Keeping It Real: Kingdom Conversations with Chris Barhorst, Kevin Bryant, Stefani Jebavy and Jon Jebavy cover art

Keeping It Real: Kingdom Conversations with Chris Barhorst, Kevin Bryant, Stefani Jebavy and Jon Jebavy

Keeping It Real: Kingdom Conversations with Chris Barhorst, Kevin Bryant, Stefani Jebavy and Jon Jebavy

By: Chris Barhorst Jon Jebavy Stefani Jebavy and Kevin Bryant
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About this listen

We wanted to give others a chance to listen in on three friends who love Jesus talking about the word and truth. Each week we will release an entire conversation that is about an hour and a half. Every conversation will be three parts and be around thirty minutes each episode. Every Monday will be part 1, Wednesday part 2 and Friday part 3, and every week is a different conversation. We pray you find hope in every episode as we discuss different topics. These conversations may challenge you or encourage you. Always ask the Father about what you hear and let Him confirm His truth to you; never take what anyone says as truth without confirmation from Holy Spirit. We hope you are blessed by these podcasts!

© 2026 Keeping It Real: Kingdom Conversations with Chris Barhorst, Kevin Bryant, Stefani Jebavy and Jon Jebavy
Christianity Spirituality
Episodes
  • Offence (Part 3 of 3)
    Apr 17 2026

    Email us: KingdomConversations25@gmail.com

    Being offended can lead to chronic anger, resentment, damaged relationships, and a persistent "victim mentality". It often triggers emotional distress such as humiliation, sadness, and anxiety, while fostering personal insecurity and paranoia. Unmanaged, it can cause withdrawal from social connection and even lead to destructive, unhealthy coping behaviors.

    • Relationship Breakdown: Constantly taking offense creates distance, fosters distrust, and causes resentment, destroying both personal and professional relationships.
    • Emotional & Mental Toll: It often triggers a "shame spiral," causing feelings of worthlessness, depression, and social anxiety. It is frequently linked to a "victim mentality," where one feels powerless and stuck.
    • Physiological & Behavioral Impact: Chronic offense can lead to physical stress, rage, and the adoption of addictive behaviors, such as alcohol, social media misuse, or over-eating, to cope with the anger.
    • Reduced Quality of Life: Being easily offended causes people to focus on negative emotions and perceive threats everywhere, leading to a miserable, lonely life.

    Support the show

    KingdomConversations25@gmail.com

    Show More Show Less
    32 mins
  • Offence (Part 2 of 3)
    Apr 15 2026

    Email us: KingdomConversations25@gmail.com

    Being offended can lead to chronic anger, resentment, damaged relationships, and a persistent "victim mentality". It often triggers emotional distress such as humiliation, sadness, and anxiety, while fostering personal insecurity and paranoia. Unmanaged, it can cause withdrawal from social connection and even lead to destructive, unhealthy coping behaviors.

    • Relationship Breakdown: Constantly taking offense creates distance, fosters distrust, and causes resentment, destroying both personal and professional relationships.
    • Emotional & Mental Toll: It often triggers a "shame spiral," causing feelings of worthlessness, depression, and social anxiety. It is frequently linked to a "victim mentality," where one feels powerless and stuck.
    • Physiological & Behavioral Impact: Chronic offense can lead to physical stress, rage, and the adoption of addictive behaviors, such as alcohol, social media misuse, or over-eating, to cope with the anger.
    • Reduced Quality of Life: Being easily offended causes people to focus on negative emotions and perceive threats everywhere, leading to a miserable, lonely life.

    Support the show

    KingdomConversations25@gmail.com

    Show More Show Less
    31 mins
  • Offence (Part 1 of 3)
    Apr 13 2026

    Email us: KingdomConversations25@gmail.com

    Being offended can lead to chronic anger, resentment, damaged relationships, and a persistent "victim mentality". It often triggers emotional distress such as humiliation, sadness, and anxiety, while fostering personal insecurity and paranoia. Unmanaged, it can cause withdrawal from social connection and even lead to destructive, unhealthy coping behaviors.

    • Relationship Breakdown: Constantly taking offense creates distance, fosters distrust, and causes resentment, destroying both personal and professional relationships.
    • Emotional & Mental Toll: It often triggers a "shame spiral," causing feelings of worthlessness, depression, and social anxiety. It is frequently linked to a "victim mentality," where one feels powerless and stuck.
    • Physiological & Behavioral Impact: Chronic offense can lead to physical stress, rage, and the adoption of addictive behaviors, such as alcohol, social media misuse, or over-eating, to cope with the anger.
    • Reduced Quality of Life: Being easily offended causes people to focus on negative emotions and perceive threats everywhere, leading to a miserable, lonely life.

    Support the show

    KingdomConversations25@gmail.com

    Show More Show Less
    31 mins
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