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  • We’re back with our final highlight episode from the 2024 Testify Congress.

    Yes, last month, in Pasadena, California, The Salvation Army from around the Western Territory joined for an event focused on teaching, training and motivating Salvationists to tell the story of Jesus more often and to more people.

    And The Salvation Army’s international leaders, General Lyndon Buckingham and Commissioner Bronwyn Buckingham, traveled from London to be part of it all.

    You've heard the General speak from this event a couple times now—in Episode 193 and 197.

    Today, we bring you his final appearance of the Congress before some 3,000 attendees at the Pasadena Convention Center Civic Auditorium. This is his public charge to the new lieutenants.

    Over the weekend, the Defenders of Justice Session of cadets were commissioned as Salvation Army officers, or pastors, and in this meeting were given their very first ministry assignment. In fact, they don't find out the location until they are standing on stage!

    And this is the battle cry, if you will, for each one of them from The Salvation Army's international leader.

    Listen in and be encouraged in your eagerness to serve, too.

    EPISODE SHOWNOTES: Read more.

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  • We’re back with more highlights from the 2024 Testify Congress.

    Last month, in Pasadena, California, The Salvation Army from around the Western Territory joined for an event focused on teaching, training and motivating Salvationists to tell the story of Jesus more often and to more people.

    And the sessions featured, you guessed it, testimonies from programs and ministries of The Salvation Army across the West.

    Today, we’re sharing two:

    First, you'll hear from Monte Mansfield, a one-time professional athlete whose life was forever altered by substance abuse. Eventually, he found The Salvation Army through the Adult Rehabilitation Center program.

    Then, Sthephania Mihilii, who moved to the U.S. from Mexico in second grade when her single mom married. She rebelled in her teenage years and then became a lifeguard at a Salvation Army Kroc Center.

    So allow me to introduce to you today, Monte Mansfield and Sthephania Mihilii—who each took to the stage live after the screening of their video testimony.

    EPISODE SHOWNOTES: Read more.

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  • We’re back with more highlights from the 2024 Testify Congress.

    Last month, in Pasadena, California, The Salvation Army from around the Western Territory joined for an event focused on teaching, training and motivating Salvationists to tell the story of Jesus more often and to more people.

    And The Salvation Army’s international leaders, General Lyndon Buckingham and Commissioner Bronwyn Buckingham, traveled from London to be part of it all.

    You may remember the General from episode 178, where we chatted about why your testimony matters (and how to use it for good). And in Episode 193, we shared his message from the first main session of the Congress with some 3,000 attendees at the Pasadena Convention Center Civic Auditorium.

    Today, we bring you his preaching from the third main session, focused on holy living.

    Listen in and be encouraged to embrace your identity in Christ.

    EPISODE SHOWNOTES: Read more.

    BE AFFIRMED. Get the Good Words email series.

    WHAT’S YOUR CAUSE? Take our quiz.

    STUDY SCRIPTURE. Get inside the collection.

    BE INSPIRED. Follow us on Instagram.

    FIGHT FOR GOOD. Give to The Salvation Army.

  • We’re back with more highlights from the 2024 Testify Congress.

    Last month, in Pasadena, California, The Salvation Army from around the Western Territory joined for an event focused on teaching, training and motivating Salvationists to tell the story of Jesus more often and to more people.

    And the sessions featured, you guessed it, testimonies from programs and ministries of The Salvation Army across the West.

    Today, we’re sharing two:

    First, you'll hear from Envoy Kevin Nagasaki. If that name sounds familiar, it is! Envoy Kevin was on the show in Episode 190 talking about living and serving through the Maui fire disaster. This is his testimony.

    Then, Dalton Low and his mom, Angela. Dalton was diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder at a young age. He found a place of belonging at The Salvation Army, and helps lead worship today.

    So allow me to introduce to you today, Envoy Kevin Nagasaki and Dalton Low—who each took to the stage live after the screening of their video testimony.

    EPISODE SHOWNOTES: Read more.

    BE AFFIRMED. Get the Good Words email series.

    WHAT’S YOUR CAUSE? Take our quiz.

    STUDY SCRIPTURE. Get inside the collection.

    BE INSPIRED. Follow us on Instagram.

    FIGHT FOR GOOD. Give to The Salvation Army.

