
Hosted by Jenifer Parr · EN
Bibles & Botox is the signature podcast of Blush Revival, where faith meets real life. Through relatable and raw conversations about faith, identity, and authenticity, women are encouraged to draw closer to Jesus and live with confidence and grace.

If God is good… if He’s loving… if He’s ready to forgive and restore—then why do we still live like He’s not enough?In this episode of Bibles and Botox, we go beyond believing in God’s goodness and confront something deeper: whether we actually believe He is sufficient. Because the truth is, most of us aren’t rejecting God—we’re supplementing Him.We look to control, relationships, success, comfort, and validation to give us what only God can provide. The Bible calls this idolatry—not carved statues, but subtle, heart-level dependencies that quietly take God’s place.Through Scripture and the powerful story of the golden calf in Exodus 32, we uncover: Why we keep chasing “more” even when we know God How idols form in our hearts (and why they feel so hard to let go of) The real cost of misplaced trust—losing intimacy with God And the life-changing truth that God isn’t trying to be enough… He already is This episode is both convicting and freeing. Because the anxiety, striving, and emptiness we feel? They’re often signs that something else is sitting on the throne.It’s time to ask the hard question: What are you depending on that isn’t God?And more importantly… are you ready to let it go?Text us with questions or prayer requests 🩷Support the show

In this powerful kickoff to the A Father’s Love: The God of Second Chances series, we confront a quiet but deeply rooted struggle many women carry: “I know God loves me… but…”In this episode, we unpack what Scripture actually reveals about God’s character—not based on our performance, but on His unchanging nature. From God’s self-revelation in Exodus 34 to His relentless pursuit of Israel, and ultimately through the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus, one truth becomes unmistakably clear:God is not hesitant in His love—He is ready.Ready to forgive.Ready to restore.Ready to remain.Even in rebellion, doubt, and failure, God’s posture toward His people has always been steadfast, compassionate, and initiating—not reactive. The resurrection is the ultimate declaration that everything needed for your acceptance has already been accomplished.If you’ve ever struggled to fully receive God’s love because of your past, your patterns, or your “but statements,” this episode will challenge and reframe how you see the Father’s heart.You are not approaching a distant God—you are coming to a Father who has already moved toward you.Text us with questions or prayer requests 🩷Support the show

In this episode of Bibles and Botox, we talk about a dangerous pattern in the human heart: when obedience to God becomes costly, we start looking back at the very things He delivered us from.The Israelites were rescued from Egypt after generations of slavery. God heard their cries, made a way through the Red Sea, and led them toward freedom. But when the wilderness became uncomfortable, they began to romanticize the place of their bondage.They remembered the food.They remembered what felt familiar.But they forgot the chains.In this episode, we talk about:Why we tend to look back when following God feels hardWhat the story of Israel reveals about our own heartsHow sin edits our memories and makes bondage look attractiveWhy obedience can feel costly, but still leads to freedomWhat it means to trust God when the wilderness feels longThis conversation is for the woman who feels tempted to go back, back to old habits, old relationships, old comforts, old patterns, old ways of coping that God has already called her out of.Because the truth is this:The chains you escaped from were never freedom.If you have been in a season where the past looks appealing, where obedience feels hard, or where surrender feels costly, this episode will remind you that God is not leading you backward. He is leading you forward.Toward healing.Toward transformation.Toward the kind of freedom only Christ can give.Listen in and be reminded: don’t go back to Egypt when God is leading you to promise.Text us with questions or prayer requests 🩷Support the show

In this final episode of our Living from Grace series, we step into one of the most powerful encounters in all of Scripture — Isaiah’s vision in chapter 6.“In the year that King Uzziah died, I saw the Lord…”Isaiah sees God high and lifted up. Holy. Untouchable. Sovereign. And his immediate response? Not confidence. Not calling. Not purpose.“Woe is me. I am undone.”In this episode, we unpack: • What it actually means that God is holy • The Hebrew word behind “undone” and why it matters • Why conviction is not condemnation • How grace always comes before commission • Why you don’t have to strive to be sentIsaiah doesn’t volunteer for ministry because he feels qualified. He volunteers after he’s been cleansed. After the coal touches his lips. After atonement is declared over him.Grace precedes assignment.If you’ve ever felt unworthy, disqualified, too messy, too late, too broken — this conversation is for you. Because the gospel doesn’t begin with “Here I am.” It begins with “Your guilt is taken away.”And only then can you say, “Send me.”This episode will ground you in truth, strip away performance Christianity, and remind you that holiness isn’t meant to crush you — it’s meant to transform you.Listen in and rediscover what it means to live sent… from grace.Text us with questions or prayer requests 🩷Support the show

In this powerful continuation of our Living from Grace series, Jen walks us through one of the most unforgettable encounters in Scripture, the woman caught in adultery in Gospel of John 8.What happens after grace speaks?When Jesus says, “Neither do I condemn you,” He doesn’t minimize sin, He redefines identity. Before behavior changes, before apologies are perfected, before anything is fixed… grace speaks a verdict: no condemnation.This episode unpacks the difference between living for grace and living from grace. It’s about dropping the stones, the ones others throw, the ones we carry from our past, and the ones we quietly throw at ourselves.Grace doesn’t just forgive, it frees. It doesn’t just erase shame, it establishes a new standing.If you’ve been living braced for judgment instead of rooted in identity, this conversation is for you.It’s time to drop the stones. It’s time to live uncondemned. It’s time to live… from grace.Text us with questions or prayer requests 🩷Support the show

