

The Patrick Madrid Show
Relevant Radio
The Patrick Madrid Show is your source for the latest in current events and contemporary issues. Join host Patrick Madrid for compelling insights, lively conversations, and encouragement for your day!
Episodes
Mentioned books

Jun 27, 2025 • 51min
The Patrick Madrid Show: June 27, 2025 - Hour 3
Listeners call in with everything from questions about running a business without a smartphone to the heavy realities of growing old, wondering about the afterlife, or converting to Catholicism when the stakes are personal and raw. A surprise appearance from Hugh Grant’s thoughts on tech distractions slips in, and stories unfold—some heartfelt, some funny, all woven with genuine concern and encouragement as Patrick brings warmth and clarity with every discussion. Kyle – I think vast majority of kids can get by without smart phone (01:42) Audio: Hugh Grant on childhood addiction to tech (07:29) Elizabeth – The brother of my husband hasn’t been to mass in a long time. How might we convince him to go? (14:23) Jim - Matthew 11:12 references heaven being stormed by violence. What does this mean? (24:24) Gabriel - I am on my way to becoming a Catholic, but my family are very devout Baptists. How can I approach them about my conversion? (30:25) John - Can you help me understand what happened to the people who lived in Israel before the Jewish people? What happened to them? (40:52) This is a Previously Aired episode from 06/02/2025

Jun 26, 2025 • 51min
The Patrick Madrid Show: June 26, 2025 - Hour 1
Patrick fields hard-hitting listener questions on why prayer matters if God knows everything, pulling in St. Thomas Aquinas and the nature of time, then takes on raw, personal pleas, like guiding a friend lost in adult entertainment, suggesting persistent prayer and spiritual strategies drawn from the saints. Unexpected details surface: communion’s brief presence in the body, awkward parish controversies, and callers eager for faith, grounding the episode in the messy, human search for hope and clarity. Audio: Montage of past presidents saying "no bomb for Iran" (01:32) Audio: Jerry Seinfeld – I’m Jewish and experienced a missile attack from Gaza (02:40) Elizabeth - Why is prayer important if God already knows what we are going to do? (05:41) Nora - My dear friend doesn't like religion. She is living in sin, what can I say to help her? (23:19) Bob - Why did Jesus come 2024 years ago? Why not 500 or 1000 years ago? Also, how long does the presence of Christ persist? (36:28) Sean - What is your take on pride masses in the Catholic Church? (44:56) Will – How long does the real presence exists in the body after taking Communion? (48:13)

Jun 26, 2025 • 51min
The Patrick Madrid Show: June 26, 2025 - Hour 2
Patrick offers thoughtful Catholic advice, fields passionate questions about sacraments, spiritual authority, and healing, and responds directly to callers with both encouragement and occasional gentle pushback. Grandma (email) – What Bible would you recommend to my 21-year-old grandson who is interested in becoming a Catholic? (00:50) Mary - I work in a big retail place and a group of women acting weird came in wanting to pray over people. Is this something I need to be concerned about? (05:44) Kimberly - The Eucharist: What about the fact that this is not just a physical state but a spiritual state? (10:20) Kim - You are causing division. I heard the comment about people praying over other people. I feel offended by Catholic radio rejecting charismatic gifts and the Holy Spirit. (13:49) Saul (email) - Can theosis occur with a Spiritual Communion besides the regular way of receiving Communion/Eucharist and is there a difference of degree? (18:29) Andrew (email) - I came across your Wikipedia page and it mentions that you used to be in the Coast Guard and an electrical engineer. Are either of these true? Sheila (email) - St. Monica did not get Augustine baptized as an infant at that time, but why? Was it because of the “fad” at the time to delay it because of sin? How long did this practice last and when did it end? Michael - According to Jesus, laying on of hands can be effective. Are we dismissing this a little too lightly? (26:29) Jeff - I have heard that as a lay person, if you lay hands on a person, you could become possessed. Is this true? (37:22) Jen - What do the words of the Centurion that we repeat at Mass mean? (41:45)

