LIVE Podcasts

LIVE Podcasts

Legacy Podcast goes LIVE

Listen to Legacy Podcast on: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Spotify | Amazon Music

Legacy Podcast LIVE Series

Show Notes: LIVE with Peter Lynas at Regular Joes

Faith in the public square, a weekend for fathers and their 11y/o moving into year 8, and the small question of what it means to be human…

Welcome to the first of our LIVE Podcasts. Kicking things off with Peter Lynas at the Regular Joes men’s conference run by our friends at RUMbLE.

Peter trained and worked as a barrister. Married to Rose with two daughters. He has sat on various boards over the years, including the board of Regent College, where he and his wife studied for a season. He also sits on our board at Exodus. His passion for faith in the public square compels him as a regular commentator in the media. He now directs the work of Evangelical Alliance across the UK and is co-lead of Being Human.

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Guest:

Peter Lynas is the director of Evangelical Alliance in the UK and co-lead of Being Human

Host:

Andy Lamberton is director of Legacy and author of Letters for Exiles

Links

Being Human

Evangelical Alliance

Show Notes: LIVE with Shane Logan and Fanta Clarke at Ballygrainy Presbyterian
Today’s guests hold significant roles in society and church. Join us for this uplifting conversation as Andy speaks with Shane and Fanta about their story of faith, the theme of fatherhood across Scripture, and what it means to be a grandfather and a father today.

SHANE LOGAN
Former head of Ulster Rugby, Shane Logan, is the new chief executive of the Bryson Group, one of Northern Ireland’s biggest and oldest social enterprises. During his time at Ulster Rugby, Shane oversaw the £15m redevelopment of Ravenhill, now the Kingspan Stadium, as well as a period of strong success on the field, which culminated in the side reaching the 2012 Heineken Cup Final. 


BISHOP KEN CLARKE
Ken (aka Fanta) became a minister in 1972 and has served in a number of roles across the evangelical church, including time spent in Chile as a missionary, local church leadership on both sides of the Irish border, became Bishop of Kilmore, Elhpin and Ardagh in 2001 before directing SAMS UK and Ireland (South American Mission Society). Now Re-Fired, he is married to Helen, they have four daughters, and grandchildren.


ANDY LAMBERTON
Andy directs the work of Legacy and has been hosting the Legacy podcast since it started, with conversations on faith and fatherhood. Author of Letters for Exiles, married to Debbie, they have four children and usually have icepops for deserts. 
Show Notes: LIVE with Tim Shiels and Rob Fraser-Binns at Fermanagh Christian Fellowship

A Derry man, a Yorkshire man, and a Donegal man walk into a church… 

Today, a Derry man bravely shares his story from brokenness to finding his identity in Christ–Tim’s story pulses with the restoring heart of our Heavenly Father. 

Also, you’ll get to hear Rob’s story as he shares about the heart of Legacy, his journey of faith, fostering and having young kids. Fasten your seatbelt!

TIM SHIELS

A former drug addict who experienced radical grace-driven transformation when he made the decision to follow Jesus. Tim and his wife, Jennie, now lead a growing church in Omagh. Tim is a father and UCB radio host.

ROB FRASER-BINNS

A Yorkshire man comes to Ireland. After over a decade of connection with a local church, Rob decided to follow Jesus. Having been a youth pastor in Scotland, he has just relocated to Northern Ireland to take up Legacy’s Head of Programmes position. Rob, along with his wife Lisa, fostered children before they had their own.

ANDY LAMBERTON

Andy directs the work of Legacy and has been hosting the Legacy podcast since it started, with conversations on faith and fatherhood. Author of Letters for Exiles, married to Debbie, they have four children raising them along the Donegal shoreline. 

Show Notes: LIVE with David Smyth and Dawn McAvoy at Elmwood Presbyterian

When God the Son became flesh, it started not in Bethlehem but nine months before, in pregnancy. 

Joseph, as husband to Mary and an earthly father to Jesus, is a fascinating example. Providing, protecting, leading and loving his family through difficulties, cultural shame and death threats. 

Our friends at Evangelical Alliance join us on the Legacy Podcast LIVE at Elmwood Presbyterian. From our changing society to the desire for wholesomeness amongst young people, from a fetus to the saviour of the world. We cover a lot of ground in this conversation on faith and fatherhood. 