  • We’re back with more highlights from the 2024 Testify Congress.

    Last month, in Pasadena, California, The Salvation Army from around the Western Territory joined for an event focused on teaching, training and motivating Salvationists to tell the story of Jesus more often and to more people.

    And The Salvation Army’s international leaders, General Lyndon Buckingham and Commissioner Bronwyn Buckingham, traveled from London to be part of it all.

    You heard from the General a couple episodes ago, and today, we’re sharing Commissioner Bronwyn's message from the second main session of the Congress with some 3,000 attendees at the Pasadena Convention Center Civic Auditorium.

    Commissioner Bronwyn, a Salvation Army officer since 1990, now serves as World President of Women’s Ministries.

    Listen in as she celebrates our stories, shares a bit of her own and encourages you in testifying to yours.

    EPISODE SHOWNOTES: Read more.

    BE AFFIRMED. Get the Good Words email series.

    WHAT’S YOUR CAUSE? Take our quiz.

    STUDY SCRIPTURE. Get inside the collection.

    BE INSPIRED. Follow us on Instagram.

    FIGHT FOR GOOD. Give to The Salvation Army.

  • We’re back with more highlights from the 2024 Testify Congress.

    This month, in Pasadena, California, The Salvation Army from around the Western Territory joined for an event focused on teaching, training and motivating Salvationists to tell the story of Jesus more often and to more people.

    And the sessions featured, you guessed it, testimonies from programs and ministries of The Salvation Army across the West.

    Today, we’re sharing two:

    First, you’ll hear from Lt. Do-Hyun Kim, who was commissioned over the weekend as a Salvation Army officer or pastor. A cadet in training from the Korea Territory, Lt. Kim completed his second year of training at the College for Officer Training at Crestmont in Rancho Palos Verdes, California, and will now return to the Korea Territory for his first appointment.

    Then, Davrah Williams, who met The Salvation Army through the Lambuth Family Center, a short-term emergency shelter that houses up to 20 families at a time in Denver. While keeping families together, the center helps them break the cycle of poverty and homelessness and begin building a sustainable, self-sufficient life.

    EPISODE SHOWNOTES: Read more.

    BE AFFIRMED. Get the Good Words email series.

    WHAT’S YOUR CAUSE? Take our quiz.

    STUDY SCRIPTURE. Get inside the collection.

    BE INSPIRED. Follow us on Instagram.

    FIGHT FOR GOOD. Give to The Salvation Army.

  • We’re back with more highlights from the 2024 Testify Congress.

    This month, in Pasadena, California, The Salvation Army from around the Western Territory joined for an event focused on teaching, training and motivating Salvationists to tell the story of Jesus more often and to more people.

    And The Salvation Army’s international leaders, General Lyndon Buckingham and Commissioner Bronwyn Buckingham, traveled from London to be part of it all.

    Today, we’re sharing his message from the first main session of the Congress with some 3,000 attendees at the Pasadena Convention Center Civic Auditorium.

    Listen in as the General shares a four-part formula for life in Christ: Connect with God and know him, share the good news of Jesus Christ, demonstrate care and concern for those in need, and pursue holiness.

    EPISODE SHOWNOTES: Read more.

    BE AFFIRMED. Get the Good Words email series.

    WHAT’S YOUR CAUSE? Take our quiz.

    STUDY SCRIPTURE. Get inside the collection.

    BE INSPIRED. Follow us on Instagram.

    FIGHT FOR GOOD. Give to The Salvation Army.

  • This past weekend, in Pasadena, California, The Salvation Army from around the Western Territory joined for an event focused on teaching, training and motivating Salvationists to tell the story of Jesus more often and to more people—the 2024 Testify Congress.

    The annual celebration includes the commencement, commissioning, ordination and appointment of cadets as they’ve completed two years of training at the College for Officer Training at Crestmont to become Salvation Army officers.

    But this year was bigger than ever as The Salvation Army’s international leaders, General Lyndon Buckingham and Commissioner Bronwyn Buckingham, traveled from London to be part of it all.

    Now, we’re dedicating our next few episodes to sharing the highlights with you, starting today with the commencement address by Dr. Sharon Docter.

    Dr. Docter is a professor of communication at California Lutheran University and a member of the Board of Governance for the College for Officer Training. She’s also a lay leader, the Corps Sergeant Major, of the Pasadena Tabernacle Corps.

