Join VIP Text List and Get A Chance to Win an I Can Only Imagine DVD

How about a contest? How about a chance to win a copy of the DVD “I Can Only Imagine”? That will happen if you text “EdBostonPodcast” to 31996.

When you text “EdBostonPodcast” to 31996, you will be added to our VIP text list and will get occasional texts from us (no more than one per week). We will run contests, make major announcements, and lots of other fun things, but remember – we won’t flood your phone with messages, no more than one message per week.

This contest will run until 8 pm eastern on July 5th and the winner will be contacted within 48 hours to get where you want your copy of I Can Only Imagine delivered.

 

National Day of Prayer Special – Tonight at 9 pm Eastern

Tonight Thursday, May 3rd, the Ed Boston Podcast Network will host a special time of prayer, scripture, and comments for our country. We will be live streaming on Facebook Live, You Now, and You Tube.

Here is some information from the National organization about today’s events and history of National Day of Prayer.

National Day of Prayer Theme for 2018

The National Day of Prayer was created in 1952 by a joint resolution of Congress, and signed into law by President Harry S. Truman. In 1988, the law was unanimously amended by both the House and the Senate and signed into law by President Ronald Reagan on Thursday, May 5, 1988, designating the first Thursday of May as a day of national prayer. Every president since 1952 has signed a National Day of Prayer proclamation.

Prayer brings people together. Prayer builds bridges between opposing persons and even political parties. Prayer reminds us that we are created in God’s image and He desires for us to represent Him everywhere we go. Prayer brings UNITY. In 2018, our theme will be Pray for America – UNITY, based upon Ephesians 4:3 which challenges us to mobilize unified public prayer for America, “Making every effort to keep the unity of the Spirit through the bond of peace.”

Our hope is that individuals, churches, and spiritual leaders in America, will humble ourselves and unify in prevailing prayer for the next great move of God in America. We can come together in clear agreement that this is our greatest need. We can become a visible union, standing together in prayer. We can pray more than ever before, and practice extraordinary prayer for the next great move of God in America that will catapult the message of the gospel nationally and internationally.

Pray with us. Sponsor an event in your community. Become a volunteer. Order resources to help promote an event in your area. Support the National Day of Prayer financially. Together, we can mobilize unified public prayer for America!

“There is no great movement of God that has ever occurred that does not begin with the extraordinary prayer of God’s people.” Dr. Ronnie Floyd

Podcast Featured In Local Newspaper

Amy and I were very honored to have our local newspaper, The Republic, feature our podcast in the local features – faith & community category. Click on the link in the headline below to go to The Republic website or read the story below.

Local resident’s podcast highlights faith of celebrities, other Christians

A voice broadcast from a home in a town of 2,200 people is sometimes reaching across the globe — and often highlighting the lives of celebrities and other notables sharing their Christian faith.

Hope resident Ed Boston considered nothing of that magnitude in 2008 when he launched the politically oriented Do The Right Thing Radio podcast with a Christian perspective. Back then, the right thing simply was to let his voice, and others, be heard.

“I was so green at all this,” he said. “I just had no idea. I would have guessed in the beginning that maybe a handful of people across the country would have listened.”

Now, according to BlogTalkRadio, the international medium through which the morphed and roughly one-hour Ed Boston Podcast is disseminated, the former Hope pastor now reaches listeners in far-flung areas including Canada, the United Kingdom and Egypt.

“That’s one of those ‘wow’ moments I have,” Boston said. “I’ve never quite figured it out.”

Besides, the now-polished interviewer who has completed some 1,600 shows is all about other questions.

The 55-year-old Boston, who lands such high-profile interviews as “America’s Got Talent” 2017 champion ventriloquist Darci Lynne Farmer and TV actress and producer Roma Downey, takes an upbeat, easy-going approach with guests.

“They know my job is not to dig (into the negative),” Boston said.

In fact, with a recent show highlighting cast and crew members from the faith-based nationally released movie “I Can Only Imagine,” he not only avoids what could be construed as negative, he gushes about the redeeming and restorative Christian message of the film. Plus, he closes every interview with a prayer. And with Downey, known from 1994 to 2003 as the star and leading character of Tess in the CBS drama “Touched By An Angel,” that practice led to a lighthearted quip he has used more than once.

“I always tell people that I prayed for an angel,” he said.

With other guests, such as WWE Hall of Fame wrestler Jeff Jarrett, he would never have allowed their three separate conversations and programs to veer too far toward specific Jarrett struggles. Also, during a live broadcast en route to the nationally controversial Ark Encounter in Williamstown, Kentucky, he floated his talk more toward biblical matters than some of mainstream media’s criticisms of the attraction.

His most faithful listeners, many of whom say they never miss a broadcast, readily identify with his unassuming ways.

Tony Ogle, a 55-year-old Columbus resident, discovered the program from chatting with Boston’s wife. He acknowledged that he grew up outside the Christian church and never was taught much about the Bible. He said Boston’s teachings and interviews give him strength “especially if I’m having a bad day.”

“He talks about real life — and unlike a lot of other (online) preachers, he’s not asking for anything,” Ogle said. “He’s straight up, honest and truthful. And sometimes what he says can (excitedly) raise the hair on my arms.”

Others also have developed an allegiance to the podcast.

