Savannah Grove Baptist Church
Native Drums
Explore the powerful symbolism of drums in African American culture, once tools of communication and resistance during the darkest times of slavery. We confront the lingering shadows of economic exploitation and the pervasive influence of media and religion in controlling black narratives. Let’s reexamine the role of the black church and its mission to fight systemic injustices, urging a return to prophetic ministries that prioritize humanity and community over material wealth. This podcast episode is not just a reflection of the past but a call to action for the future, urging us to build a m...
Autor
Savannah Grove Baptist Church
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Podcast-Website
Neueste Folge
5. Jul 2026
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What's Often Forgotten About the Freedom of the Fourth 05.07.2026 27:44
Send us Fan Mail Fireworks are loud, simple, and temporary. Freedom is none of those things. I’m Napoleon Bradford, and I’m asking a question most of us were never taught to sit with: when did you become free, and freedom from whom? If your answer is “July 4th, 1776,” stay with me, because for millions of Americans that date has never been fully true historically, legally, or socially. We walk thr...
What Happens When Worship Becomes Movement 04.07.2026 9:37
Send us Fan Mail A summer camp where kids learn choreography is nice. A summer camp where kids learn how to worship, lead, and believe they belong is something else entirely. We sit down with Mia to celebrate the 26th year of Heaven Bound Praise Dance Camp at Savannah Grove Baptist Church in Florence, South Carolina, and to share what makes this week such a life-giving tradition for families, stud...
No Youth No Church 28.06.2026 29:44
Send us Fan Mail If your church’s older members stepped away tomorrow, who would still be standing in the building a year from now? That question drives a real, practical conversation with Alpheus Anderson, an author, music director, producer, and the founder of Pure in Heart children’s and youth choir. We talk about the quiet crisis many congregations feel after COVID: youth ministry numbers shri...
The King Summit Preview 24.06.2026 30:28
Send us Fan Mail You can feel it when a community moment is bigger than a flyer. Josiellia Williams sits down with Bishop Michael Blue for a special Native Drums conversation that starts with a full preview of CCFM’s King Summit at the Florence Center in Florence, South Carolina, then goes deeper into what churches actually need to navigate right now. We walk through the schedule, the worship nigh...
138 Years Of Faith In Action 21.06.2026 30:47
Send us Fan Mail 138 years is not a slogan, it’s proof of a mission that keeps showing up. From Savannah Grove Baptist Church, we talk with Mrs. Mary Alice Graham, president of the Women’s Baptist Educational and Missionary Convention of South Carolina, and Dr. Sarah Simmons, second vice president, about how this statewide women’s ministry keeps Christian education and missionary work alive across...
A Clear Guide To The South Carolina Baptist Women’s Annual Session 14.06.2026 10:04
Send us Fan Mail A big church week can feel confusing fast, so we brought in the perfect guide: our sister Antoinette “Sister Toni” Muldrow, longtime leader in Baptist women’s work across South Carolina. She helps us map out what’s happening day by day as the Women’s Baptist E&M Convention of South Carolina convenes at Savannah Grove Baptist Church in Effingham, just outside Florence, SC. If y...
Freedom School Turns Summer Break Into A Reading Habit 13.06.2026 9:14
Send us Fan Mail Summer break can quietly undo months of progress, especially when kids lose daily reading practice. We sit down with Dr. Fraronda Green, executive director of the Children’s Defense Fund Freedom School at Savannah Grove Baptist Church, to talk about a summer literacy program designed to fight summer reading loss while building pride, confidence, and community. Dr. Green connects t...
You Only Need One Photo ID To Vote 01.06.2026 13:02
Send us Fan Mail Voting gets complicated the moment bad info hits the group chat. So we brought in Delcinia Murchison, a retired postmaster and experienced elections worker, to give clear, practical guidance that helps you walk into the polls confident, calm, and prepared. We start with the question we keep hearing: “How many IDs do I need to vote?” Delcinia lays it out plainly for South Carolina...
Redistricting In South Carolina 24.05.2026 40:40
Send us Fan Mail A political map can look like harmless lines on paper right up until it changes who gets heard. We’re joined by South Carolina Representatives Robert Williams (House Seat 62) and Roger Kirby (House Seat 101) for a candid breakdown of the state’s mid decade redistricting fight and why the timing alone raises alarms for voters, candidates, and election officials. We talk through the...
You Can Change Careers And Still Win 17.05.2026 19:36
Send us Fan Mail Your career doesn’t have to make sense to anyone else for it to work and Shemeka Cusack is living proof. We talk with Shemeka about what it looks like to pivot from early college plans and radiology coursework into hair school, salon ownership, real estate, and ultimately a calling in pediatric speech therapy. The through line is growth: every job teaches a skill you can reuse, es...
A Homecoming For The Pee Dee As Wilson High Marks 160 Years With A Parade Block Party And Gospel Weekend 03.05.2026 25:39
Send us Fan Mail 160 years doesn’t just mark time, it marks sacrifice, pride, and the kind of education that reshaped families across generations. We sit down with Bryant Moses, chairman of the Wilson High School 160th anniversary committee, to share what’s coming and why this celebration belongs to the entire Pee Dee region, not only Florence locals or recent grads. If Wilson touched your family...
From Coach To Superintendent 26.04.2026 25:19
Send us Fan Mail A lot of people imagine superintendents as “career administrators” who climbed a neat ladder. Bernard McDaniel’s story is messier, more human, and far more useful. From teacher and football coach to principal, district leader, and now Superintendent of Lee County Schools, he breaks down the real moves that shaped his leadership and the hard moments that tested it. We talk about ho...