    This session of graduating cadets is named the Defenders of Justice. Listen in as Dr. Docter shares three superpowers cadets need when beginning their life as officers from a soldier’s perspective: authenticity, presence and seeing people as they really are.

    EPISODE SHOWNOTES: Read more.

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  • No one expects to evacuate from their home in the middle of the night, wading through chest-deep water to find a way out of an emergency.

    We just don't think it'll happen to us.

    But for Shamrock Steele and her husband, Dave Lanphear, it did.

    Shamrock and Dave survived the Skagit floods in November 2021.

    They made it out in the middle of the night, in their pajamas, with their young grandkids and pets.

    Their completely remodeled house that they were just about to move into, however, did not.

    Then days turned to months as they figured out what to do next and how to rebuild.

    And that's when they met The Salvation Army.

    EPISODE SHOWNOTES: Read more.

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  • We’ve said it before: The Salvation Army’s disaster relief operation never sleeps. Perhaps that could not be more true than in the case of Envoy Kevin Nagasaki who is in-charge of the Lahaina Lighthouse Corps in Maui, Hawaii.

    You’ll remember last August, the Lahaina Lighthouse Corps burned along with historic Lahaina town in the deadliest U.S. wildfire in more than a century. For Envoy Nagasaki, this disaster was personal: The corps complex contained spaces for worship, social services and a thrift store, along with the home he shared with his wife as ministry leaders in the community for nearly 30 years.

    So not only was the community he loves leveled, and he himself directly impacted by the fires, he was on the frontlines of service responding to them too. Less than 24 hours after the fires, he was delivering food across shelter sites and serving first responders as part of The Salvation Army’s coordinated effort on the island of Maui that is still ongoing.

    In this episode, guest hosted by Managing Editor Hillary Jackson, Envoy Kevin Nagasaki shares a glimpse of what it’s like to respond to a disaster when you’re truly in it yourself. He shares the hope he has for his community, and how it’s finding renewal.

    EPISODE SHOWNOTES: Read more.

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  • Building resilience is a lengthy process, but it's an investment that pays off. By focusing on preparedness, mitigation and adaptation, more communities can ensure that they too build and sustain resilience after a natural disaster.

    Todd De Voe is a true authority on all things resilience and emergency management.

    Todd is the Editor in Chief of The Emergency Management Network newsletter, a published author in the reference book "Campus Crisis Management," and has penned numerous whitepapers and studies. He hosts The EMN Newsletter Podcast and The Leader's Cafe. He even delivered a TED talk on building and sustaining resilience. Todd holds a Masters in Public Administration and another in Emergency Management, and he's a graduate of the National Emergency Management Executive Academy.

    Today, we're diving into what resilience truly means in emergency management, the the role of community organizations and programs in building a culture of preparedness, along with strategies communities can use to strengthen their bonds and resources in the face of adversity. Most importantly, Todd will share insights into the common challenges communities face during recovery and how they should be approached.

    EPISODE SHOWNOTES: Read more.

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  • Every disaster scenario creates its own unique circumstances and special needs. In each case, The Salvation Army is there with other agencies to offer relief in the form of food services, emergency communications, donations management, social services and more.

    Perhaps most uniquely, The Salvation Army deploys specially trained individuals to offer emotional and spiritual care to rescue workers and disaster survivors alike.

    That ministry of presence is all we do and say—a collective action of words, touch, listening and presence. Collectively, those actions work together to express the love and compassion of God.

    Major Tammy Ray, who currently serves as the corps officer in Redding, California, has a long history of responding to disasters as part of The Salvation Army's disaster relief team. And she helps prepare people to serve in this emotional and spiritual care role—to discern and offer what someone might need, even if they can't state for themselves—to create the "transforming place."

    As she says, It's more being than doing.

    It's a quiet servanthood, a calm presence.

    It's not about fixing but it is a gift of connection with another person at a critical time in their life.

    It might be exactly what St. Francis of Assisi meant when he said, "Preach the gospel at all times, and if necessary, use words.”

    EPISODE SHOWNOTES: Read more.

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  • A good start to disaster preparedness is knowing the risks you should be prepared for based on where you live. That’s a big part of Jonathan Sury’s work.