Jun 26, 2025 • 51min
The Patrick Madrid Show: June 26, 2025 - Hour 3
Patrick fields heartfelt questions about Catholic burial practices, the wounds of loss, finding hope amid cultural turmoil, and the history of the Knights of Columbus, all while offering concrete encouragement drawn from tradition and stories of saints. Henry - Can Freemasons be buried in a Catholic cemetery? (02:19) Sophia - I am calling to praise The Patrick Madrid Show. I thought you did a great job addressing what the point of prayer is. (06:36) Steven - Why is the world so chaotic these days? (18:21) Wyatt - Charismatic movement: Why do people lift their hands with the priests during the Our Father? Jim - Do Freemasons believe in the Catholic faith or are they separate from that? (30:23) Maritza (email) - There is an infiltration of Protestant belief and teachings in my parish. (37:43) Aaron - Does Holy Water expire and what would a person do with it if it does? (40:09) Gale - The angry women who called on Tuesday sounded a lot like how I used to sound. (46:12) Leslie - My dad was a Freemason. Is he in Purgatory or Hell? (48:59)

Jun 25, 2025 • 51min
The Patrick Madrid Show: June 25, 2025 - Hour 1
With callers bringing up everything from secular music’s potential spiritual risks to the struggles and meaning of being “a man after God’s own heart,” Patrick’s insights zigzag between humor, candor, and heartfelt encouragement. Unexpected stories, references to timely Vatican II documents, and sharp observations keep every answer fresh and unvarnished. Marie (email) – How do I get Relevant Radio prayer cards? (01:51) Yvonne - What Bible do you pray with? (08:17) Angie - Talking with an Evangelical friend about John. She takes John 6 symbolically. Are we supposed to take this literally? (10:11) June – What does it mean when in scripture it says that God calls David a man after His own heart? (20:29) Nancy (email) - If someone has never been a Catholic, or hasn't ever been taught/studied the Catholic faith, is Heaven impossible? (26:46) Eric – Yesterday, a caller was complaining about you listening to the Beatles. I do enjoy secular music too. What does the Church teach on this? (34:11)

Jun 25, 2025 • 51min
The Patrick Madrid Show: June 25, 2025 - Hour 2
Patrick guides listeners through raw, unfiltered conversations—men open up about personal failings, past trauma, and the daily grind of resisting temptation while clinging to faith. He responds with gritty, practical spiritual tools: the rosary for fortitude, guardian angels for tough moments, and advice that cuts through both shame and confusion. Matters of trust, marriage across faiths, and the burdens families carry fuel his advice, always returning to hope and relentless honesty. Steve – How can I know that I am a man after God's heart? What else can I do? (00:38) Karla (email) – Should I talk to my boyfriend’s family that I have become a Catholic? (21:55) Joshua – I’m looking for a good Catholic woman. How can I find one who is modest? Not many women go to Church where I live. Sometimes I take it personally because I am alone. (28:20) Patrick in Florida – I don’t get the animosity towards our President. What's up with Catholics denigrating him? (40:47) Matt - Custody of the eyes: relying on your guardian angels works 100 percent! (46:19)

Jun 25, 2025 • 51min
The Patrick Madrid Show: June 25, 2025 - Hour 3
Patrick encourages men and women grappling with lust to focus on modesty, purity, and self-control in today’s world. He fields a deeply personal call about grief, the ache of unanswered prayers, and the daily effort to pursue virtue, offering compassion, practical wisdom, and the rock-solid hope found in Scripture and community. Sudden moments of humor and heartfelt support blend with advice on modest dress, addiction battles, and the sacred duty to lift up one another—whether that means praying for strangers or connecting a hurting listener with the Knights of Columbus. Laurie - I just wanted to encourage men in custody of eyes. The world, flesh and devil are trying to get us to forget who we are. Men, you are made for this. (01:41) Lisa - The Bible says ask and you shall receive. Did you have any words of comfort for those who don’t get their prayers answered? (06:12) Paul - I agree with you about lust addiction. Praying a daily Rosary and having custody of the eyes helps. I rely on the strength of my guardian angel. (14:07) Katie (email) – Women, please dress modestly. We can help the fight. (20:29) Robert - Custody of the eyes: I turn away and thank God for their beauty instead of ruminating on it. (21:20) Janet – It used to bother me a great deal when I saw women scantily clad. I confessed my anger. I am always praying for them when I see them, it really relieves me of anxiety and angst. (22:08) Ben - CS Lewis’ Screwtape Letters helped me mentally with lust. (24:47) Tom – I have Cerebral Palsy and am being mistreated where I live. How can I deal with this without falling into sin? (28:05) Maria – The friend of my grandson dresses very skimpy. I told him I didn’t like how she was dressed. My family was upset with me for saying this. (39:52) Lisette - My daughter received Voodoo dolls as gift (43:53)

