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.

Read More
The One Worth Keeping in View
Believing Thomas Believing Thomas

The One Worth Keeping in View

Ephesians 1:17 holds out a simple gift from the Father. He gives the Spirit of wisdom and revelation so that we might know His Son. Not only know about Him, but actually know Jesus Himself. Miles Stanford helps us slow down and remember that the Christian life centers on a Person. Relief for the conscience is precious, and yet the journey does not stop there. Fellowship with the Son becomes the steady rhythm of the day.

Read More
Wholehearted and Human
Believing Thomas Believing Thomas

Wholehearted and Human

Colossians 2:20 to 23 warns against rule keeping that parades as wisdom while missing the heart. Today’s reading reminds me that the victorious life in Jesus is not narrow and prickly. It is holy, honest, and deeply human. The King’s work never calls for rudeness. Courtesy and kindness fit the gospel.

Read More
All My Boast in Jesus
Believing Thomas Believing Thomas

All My Boast in Jesus

Philippians 3 lifts a simple banner. Glory in Christ Jesus, put no confidence in the flesh. E. Stanley Jones invites us to take that step from enjoying the Lord to glorying in the Lord Jesus, not as a mood swing, but as a settled way of seeing. Knowing Jesus is the treasure that makes other props lose their shine.

Read More
Higher Ground of the Heart
Believing Thomas Believing Thomas

Higher Ground of the Heart

Matthew 21 shows a King arriving in meekness, and a crowd that wants a quick, earthly win. Children praise Him. Leaders bristle. Underneath the noise, motives come into view. T. Austin-Sparks points us to this contrast and invites us to step onto higher ground, not to look down on anyone, but to see as Jesus sees.

Read More
Worth Given, Not Won
Believing Thomas Believing Thomas

Worth Given, Not Won

Romans 3:21 says that the righteousness of God has been made known apart from the law. Ray Stedman reminds us that this is not about polishing behavior first. It is about God giving us a new standing, a righteous welcome that flows from Jesus and not from our performance. That lands close to home, because so many of us chase worth in quiet ways. We measure days by boxes checked, people pleased, or goals reached, then wonder why the heart still feels thin.

Read More
Fed by His Faithfulness
Believing Thomas Believing Thomas

Fed by His Faithfulness

Psalm 37 invites me to live today with a settled center. Trust in the Lord, do good, stay where He has placed you, and be nourished by His faithfulness. Delight in the Lord and He shapes what the heart wants. Commit your way to Him, trust again, and He acts. Bob Hoekstra’s reflection gathers these lines and points me to grace as the source, not my push, not my performance. Thank you, Bob, for the steady reminder that goodness grows where trust is planted.

Read More
Feeding on the Living One
Believing Thomas Believing Thomas

Feeding on the Living One

John 6:57 says that the Son lives because of the Father, and that the one who feeds on Him will live because of Him. A. B. Simpson points us beyond gathering more information to receiving living nourishment from Jesus Himself. Truth matters, and yet truth becomes food when the Holy Spirit makes it real within. That is where life rises, where comfort and strength move from the page into our moments.

Read More
Clear the Way for Knowing God
Believing Thomas Believing Thomas

Clear the Way for Knowing God

Some thoughts grow like ivy around the mind, and Oswald Chambers invites us to cut them back with truth. His reading on 2 Corinthians 10 speaks to the patterns that argue against knowing God, the inner narratives that puff themselves up and crowd out simple trust. He reminds us that our weapons are not the world’s tools. They are of God, and they carry real power to take thoughts captive.

Read More
When Grace Does The Work
Believing Thomas Believing Thomas

When Grace Does The Work

Today’s reading in Abide Above points me back to the simplicity of faith. We received Jesus by trusting Him, not by earning Him, and we grow the same way. Grace is not a starter kit that leaves us to finish the job. Grace carries the weight from new birth to daily maturity. Miles Stanford’s reminder is kind and clear. Any “victory” that demands white-knuckle effort from me is counterfeit. The real thing is Jesus expressing His life in and through a willing heart.

Read More
First the Kingdom, Quiet in the Heart
Believing Thomas Believing Thomas

First the Kingdom, Quiet in the Heart

Matthew 6 points me to a different source of life. Jesus does not minimize real needs, He lifts my eyes to a Father who already knows them. Witness Lee’s reflection reminds me that the Sermon on the Mount is not a moral ladder for human effort. It is a description of life shared with God, the divine life expressing rest, joy, and sufficiency. Anxiety belongs to the old way of living on our own. Rest belongs to the new way of living from Him.

