Uncomfortable Grace Podcast By Coty Nguyễn cover art

Uncomfortable Grace

Uncomfortable Grace

By: Coty Nguyễn
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Through Uncomfortable Grace, I create space for honest, Spirit-led conversations that challenge the Church to return to truth, unity, and holiness. Each episode confronts the hard stuff... sin, division, lukewarm faith and invites listeners into deeper surrender, practical discipleship, and a revived relationship with Jesus. This isn’t about surface-level inspiration... it’s about transformation.


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© 2026 Uncomfortable Grace
Christianity Ministry & Evangelism Spirituality
Episodes
  • Is Death Too Far
    Mar 24 2026

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    Death can feel like the simplest answer when evil is undeniable, but simple answers can hide unexamined assumptions. We sit with a question that refuses to stay theoretical: is the death penalty ever faithful for Christians, or is it a form of vengeance we baptized as “justice”? I share how my own framework shifted from clean moral categories to a deeper grief over any life lost, including the condemned.

    To wrestle with capital punishment without turning it into a political shouting match, we use the Wesleyan quadrilateral: Scripture, tradition, reason, and experience. We look at the image of God in Genesis, God’s desire for repentance in Ezekiel 18:23, and Jesus stopping an execution in John 8, then ask what those texts do to our instincts about killing as punishment. From there we talk honestly about Christian tradition, how it has supported the death penalty at times, and why holiness can refine our moral imagination toward prison reform, restraint, and mercy without denying the need for justice.

    We also get practical and blunt: what is punishment for, and can life imprisonment protect society while avoiding irreversible harm? Finally, we land on the most uncomfortable test of all: when I want someone executed, am I pursuing justice or feeding revenge. If you care about Christian theology, criminal justice, restorative justice, and what it means to be serious about Jesus, this conversation will challenge you in the best way. Subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review, then tell us: is death too far?

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    20 mins
  • When the Church Makes Peace With Death: Abortion, the Death Penalty, and the Gospel We Keep Avoiding
    Feb 10 2026

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    When compassion gets confused with killing and dignity is used to dress up death, it’s time to slow down and ask what God has actually said. We trace a straight line from Genesis to the Gospels to show why human life is sacred, how the image of God grounds dignity beyond productivity or autonomy, and why death is never a solution in the kingdom Jesus announced. Along the way, we take on the hard question many Christians avoid: can a pro-life ethic make peace with the death penalty? Drawing from a Wesleyan lens, we wrestle with justice, protection of the innocent, and the space grace needs to work, even behind bars.

    You’ll hear a clear case for choosing life that isn’t about party lines or slogans. We name how a culture of death takes root—by making worth conditional, calling killing care, and treating dependence as weakness—and we contrast that with Jesus’ pattern: moving toward the sick, raising the dead, and defeating the grave through resurrection. We address common pushbacks around compassion, choice, and judgment, and show how biblical compassion never ends a life to ease pain. Instead, it bears suffering with people and refuses to trade a person’s future for our present comfort.

    Our goal is not to win arguments, but to call the church back to faithfulness where truth and mercy meet. If resurrection is real, death is the enemy, not a tool. Join us as we challenge easy narratives, repent of failures, and commit to protecting every life—unborn, disabled, elderly, incarcerated, and even guilty—because Jesus is Lord of life and death doesn’t get the final word. If this moved you or made you think, share it with a friend, subscribe for more, and leave a review with the verse that shaped your view of life.

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    23 mins
  • Guarding Scripture In A Heated Debate About Immigration
    Jan 27 2026

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    What happens when politics borrows the language of the pulpit? We open the door on a hard conversation: immigration, slogans that sound compassionate, and the subtle ways the church can trade theological depth for quick applause. Our aim isn’t to inflame, but to shepherd—calling out misused scripture while holding fast to mercy, order, and the lordship of Jesus.

    We dig into the claim “Jesus was an immigrant,” exploring why the heart behind it matters and why the history doesn’t fit modern categories. From there, we challenge the assumption that empathy justifies lawlessness, tracing a biblical thread from creation’s order to Israel’s laws to the early church’s discipline. Grace doesn’t dissolve boundaries; it transforms people within them. Along the way, we ask why easy slogans spread faster than truth and how repentance, not affirmation, keeps the gospel alive in our hearts.

    Drawing on a Wesleyan lens—Scripture as primary authority, with tradition, reason, and experience in their proper place—we offer a path to love immigrants without twisting texts. We unpack how turning Jesus into a political mascot silences his lordship, and how weaponized compassion, however well-intended, distorts the gospel’s call to holiness. The final charge is simple and demanding: love the stranger, pursue justice, resist cruelty, and refuse to bend Scripture to our instincts. Uncomfortable grace is still grace, and truth spoken in love still stands.

    If this conversation helps you think more clearly and love more faithfully, share it with a friend, subscribe for more thoughtful theology, and leave a review to help others find the show.

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    20 mins
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