Come, Follow Me Moms | Simple Come Follow me for Busy Moms, Christ Centered Scripture study, Simple Scripture Study Podcast By Cassie Moore - Christian Life Coach Come Follow Me Teacher for Busy Moms cover art

Come, Follow Me Moms | Simple Come Follow me for Busy Moms, Christ Centered Scripture study, Simple Scripture Study

Come, Follow Me Moms | Simple Come Follow me for Busy Moms, Christ Centered Scripture study, Simple Scripture Study

By: Cassie Moore - Christian Life Coach Come Follow Me Teacher for Busy Moms
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Do you feel behind on Come, Follow Me?

Do you want to study the scriptures but struggle to find the time, energy, or confidence?

Do you wish someone would just explain Come, Follow Me simply without pressure, guilt, or overwhelm?

Come, Follow Me Moms is a Christ-centered podcast for busy moms who want to understand the scriptures, feel the Spirit, and confidently teach their children without adding one more heavy thing to their plate.

Each week, you’ll get simple Come, Follow Me insights, clear explanations of the weekly scriptures, and practical ways to apply the gospel to real mom life. No overthinking. No perfectionism. Just truth, peace, and Jesus; one insight at a time.

This podcast is for you if:

You feel inconsistent or “behind” with Come, Follow Me

You want scripture study to feel doable and meaningful

You want to strengthen your testimony and your family without overwhelm

You want help understanding what the scriptures are actually saying

You want to feel confident guiding your children spiritually

Hosted by Cassie Moore, a mom of five, Christian Life Coach and lover of Come, Follow Me. This podcast will help you simplify scripture study, invite the Spirit into your home, and fall in love with the word of God again right where you are.

✨ Come as you are.

✨ Start small.

✨ Let Christ do the rest.