Saved Without a Resume is for the woman who has been trying to measure her standing with God by her consistency, her discipline, or her ability to “get it right.”It’s for the woman who loves God… but still feels pressure to prove that love.This message dismantles the idea that salvation is something you achieve and replaces it with the truth that salvation is something you receive.Not negotiated.Not earned.Not achieved.But, received.We’ll look at a story in Scripture: God does not move toward the 'impressive'. He moves toward the humble. Toward the honest. Toward the ones who come empty-handed.A broken spirit.A contrite heart.Open hands.Just like the thief on the cross—no résumé, no list of accomplishments, no time to fix his life—yet fully welcomed because he trusted Jesus.This episode gently exposes performance-based Christianity and invites you back to the simplicity of the gospel:You are not saved by what you bring to God.You are saved by what Christ has already done for you.No résumé required.No striving necessary.Just faith.Just grace.And a God that saves us not because of who we are, but because of who HE IS.Text us with questions or prayer requests 🩷Support the show

What if God doesn’t meet you at your performance… but at mercy?In the first episode of our new series Living from Grace, we dismantle the deeply ingrained belief that God meets us with crossed arms, disappointment, and condemnation and replace it with the biblical truth: God has always met His people at the Mercy Seat.From the Ark of the Covenant in Exodus to the cross of Christ, Scripture reveals a stunning pattern: God’s presence does not rest on human obedience, spiritual perfection, or flawless discipline, it rests on atoning blood. Mercy has an address. And that address is Jesus.In this episode, we explore:• Why God meets us above our failure, not inside our performance• How the Mercy Seat in the Old Testament foreshadows Christ• Why Jesus is literally called the “Mercy Seat” in Romans 3:25• What God’s posture toward you truly is when you sin• How mercy removes condemnation and grace empowers obedience• Why repentance grows best in an environment of mercy, not shameIf you’ve been living under quiet guilt, spiritual exhaustion, or the pressure to “do better” in order to be loved by God, this episode will reorient your entire understanding of where God meets you.Spoiler: It’s not in a courtroom.It’s not at your spiritual resume.It’s not at your best day.It’s at the cross.It’s at the Mercy Seat.And He invites you there every single time.Come discover what it really means to live from grace.Text us with questions or prayer requests 🩷Support the show

Faith doesn’t always feel confident or peaceful. Sometimes it feels like fear, hesitation, and obedience without clarity.In this episode of Bibles and Botox, we explore what I call “but faith”. The kind of faith that chooses obedience even when emotions, logic, and circumstances say otherwise. From Simon Peter lowering his nets after a night of failure, to Abraham placing Isaac on the altar, to Jesus praying in Gethsemane, we see a consistent pattern in Scripture: God works through surrendered obedience before understanding comes.You’ll hear a powerful personal testimony that brings this concept to life, and we’ll unpack how but faith shows up in real places: marriage, motherhood, calling, waiting seasons, and the moments when trusting God feels costly.If you’ve ever said, “God, this doesn’t make sense… but I’ll obey,” this episode is for you.Text us with questions or prayer requests 🩷Support the show

Anxiety often has deeper roots than stress or overwhelm. In this episode, we explore the powerful connection between shame and anxiety and the way shame quietly shapes our identity, our faith, and how we relate to God.Many Christian women carry anxiety fueled by self-blame, fear of disappointment, perfectionism, and the belief that God is distant when they struggle. But the Bible tells a different story—of a God who comes looking for His children, not after they’ve fixed themselves, but right in the middle of hiding.In this episode, we talk about: • How shame fuels anxiety and emotional exhaustion • Why anxiety isn’t always about control—but about identity • The biblical picture of a God who pursues, not withdraws • Finding freedom from shame through God’s grace and presenceIf you’re a Christian woman struggling with anxiety, burnout, or feelings of unworthiness, this episode offers biblical truth, encouragement, and hope rooted in Scripture—not self-help.You are seen. You are pursued. You are not disqualified.🎧 Listen, share, and subscribe for weekly faith-based conversations on anxiety, identity in Christ, emotional healing, and spiritual growth. You can also support the podcast through the Buzzsprout link in the show notes.Text us with questions or prayer requests 🩷Support the show

This episode dismantles one of the most seductive lies modern women live under: “If I don’t keep moving, producing, proving, and performing, everything will collapse.”Restlessness isn’t just exhaustion — it’s unbelief dressed up as hustle. It’s the false gospel that tells you you must earn worth, secure identity, fix everyone, anticipate every crisis, and carry what only God can carry.But Christ didn’t hang on a cross, drink the full cup of wrath, descend into death, rise again, and ascend to the right hand of the Father just so you could live like the world is still on your shoulders.“It is finished.” (John 19:30) Not partly finished. Not almost there. Not “Jesus did His part, now you better do yours flawlessly.”Finished means:the penalty is fully paidthe striving for identity is overthe performance treadmill is shatteredthe restlessness of self-salvation is exposed as a lieIf you’re constantly anxious, constantly hustling, constantly proving, constantly afraid to stop because life might unravel — then this isn’t just a lifestyle issue. It’s a lordship issue.You’ll hear why:Restlessness is not a personality flaw — it’s a theological misalignment.Busyness isn’t the enemy — burdened self-redemption is.Rest is not laziness — it’s obedience.Sabbath is not suggestion — it’s identity formation.Jesus didn’t invite you to burnout discipleship. He invited you to union, yoke, communion, and freedom.This episode will expose the counterfeit rest culture sells (self-care, spa days, escapism, numbing) and contrast it with the violent, victorious declaration Christ made over your life:“It is finished.” Finished striving. Finished earning. Finished proving. Finished performing for love you already have.Come listen — not to be inspired — but to be re-ordered. Come, and rest.Text us with questions or prayer requests 🩷Support the show