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.
Genesis 30: When God Builds His Promise Through a Striving Household
Genesis 30 is not a neat chapter.
It is full of jealousy, wounded longing, rivalry, bargaining, cultural shame, household conflict, questionable schemes, and economic manipulation. It is the kind of chapter that refuses to let us romanticize the patriarchs. Scripture does not polish the family of Jacob into a stained-glass scene. It lets us see the household as it was.
Rachel is desperate. Leah is wounded. Bilhah and Zilpah are drawn into the rivalry of others. Jacob is pulled between competing wives and later must deal with Laban’s manipulation. Laban sees that blessing has come through Jacob, but still tries to control the terms for his own advantage.
And yet, underneath all of that human striving, God is building the family through whom His covenant promise will continue.
Amos 7: When the Plumb Line Falls on Comfortable Religion
Amos 7 is a chapter about mercy, measurement, and resistance to the Word of God.
It begins with a prophet pleading for the survival of Israel and ends with a priest rejecting the message of the Lord. Between those two scenes stands a plumb line, a simple tool that reveals whether a wall is straight or leaning. That image becomes the central force of the chapter. God is not guessing about His people. He is measuring them by the covenant He gave them, and the result is devastating.
Yet for those of us who read Amos 7 in light of Jesus and His finished work, the passage does not become a call to panic. It becomes a searching word that leads us to Christ.
Why Do Anxious Thoughts Feel So True? Romans 12:2 and the Renewal of the Mind in Christ
Some thoughts do not feel like thoughts.
They feel like certainty.
A message goes unanswered, and the mind says, “They must be upset with me.”
Your body feels strange, and the mind says, “Something is wrong.”
A decision has no clear answer, and the mind says, “This is going to end badly.”
Prayer feels dry, and the mind says, “God must be distant from me.”
That is what makes anxious thoughts so convincing. They do not merely report what happened. They interpret what happened. They take a fact, attach a meaning to it, and then present that meaning as reality.
Fear is often a poor interpreter.
The Spirit of Adoption and the Fearful Heart: You Are Not Facing Life as an Orphan
There is a moment that often arrives before thought has time to organize itself.
A text message comes in.
A diagnosis is mentioned.
A conversation does not go the way you expected.
Plans fall apart without warning.
A person’s tone changes, and something inside you begins to brace.
Before you have prayed a sentence, before you have fully processed what happened, a verdict seems to rise from within:
This is on me now.
I have to figure this out.
I have to hold this together.
No one else is coming.
What We Mean by the Abiding Life: Five Biblical Convictions That Shape Rooted in Christ
At Rooted in Christ, when we speak about the abiding life, we are not beginning with a counseling method, a spiritual slogan, or a self-improvement process.
We are beginning with Scripture.
The Christian life is not the old self trying harder for God. It is not fear-management with Christian language added. It is not the believer attempting to produce spiritual fruit from self-effort.
The Christian life is Christ Himself as the life of the believer.
When Your Body Still Feels Afraid: Panic, Weakness, and the Help of the Spirit
Why can the body still feel afraid when the heart knows God is near?
That question matters because many sincere believers carry two waves of fear. The first wave is the bodily alarm itself. The heart races. The chest tightens. Thoughts scatter. The body reacts before the mind can sort out what is happening.
Then comes the second wave.
The shame wave.
The Flesh Learns to Cope, but Christ Teaches You to Abide
There are patterns in us that do not announce themselves as fear.
That is part of what makes them difficult to see.
Control may call itself wisdom. Avoidance may call itself peace. People-pleasing may call itself love. Overthinking may call itself responsibility. Withdrawal may call itself protection. Anger may call itself strength. Numbing may call itself relief. Perfectionism may call itself excellence…
You Have a New Past in Christ: Your Story No Longer Begins with Fear
Fear does more than make us afraid in the moment. Over time, it can begin to interpret our whole story.
It looks back over painful events and says, “This is why you are the way you are.” It points to old wounds and says, “This is what will always be true of you.” It watches the body react, the mind race, the heart brace, and says, “See, this is your identity.”
And after years of hearing that voice, many people begin to accept fear as narrator.
Not That Person Anymore: Fear Is Not Your Identity in Christ
There is a sentence many believers carry for years before they ever recognize its power.
“This is just how I am.”
Anxious. Afraid. Braced for the next blow. Always scanning for what might go wrong. Always managing the room, the people, the possibilities, the risks, the tone, the future.
