
Show overview
Praise Cathedral Podcast has been publishing since 2023, and across the 3 years since has built a catalogue of 230 episodes. That works out to roughly 160 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a weekly cadence.
Episodes typically run thirty-five to sixty minutes — most land between 39 min and 45 min — and the run-time is fairly consistent across the catalogue. None of the episodes are flagged explicit by the publisher. It is catalogued as a EN-language Religion & Spirituality show.
The show is actively publishing — the most recent episode landed 1 weeks ago, with 28 episodes already out so far this year. The busiest year was 2024, with 98 episodes published. Published by Pastor Jerry Madden.
From the publisher
Praise Cathedral is a member of the Church of God denomination (Cleveland, TN) located in Greer, South Carolina. We're happy to provide a replay of our sermons for you to enjoy any time!
Latest Episodes
View all 230 episodesEven Jesus Had A Mother
Even Jesus Had A Mother
Undrafted
Undrafted
Let's Get Real
Let's Get Real

Where Is Everyone?
<p>Pastor Jerry Madden takes the congregation to the Cross and the empty tomb on Easter Sunday and poses the question 'Where Is Everyone?' Find guidance and direction through the stories told in the Bible to encourage your walk with Christ.</p>
Where Is Everyone?

If These Rocks Could Talk
<p>Throughout Scripture, God has used ordinary rocks and stones as powerful memorials of His faithfulness. From Jacob's pillow stone where God renewed His promises during Jacob's darkest hour, to the twelve memorial stones Joshua set up after crossing the Jordan River, to the small stone David used to defeat Goliath, these simple objects tell extraordinary stories. The most significant stone of all was the one that sealed Jesus' tomb - a stone that couldn't contain the risen Savior. These biblical examples remind us that God shows up in unexpected places and uses ordinary things to accomplish extraordinary purposes. We must share these stories of God's faithfulness with future generations, creating our own memorials to remember how God has worked in our lives.</p>
If These Rocks Could Talk

The Story of Dr Phil Cook
<p>We are excited to welcome Dr. Phil Cook, president of Lee University to our pulpit as he shares his testimony.</p>
The Story of Dr Phil Cook

Where The Kingdom Thrives
<p>The parable of the sower reveals why some people experience abundant spiritual fruit while others remain spiritually barren. Jesus describes three types of unproductive soil: hard hearts that have been hurt and become unteachable, shallow hearts that lack commitment and depth, and divided hearts where competing priorities choke out God's word. Good soil represents a heart that is soft, tender, and totally available to God. When God's word finds this kind of surrendered heart, it produces remarkable fruit - thirty, sixty, or even a hundred-fold. The key is honest self-examination and allowing God to break up hard places, create depth, and remove competing interests that prevent His word from flourishing in our lives.</p>
Where The Kingdom Thrives
If You Knew

If You Knew
<p>In John 4, Jesus' encounter with the Samaritan woman at the well reveals how understanding His true identity transforms everything. Jesus broke through racial and gender barriers to offer living water to someone society had rejected. The woman initially doubted His ability because she didn't recognize who He was - the same mistake we make today when we worry instead of pray. When Jesus exposed her hidden shame from five failed marriages, she tried to redirect to religious arguments rather than face her pain. But Jesus came not to condemn but to liberate. The key lesson is that if we truly knew who Jesus is - the King of Kings who gives us access to approach Him anytime - we would ask Him about everything instead of living below our privilege as God's children.</p>
What Is In A Name

What Is In A Name
Lord of Rest

Lord of Rest
<p>Jesus offers something radically different from religious performance: true rest for our souls. When He declared authority to forgive sins and healed on the Sabbath, Jesus challenged both moral conservatives and cultural liberals who sought acceptance through their own efforts. The Gospel isn't about meeting minimum requirements or achieving enlightenment—it's about resting in Christ's finished work. Religious systems create bondage by making acceptance conditional on performance, but Jesus provides rest through His completed sacrifice on the cross. The question isn't how much we must do to earn God's acceptance, but how much we can give in response to the acceptance we've already received in Christ.</p>