
Westside Church
Experiencing the life and love of Jesus together.
Evan Earwicker, Ben Fleming and the Speaking Team of Westside Church · Westside Church
Show overview
Westside Church has been publishing since 2022, and across the 4 years since has built a catalogue of 207 episodes. That works out to roughly 100 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a weekly cadence.
Episodes typically run twenty to thirty-five minutes — most land between 27 min and 29 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-US-language Religion & Spirituality show.
The show is actively publishing — the most recent episode landed 1 weeks ago, with 21 episodes already out so far this year. The busiest year was 2024, with 59 episodes published.
From the publisher
Experiencing the life and love of Jesus together.
Latest Episodes
View all 207 episodesBen Fleming: What Money Can't Buy, Matthew 6:19-34
Lindsay Parnell: Performing the Faith, Matthew 6:1-18
Evan Earwicker: Am I a Good Person, Matthew 5:17-20
Evan Earwicker: Am I a Good Person, Matthew 5:17-20
Ben Fleming: The Luckiest, Matthew 5:1-12
Evan Earwicker: The Greatest Sermon Ever Told, Matthew 4:23-5:2
Ben Fleming: Easter Sunday, John 21:1-16
Evan Earwicker: God in the Garden, John 18:1-11
The Gospel of John: Week 13 | In the Garden of Gethsemane, Jesus, by handing himself over to his attackers, shows that he is not a powerless victim, but the only one with authority to choose the path of the cross to save others.
Ben Fleming: Abiding & Thriving, John 15:3-17
The Gospel of John: Week 12 | Jesus invites us to remain connected to him like branches to a vine, trusting that real transformation and fruitfulness comes not from abiding in his life and teachings – choosing to simply be with him – not striving to prove our dedication or worth.
Josh Cordell: Peace in a Troubled World, John 14: 1-14
The Gospel of John: Week 11 | The peace that Jesus offers isn’t found in specific circumstances or self-improvement. It is found by realizing that we are vessels of his goodness, and are fully reliant on his presence through the Holy Spirit.
Evan Earwicker: Love That Lowers, John 13:1-17
The Gospel of John: Week 10 | While the disciples argued about who among them was the greatest, Jesus stooped to wash their feet. By loving even those who would betray and abandon him, Jesus showed that loving your neighbor has nothing to do with status – it is about lowering yourself in order to lift up another.
Ben Fleming: Worship That Costs, John 12:1-8
The Gospel of John: Week 9 | Mary’s (the sister of Lazarus) bold act of anointing Jesus with costly perfume reveals that true discipleship flows from humble devotion at his feet – not pride, efficiency, or transactional religion that believes God “owes” us something.
Evan Earwicker: Resurrection & The Life, John 11:1-14
The Gospel of John: Week 8 | Jesus’ bold declaration, “I am the resurrection and the life,” confronts the hard question: Why God sometimes seems slow in the face of suffering? We are invited to trust Christ’s nearness in grief, believe in His power to bring life from death, and become a community marked by grace and resurrection hope.
Ben Fleming: The Voice We Know, John 10:1-10
The Gospel of John: Week 7 | Jesus’ declaration as the Good Shepherd invites us to consider what it truly means to recognize His voice amid the noise and competing influences of everyday life.
Evan Earwicker: Learning to See, John 8:12
The Gospel of John: Week 6 | When Jesus declared himself the Light of the World, it was a declaration that asked something of humanity, too. It asked us to keep our eyes open and willing to recognize that before we saw Jesus’ light, we were blind – but by acknowledging his light, now we can see!
Ben Fleming: A Tale of Two Frustrations, John 6:1-15
The Gospel of John: Week 5 | When Jesus fed the crowd but refused to be made a national savior, he disappointed the revolutionaries who viewed him as a means to an end – just like the Pharisees had before. Instead of seeing Jesus simply as someone who can change our circumstances, we should see and seek him for who he really is: the Bread of Life.
Evan Earwicker: Do You Want to Be Well? John 5:1-18
The Gospel of John: Week 4 | Following Jesus means allowing his teaching to change us. When John wrote about Jesus healing the paralyzed beggar, he noted how easily brokenness can become our identity – and how Jesus calls us to leave it behind.
Mike Meeks: Grace & Truth, John 4:1-30
The Gospel of John: Week 3 | Jesus is not half grace and half truth. He is fully grace and fully truth, which allowed him to completely see our sin and then sacrifice himself as a perfect atonement for it.
Ben Fleming: Jesus Brings Abundance, John 2:1-12
The Gospel of John: Week 2 | The Jesus who quietly and miraculously turned water into wine, refilling what had run dry, is the same Jesus who overturned tables at the temple, bolding disrupting a system that was denying people access to God. Jesus’ peace does not mean quiet – but it does mean wholeness, justice, and joy for those who take part in it.
Evan Earwicker: God Is on Our Side, John 1:1-18
The Gospel of John: Week 1 | The Apostle John’s account of the Gospel differs from Matthew, Mark, and Luke’s accounts in that John’s Gospel is a personal reflection on his experience of living and serving in Jesus’ presence. John writes earnestly that Jesus, who was the living, breathing Voice of God, is on humanity’s side.