Evangelical Alliance and Both Lives have a new resource called God Unborn, which looks at the impact of Joseph on the story of the incarnation. Download a seven-day devotional – God Unborn – here

Also available for churches is a video resource you can play on a Sunday morning in March – 9 months before Christmas at the same link. 

 The Evangelical Alliance is a membership organisation of which we are a member – and you can be too! As a church, an organisation or an individual. Find out more on their website.  

Both Lives is an initiative of Evangelical Alliance: a pro-women and pro-life movement – imagining a people and place that values the life and health of women and unborn children, and pursues the wellbeing of both. Find out more here.

And Legacy… that’s us! A ministry for fathers. We provide programmes for churches to help faith and fatherhood thrive. Find out more on our website. www.legacyfathers.org

Today’s guests

DAVID SMYTH

David is head of the Evangelical Alliance in Northern Ireland and coordinates their Public Leader course. A former solicitor who represents the Evangelical Alliance on a range of government, civic, and charitable forums. He serves in the space where faith, law, politics, and culture intersect. He is also an elder in Legacurry Presbyterian Church. 

DAWN MCAVOY

Through her own story of pregnancy crisis, Dawn is now convinced that both lives matter during pregnancy. She lives and worships on the Ards peninsula in Northern Ireland with her husband Peter and their growing family.

ANDY LAMBERTON

Andy directs the work of Legacy and has been hosting the Legacy podcast since it started, with conversations on faith and fatherhood. Author of Letters for Exiles (a book on Daniel), married to Debbie, they have four children raising them along the Donegal shoreline. 

LINKS:

A previous episode Fathers and the Unexpected with David and Dawn

Download a seven-day devotional – God Unborn

Evangelical Alliance

Both Lives

Legacy

Show Notes: LIVE with Warren Smyth and Jasper Rutherford at Magherafelt Baptist

The snare of pornography, the journey out, and a father coming to Christ.

Andy is joined by two friends on the Legacy Podcast, Warren and Jasper, LIVE at Magherafelt Baptist Church. 

  • “The Devil knows your name but calls you by your sin. God knows your sin but calls you by your name.” 
  • “I could stop myself from falling on my knees, but I couldn’t stop the tears.”
  • “It’s not that we have to clean ourselves up to come to God, but when we come to God, He cleans us up.”
  • “You never walk alone.”

Feel free to reach out – hello@legacyfathers.org 

Huge thanks to Magherafelt for hosting such an amazing evening.

GUESTS
Warren Smyth
Jasper Rutherford
Andy Lamberton

Links:
Legacy
Conquer Series
CIY

How to Help Your Children Slow Down, with Kent Evans. Legacy Podcast S3E2

How to Help Your Children Slow Down, with Kent Evans. Legacy Podcast S3E2

Listen on: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Spotify | Amazon Music

How to Help Your Children Slow Down

Life is a million miles an hour. Is your home a haven or do you live in a hurried house? Little of what’s important happens in a rush. 

Join Andy Lamberton as he speaks with Kent Evans about helping our children slow down.

Chapters

  • 0:00 – Introduction
  • 3:30 – Helping our children slow down
  • 24:00 – Becoming disciple-making dads

This is the second of our ‘How To’ series. Up next: How to Embrace God’s Call to be Fathers to the Fatherless, with Roger Cooke. 

Guest:
Kent Evans is executive director of Manhood Journey, and along with his wife, April, has not one, not two, not three, not four, but five sons. Author of Manhood Journey and Wise Guys

Links:

*****

Legacy Podcast Hosts

Andy Lamberton is the director of Legacy. He goes to the same church his parents, grandparents, great and great great-grandparents went to. Married to Debbie, they are raising their four children in Donegal with ice-pops for dessert most days. Author of Letters for Exiles: Faithful Living in a Faithless World.

Stephen Mullan directs the work of Dreamscheme Northern Ireland, a youth work charity that provides support and opportunities to young people growing up in housing estates. He also writes on the subject of youth via his newsletter Rethinking Youth. Stephen is married to Sharon and has two young children.