Why Trying Harder Fails: Resting in the Finished Work of Christ
There is a kind of exhaustion that can live inside very sincere Christians.
It is not the exhaustion of not caring. It is often the exhaustion of caring deeply and still feeling unable to become what we know we should be. We try harder to stop sinning. We try harder to be patient. We try harder to feel close to God. We try harder to forgive. We try harder to become the kind of Christian we imagined we would be by now.
And when the effort does not produce lasting fruit, shame often arrives with a familiar voice …
Galatians 2:20 in Context: Christ Lives in Me, But How Do I Actually Live by Faith?
There are moments when the truth we cherish most seems to press hardest against the reality of our own weakness.
You know the verse. You love the verse. You may even have quoted it many times:
“I have been crucified with Christ. It is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me.”
And yet, there you are in a hard conversation.
Someone says something unfair. Someone crosses a line. You know you need to answer, but you do not want to react from fear, anger, pride, or self-protection. You want Christ to be seen. You want your words to be governed by His life.
Then the moment comes …
When God Interrupts Comfortable Religion: A Reflection on Amos 4
There is a repeated sentence in Amos 4 that deserves to sit in the center of our attention:
Yet you did not return to me.
That phrase is the burden of the chapter. It tells us that God was doing more than exposing sin. He was calling His people back to Himself. The judgments were real. The warnings were severe. But the repeated refrain shows the heart behind them. The Lord was summoning His people to return.
Amos 4: When God Interrupts Comfortable Religion
Amos 4 is not a quiet chapter. It is the word of the Lord against a people who have learned how to combine worship with oppression, religious activity with moral decay, and prosperity with spiritual blindness. The chapter exposes one of the most dangerous conditions in the human heart: the ability to feel religious while remaining resistant to God.
Psalm 139: Known, Enclosed, Formed, and Led
Psalm 139 is not merely a meditation on God’s knowledge. It is a full encounter with the God from whom nothing is hidden, nowhere is distant, no person is accidental, and no heart is safe from His holy examination.
Love With Wisdom: Boundaries Without Revenge
Someone keeps taking from you, and it is starting to wear you down. Time disappears. Money drains. Emotional energy leaks out. You find yourself doing the work of two people, carrying the weight of a relationship alone, or feeling pulled by guilt every time you try to say no.
When Hurt Turns Into Bitterness, A Way Back To Freedom In The Abiding Life
Most people do not set out to become bitter. It usually starts with a hurt that stays close. Someone said something that cut deep. Someone did something that broke trust. Something unfair happened and it still stings when you think about it.
At first, it is just sadness, anger, confusion, grief. Over time, though, something can change inside. Your heart starts guarding itself. You replay what happened. You picture what you wish you had said. You imagine the apology that never came. And little by little, you start living with a tightness inside that will not loosen.
If I’m Abiding in Christ, Why Do I Still Feel Panic? Four Anchors For The Fearful Heart
You can love the Lord. You can want closeness with Him. And panic can still show up.
Sometimes it arrives without warning. Your heart races. Your chest tightens. Thoughts spin. Fear surges, even when you cannot name a clear trigger. And then a second fear often follows, the one that whispers, “If I were truly abiding, this would not be happening.”
That second fear is often the heavier burden. Not the panic itself, but the verdict you start placing on yourself because of it.
The Whole Journey in One Message: Romans 6–8 as One Gospel Movement
There is a way to read Romans 6, Romans 7, and Romans 8 that turns them into pressure. It happens quietly. We start treating Paul as if he is giving the church a religious upgrade plan for the old self. We skim the indicatives and live off the imperatives. We make the Christian life sound like grit, not grace.
But Paul is doing something else.
RCC Catechism Study Series, Mary, Part 8: A Healthy Place For Mary, And A Life That Stays Centered On Jesus
We have walked through Mary’s place in Scripture and through several Catholic claims about Mary. Now we come to the final and most practical question. What is a healthy place for Mary in the Christian life, a place that honors her faith, respects Scripture’s boundaries, and keeps devotion centered on Christ as Life.
RCC Catechism Study Series, Mary, Part 7: Assumption, Resurrection Hope, And The Limits Of Inference
When believers talk about Mary’s Assumption, the conversation often carries two very different tones. For some, it is a cherished part of their tradition, a beautiful picture of hope. For others, it raises an immediate question, where is that in Scripture. Both responses can be sincere. So in this post, I want to keep our method steady and our tone gentle. We will look carefully at what the New Testament explicitly teaches about resurrection, what is promised to every believer, and what is not directly stated about Mary.