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.
The Pathway of Wholeness
3 John 1:2 — “Beloved, I pray that in every way you may prosper and enjoy good health, as your soul also prospers.”
Today’s reflection from Days of Heaven on Earth invites us to consider the connection between spiritual alignment and well-being. A.B. Simpson draws our attention to a deeper kind of healing—one that begins in the soul and then permeates the body and circumstances. The verse from 3 John isn’t merely a kind wish for health and success—it’s a reminder that when our souls are prospering in righteousness, the rest of our lives come into alignment with God’s peace, power, and provision.
Reigning in Life through Christ
Today’s devotional from Day by Day by Grace is a fresh reminder of the immense contrast between the inheritance of Adam and the inheritance of Christ. Paul presents a before-and-after snapshot of humanity: on one side, the reign of death that spread to all through Adam’s sin; on the other, the reign of life available only through Christ.
Holiness Versus Hardness
1 Timothy 2:1 — “I urge, then, first of all, that petitions, prayers, intercession and thanksgiving be made for all people.”
Oswald Chambers reminds us today that true prayer isn’t sentimental, casual, or merely therapeutic—it’s intercession. It’s not about feeling better or sounding spiritual. It’s about entering into the very thoughts of God for others, worshiping Him, and aligning our desires with His heart.
Previously Prepared
Today’s Abide Above devotional emphasizes something essential yet often missed: the battle against sin is not won at the moment of temptation—it’s already won before the day begins. The writer wants us to see that Christ’s disposition, His settled mindset of surrender and suffering, is to be ours as well. We’re not meant to be reactive strugglers, constantly caught off-guard and scrambling to reckon ourselves dead to sin once the temptation is already staring us in the face.
Centered on Christ
Today’s devotional draws our focus to what Paul understood so clearly: the Scriptures are not merely about history, morality, or tradition—they are about Christ. Everything in the Old Testament—the deliverance from Egypt, the rise and fall of kings, the law, the prophecies, the poetry—all of it pointed to a person. But many missed Him.
Knowing Him Is the Answer
T. Austin-Sparks speaks straight to the restless heart—the one that’s striving, searching, and stretching toward a deeper spiritual life, only to find itself weary and fruitless. His message is not an invitation to do more, but to know Christ more. Sparks reminds us that our longing for spiritual fullness will never be satisfied by technique, discipline, or intensity. The Lord gently redirects our gaze: “I am the way.”
A Response to “The ‘Victorious Life’: Studies in Perfectionism, vol. 2” by BB Warfield
I recently read an article on The “Victorious Life”: Studies in Perfectionism, vol. 2 by BB Warfield from 1918 as originally published in The Princeton Theological Review, and I want to say how grateful I am for the historical and theological care Warfield brought to this important discussion. Warfield is exactly right that theology must be anchored in Scripture, and his attention to doctrinal clarity and historical awareness is commendable. In that spirit, I offer a friendly, grace-filled perspective from within the tradition of the exchanged life—one that, while perhaps overlapping with some of the concerns raised in his article, offers a Christ-centered framework that avoids the extremes he rightly cautioned against.
Ezra 10
Ezra 10 closes the book with raw repentance and a national turning back to God—though not without immense cost. Ezra’s heart-wrenching prayer in public stirred deep grief among the people, exposing how the entanglement with unbelieving spouses had opened doors to idolatrous compromise. This wasn’t merely a cultural issue—it was a matter of covenant fidelity.
Ezekiel 31
In Ezekiel 31, the prophet delivers a poetic allegory just two months before the fall of Jerusalem. Speaking the word of the Lord, Ezekiel holds up the image of a mighty tree—Assyria—as a metaphor to warn Egypt. The Assyrian Empire, once towering in majesty and strength, was envied by all but ultimately brought low because of its pride. Egypt is now compared to this once-glorious tree. The message is clear: no empire, no matter how impressive, is exempt from God’s judgment when its heart is lifted up in arrogance.
Job 33
In Job 33, Elihu steps in—not to condemn, but to clarify. He urges Job to listen, not to more rebuke, but to reassurance that God has not been silent. Elihu acknowledges Job's confusion, repeating back Job’s belief that God is distant and unresponsive. But Elihu gently refutes that idea. His main point is both pastoral and profound: God does speak, and when He speaks, it is always for the purpose of saving.