Copyright 2026 All rights reserved.
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Episodes
  • 13. Come, Follow Me Moms Exodus 1-6, March 23-29, I have Remembered my Covenant, Moses Story, Moses of Egypt
    Mar 23 2026
    Come, Follow Me Moms Exodus 1–6 “I Have Remembered My Covenant” Hey mamas, welcome back to Come, Follow Me Moms, where we take the scriptures each week and break them down into the meat and potatoes so you can understand them, feel the Spirit, and apply them to real mom life. This week we are in Exodus 1–6, and I need you to hear this right from the start: 💗 God does not forget His people. Because if we’re being real… There are seasons where it feels like He has. When life is heavy When prayers feel unanswered When things actually get harder, not easier This week’s story is for you if you’ve ever felt that way. 📖 The Story (Meat and Potatoes) Let’s break it down simply. The Israelites are multiplying in Egypt. A new Pharaoh comes who does not know Joseph. He becomes afraid and puts them into bondage and slavery. He even orders that baby boys be killed. But God starts working… and He works through women. The midwives, Shiphrah and Puah, fear God more than man. Moses’s mom hides him. His sister stays close and watches over him. Pharaoh’s daughter shows compassion and raises him. Then Moses grows up, flees Egypt, and has an experience with God at the burning bush. God calls Moses to deliver Israel. And Moses responds in a way that probably feels familiar: “Who am I?” “I’m not good enough.” “I can’t do this.” And yet… he goes. Moses obeys. He goes to Pharaoh. And things actually get worse. The people are upset. Moses feels discouraged. And then God says: “I have remembered my covenant.” (Exodus 6:5) The Purpose This is not just a story. It is a pattern. Bondage Crying out God calls Resistance Deliverance And here is the truth: God is working even when you cannot see it yet. The Women Don’t skip this part. This is powerful. God did not just use Moses. He used women in quiet, brave, everyday ways. Midwives who chose God over fear A mother who trusted God with her baby A sister who stayed close and watched A woman who showed compassion and made a difference You do not have to be the main character to be part of God’s plan. You are shaping your home. You are raising leaders. You are part of something bigger than you can see. 🤍 Motherhood Connection This whole story is motherhood. Protecting your children Trusting God when things feel unsafe Doing small things that feel unseen One line that stood out so strong: “The same place that saved Joseph’s family… became the place of their affliction.” Sometimes the place that once felt like a blessing now feels heavy. And you find yourself asking: God… why am I here? 🙏 How God Shows Up God shows up in Exodus long before the big miracles. Through people Through small acts Through timing Through protection we don’t even recognize He was working before Moses ever saw the burning bush. And He is working in your life right now, even if nothing looks different yet. 📖 Powerhouse Verses Exodus 1:17 The midwives feared God This is reverence, trust, choosing God over the world Exodus 2:24 God remembered His covenant He did not forget. He never forgets Exodus 3:11 Who am I Moses doubted himself just like we do Exodus 3:12 Certainly I will be with thee That is the answer. Not that you are enough, but that God is with you Exodus 4:10–12 God does not remove weakness. He works through it Exodus 5 Sometimes obedience makes things harder before they get better Exodus 6:6–7 I will redeem you God delivers in His timing 🔥 The Refining In affliction, they grew. Growth does not happen in comfort. It happens in the hard seasons. God was not punishing Israel. He was preparing them. And He is doing the same for us. 💬 Personal Stories I shared how this podcast took me five years to start because I felt unqualified. God was patient with me. Moses did not feel ready either. And I love this real-life example from a friend: She shared that being willing to get pregnant again has been a huge act of faith. It has been scary, unknown, and she does not even have the ending yet. And that is faith. Faith is not knowing how it ends… and saying yes anyway. 🙋‍♀️ Questions to Reflect On Where in your life do you feel in bondage right now? Where does it feel like God is quiet? What is God asking you to do that feels too big? Are you willing to say yes… even without the ending? 💗 Final Message Mamas… If you are in a hard season If life feels heavy If you are wondering if God sees you He does. He remembers you. He is working, even now. And just like He told Moses: “I will be with thee.” Closing Invitation This week: Trust God in the unknown Look for Him in the small ways Say yes to the thing He has been putting on your heart And remember… He has not forgotten you 🤍 References - Scripture Study help https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/study/manual/scripture-helps-old-testament/12-exodus-1-6?lang=eng&id=p_j9Cwq-p_ilja5#p_j9Cwq Flowers By Samantha Ebert https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=...
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    37 mins
  • 12. Come, Follow Me March 16-22, Genesis 42- 50, Betrayal, But God Moments, Joseph and the Coat of many colors, God Meant it unto good
    Mar 16 2026
    Come, Follow Me Moms March 16–22 Genesis 42–50 “God Meant It Unto Good” Hey mamas, welcome back to another week of Come, Follow Me Moms. I am Cassie, your scripture study companion, and I am so glad you are here. This week we are studying Genesis 42–50, and we are finishing the first book of the Bible. And man, it is a good one. As we finish Genesis this week, we are also finishing the story of Joseph. And honestly, this might be one of the most powerful stories in all of scripture. Joseph’s life had betrayal, prison, false accusations, family drama, famine, forgiveness, and redemption. And at the end of it all, Joseph says one of the most hopeful lines in the entire Bible: “Ye thought evil against me; but God meant it unto good.” Genesis 50:20 That is the theme for this week. Sometimes life feels like it is falling apart, but God is working a bigger story. But God. Before we dive in, let’s do a quick recap from last week so we are all fresh on what is going on. Joseph was Jacob’s son through Rachel, the wife he deeply loved. Rachel had Joseph, and later Benjamin. Joseph was sold into slavery by his brothers, served in Potiphar’s house, was falsely accused by Potiphar’s wife, interpreted the dreams of the butler and the baker in prison, and then eventually interpreted Pharaoh’s dream and rose to power in Egypt. Now we get to the part of the story where everything starts coming together. Joseph Is a Type of Christ When you look closely, Joseph’s life mirrors Jesus Christ in such powerful ways. Joseph was beloved by his father. Christ was the Beloved Son of God. Joseph was betrayed for silver by his brothers. Jesus was betrayed for silver by Judas. Joseph suffered unjustly but later saved his people from famine. Jesus suffered for our sins and saves us from spiritual death. Joseph preserved life. Jesus saves souls. Joseph even tells his brothers: “God sent me before you to preserve life.” Genesis 45:5 Just like Christ came to save us, Joseph was sent ahead to preserve and rescue. God Sends Deliverance Before the Trial One thing that stood out so strongly to me in this story is that God sends deliverance before the crisis even arrives. Joseph was sent to Egypt years before the famine came. At the time, it looked like tragedy. He was thrown into a pit. Sold into slavery. Thrown into prison. But years later we see the truth. God was preparing the rescue before the famine even began. Joseph was