A Personal Journal of Grace and Discipleship
“I have been crucified with Christ and I no longer live, but Christ lives in me. The life I now live in the body, I live by faith in the Son of God,who loved me and gave himself for me.” - Galatians 2:20

From the blog
The Exchanged Life: Finding Freedom and Wholeness Through Spirituotherapy
In a world filled with competing counseling models, it’s not uncommon to find contrasting views on what “biblical” or “Christian” counseling truly means. Searching for answers can feel overwhelming, and the terms alone—“biblical counseling” versus “Christian counseling”—can spark endless debates on how, or whether, secular counseling methodologies fit within a Christian framework.

1 Timothy 5: Honoring the Household of God
Paul continues to develop the imagery of the church as a spiritual household, instructing Timothy on how to navigate sensitive dynamics with wisdom, respect, and purity. He’s to treat older and younger men as family and honor the unique dignity of women, especially the vulnerable. Widows receive a detailed focus—those over sixty with no family support and a history of good works are to be cared for by the church, while younger widows are encouraged to remarry to avoid spiritual idleness and temptation. Paul underscores the priority of family responsibility, warning that neglecting this care is a denial of faith.

Acts 11 — A Journal of Union and Witness
The events of Acts 11 pivot from narrative to explanation. The miraculous inclusion of Gentiles into the body of Christ now needed defending—and it wasn’t the Gentiles who raised objections, but the circumcision party. Peter carefully recounted the vision and encounter from chapter 10, confirming that the Spirit had come upon the Gentiles just as He had at Pentecost. His logic was airtight: if God gave them the same gift, who are we to stand in the way?

There Is No Other Seal
E. Stanley Jones reminds us that the true mark of spiritual authenticity is not found in ordination certificates, denominational alignment, or ecclesiastical lineage—it is found in transformed lives. While some may claim apostolic authority based on rituals or institutional succession, Paul offers a far more tangible and Christ-honoring measure: changed people.

The Cost of Disobedience
In today’s reflection, Ray Stedman draws our attention to Jesus’ words in John 17, where He speaks to the Father about completing the work He was given to do. This moment of prayer precedes the cross, yet includes it—and far more. From His ministry of healing and mercy to the quiet obedience of His early years in Nazareth, every chapter of Christ’s life was marked by self-emptying love.

The Secret Inside the Wrapping
Today’s reflection from A.B. Simpson reminds me that God’s gifts don’t always arrive in attractive packaging. Some of the most treasured blessings in our lives come wrapped in confusion, hardship, or even suffering. Like the wilderness tabernacle—plain on the outside, but holding holy treasures within—God often hides His richest work beneath layers that seem unimpressive or even troubling at first glance.

A Better High Priest under Grace
In today’s reading from Bob Hoeksra, we are reminded that the greatness of grace is found not in a principle but in a Person—Jesus, our eternal High Priest. The old covenant, with its temporary priests from the line of Aaron, could never bring perfection. These priests were mortal, limited, and symbolic of the One to come. Their ministry ended in death. But Christ’s priesthood is eternal—anchored not in the law or lineage, but in the power of His endless life.

Get a Move On
Oswald Chambers reminds us that abiding in Christ is not something we schedule around—it is the state we are invited to live in. His message dismantles the false idea that communion with God must be carefully protected from the bustle of daily life. Jesus Himself remained perfectly united with the Father in every situation—not by escaping His reality, but by surrendering to it.

Thy Will Be Done
Today’s reflection from Miles Stanford reminds me that God’s aim is not just to meet my needs—it is to keep me close. He is not content to dispense provision like a distant benefactor. Instead, He supplies in a way that keeps the eyes of my heart turned toward His. Trials, then, are not interruptions to God’s will—they are often the very expression of it.

The Author of Life
Today’s devotional from Witness Lee draws from Peter’s bold declaration in Acts 3, where he contrasts the crowd’s choice of a murderer over the “Holy and Righteous One,” identifying Jesus as the Author of life. The Greek term archegos reveals much more than we might see on the surface—it means originator, captain, founder, the very beginning from which all life flows.

Genesis 8
Genesis 8 paints the quiet and holy aftermath of a storm. The floodwaters begin to recede not merely because of natural progression, but because God remembers. This remembrance is not mere recall—it is covenantal faithfulness. Just as the Spirit hovered over the primordial chaos in Genesis 1, so now a wind (the same Hebrew word as “spirit”) moves over the floodwaters, bringing about a new beginning. What was once a judgment becomes a renewal. The world is being re-created.