    Jonathan is the Project Director for Communications and Field Operations at the National Center for Disaster Preparedness. He is currently pursuing a doctoral degree in Population and Family Health at the Mailman School of Public Health at Columbia University.

    Jonathan leads a project called the Natural Hazards Index, which maps local vulnerability to various disasters at the sub-county level. Everything including extreme heat, earthquakes, landslides, tornadoes, and floods. The project's interactive map allows users to zoom in and assess climate, weather and geological hazards in their vicinity. That way, people can learn to take proactive measures to safeguard themselves and their families.

    Today we’re talking with Jonathan about the Natural Hazards Index, the importance of preparedness, how data can help individual households and communities alike, and what we should be paying attention to amid the changing disaster landscape.

    EPISODE SHOWNOTES: Read more.

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  • Where would you go if you could live anywhere you wanted?

    For a lot of Americans, the answer is Phoenix. In fact, Maricopa County, Arizona, which includes Phoenix, Mesa and Scottsdale, has held the title of "fastest growing county in the U.S. by numeric growth" for much of the past decade.

    But, Maricopa isn’t just one of the hottest places in terms of popularity. It’s also the literal hottest metropolitan area in the U.S.

    Summertime, in particular, is dangerously hot in Maricopa County, and getting hotter every passing year. Last year, in 2023, Maricopa County identified a total of 645 heat-related deaths—a 52 percent increase from the previous year and the most heat-related deaths ever recorded.

    The Salvation Army runs a network of heat relief stations throughout Maricopa County to help residents stay safe and hydrated, and out of the record-breaking temperatures.

    Lt. Colonel Ivan Wild, Divisional Commander of The Salvation Army Southwest Division, is on the show to talk about The Salvation Army's heat-related disaster response efforts and how the organization plans to better serve its communities amid more extreme weather events.

    EPISODE SHOWNOTES: Read more.

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  • The U.S. experienced a record number of billion-dollar weather disasters in 2023, and it’s not a one-year fluke but the new trend.

    In the face of this changing disaster landscape, there's one organization consistently on the frontlines, bringing aid and hope to those in need: The Salvation Army, whose disaster relief operation never sleeps.

    Last year alone, The Salvation Army served nearly 600,000 people across a staggering 4,300 disaster events. Thanks to the generosity of donors and corporate partners, The Salvation Army was able to provide these survivors with a warm meal, a safe haven for the night, and in some cases, something just as essential: a listening ear and a moment of prayer.

    John Berglund, The Salvation Army's Emergency Disaster Services Director in the West, is helping us set the stage for our ongoing conversation about the current state of disaster relief.

    He's sharing more on the dynamics of serving throughout another record-breaking disaster year, the importance of cleverly adapting to meet needs, and some of the common misconceptions around disaster relief.

    EPISODE SHOWNOTES: Read more.

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  • We see stats about addiction. We see substance abuse portrayed in film and in TV shows. We might even know someone who’s personally faced addiction to drugs or alcohol. But most of us don't really understand what causes addiction, and why our brains respond the way they do to drugs.

    Dr. Judy Grisel has made it her life’s work to unravel the mysteries of addiction, striving to uncover its root causes.

    A distinguished behavioral neuroscientist whose expertise spans the fields of pharmacology and genetics, Dr. Grisel's groundbreaking research draws from her insights into addiction. These insights aren’t just academic though; they're also deeply personal.

    Dr. Grisel's journey has been shaped by her own experience with addiction, which has given her a unique vantage point on the subject.

    Her passion for understanding the neuroscience behind addiction led her to deliver a powerful TED Talk titled “Never Enough: The Neuroscience and Experience of Addiction,” which captivated audiences around the world. She wrote a book of the same name.

    With a career dedicated to advancing our understanding of addiction, Dr. Grisel is on the show to share her knowledge, insights and research findings, shedding light on this complex and often stigmatized topic.

    EPISODE SHOWNOTES: Read more.

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  • It’s 2024, and the opioid crisis is showing no signs of slowing down.

    Overdose deaths from opioids, including prescription painkillers and synthetics like fentanyl, continue to rise.

    The statistics paint a chilling picture.

    According to the CDC, an estimated 187 people in the U.S. die every day of opioid overdoses, most involving illicit and dangerous versions of fentanyl.

