless life, and that deep faith commitment dropped 35% from 2022 to 2023, making the case that the church must return to preaching the uncompromised gospel. "I'd rather be canceled by the world and continued by the throne," Cutter declares. He also highlights City Harvest Network under Pastor Rod Parsley as a covering for pastors hungry for revival. If you're ready to believe God for a move of His Spirit, this episode is your call to action. Learn more at mybfc.net and cityharvest.network.
Holy Spirit28mJeff Leake on Holy Spirit Baptism, Church Power, and Supernatural Partnership
Pastor Jeff Leake of Allison Park Church in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, joins Philip Cameron for a compelling conversation about the Holy Spirit baptism and why the church desperately needs it today. Jeff, who has pastored Allison Park Church for 31 years and has directly planted 32 churches since 1996, draws on decades of Spirit-led ministry to explain why so many Christians are living far below their potential. Citing a George Barna organization study revealing that over 60% of self-identified Christians in the United States don't believe the Holy Spirit is even a person, Jeff makes the case that doctrinal confusion about the Spirit is at the root of the church's diminished cultural influence. He unpacks the critical distinction between salvation and Spirit baptism using John chapter 20 and Acts chapter 1: "When you get saved, you get the Holy Spirit — when you get baptized in the Holy Spirit, the Holy Spirit gets you." He also shares how his son David witnessed cataracts miraculously disappear after praying for a man in Nicaragua, a moment that transformed David's faith from obligation to passion. Jeff's book, Gateway to Supernatural Life, is available at shoptheword.com.