A podcast from Ray Hughes.
The Psalms don’t just tell stories of victory, they carry the long memory of God’s faithfulness. In this episode of Listening Porch, Ray Hughes and Eric explore what it really means to be a psalmist. Not just a songwriter, but a person whose life becomes praise. From David’s victories and failures to our own moments of shame, response, creativity, and redemption, this conversation reframes worship as something lived, not performed.
We talk about:
- Responding to God instead of reacting
- How victory flows from God’s faithfulness, not self-effort
- Why language, art, music, and creativity access God’s presence
- Being a psalmist whether you sing, write, paint, or simply live faithfully - Seeing your life as God’s testimony in the earth
- This episode takes the pressure off “doing praise right” and invites us to simply be the praise.
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Join Selah Creatives: Get access to all of Ray’s online courses, teachings, monthly live Zoom gatherings, and a community of over 100 like-spirited creatives → selahonline.teachable.com/p/selah-creatives
Support Ray on Patreon: Receive his personal poetry, prose, and creative writings not shared anywhere else → patreon.com/rayhughes
Visit Ray's Website: RayHughes.org
What does it actually mean to be a psalmist?
In this Listening Porch conversation, Eric and Ray reflect on #44 from 107 Things I Forgot to Say the Last Time I Talked About Worship, Creativity, and Music. Together, they explore how the psalms are more than songs. They are stories of real lives lived before God.
This episode dives into tension and release, lament and praise, and how David’s psalms documented moments of fear, desperation, trust, and deliverance, often before the victory was visible. We talk about how creativity gives language to the soul, why honesty matters in worship, and how remembering God’s past faithfulness shapes future hope.
Whether you’re a musician, writer, artist, or simply someone learning how to express your walk with God, this conversation invites you to see your life as a song still being written.
On a cold November porch in Alabama, we talk about deserts, waiting, creativity, and why God often speaks beyond the narrow parameters of thought. A conversation about stillness, listening, and finding beauty where we least expect it.
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Join Selah Creatives: Get access to all of Ray’s online courses, teachings, monthly live Zoom gatherings, and a community of over 100 like-spirited creatives → selahonline.teachable.com/p/selah-creatives
Support Ray on Patreon: Receive his personal poetry, prose, and creative writings not shared anywhere else → patreon.com/rayhughes
Visit Ray's Website: RayHughes.org
In this episode of The Listening Porch, Ray Hughes reflects on the difference between fitting in and belonging, and why so many gifted, creative, Spirit-filled people feel misaligned in the places they’re trying to serve.
Drawing from the life of David, Ray explores how the Holy Spirit expresses Himself through poetry, music, story, and creativity, not just within sacred spaces, but through everyday assignments. We talk about fire as light, fire as warmth, fire as focus, and fire as something meant to be carried into dark places.
From campfires and candles to misfits and renaissance moments, this conversation invites us to stop trying to fit and instead find the place where we truly belong, where what God put in us is welcomed, protected, and allowed to shine.
In this episode of The Listening Porch, Ray and Eric sit down to talk about something so many creatives quietly carry: the feeling of not fitting in.
Drawing from the life of King David, they explore why so many musicians, poets, worship leaders, storytellers, and dreamers walk through seasons of misalignment, and how God uses those very seasons to shape purpose, discipline, and fire.
David didn’t just surround himself with poets and prophets. He gathered the distressed, the discontent, the misunderstood, the ones in debt, and the ones who didn’t fit anywhere else. And somehow, in that strange mix of people, God formed a culture that carried His presence into a new day.
Ray and Eric talk about mis-assignment, the purpose of uncomfortable seasons, the tension between creativity and discipline, and what it means to bring your unique fire into a community without losing your soul.
If you’ve ever felt like a misfit, this conversation is an invitation to see that you’re not misplaced, you might just be in the middle of being prepared.
