Season 1, Episode 14. What I Learned When I Wanted Friendship to be Unchanging: An Interview with Bethany Smith

What I Learned When I Wanted Friendship to be Unchanging: An Interview with Bethany Smith

Bethany is one of the regular contributors to Stories I’d Tell You at Dinner and she shares about her desire to hold on tightly to friendships after the isolation of interstate and overseas moves. She explains how God’s unchanging nature has been a comfort to her and has changed her approach to friendship as one of gratitude and openness.

In today’s episode we explore:

  • Bethany’s role caring for her children and partnering with her husband in their ministry to students at UWA.

  • Growing up as a pastors kid and not remembering a day when she did not believe in Jesus.

  • Her experiences in friendship and isolation with multiple moves overseas and interstate, the desire to hold on tightly to friendships and wanting them to be unchanging. We discuss how she has come to rest in the fact that God is the only one who is unchanging.

  • How the change in her theology of friendship has changed how she approaches friendship.

You can listen on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, YouTube, or anywhere you get podcasts.

Mentioned in this episode:

The Hunger Games series by Suzanne Collins

The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo by Stieg Larsson

The Lazy Genius Podcast

Australian Fellowship of Evangelical Students (AFES)

Reach Australia

CRU West

My Home and My Heart by Bethany Smith

About Bethany

Bethany grew up on the South Coast of NSW, moved to Sydney for university, and met her husband, Matt, while studying at Moore Theological College. They moved to Perth in 2020 to share the gospel with university students at UWA. They’ve since had three children who she spends her days with, caring for and discipling in the Lord Jesus. Bethany enjoys reading, exercising, baking and attempting to keep her plants alive.

Want honest stories from Christian women in Western Australia in your inbox on Wednesdays? Sign up here

Next
Next

Season 1, Episode 13. Why Do The Sads Feel So Sad?