Jun 25, 2025 • 3min
“Did Pope Leo Really Say That?” How to Spot AI-Generated Catholic Content (Special Podcast Highlight)
Image via bella1105 / Shutterstock. Patrick Madrid and Producer Cyrus just served up a Best of the Week moment on The Patrick Madrid Show, and it’s one of those “wait… what??” stories that will make you think twice about what you come across online. Here’s the scoop: The Email That Sparked It All: Mike from Arizona wrote in with a head-scratcher. He stumbled upon a YouTube video claiming to be a speech from Pope Leo. He asked: “Wait, is this even real?” So naturally, he turned to Patrick Madrid. Grok: The AI Detective Patrick and Cyrus took Mike’s link and dropped it into Grok, a snazzy AI-powered search tool. They asked: “Hey Grok, is this video real… or AI fakery?” Grok’s verdict: “AI-generated.” Does It Sound Like Pope Leo XIV? Just because something sounds good, doesn’t mean it’s legit. Cyrus hit the nail on the head: “It’s so easy to fall into the trap of seeing something online that affirms what I already think.” Even if the message is doctrinally fine, using a fake voice to deliver it is misleading. Truth deserves honesty, not a holy deepfake. “Fictitious Pope Leo”? One funny twist: Grok called Pope Leo a “fictitious figure.” Patrick and Cyrus responded: “Uhh... he is literally the Pope." So yeah, even Grok has some news to catch up on. Verify Everything Patrick borrowed a gem from Ronald Reagan: “Trust... but verify.” Then tweaked it for our times: “Actually... don’t trust. Just verify.” Especially when it comes to flashy online content with sacred-sounding messages. Wanna Chime In? Send your questions to patrick@relevantradio.com He might just crack your case next.