Introduction to Hosea
Hosea is a love story, but not the kind we expect. It is the story of a covenant marriage betrayed and yet—astonishingly—pursued with relentless affection. God, as the faithful husband, binds Himself to a people who persist in spiritual infidelity. And through the heartbreak of His prophet’s own marriage, He paints the divine drama in human terms: Israel’s idolatry is not merely rule-breaking—it is soul-breaking disloyalty. Yet still, God yearns.

Psalm 20 — The Power Behind the Battle
Psalm 20 is a community prayer of blessing and trust, uttered before the king leads the army into battle. The people pray that God would remember the king’s offerings and respond favorably, not because of merit, but because of the relationship God initiated with His anointed. The hope expressed is not merely in the strength of armies, but in God’s faithfulness to His purposes. The first half of the psalm (vv. 1–5) is voiced corporately—asking for God to bless the king’s plans and grant victory. In the second half (vv. 6–9), one voice rises—perhaps the king’s or a prophet’s—expressing firm confidence in God’s answer. The contrast is stark: some trust in chariots and horses, but we trust in the name of the Lord.

Seal of My Apostleship
E. Stanley Jones clarifies a critical truth about what really confirms someone’s calling in Christ—not a lineage of ordination, but the unmistakable fruit of transformed lives. Paul, often questioned about his apostolic authority, doesn’t appeal to a chain of human ceremonies or tradition. He simply says, “You are the seal of my apostleship in the Lord” (1 Corinthians 9:2). His validation is not institutional—it’s incarnational. The evidence of his calling is living and breathing in the changed lives of those to whom he ministered.

The Hour of Glory
Jesus didn’t shrink back from the cross. When He declared, “Father, the hour has come” (John 17:1), it wasn’t a sigh of resignation, but a cry of anticipation. He had long awaited this hour—not as the end, but as the beginning of the fulfillment of all He came to accomplish. Unlike our tendency to see difficult moments as loss or endings, Jesus saw His hour of suffering as a gateway to eternal fruitfulness.

Words That Rise
Today's reflection from A.B. Simpson emphasizes that words, though less deliberate than actions, possess a spiritual weight that reverberates beyond time. The writer paints a sobering picture: while deeds may gain attention from others, words rise like vapor before the throne of God. They're not lost to the wind—they’re recorded, preserved, and, one day, revealed.

The Better Covenant
God has not merely improved the old way—He has replaced it entirely. The first covenant, built on law, had a divine purpose: to expose the need for righteousness and point sinners toward it. But it was never meant to impart life. Instead, it held up a mirror that reflected our inability to fulfill the law’s demands. As good and holy as it was, the law could never justify or sanctify.

Consecrated to Him
Oswald Chambers invites us to confront a subtle but powerful resistance to Jesus: our temperament. We often use personality traits—our preferences, introversion or extroversion, aversions, even our so-called gifts—as excuses to maintain control of how we live. But Jesus doesn’t ask us to offer up what we’re comfortable surrendering. He asks for the one thing we always try to keep—our right to ourselves.

Three-Fold Cord
Today’s meditation from Miles Stanford draws our gaze upward and inward, anchoring us in the reality that suffering is not just a season to survive—it’s a sacred thread in the tapestry of transformation. The devotional invites us to see life’s trials not as detours, but as part of God’s deliberate and loving path to conform us into the image of His Son.

Enjoy the Refreshing by Calling on the Lord — Part 2
The heart of today’s reflection by Witness Lee is simple yet powerful: refreshing doesn’t come from relief in circumstances—it flows from rejoicing in the presence of the Lord. Isaiah points to this refreshment using the image of drawing water from the wells of salvation. It’s not a casual or silent drawing; it's done with joy, even with a strong, audible call upon the Lord’s name.

Free... in the Lord
E. Stanley Jones invites us to pause and consider what true freedom looks like—not in the worldly sense of doing whatever we wish, but in the liberating safety of living in the Lord. Reflecting on Paul’s instruction in 1 Corinthians 7:39, he points out that even our personal desires, such as the desire to remarry, must remain guarded by this phrase: only in the Lord. Within that boundary lies both blessing and security, even if not always immediate happiness.