

The Austin Stone Podcast
The Austin Stone
Our podcasts share personal stories of what God is doing across the globe through the lives of everyday believers. Whether it's listening to a goer overseas or a tour of racially-significant landmarks in Austin, these stories help encourage the church to worship Jesus for who He is and to remember what He has done.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Apr 18, 2021 • 42min
Forgiven Forgivers
Ross Lester will lead us through Matthew 18:21-35 and share on forgiveness and what it means for us to truly honor and obey the word of God in its entirety.

Apr 11, 2021 • 38min
How Can I Persevere To The End?
Halim Suh teaches from Matthew 18:15-20 and expounds on God’s desire for us to be mercifully restored through Him.

Apr 4, 2021 • 42min
Living Hope
For Easter 2021, Ross Lester preaches a sermon on Jesus Christ, our Living Hope.

Mar 28, 2021 • 34min
The King on a Colt
Ross Lester preaches on the topic “The King on a Colt,” as we begin Holy Week and look ahead to our celebration of Easter.

Mar 14, 2021 • 33min
Temptation to Sin
Matt Blackwell preaches through Matthew 18:7-9 with a message on the realities of temptations and how to resist them.

Mar 7, 2021 • 36min
True Greatness
Halim Suh explores Matthew 18:1-6 and what true greatness looks like in the eyes of Christ.

Feb 28, 2021 • 37min
Temple to End All Temples
Tyler David leads us in the book of Matthew with a message on the “Temple To End All Temples.”

Feb 26, 2021 • 19min
Know Austin, Love Austin: Rosewood Neighborhood Park
However, later, in 1905 formerly enslaved African persons Thomas J. White and his wife, Maddie B. Haywood, founded the Travis County Emancipation Celebration Association and, two years later, they pooled enough community resources to purchase five acres of land on Rosewood Avenue and Chicon and named it Emancipation Park. They believed that Black people should celebrate Juneteenth on Black-owned land. It was their own piece of freedom. It was their own piece of property.
Emancipation Park lasted for over 20 years until the City of Austin seized the privately-held land through a process called ‘eminent domain’ and constructed the first federally-funded housing projects named Rosewood Courts, which still occupy the space today.
To comply with the city-enacted mandate, enforced by the ‘Separate but Equal’ doctrine of U.S. law, the Negro District was created in East Austin, east of East Avenue, which is present-day I-35. The Negro District would house all of the segregated facilities within the city, including a park—a park that we now know as Rosewood Park.
From that point on, the limited resources that the city would invest and put into Black recreation, leisure, and services went into Rosewood Park. But despite all of the violence that created Rosewood Park for the Black population, Black people in Austin still made it their own.

Feb 23, 2021 • 19min
Know Austin, Love Austin: Clarksville
Clarksville was named for Charles Clark, the man who decided Clarksville would be a place where Black men, women, and children could reunite with their families and friends, torn apart during slavery. As more Black families arrived in the area, Clark's visions guided them. He wanted them to direct their own lives and freely practice their religion away from the gaze of the establishment. It was theirs.They were united by a shared history of being reduced to a condition, being ‘enslaved’ and never ‘a slave,’ and they were determined to be someone—to become citizens of the United States of America on their own terms. And that's what they did.
When the City of Austin made the decision to become what is renowned for today—a place of pristine green natural spaces, the center of knowledge production and innovative technology—they faced a problem. Black people and their communities dispersed in various parts of the city, stood as a challenge to them achieving their goals.
The city’s solution to this challenge was the creation of the 1928 Master Plan, which designated the area east of East Avenue, or present day I-35, to become the ‘Negro District,’ where all services for Black people were to be located. It was a deliberate and strategic decision to force Black people to move into East Austin. Those residents and community members that decided to remain in place were denied services and public investment.

Feb 21, 2021 • 39min
Delivered Deliverer
Ross Lester leads us deeper into the book of Matthew with a message on our “Delivered Deliverer” from Matthew 17:22-23.