exactly where he needed to be, at exactly the right time, to save his family. And sometimes God is doing the same thing in our lives. What looks like hardship today may actually be preparation for something sacred tomorrow. You may be in a season right now that makes no sense. It may feel unfair, painful, lonely, or confusing. But God may be placing things in order that you cannot see yet. The Brothers Had Changed One of the most beautiful parts of this story is seeing how Joseph’s brothers changed. Years earlier, they had sold Joseph for money. But when Joseph tests them with Benjamin, something different happens. Judah steps forward and basically says, take me instead. Let Benjamin go home to his father. That is huge. The man who once helped sell his brother now offers to sacrifice himself for another brother. That is repentance. That is growth. That is a changed heart. The gospel really does change people. And I think that matters for us as moms because sometimes we look at people and think, they will never change. But God is in the business of softening hearts, reshaping souls, and making people new. Forgiveness Brings Healing Joseph had every reason to hold onto bitterness. His brothers betrayed him. He lost years with his family. He suffered deeply because of what they did. And yet Joseph forgives them. Not just with words, but with action. He feeds them. He protects them. He welcomes them. He saves them. Forgiveness does not erase the past, but it allows God to redeem the future. Joseph understood something powerful. Holding onto anger would not heal his family. Forgiveness would. That does not mean what happened was okay. It means Joseph chose to let God write a better ending than bitterness ever could. “But God” If I had to summarize Joseph’s life in two words, it would be this: But God. They betrayed him, but God had a plan. He was sold as a slave, but God raised him to power. He was falsely accused, but God preserved him. He was forgotten in prison, but God had not forgotten him. And in the end Joseph says: You meant it for evil, but God meant it for good. That is the hope of the gospel. God can take broken pieces and turn them into redemption. God Is a God of Abundance Something else beautiful in this story is how Joseph cares for his family. He tells them not to worry about their stuff. He tells them to come to Egypt. He tells them he will take care of them and that they will have the best of the land. Joseph provides abundance. And that reflects the heart of God. ...
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    35 mins
  • 11. Come, Follow Me March 9-15, Genesis 37-41, The Lord was with Joseph, Joseph and the Coat of Many Colors
    Mar 10 2026
    Come, Follow Me Moms Podcast March 9–15 | Genesis 37–41 The Lord Was With Joseph Hey mamas, welcome back to another episode of Come, Follow Me Moms, where we dig into the scriptures each week and pull out the meat and potatoes so you can understand the scriptures, feel the Spirit, and apply them to real mom life. This week for Come Follow Me we are studying Genesis 37–41, and the theme is one of my favorite phrases in the scriptures. The Lord was with Joseph. Here is the interesting thing. Joseph’s life was not easy. In fact, the more righteous he was, the harder things seemed to get. Joseph was betrayed by his brothers. He was sold into slavery. He was falsely accused. He was thrown into prison. He was forgotten by the people he helped. And yet the scriptures say something incredible over and over again. The Lord was with him. Not that the Lord prevented the trials. But that God stayed with him in the trials. I cannot stop thinking about that phrase. The Lord was with Joseph. In the hard season of his life. In the dirty walls of the prison cell. In the ditch his brothers threw him into. And then I started thinking something powerful. If God meets Joseph in the most unlikely places, He will meet us there too. I have believed that for years. God meets us in the dirt. He meets us in the mess. He meets us in the dark seasons of our life. He meets us on bathroom floors. He meets us in our cars. He meets us in places where we feel broken and alone. He might not take the trial away. But He will show up and walk through it with us. This lesson reminded me of the poem Footprints in the Sand. Growing up, that poem hung in our home. I continued the tradition and have it hanging in our home today. It is one of my favorites when I am feeling alone. The message is simple but powerful. In our darkest times, when we feel like we are walking alone, those are actually the moments when Christ is carrying us. You are never alone. God and Jesus never leave your side. When Doing the Right Thing Makes Life Harder One question the Come Follow Me manual asks this week is so important. Why do bad things happen even when we do the right thing? Joseph kept his covenants. But he was still abused by family. He was abandoned. He was falsely accused. Elder D. Todd Christofferson teaches something powerful about this in his talk “Our Relationship with God.” Sometimes we misunderstand the promises of God. Sometimes we think that if we obey, everything will work out exactly the way we planned. But that is not how God works. God is not a cosmic vending machine where we insert obedience and instantly get the blessing we ordered. Instead, God shapes our lives according to His wisdom and His timing. Joseph’s life is a perfect example of this. Joseph was sold into slavery by his own brothers. He worked faithfully in Potiphar’s house and rose in responsibility. But that progress was taken away because of false accusations from Potiphar’s wife. Joseph could have thought, “So prison is what I get for keeping the law of chastity.” Instead he continued to turn to God. And even in prison, the Lord prospered him. Eventually the Lord placed Joseph in a position of power next to Pharaoh, allowing him to save the house of Israel. Joseph truly lived the scripture that all things work together for good to them that love God. The Lord Was With Joseph One phrase appears over and over in Joseph’s story. Genesis 39:2 “The Lord was with Joseph.” God was with him when he was a slave. God was with him when he was falsely accused. God was with him when he was thrown into prison. God was with him when he was forgotten. One of the biggest lies Satan tells us is this. If God loved you, this would not be happening. But Joseph’s story shows us something different. God does not abandon us in hardship. He walks with us through it. Even in prison. Even in betrayal. Even in seasons of waiting. A Quick Recap of Joseph’s Story Joseph’s father Jacob, whose name was later changed to Israel, was the twin brother of Esau. Jacob received the birthright. Jacob worked seven years to marry Rachel, but he was deceived and given Leah instead. He worked another seven years for Rachel. Leah had many children, hoping Jacob would love her more. Rachel eventually had Joseph, making him deeply loved and favored by Jacob. Joseph received a coat of many colors and was clearly the favorite son. His brothers grew jealous. Joseph also had dreams showing that his brothers would one day bow down to him. This only made their anger worse. In Genesis 37, his brothers planned to kill him, but Reuben convinced them not to. Instead they threw him into a pit and eventually sold him as a slave. They dipped Joseph’s coat in blood and told their father Jacob that Joseph had died. Joseph was taken to Egypt and sold to Potiphar, an officer of Pharaoh. Genesis 39 teaches that Joseph was loyal and trustworthy. Potiphar recognized that the Lord was with Joseph and that ...
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    32 mins
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