Jun 24, 2025 • 11min
"Why I Can't Attend the 'Wedding'..." A Grandmother's Heartfelt Letter to Her Grandchild (Special Podcast Highlight)
Patrick Madrid takes on a question that a lot of Catholics wrestle with today... "Can I go to a wedding that’s not valid in the eyes of the Church?" Think: same-sex weddings, remarriages without annulments, Catholics marrying outside the Church, etc... Now, Patrick’s not into the “grin and bear it, go anyway for family unity” thing. His gold standard is St. John the Baptist, who literally lost his head rather than support an invalid marriage. But the heart of the episode? A powerful letter from a grandma to her granddaughter, explaining why she can't attend her wedding...not out of hate, but out of deep, eternal, radical LOVE. Let’s just say this is the kind of letter that leaves a mark. THE LETTER: Dear sweet granddaughter, I love you and that will never change. But part of loving you is caring more for your eternal soul than your perceived temporary happiness. I wouldn't be loving you the way Christ calls me to love you if I attend something that celebrates your open rebellion against God, which will lead to His wrath being brought down upon you. Colossians 3:6 says that because of things like sexual immorality, 'the wrath of God is coming upon the sons of disobedience.' I love you so much that I want you to be saved from God's wrath. Therefore, I can't participate in a celebration that demonstrates how you deserve it. You may not see this as love right now because I'm sure my words hurt. Do you remember the time you ran into the street as a child when cars were coming? I swept you up and spanked you as a reminder to not run into the street. You didn't like that at the time. It hurt you and you weren't real happy with me in that moment. You didn’t speak to me for a little while and that wasn’t easy on a grandmother’s heart. I know my actions didn't feel loving to you in that moment, but they were out of a deeper love for you than you could understand. The pain you experienced was meant to be a warning that if you run in the street you're going to die. Would it have been more loving to watch you run in the street just because you thought it was fun and gave you momentary happiness? Some will tell you that my absence at this ceremony is a lack of love and shows that I'm just judgmental. Nothing could be further from the truth. As painful as it will be for both of us, my absence is to communicate to you how MUCH I love you. I love you so much that I'm willing to sacrifice some aspects of our temporal relationship for your eternal well-being. The street you’re about to run into is far more deadly than the one you ran into that afternoon when you were a child. No one would've called me loving if I had just sat there and watched you then. Those people would’ve been right if I had watched you then, and I would be wrong to watch you now. I cannot sit there and watch you play in a far more dangerous street. I wish I could sweep you up and pull you out of this current street. But you’re no longer a little child; you’re a grown woman and have to make your own choices. But the consequences of running in this current street are far more dangerous than the street you ran into as a child. I can’t sweep you up and pull you out now, but I also can’t sit and just watch you run into oncoming traffic. I believe my presence could be far more dangerous to you than my absence. I fear that my presence might communicate to you that the street you're playing in isn't as bad as it really is. If this causes a separation between us, my grandmother's heart will hurt. But my love as a Christian grandmother must rise above my familial emotions. I pray my absence will cause you to realize how dangerous your choice is and that any separation between us doesn’t even begin to compare to being eternally separated from God. At celebrations, I want to smile, laugh, and have tears of joy. If I attend this ceremony, none of those things would be possible. I don’t want to sit there downcast and crying tears of sadness. So, when you look out and see my absence, I want you to know that I am not sitting at home angry or in a judgmental spirit. I will be home weeping, praying, and asking God to open your eyes to your sin and bring you to repentance. This is not because I think I’m better than you. I am as much in need of God's saving grace as you are. I too once played in the street of sin and thought I was okay. I thought that because God’s wrath had not yet poured down on me that it never would. I mistook God’s kindness to withhold His immediate wrath as tacit approval of me. What I didn’t know was that God’s kindness to withhold His wrath, that I deserved to be immediately poured out upon me, was meant to lead me to repentance. And God loved me enough to send someone into my life to tell me the truth about my sin so that I might be saved from His coming wrath. Someone loved me enough to confront me, help me see my sin for what it is, and share the gospel with me. They warned me of God’s coming wrath. They showed me how God sent His Son Jesus to die in my place upon the cross and pay for my sins. They told me how Jesus not only died, but He rose again from the grave and defeated death so that I could be delivered from the penalty of death that I deserved because of my sin. And they told me I needed to turn from sin and turn to Jesus as my Lord and Savior. You’ve heard me tell you this truth since you were a child. How many times did I tuck you in and tell you of the love of Jesus and quote John 3:16? I continue to beg you to turn from your sin and come to Jesus. Whatever perceived happiness you feel in that ceremony and the relationship you're in will be fleeting. But if you turn from your sin and come to Christ for salvation, you will receive eternal peace and joy that no one can take from you. If you go forward with this ceremony, I won’t be in that room. But I will always love you and be longing for you to turn from sin and come to Christ for salvation. The truth is, I love you so much that I won’t lie to you, either directly or indirectly, about the dangers of playing in the street of sin. Know that I love you and will long for the day when you see my actions as being like Jesus - to seek and to save the lost. In true loving affection, Nana Patrick was blown away by the letter. He noted that while the letter didn’t specify the exact situation, it could apply to: -A same-sex "wedding" -A remarriage after divorce with no annulment -A Catholic marrying outside the Church without following the canonical form Whatever the case, the core truth remains: Real love doesn’t play nice with lies. Real love tells the truth, even when it costs something. Patrick reminded you of1 John 4:18: “Perfect love casts out fear.” This grandma is fearless. She’s not afraid to hurt feelings to save a soul. That is perfect love.

Jun 24, 2025 • 51min
The Patrick Madrid Show: June 24, 2025 - Hour 1
Patrick questions the flood of AI-generated videos claiming to feature messages from Pope Leo, revealing how quickly deepfakes can confuse even the most faithful. He gives listeners a hands-on crash course in spotting digital fakery using Grok and ChatGPT, while mixing in a dose of skepticism with humor, Beatles AI tracks, and practical faith advice. Trust no one at first glance, Patrick insists—because these days, even the truth needs a background check. Mike (email) – How do we know if a video of Pope Leo is real or fake? (00:42) Donna (email) - I was told "Revelations isn't in your bible because Catholics don't believe in the rapture." (09:48) Patrick shares emails about A.I. videos and how to tell if something is real or computer generated (20:40) Email - I just learned my father-in-law doesn't believe in confessing to a priest. Can you please recommend a book or resources I can give him to help explain why it's proper to confess to a priest instead of just praying to God? Dennis (email) - The biggest danger of A.I. videos is that we can get accustomed to these messages, assuming they're legitimate (30:12) Frank - I discovered errors in AI searches. AI will just pull from whatever. (32:29) Patrick on the quality of Beatles A.I. music (38:23) George - Is there an order to the Trinity and would it be sacrilegious to describe this order? (44:54)


