
Hosted by Rev. Kenn Blanchard · EN

Psalm 71:9 — "Do not cast me away when I am old; do not forsake me when my strength is gone." "There is a loneliness that doesn't come because you've done anything wrong. It comes because you've lived long enough. The children have grown. Friends have moved away—or passed away. Retirement has changed your routine. The house is quieter. The phone rings less often. And somewhere along the way, a man who spent decades taking care of everyone else discovers that he is sitting alone with his thoughts. The hardest part is that good men rarely talk about it. They keep mowing the lawn. They go to church. They smile when people ask, 'How are you?' They tell everyone they're doing fine. But in the quiet moments, they wonder, 'Does anyone still need me? Does my life still matter? Has God forgotten me?' If that's you today, or if you love someone who quietly carries that burden, I want you to hear this before we go any further: Your loneliness may be real, but it is not the final word. God has not abandoned you. The same God who walked with you through your strongest years will walk with you through your quietest ones. Today, we're going to talk about The Loneliness of Good Men—and the God who never leaves an empty chair unoccupied.

David's family reminds us that even godly people have troubled homes. Our hope is not found in having a perfect family, but in serving a perfect Savior who brings grace, healing, and redemption into broken homes. That truth is perhaps the greatest lesson from David's house: God's covenant faithfulness outlasted David's family failures. It gives hope to every parent, every spouse, every child, and every believer who has ever wondered whether God can still work through a messy family.

The Weight We Carry We all carry something—grief, anxiety, regret, fear, or burdens no one else can see. But God never intended for us to carry them alone. In this episode of Broken & Believing, Rev. Kenn Blanchard explores the powerful promise of 1 Peter 5:7: "Casting all your care upon Him; for He careth for you." Discover what it truly means to surrender your burdens to Christ and find peace in the God who genuinely cares for you. Scripture: 1 Peter 5:7 🌐 More episodes: kennspodcast.com

"I Wanna Praise God Like Caleb" Because only an old man knows what it really means to see God keep His word. POINT 1 — PRAISE THAT SURVIVES THE YEARS POINT 2 — PRAISE THAT OUTLIVES DISAPPOINTMENT POINT 3 — PRAISE THAT STILL HAS STRENGTH IN IT POINT 4 — PRAISE THAT KNOWS GOD IS NOT DONE Numbers 13:6, 13:30, 14:24 Joshua `4:11, 14-15 God Is James Cleveland & The Southern California Community Choir Thank you, Kenn

Count on God A Sermon from the Valley, for the Valley, by the God Who Never Leaves the Valley and a Psalm at the end. Thank you. Kenn

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https://www.teepublic.com/t-shirt/92878792-faith-is-not-a-feeling-by-rev-kenn-blanchard A sermon for the days when emotions wobble but God remains steady Takeaway The heart of the message: Faith is strongest when it stops depending on how you feel and starts depending on who God is. Feelings shift. God doesn't.

let me know what you think of the Psalm. Kenn

People think pastors, evangelists, and preachers just open the Bible and start talking. But you and I know better. There are days I sit with God and say, "Lord… what do You want me to say to Your people today?" And sometimes the hardest part isn't writing the sermon — it's wrestling with the fear that I might say too much, or not enough, or something that touches nobody, or something that glorifies me instead of Him. And on the days when that fear wins… there is no episode. There is no sermon. There is only silence. Because I refuse to speak if He hasn't spoken....

"When Hope Slips Through Your Fingers" TEXTS: • Psalm 42:5 • 2 Corinthians 1:8–10 • Lamentations 3:19–24 • Luke 24:13–35 Kenn Blanchard