Galatians 3 – Faith, Not Law, Brings Life
In Galatians 3, Paul takes the gloves off with the Galatians. With passionate clarity, he confronts their spiritual regression. They began by faith, receiving the Spirit and witnessing God’s work among them — not by obeying the law, but by believing what they heard. So why were they now living as if the law could perfect what faith had begun?
He reminds them of Abraham — justified by faith long before the law existed. Through Abraham, God promised that the blessing of justification would reach the nations, not through works, but through belief. But Paul doesn’t shy away from the curse that comes with relying on the law. Since the law demands perfect obedience and none can give it, all who cling to it are under a curse. The only escape? Christ. He became a curse for us so we might receive the promise of the Spirit through faith.
John 2
John 2 marks the beginning of Jesus’ public ministry and highlights two important signs: the transformation of water into wine at a wedding in Cana and the cleansing of the temple in Jerusalem. Both events showcase the arrival of the Messianic age and point beyond the actions themselves to the deeper truths they signify.
Defending the Faith by Displaying Christ
Jude’s brief but urgent letter opens with a fiery charge: “Contend for the faith.” Not passively preserve it. Not quietly ignore corruption. But contend—actively stand against distortions of the gospel, especially those that twist God’s grace into an excuse for sin. That kind of boldness is necessary when truth is under siege.
When to Speak, When to Shine
If I’m reading both of these devotionals rightly, there’s a beautiful tension we’re invited to hold. In the Job 32 post, we meet Elihu, a young man moved not by pride or personal offense but by a holy zeal for God’s honor. He doesn’t speak for the sake of being heard. He speaks because he cannot stay silent while God's justice is misrepresented. The Spirit of God fills him with insight that surpasses human status or tradition. It’s a moment of Spirit-filled boldness, where silence would be dishonoring.
I Must Contend—I Must Commend—Which?
Today’s entry from In Christ by E. Stanley Jones brings to light something I’ve witnessed countless times in Christian circles—zeal for defending the faith that somehow misses the heart of the faith itself. Jones takes us to Jude’s call to “contend for the faith once delivered to the saints”—but rather than fueling a posture of argument, he invites us to consider what kind of contending is truly Christ-centered.
To Be Content
Today’s entry from Immeasurably More draws our hearts toward a truer understanding of contentment—not as having everything we want, but as wanting only what we have. Ray Stedman reflects on Paul’s testimony in Philippians 4:12, where the apostle confesses that he learned the secret of contentment. It's not innate. We’re not born with a quiet soul. We grow up striving—reaching for something newer, better, more satisfying—but never quite arriving.
Guarded by Grace
A.B. Simpson reminds us today that the Christian life, especially when lived in deeper union with Christ, is not exempt from warfare—it invites it. As we draw nearer to God, the opposition often grows stronger. The enemy does not waste arrows on those who are not advancing. But for those walking in obedience and singleness of heart, God promises protection.
Death in Adam or Life in Christ
In today’s reflection, Bob Hoekstra lays out the stark contrast between the inheritance we received from Adam and the one we now enjoy in Christ. Every human begins life under Adam’s headship—spiritually dead, separated from God, and marked by the consequences of sin. But Jesus, the second Man, came as the head of a new family, offering resurrection life and intimate fellowship with God.
Always Ready for His Surprise
Oswald Chambers challenges us to live in a state of constant readiness—not just for the final return of Jesus, but for His unexpected moments of appearing in our daily lives. He isn’t talking about looking toward the clouds for some cosmic return but watching for the often-unannounced arrivals of Christ in the moments we deem ordinary or even chaotic. Chambers warns that we can become so preoccupied—even with Christian service—that we miss these surprise visits from Jesus.
Tyranny of Sin
The heart of today’s devotional rests in the breathtaking dual reality of the Cross: Christ died for our sin—and we died with Him unto sin. These are not theological ideas to file away but transformational truths to boldly reckon as reality.
The tyranny of sin once loomed over humanity like an unshakable empire. For the lost, Christ’s sacrificial death paid the full penalty of that tyranny. But for the believer, our union with Him in that same death does something equally radical: it ends sin’s reign over us. We are not merely forgiven; we are freed. The Cross did not only settle our past, it redefined our present.