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Join Selah Creatives: Get access to all of Ray’s online courses, teachings, monthly live Zoom gatherings, and a community of over 100 like-spirited creatives → selahonline.teachable.com/p/selah-creatives
Support Ray on Patreon: Receive his personal poetry, prose, and creative writings not shared anywhere else → patreon.com/rayhughes
Visit Ray's Website: RayHughes.org
There are plenty of good ideas floating around. But God ideas… those are the ones that ask us to slow down. To listen. To partner.
Thoughts are like diamonds in the dark. They do not shine until someone turns on the light. Sometimes that light is attention. Sometimes it is patience. Sometimes it is the Holy Spirit saying, “Stay with this.”
In this Selah Creatives moment, we explore how ideas grow, how dreams speak, and how creativity becomes a conversation instead of a performance.
If you want to walk with a company of people learning to create that way, you can find us at rayhughes.org.
Pull up a chair. There may be a God idea waiting for you.
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Join Selah Creatives: Get access to all of Ray’s online courses, teachings, monthly live Zoom gatherings, and a community of over 100 like-spirited creatives → selahonline.teachable.com/p/selah-creatives
Support Ray on Patreon: Receive his personal poetry, prose, and creative writings not shared anywhere else → patreon.com/rayhughes
Visit Ray's Website: RayHughes.org
In this episode of The Listening Porch, we explore a beautiful metaphor:
Writing feels like walking through a forest, looking for the sea.
Ray and Eric talk about:
- How writing, creativity, and spiritual life mirror a long forest journey
- Why wonder is essential, especially in the “ordinary” seasons
- Why there’s no such thing as writer’s block
- The difference between getting lost and being lost
- The art of digging for treasure right where you are
- How the forest eventually opens to revelation, like stepping into a clearing and finally seeing the sea
Ray shares stories from his childhood, lessons from his well-digger father, and how a life of amazement can make a life amazing.
Eric reflects on growing up in Bakersfield, learning to find gold in unlikely places, and staying faithful on the path—step after step.
This episode is for:
• Writers
• Musicians
• Creatives
• Seekers
• Anyone who feels “lost,” stuck, or in a gray season
• Anyone longing to rediscover wonder
In this episode of The Listening Porch, we’re literally on a porch outside, surrounded by dogs barking, cars passing, and creation doing what it does. And in that setting, Ray shares one of the themes that has shaped his entire life: wonder.
We talk about the “mystery of Christ,” not as something we’re meant to comprehend, but something we’re invited to apprehend — to step into, experience, and walk with. Ray uses the image of walking through a forest to teach us how wonder reveals God in ways intellect never could.
We discuss:
Why the mysteries of God aren’t puzzles to solve
How wonder is the passageway into knowing Him
How pride and cynicism choke out our ability to see
Why grey areas are not failures, but invitations
How writing, walking, and watching creation awaken our spirits
And how to stay tender, curious, and childlike in a world that pushes us toward answers
If you’ve felt your wonder shrinking or if cynicism has taken root, this episode might be for you.
In this conversation, we explore how worship, music, and even church architecture influence the way we encounter God. From the awe of ancient cathedrals to the simplicity of a living room or open field, we talk about how real worship isn’t confined to walls or production — it’s born in moments where love meets love.
We discuss the beauty of sacred spaces, the loss of wonder in modern worship, and what it looks like to encounter God with undivided attention.
In this episode of The Listening Porch, Ray Hughes shares the heart behind the name itself — why porches once mattered so much, how storytelling shaped families and cultures, and what we lose when we trade real connection for technology.
From Irish legends to front porch memories, this conversation reminds us that stories are sacred spaces — and that listening itself is an art form.
In this episode of The Listening Porch, Ray Hughes and Eric Yun dive into the beauty of creative freedom — how every artist, poet, and musician carries the potential for a new revolution when they stop trying to fit in.
They discuss how styles evolve, how comparison can kill creativity, and how to rediscover the purity of making art just because it’s in you.
From the birth of musical genres to the heart behind prophetic art, this conversation will remind you that what finds its way into your heart will always find its way into your art.
Topics include:
The power of cross-cultural creativity
The danger of imitation without authenticity
How revolutions in music start from genuine expression
The art of listening for your own sound