Stephen Mullan

Fathers and the Unexpected with David Smyth and Dawn McAvoy. Legacy Podcast S1E3

Fathers and the Unexpected with David Smyth and Dawn McAvoy. Legacy Podcast S1E3

“We can’t prepare our kids for every eventuality. So much about fatherhood is unexpected. There will be challenges our children encounter that we simply can’t forecast. But then again, the job is to be a good parent, not a good prophet.”

Join co-hosts Andy Lamberton and Stephen Mullan as they chat with David Smyth and Dawn McAvoy from Evangelical Alliance and Both Lives Matter.

Listen on: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Spotify | Amazon Music

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Related Links from this episode:
Both Lives Matter Website
Evangelical Alliance Website
2 Minute Video explaining Legacy.

Fathers and the Unexpected – Article by Stephen Mullan.

We’re back with another episode from the Legacy Podcast. I found this to be another really helpful conversation that gets into all sorts of important topics. Thanks to David Smyth and Dawn McIvoy from Evangelical Alliance for being great contributors.

On the back of the conversation, I’ve been thinking that we can’t prepare our kids for every eventuality. So much about fatherhood is unexpected. There will be challenges our children encounter that we simply can’t forecast. But then again, the job is to be a good parent, not a good prophet.

Stories prepare our children for the unexpected

One way we can give our children the resources they need for the unknowable future is through telling stories.

In the podcast, David points to storytelling as a way to prepare our kids for whatever lies ahead. I’ve thought about this before, but only in terms of reading good books to my own children. I’m excited to pass on the old tales and fables, as well as the modern classics like Narnia and Lord of the Rings. What I hadn’t thought about before was the value of my own stories or the tales from my family. I appreciate David’s encouragement to tell more of these to my children.

Stories help prepare children for the unknown.

When we tell good stories:

  • We introduce our children to role models and heroes to imitate.
  • We fill their imagination with visions of a good life.
  • We teach them to take a long view – it takes a journey and many obstacles to reach our goals and to become who we’re made to be.
  • We connect their individual life to something larger than themselves.
  • We inspire them to stand for good and to fight against evil.

Crucially, stories shape our children’s sense of identity and purpose – two realities that will hold them as they navigate the future.

Where do we start all of this?

First, let’s embrace our job as storytellers. Let’s find good stories and tell them often. That might mean asking for recommendations and spending some money. But while I will definitely be buying more books, my major take-away from our conversation with David is that my children need to hear more stories from my own life and my parents’ and grandparents’ lives.

When the unexpected happens, say something certain

As time passes by, our children will inevitably experience the unexpected.

In the second part of our podcast conversation, Dawn talked in depth about one significant example – unplanned pregnancy. But there are many other examples.
The point that struck me, however, was the power of a father to give his children hope through how he responds to the unexpected.

In Dawn’s own case, the response of her dad gave her the support she needed during an unplanned pregnancy. The certainty that her dad was going to be part of her circle of support made all the difference and encouraged her to move forward as a young mum.

Sadly, when men don’t give this kind of support to their partner or daughter, the likelihood of abortion skyrockets. As Dawn puts it: “among women who terminate their pregnancy, 82% are single … the lack of support persuades them to terminate the pregnancy.”

This is a message dads don’t hear enough: our words matter – and they especially matter during times of unplanned crisis.
When we look our children in the eye and assure them of our full support, regardless of the mess and pain that must be faced, we fill them with hope and give them confidence to move forward. We guarantee them that however difficult the next few steps will be, they can count on Dad to be on their side.

Practically, that means we need to be ready to speak to our children with certainty. One word Andy Lamberton encourages dads to use more often is ‘always’. I like that advice.

  • “You can always come talk to me.”
  • “I’ll always be here for you.”
  • “I will always love you.”

Said with sincerity, words like these can be the lifeline that gets our children through the challenge.

Did you enjoy the podcast? please share with other fathers you know and tell us what you think. Email: hello@legacyfathers.org 

By Stephen Mullan
Cohost of the Legacy Podcast.

Bio:
Stephen directs the work of Dreamscheme Northern Ireland, a youth work charity that provides support and opportunities to young people growing up in housing estates. He also writes on the subject of youth via his newsletter Rethinking Youth. Stephen is married to Sharon and has two young children.