A Personal Journal of Grace and Discipleship
âI 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.â - Galatians 2:20
From the blog
The Exchanged Life: Finding Freedom and Wholeness Through Spirituotherapy
In a world filled with competing counseling models, itâs not uncommon to find contrasting views on what âbiblicalâ or âChristianâ counseling truly means. Searching for answers can feel overwhelming, and the terms aloneââbiblical counselingâ versus âChristian counselingââcan spark endless debates on how, or whether, secular counseling methodologies fit within a Christian framework.
𪨠Built on the Bedrock of Christ
Jesus did not say He would build His church on Peter the man, but on the bedrock truth Peter confessedâthat Jesus is the Christ, the Son of the living God. This declaration, revealed not by human wisdom but by the Father, is the foundation upon which all who receive eternal life stand. Christ is not merely a component of the churchâs structure; He is the structure. He is the cornerstone, the unshakable foundation.
đŁ Built Up Into One
Oswald Chambers draws our attention away from personal spiritual progress as an end in itself and redirects it toward Godâs greater intentionâthe building up of the Body of Christ into the fullness of Christ. Redemption is not just an individual experience; it is the opportunity for divine restoration of all humanity into right relationship with God through Jesus Christ. We were never meant to cultivate our own private sanctuaries of spiritual growth. Christâs indwelling life in us is meant to express itself both personally and corporately.
đ Seated First, Then Walking
Todayâs devotional from Miles Stanford calls us to see the drastic difference between law-based living and grace-based living. Under law, right conduct was demanded firstâposition or blessing had to be earned. But in Christ, the entire order has been reversed. By grace, we have been given an exalted position firstâwe are already seated with Christ in the heavenlies. And from that secure seat, right conduct becomes the natural outflow of our new life.
đď¸ Clothed with Power, Moved by Breath
The Holy Spirit was first breathed into the disciples in John 20, and then poured out upon them in Acts 2. These two moments are not contradictory, but complementaryâtogether revealing the fullness of the Spirit's ministry: His indwelling presence and His empowering presence.
đ The End of Striving, The Start of Rest
In a deeply personal letter written in 1869, missionary John McCarthy shared a revelation that would go on to reshape the spiritual experience of J. Hudson Taylorâand through him, countless others. He had been striving hard to live a holy life, painfully aware of his shortcomings, always longing for more consistent communion with Christ. But the harder he tried, the more elusive that intimacy seemed.
đ Resting with the Shepherd
The psalmist reminds us that anxious toil yields little for the soul who is already beloved by God. Donald Barnhouse shares a deeply personal transformation: he went from mentally rehearsing unsolved problems at bedtime to entering into communion with Christ. What began as a mental disciplineâchoosing to think about Christâgrew into a spiritual awakening, one where Jesus became more real than the dark behind closed eyes.
đ Well DoneâWithout the Climb
Whenever I hear a line like, âWe are not trying to earn His approval or secure His affection. We are simply receiving what He already gave: the gift of Himself, given freely through faith,â I want to shout, âPraise GodâI agree!â
But then Iâm reminded by my friends: What about 2 Timothy 2:15? Or the parable of the âWell done, good and faithful servantâ? Am I ignoring the call to pursue a life of faithfulness and approval before God? This tension is worth exploring.
đ Nothing to Earn, Everything to Receive
E. Stanley Jones brings us to the center of Paulâs message: justification is not something we achieve by works, but something we receive through faith in Jesus Christ. This is the crossroads where religion and grace part ways. Jones draws a contrast between two laddersâone we attempt to climb toward God through our own effort, and one where God comes down to us, meeting us in Christ at our point of need.
đŞ Through the Window of Rest
T. Austin-Sparks opens a window to something eternal: not a place to go, but a Person in whom we rest. Drawing from Hebrews 4, he reminds us that Godâs people failed to enter His restânot because it wasnât offered, but because they did not believe. The gospel had been proclaimed to them in advance, though in shadow and type, yet their hearts remained hardened. The invitation still stands: âToday⌠enter into My rest.â
đ¨ When We Fashion the Infinite
In Acts 17, Paul boldly refutes the mindset that God is a being crafted, contained, or appeased by human effort. He reminds the Atheniansâand usâthat the true God is not formed but formative, not dependent but completely sufficient, not silent but ever-giving. He is not housed in temples or nourished by offerings, for He Himself is the source of all life and breath and everything else.