Donald Middlebrooks, 55, a tow truck driver in the small community of Eastern Valley, Alabama, finds himself working six and seven days per week, including most Sundays. Such a schedule makes it difficult to attend worship services. So, a few years ago, on his smartphone’s Tune In Radio app, he typed in the keyword “religion.”

Up popped Boston’s podcast. Middlebrooks began listening every night as he was going to bed. He liked Boston’s easy-going manner with guests, plus a laid-back approach in a few sermons he caught.

“He definitely doesn’t preach down on the sinner,” Middlebrooks said, adding that he has little use for condemning preachers.

And the Alabama resident soon realized that, even though people in several other countries have listened to some of Boston’s programs, the podcaster still makes time for one-on-one chats with listeners. After Middlebrooks sent Boston a Facebook message saying he enjoyed the show, Boston responded with a phone call.

Since then, he has phoned Middlebrooks, a recovering alcoholic, to pray with him.

“That especially means a lot to me,” said the listener.

Host: Hope resident and former church pastor Ed Boston. His wife Amy Boston sometimes is on some of the podcasts, such as a recent review of the new film “I Can Only Imagine.”

A little help from his friend: Originally included producer Trevor Decker, who is now an adviser.

Length: About an hour.

Shows: Normally posted at 9 a.m. Saturdays. Others are posted during the week as he gets ideas, gathers thoughts and arranges interviews.

Where to listen online: blogtalkradio.com/edboston or the Facebook page for Ed Boston Podcast Network.

Special Podcast Tonight at 7 pm – Remembering Billy Graham

Join the Ed Boston Podcast Network tonight at 7 pm eastern as we pay tribute to a wonderful man of God – the Rev. Billy Graham. During this live podcast, we will look at his life, his legacy, and some of his “favorites”.

Here is the link to the podcast. Use it to join the live show, and you can also use the same link to listen at any time after the podcast, in our archive files.

Remembering Billy Graham

List of Countries That Listen To the Podcast: Ireland

10 days ago, we started a  New Feature: Let’s See What Countries Listen to the Ed Boston Podcast.

The first country listed in the link above was Sri Lanka.

Today’s country is IRELAND, which is sitting at the #5 position on the list of countries who listen (the list constantly changes).

From Wikipedia:

The Republic of Ireland, the 1922 state, comprising 26 of the 32 counties of Ireland, was “styled and known as the Irish Free State”.  The Constitution of Ireland, adopted in 1937, provides that “the name of the State is Éire, or, in the English language, Ireland”. Section 2 of the Republic of Ireland Act 1948 states, “It is hereby declared that the description of the State shall be the Republic of Ireland.” The 1948 Act does not name the state as “Republic of Ireland”, because to have done so would have put it in conflict with the Constitution.

The government of the United Kingdom used the name “Eire” (without the diacritic) and, from 1949, “Republic of Ireland”, for the state;  it was not until the 1998 Good Friday Agreement that it used the name “Ireland”. 

As well as “Ireland”, “Éire” or “the Republic of Ireland”, the state is also referred to as “the Republic”, “Southern Ireland” or “the South”.  In an Irish republican context it is often referred to as “the Free State” or “the 26 Counties”.

Religion

Religion in the Republic of Ireland 
Religion Percent
Roman Catholic
78.3%
Non-religious
10.1%
Protestant
4.2%
Muslim
1.3%
Other
6.1%

Religious freedom is constitutionally provided for in Ireland. Christianity is the predominant religion, and while Ireland remains a predominantly Catholic country, the percentage of the population who identified as Catholic on the census has fallen sharply from 84.2 percent in the 2011 census to 78.3 percent in the most recent 2016 census. Other results from the 2016 census are : 4.2% Protestant, 1.3% as Muslim, and 9.8% as having no religion.  According to a Georgetown University study, before 2000 the country had one of the highest rates of regular Mass attendance in the Western world.  While daily attendance was 13% in 2006, there was a reduction in weekly attendance from 81% in 1990 to 48% in 2006, although the decline was reported as stabilizing. In 2011, it was reported that weekly Mass attendance in Dublin was just 18%, with it being even lower among younger generations.

The Church of Ireland, at 2.7% of the population, is the second largest Christian denomination. Membership declined throughout the twentieth century, but experienced an increase early in the 21st century, as have other small Christian denominations. Significant Protestant denominations are the Presbyterian Church and Methodist Church. Immigration has contributed to a growth in Hindu and Muslim populations. In percentage terms, Orthodox Christianity and Islam were the fastest growing religions, with increases of 100% and 70% respectively.

Ireland’s patron saints are Saint Patrick, Saint Bridget and Saint Columba. Saint Patrick is the only one commonly recognized as the patron saint. Saint Patrick’s Day is celebrated on 17 March in Ireland and abroad as the Irish national day, with parades and other celebrations.

As with other predominantly Catholic European states, Ireland underwent a period of legal secularization in the late twentieth century. In 1972, the article of the Constitution naming specific religious groups was deleted by the Fifth Amendment in a referendum. Article 44 remains in the Constitution: “The State acknowledges that the homage of public worship is due to Almighty God. It shall hold His Name in reverence, and shall respect and honour religion.” The article also establishes freedom of religion, prohibits endowment of any religion, prohibits the state from religious discrimination, and requires the state to treat religious and non-religious schools in a non-prejudicial manner.

Religious studies was introduced as an optional Junior Certificate subject in 2001. Although many schools are run by religious organisations, a secularist trend is occurring among younger generations.