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.
RCC Catechism Study Series, Mary, Part 3 Mary In The Life Of The Church, Then The Spotlight Rests On Jesus And The Spirit
RCC Catechism Study Series, Mary, Part 2 Mother Of God, What The Title Protects And What It Does Not Add
Some doctrines feel like a warm blanket. Others feel like a fence around something precious. The title Mother of God is a fence. It is not mainly meant to elevate Mary. It is meant to protect Jesus.
RCC Catechism Study Series, Mary, Part 1 Blessed, Believing, And Human
Mary is often spoken about with either distance or intensity. Some rush past her as if she were a footnote. Others speak of her in a way that can leave ordinary believers wondering where they belong in the story. Scripture gives us a steadier path. It honors Mary with genuine warmth, and it keeps Jesus in the center, where He belongs.
RCC Catechism Study Series, The Eucharist, Part 8 Communion, Assurance, And The Abiding Life
The RCC Catechism closes its Eucharist section with something many believers long for, a warm, relational emphasis on union with Jesus. It says the principal fruit of Holy Communion is intimate union with Christ, drawing language straight from John 6, abiding in Him and He in us. It speaks of nourishment for the journey, renewed charity, deeper unity in the church, and a life that bends outward toward the poor. In a time when many churches have made communion an occasional add on, that reminder has real weight. The table is meant to matter.
RCC Catechism Study Series, The Eucharist, Part 7 Eucharistic Adoration And Reservation, Worship That Stays Christ-Centered
The desire behind Eucharistic adoration is easy to understand. Many believers long for a deeper awareness of Jesus, not as an idea, but as the living Lord. They want reverence. They want worship that is unhurried. They want a heart that is not distracted. The RCC Catechism speaks into that longing by encouraging adoration of Christ in the Eucharist, not only during Mass, but also outside of it, including reservation in a tabernacle and veneration of the reserved hosts.
RCC Catechism Study Series, The Eucharist, Part 5 Real Communion, What Scripture Affirms About Presence
There is a reason the conversation about “real presence” stirs so much attention. It touches the tender place in many believers, the longing for Jesus to be near in more than idea, more than memory, more than doctrine we recite while our hearts remain thirsty. If the table is a gift from the Lord, then it is right to ask, what does Scripture actually promise happens there.
RCC Catechism Study Series, The Eucharist, Part 6 Priesthood, Ministry, And Who Presides
When Christians talk about the Lord’s Supper, the conversation often turns to a practical question that carries real spiritual weight. Who is meant to preside at the table. Is the Supper entrusted to a special priesthood, or to the gathered church under shepherding leadership. And what does the New Testament actually require for order, reverence, and faithfulness.
RCC Catechism Study Series, The Eucharist, Part 4 Once For All, Hebrews And The Finished Cross
There are few places in the Bible that steady a trembling conscience like Hebrews. It does not merely describe salvation, it anchors salvation. It takes the reader by the hand and says, look at the Priest, look at the blood, look at the once for all offering, look at the seated Christ. Then it refuses to let you slide back into a life of spiritual debt and repeated payment.
RCC Catechism Study Series, The Eucharist, Part 3 Examine Yourself, Then Eat, Reverence Without Fear
There is a kind of warning that wounds, and a kind of warning that protects. Paul’s words about the Lord’s Supper in 1 Corinthians 11 are the protecting kind. They are not written to keep tender believers away from the table. They are written to keep the table from being treated like a casual snack, while brothers and sisters are being neglected, shamed, and divided.
RCC Catechism Study Series, The Eucharist, Part 2 Participation And One Body, What The Supper Forms In The Church
When the RCC Catechism calls the Eucharist the source and summit of the Christian life, it is trying to protect a truth many modern believers have lost. The Lord’s Supper is not a decorative ritual. It is a gospel gift. It is meant to be central, because it brings the church back to Jesus, again and again, with bread and cup, with thanksgiving, with remembrance, with shared communion.
