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Living On Common Ground

Living On Common Ground

By: Lucas and Jeff
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Does it feel like every part of your life is divided? Every scenario? Every environment? Your church, your school, your work, your friends. Left, right. Conservative, liberal. Religious, secular. From parenting styles to school choice, denominational choice to governing preference, it seems you're always being asked to take a side.


This is a conversation between a progressive Christian and a conservative atheist who happen to be great friends. Welcome to Living on Common Ground.

© 2026 Living On Common Ground
Philosophy Social Sciences Spirituality
Episodes
  • The Rip Current
    Jun 11 2026

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    The most dangerous water at the beach is not the wave you can see coming, it is the calm channel that quietly pulls you away from shore. We kick off a new series of short reflections by reading “The Rip Current,” then we take it apart like a real-life warning label: what does it mean when the hazard is subtle, the sign is easy to ignore, and your confidence shows up right when you should be paying attention?

    From there we get honest about how we react to authority. A lifeguard flag feels like useful information; a lifeguard truck barking orders can flip a switch and make you want to do the forbidden thing out of principle. That tension opens into a wider talk about boundaries, “collected wisdom,” and why some advice sounds outdated until you live the consequences. We use examples from relationships, faith, community, and the messy question of sex outside marriage to explore the difference between guidance that explains the why and rules that only demand compliance.

    We close by bringing it home to parenting, morality, and responsibility. How much safety is too much? When is a red flag appropriate, and when is it enough to post a warning and teach an escape route? And when your kid ignores you and gets pulled out anyway, what do you owe them next? If this conversation sparks a story for you, share it with us, and please subscribe, share the episode, and leave a review so more people can find the series.

    ©NoahHeldmanMusic

    https://livingoncommonground.buzzsprout.com

    https://www.jeffreystreszoff.com/

    jeffrey.streszoff@gmail.com

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    49 mins
  • Reflections from the Beach
    Jun 4 2026

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    The most dangerous current in your life might not feel like danger at all. Jeff opens a new series, “Reflections from the Beach,” with the story behind the stories: a community tornado that revealed what people can become for each other, a pandemic that turned everyday choices into tribal tests, and a church season where United Methodist disaffiliation fights and LGBTQ inclusion debates left real emotional scars.

    From there, we move from crisis to recovery without pretending it’s neat. Jeff shares why a solo Appalachian Trail sabbatical mattered, what it did to his sense of identity beyond “Pastor,” and how his faith has shifted from defending doctrines to paying attention to what gives life. Along the way, he names the thinkers and frameworks that shaped his language, from Stoicism and resilience to Paul Tillich’s “ground of being,” John’s logos, and the idea of a divine current oriented toward connection, love, and radical hospitality.

    The beach becomes a surprisingly sharp teacher. A rip current safety sign turns into a metaphor for spiritual formation, political polarization, and relationships: the calm channel between waves can be the thing that pulls you out to sea. We also explain how the series will work each week, why Jeff reads each reflection straight through before the conversation starts, and how our show lives in the tension of a progressive Christian and a conservative atheist choosing curiosity over winning.

    Subscribe, share the show with a friend who needs a better kind of conversation, and leave a review if it helps. Then tell us what came up for you: what “easy path” in your life has been more dangerous than it looked?

    ©NoahHeldmanMusic

    https://livingoncommonground.buzzsprout.com

    https://www.jeffreystreszoff.com/

    jeffrey.streszoff@gmail.com

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    38 mins
  • A Libertarian Congressman Loses
    May 28 2026

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    Every part of life can start to feel like a walled-off camp: your work, your church, your friend group, even your news feed. We sit down as a progressive Christian and a conservative atheist who still choose friendship, and we ask a hard question out loud: if we met today, would we still be friends?

    A Kentucky congressional primary turns into a bigger conversation about political polarization, libertarianism, and what happens when principle clashes with party power. We unpack why Thomas Massie became important to small-government voters, why omnibus spending bills and “must-pass” budgets are so corrosive, and how money and loyalty tests can flip allies into enemies. From there we get into the public’s demand for government transparency, including the Epstein files and other high-profile records, and why broken promises fuel distrust in institutions across the spectrum.

    We also tackle the messier stories everyone argues about: reports of an IRS-related deal, claims of political weaponization, and the debate over January 6 that often gets flattened into a single narrative. Along the way we talk media algorithms, late night TV as clipped “news,” shrinking attention spans, and why long-form conversation still matters when everything else pushes us toward quick outrage. We end with perspective from US history and a reminder that understanding someone’s reasons is not the same as agreeing.

    If you want more civil discourse, common ground, and honest debate without caricatures, subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review. What’s one belief you’ve changed after hearing someone out?

    ©NoahHeldmanMusic

    https://livingoncommonground.buzzsprout.com

    https://www.jeffreystreszoff.com/

    jeffrey.streszoff@gmail.com

    Show More Show Less
    47 mins
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