    What’s perhaps more alarming, is this crisis is now affecting every age group. In fact, overdose is now the third leading cause of death in American children. From 2019 to 2021, adolescent overdose deaths more than doubled.

    To help us better understand the crisis, Dr. Ricky Bluthenthal is on the show today. At the University of Southern California, Dr. Bluthenthal is a Professor and Vice Chair for Diversity, Equity and Inclusion in the Department of Populations and Public Health Sciences, and Associate Dean for Social Justice in the Keck School of Medicine.

    He’s well versed on the opioid crisis and its devastating effects on families and communities. He’s been published more than 190 times in peer-reviewed scientific journals and is on the editorial board of the International Journal of Drug Policy. Dr. Bluthenthal has received numerous awards including the John P. McGovern Award for Excellence in Medical Education from the Association for Multidisciplinary Education & Research in Substance Use & Addiction.

    On this episode, he joins to give us more insight on the opioid crisis and what he believes needs to happen to make change.

    EPISODE SHOWNOTES: Read more.

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  • Did you know every 39 minutes, someone dies in a drunk-driving accident in the United States? That's about 37 people a day.

    We know drinking and driving is deadly, yet it continues to happen across the country.

    According to one estimate, on average, those who drive drunk will be intoxicated 80 times before being caught. In addition, studies show the odds of being involved in a fatal auto accident increase with each additional DUI arrest.

    It’s a fate Shauna Zeuske tempted again and again.

    In 2015, she was arrested for driving under the influence. That DUI was her third. Within a month, she’d received two more and ended up with a three-year jail sentence. She was able to get some time shaved off her sentence, but within six months of returning home, she got her sixth DUI.

    When she went back to jail, she told her public defender she wanted to go to The Salvation Army. They allowed it, so she entered the Adult Rehabilitation Center program. These residential programs provide spiritual, emotional and social assistance to individuals who are experiencing a variety of social, emotional and spiritual challenges, including issues relating to substance abuse. Shauna feared she wouldn’t be able to get sober, but she stuck with it, because as she said, “she desperately wanted to stop drinking.”

    And in 2021, she graduated from The Salvation Army San Diego Adult Rehabilitation Center.

    She went on to manage the Transitional Living Center at The Salvation Army Door of Hope Rady Campus in San Diego, helping other women looking for transformation too.

    And today, she works as a financial controller for a construction company. She recently married and continues to sponsor and mentor others through their own challenges.

    Shauna is on the show to share more about her own experience on the road to recovery.

    EPISODE SHOWNOTES: Read more.

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  • It's said when an individual is rehabilitated from their addiction, some 50 people around them are positively affected.

    For The Salvation Army Adult Rehabilitation Center program across the western U.S., that equates to some 50,000 people a year.

    And more than only addressing issues of substance abuse, these centers offer life rehabilitation for those who need it, according to Major Mark Nelson, ARC Commander in the West.

    It's a story that goes back to William Booth telling his son in Victorian England to "do something" to help the men living under the bridge.

    Now, for more than 100 years, The Salvation Army has operated rehabilitation facilities across the U.S. that provide help and hope to those with a variety of problems, including issues relating to substance abuse. These residential programs offer spiritual, emotional and social assistance in an environment designed to help participants live healthy, fulfilling lives.

    But it doesn't stop with them. That ripple effect is helping restore families.

    EPISODE SHOWNOTES: Read more.

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  • One in 7 Americans reports experiencing a substance use disorder, according to the CDC.

    Some people may use drugs to help cope with stress or trauma. Others may use them to deal with mental health issues. Others still may even develop opioid use disorder after misusing opioids they are prescribed by their doctors for ailments like back pain.

    In any case, using drugs over time makes it easier to become addicted.

    Yet for those that become addicted, just one in 10 people will receive treatment. The reasons for this low rate range from stigma to difficulty actually accessing treatment services.

    It’s something Steve Adami is keeping a close watch on.

    Steve spent two decades in and out of jails and prison. Today, he is Executive Director of The Way Out, a recovery-focused homeless initiative of The Salvation Army.

    Ultimately, Steve wants to make sure it’s easy for anyone who wants to get treatment to get treatment. And he's on the show to share more about the effort to do just that.

    EPISODE SHOWNOTES: Read more.

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