RCC Catechism Study Series, The Eucharist, Part 1 Do This In Remembrance, What Jesus Instituted And Why
If you have ever taken the Lord’s Supper and sensed both comfort and questions, you are in good company. The table can steady the heart, and it can also raise honest thoughts. What exactly did Jesus institute that night. What does it mean to remember Him. Why does the New Testament speak with such weight about a meal that looks so simple.
Keys And Cornerstone, Reading The Authority Texts With Open Hands
When Christians discuss Rome’s claims about authority, the conversation often turns quickly to Peter. The keys. Binding and loosing. Forgiving sins. Feeding sheep. And then, the big conclusion some are taught to accept without much pause, Christ gave governing authority to the Church, and that authority continues through tradition and papal decree.
Before We Compare, A Calm Way To Read Scripture, Tradition, And The Apostolic Deposit
If you have ever tried to discuss the Eucharist or Mary with a Catholic friend, you know how quickly the conversation can stall. Not because anyone is trying to be difficult, but because we are often using different starting points. Many Protestants instinctively begin with Scripture as the final authority. Many Catholics instinctively begin with Scripture read within Sacred Tradition and the Magisterium. When those starting points are not identified, the whole discussion can feel like comparing apples and oranges.
Justified, Crucified, Alive: The Gospel Logic of Galatians 2:15–21
Galatians 2:15–21 is Paul at his clearest and most personal, but it is also Paul at his most pastoral. This passage is born out of a public moment in Antioch, when Peter’s withdrawal from table fellowship with Gentile believers signaled that faith in Christ was not enough for full standing among God’s people. Paul confronts Peter because the issue is not manners. It is the truth of the gospel, and therefore the spiritual air the church will breathe.
Inseparable Love, The Unbreakable Security Of Union With Jesus
There are seasons when a believer can recite Romans 8 and still wake up with a trembling heart. Sorrow raises questions. Weakness awakens fear. Accusations press in, sometimes from outside, sometimes from within. In those moments the question is rarely academic. It is personal. Will the Lord keep me. Will He carry me all the way home.
Light In The Groaning Place
Romans 8 can read like sunrise, and then life can still weigh on the chest. Paul has just brought us into adoption and intimacy, Abba, Father, the settled love of God for His children. Then he turns and speaks about suffering. That move can unsettle us, because the heart wants a simple equation. If God is my Father, why does it still hurt like this. If I belong, why does my soul still groan.
Not on Probation: The Spirit of Adoption and the Cry “Abba, Father”
Have you ever noticed how easy it is to believe the gospel with your mind, and still approach God like you are on probation?
You know the right words. You can confess the right truths. You can even say, “I’m saved by grace.” And yet, when you come to God, something in you still flinches. It is as if you have access, but only if you perform. As if you are loved, but only on your best days. As if closeness must be earned, and peace must be paid for.
A New Address, Life And Peace In The Indwelling Spirit
There are seasons when a believer knows the truth, yet daily experience still sounds like Romans 7. Effort, collapse, guilt, repeat. It is not the language of someone who does not care. It is the weary language of someone who cares deeply, but keeps trying to live the Christian life from the wrong source. Romans 8 is God’s answer, not by handing us more willpower, but by revealing the Spirit of life who now dwells within everyone who belongs to Jesus.
When Comfort Becomes Noise
When I sit with Amos 4, I sense the discomfort of a message that refuses to whisper. This is a word spoken into ease, into comfort, into a life padded enough that the cries of others no longer interrupt sleep. God is not addressing people who think they have rejected Him. He is addressing people who believe they are close to Him, even proud of their devotion, while quietly ignoring the poor and exploiting the weak. The shock of this passage is not that God speaks strongly. It is that He speaks to people who think everything is fine.
Held In The Day Of Trouble
When I sit with Psalm 41, I hear the closing cadence of Book I of the Psalms, a stretch of songs shaped by weakness, illness, betrayal, and the quiet ache of being misunderstood. David is not writing from strength here. He is writing from a bed of affliction, surrounded by opportunistic enemies and wounded by the defection of someone he once trusted. Yet the psalm opens with a word that lifts the eyes before it names the pain. Blessed.