âď¸ The Day Already Prepared Within
Todayâs reflection from AB Simpson centers on this quiet but powerful truth: Jesus doesnât just give us what we need for the dayâHe iswhat we need. A day lived with Him is not one where we scramble for guidance, strength, or peace; itâs one where we draw upon His indwelling life as our moment-by-moment source.
đ Living What Cannot Be Lost
Eternal life isnât just a promise for some distant tomorrowâit is a present-tense reality in everyone who belongs to Christ. The richness of this gift stretches beyond the concept of living forever. Eternal life is both durational and relationalâit never ends, and it is found only in the Son of God.
đŁ Realizing Christ in Every Step
Oswald Chambers invites us to see life not as divided between sacred and secular, but as one continuous opportunity to know Christ intimately. The spiritual saint, he says, doesn't live for self-fulfillment but for the deepening knowledge of Jesus in every corner of lifeâyes, even the unremarkable ones.
đď¸ Grace for the Moment Youâre In
God is never late, nor is His grace theoretical or generic. Todayâs devotional from Miles Stanford reminds us that grace is not a reserve we store in advanceâit flows fresh and perfectly timed for the moment of need. Philippians 4:19 assures us that God supplies all our needs according to His riches in glory by Christ Jesus. That supply is not limited to material provision, but encompasses emotional strength, spiritual courage, and sustaining mercy.
đ§Clothed and Quenched
Todayâs reading from Witness Lee invites us to behold a vital distinction in our relationship with the Holy Spiritâbetween the essential Spirit and the economical Spirit. When Jesus spoke of living water flowing from within, He was speaking of the Spirit as lifeâessential and inward. But later, as He instructed His disciples to wait until they were clothed with power from on high, He was referring to the Spiritâs outward equipping for service.
đ The Sweet Bondage of Freedom
Real freedom in Christ isnât a license to drift into apathyâitâs the deep desire to be bound more fully to the One we love. E. Stanley Jones recalls conversations with Muslims and Hindus who marveled at the all-consuming nature of Christian devotion. Unlike prescribed rituals that end with a final prayer or set act, Christâs freedom invites us into a continuous life of loving surrenderâa freedom that binds us joyfully, fully, and perpetually to Him.
đż Nothing Held Back
Ruth Paxsonâs reflection presses gently but firmly into the deeper meaning of surrender. Yielding isnât confined to one moment in the pastâit extends across the entire landscape of our lives: spirit, soul, and body; past, present, and future. Many find it easier to entrust the past to the Lordâwhatâs done is done, and perhaps regret softens the hand to release it. But yielding the presentâour ongoing patterns, attachments, and small hidden reservationsâcan be much harder. And the future? That often feels like too big of a risk to place entirely in someone elseâs hands, even Godâs.
đ§ Leaving the Self-life Behind
Growth into the fullness of Christ doesnât stall because we lack information or opportunityâit stalls when remnants of the old self quietly take center stage again. T. Austin-Sparks draws our attention to a subtle but powerful truth: many faithful believers who began their walk in surrender have found themselves arrested in spiritual growth, not due to ignorance, but due to unyielded areas of the soul. Perhaps an old mindset resurfaced, or an uncrucified desire asserted itself. However it happens, the result is the sameâtheyâve reached a standstill.
đ The Beauty of a Searching Heart
Luke commends the Jews in Berea as âmore noble-mindedâ than those in Thessalonicaânot because they blindly accepted Paulâs teaching, but because they eagerly received it and searched the Scriptures to confirm its truth. Their nobility wasnât in blind faith, but in discerning faithâone that received eagerly but tested wisely.
đ The Gift That Is Already Ours
Of all the promises God has made, there is one that crowns them allâthe promise of eternal life. This is not merely a reward for the future but a reality already imparted to those who believe in Jesus. Eternal life is more than unending existence; it is the very life of God shared with us, now and forever.