What Do You Owe Your Ancestors And Your Vote 12.04.2026 49:23
Send us Fan Mail A single deed can hold a whole world. We talk with Terry James, founder and executive director of the Jamestown Foundation, about what it takes to protect Black family land and turn it into a public place of learning. Terry walks us from the foundation’s start in 2007 to the annual Jamestown celebration, where storytellers, craftspeople, Tuscarora artists, and historical reenactor...
Tracing African Roots From Genesis Through Egypt 29.03.2026 31:25
Send us Fan Mail The version of the Bible most of us grew up with had a quiet message baked into the pictures, the movies, and even the way history got taught: Black people were missing from the sacred story. That claim doesn’t hold up when you read with a map open and the text taken seriously, so we invited Dr. Antonio Black, pastor of Green Hill Baptist Church, to walk with us through what scrip...
When Caring For Others Becomes A Ministry 27.03.2026 32:19
Send us Fan Mail You can hear it in Marilyn McKnight’s voice right away: for her, caregiving is not a transaction, it’s a calling. Marilyn is the president and CEO of Peace Love And Glory Home Care LLC, and she joins us during Women’s History Month to talk about what it really takes to serve families with dignity, consistency, and faith. She shares how years of experience across roles in home care...
If Democracy Is “We The People” Who Are You Hearing? 22.03.2026 1:10:31
Send us Fan Mail The fastest way to lose your community is to stop listening to it. Josiellia Williams, sat with Senator Maggie Glover for a wide-ranging, deeply personal talk about what real representation looks like in South Carolina politics and why she believes every elected seat is an “assignment” that belongs to the people who put you there. From the start, she takes us back to the early ca...
What Happens When A Community Forgets Its Own Playbook 15.03.2026 42:36
Send us Fan Mail History doesn’t always announce itself while you’re living it and that’s the thread we keep pulling in our conversation with Elaine Reid. She came home looking for a job, walked into a local newsroom, and soon became the first African American anchor woman on WBTW TV 13 News. That single change in who held the mic reshaped access, trust, and visibility for Black communities across...
When Purpose Meets Care: Turning A Calling Into Limb-Saving Work 08.03.2026 24:59
Send us Fan Mail A quiet statistic hides in plain sight across the South: diabetes is stealing mobility, dignity, and years often starting with the feet. We sat down with Dr. Hillery Dolford, a family nurse practitioner with a doctorate in nursing, to unpack how culture, diet, and inactivity can outweigh genetics, and why early action on rising A1C is the difference between management and crisis....
From Salon Chair To Catering Empire 01.03.2026 20:44
Send us Fan Mail A wood stove, a hot plate, and a room full of doll babies: that’s where Vea Ella Gee culinary story begins, and it carries her from a bustling beauty salon to a beloved catering business that’s fed weddings, offices, and whole communities. We sit down during Women’s History Month to trace a life built on family recipes, bold pivots, and the kind of grit that turns passion into a p...
How Girl Scouts Are Fighting For Corporal Waverly Woodson’s Medal Of Honor 15.02.2026 28:29
Send us Fan Mail Courage deserves a clear record. We sit down with historian and philanthropist Lloyd Gill to follow a remarkable path from a family’s memorial scholarship to a full‑scale community campaign to honor Corporal Waverly Woodson Jr., the Black medic who worked 30 straight hours on Omaha Beach saving lives while wounded. What began as a student research challenge turned into a mission f...
Four Voices That Changed American Literature 25.01.2026 27:14
Send us Fan Mail Four voices. One enduring throughline: language as liberation. We shine a bright, human light on Maya Angelou, Zora Neale Hurston, Toni Morrison, and Alice Walker—women who transformed American literature and widened the world’s sense of what stories can hold. We start with Maya Angelou, tracing a path from childhood silence to a global stage. Her memoir I Know Why the Caged Bird...
Exploring A Century Of Black Achievement And Why Studying It Today Still Matters 11.01.2026 14:44
Send us Fan Mail A hundred years after Carter G. Woodson launched Negro History Week, we step back and ask a simple question with big consequences: how do we choose what to remember? Educator and former coach Daryl Page charts the living map of Black history—its origins, its overlooked corners, and the practical ways we can study and share it with the next generation. We begin with the roots: wh...
Inside The Education Oversight Machine: Scores, Standards, And Spending 07.12.2025 28:38
Send us Fan Mail Education isn’t a scoreboard—it’s a future. Representative Terry Alexander joins us to open the black box of South Carolina’s Education Oversight Committee, explain how standards get set, and question whether rising rankings reflect real learning or just better spin. We talk plainly about what data can and can’t tell us, where budgets actually land, and why too many graduates stil...
How A Community Program Rebuilds Bonds At Home 23.11.2025 43:25
Send us Fan Mail Real change at home often starts with small, repeatable habits: a shared meal, a calm conversation, a clear boundary. We invited Elder Alexis Pipkins to walk us through the Strengthening Families Program and how 11 structured sessions help parents and kids trade conflict for connection. From the first dinner to the final booster, this skills-based approach (not therapy) leans on t...
Consistency Is The Quiet Superpower Of Fatherhood 16.11.2025 38:33
Send us Fan Mail What if fatherhood support felt practical, human, and free of judgment? We sat down with the Man to Man Fatherhood Initiative team to explore how their intervention specialists help dads steady work, court, and home—so kids see a parent who shows up consistently and with purpose. We start where many fathers need help most: employment. The team runs a hands‑on job development boot...
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