Read More
Nothing Compares 2 U: When Empty Freedom Meets a Greater Love
Believing Thomas Believing Thomas

Nothing Compares 2 U: When Empty Freedom Meets a Greater Love

“Nothing Compares 2 U” is a lament of absence. Time is counted (“seven hours and thirteen days”), freedom expands (“I can do whatever I want”), comfort is purchased (“a fancy restaurant”), substitutions are attempted (“every girl I see”), advice is offered (“try to have fun”)—and the ache remains. It’s all deeply human, and painfully honest.

Read More
Love We Cannot Produce
Believing Thomas Believing Thomas

Love We Cannot Produce

1 John 2:5 says that God’s love is perfected in the one who keeps His word. Today’s reading reminds me that perfect love is beyond human ability. The call exposes our weakness, not to shame us, but to steer us away from self-effort and into the life of Jesus within. I appreciate how Nick Harrison gathers voices that point us to the Source. We do not squeeze love from ourselves. We receive love from the Lord and watch Him express it through us.

Read More
Joy That Outlives Circumstances
Believing Thomas Believing Thomas

Joy That Outlives Circumstances

Philippians 3:1 calls me to rejoice in the Lord. E. Stanley Jones reminds me that joy is not squeezed from circumstances. It springs from Jesus Himself. Habakkuk learned to sing when the fields were empty and the stalls were bare. His song was not denial. It was a choice to delight in the God of salvation.

Read More
Ambition Laid Down, Life Lifted Up
Believing Thomas Believing Thomas

Ambition Laid Down, Life Lifted Up

Philippians 2:3 calls me to turn away from selfish ambition and to count others as more important. In today’s selection from T. Austin-Sparks, I hear a fatherly caution. Natural ambition can slip into Christian work with a new coat of paint, yet it is the same engine underneath. The invitation is to let go of chasing prizes and to want God Himself. That is not a scolding, it is a rescue. When Jesus is the goal, doors and outcomes return to their proper size.

Read More
When the Signs Say Wrong Way
Believing Thomas Believing Thomas

When the Signs Say Wrong Way

Romans 3:19 to 20 reads like a mirror, not a mallet. The Law speaks to those under it, every mouth goes quiet, and the whole world stands accountable to God. No one is declared righteous by the works of the Law. Through the Law we become conscious of sin. That could sound like the end of the road, but Ray Stedman shows it as mercy. God is not looking to wipe us out. He is rescuing us from false hope.

Read More
Sheltered and Satisfied
Believing Thomas Believing Thomas

Sheltered and Satisfied

Psalm 36 opens a doorway into God’s covenant love. David names it lovingkindness, a steady, loyal goodness that shelters people who draw near to Him. Today’s reading lingers on that promise, that the Lord satisfies the thirsty with the fullness of His house, and that from Him flows the fountain of life. Bob Hoekstra’s reflection invites me to trust this steadfast mercy in the real world, not just in quiet moments.

Read More
Joy That Chooses Jesus
Believing Thomas Believing Thomas

Joy That Chooses Jesus

Habakkuk’s words land like a steadying hand. Yet I will exult in the Lord. I will rejoice in the God of my salvation. Today’s reading from A. B. Simpson reminds me that joy is not a mood I chase, it is a Person who meets me. The passage does not ignore sorrow. It invites a different center of gravity, a grace-filled choice to look to Jesus when feelings dip low.

Read More
Springs That Do Not Run Dry
Believing Thomas Believing Thomas

Springs That Do Not Run Dry

John 4:14 pictures something more than a spiritual trickle. Jesus promises a spring within, rising and overflowing with His life. Oswald Chambers reminds me that this is not about scraping together enough willpower to act kind for another day. It is about staying right with the Source, then letting His life pass through me to others.

Read More
The Door Is Open, Draw Near
Believing Thomas Believing Thomas

The Door Is Open, Draw Near

Hebrews says we have boldness to enter the Holiest because of Jesus. Miles Stanford points out that the veil is torn, not for us to admire from a distance, but so we go in and abide. We do not wait on a priest to come out to bless us. The Father has opened the way, and He welcomes us to live from His presence.

Read More
When Mercy Speaks First
Believing Thomas Believing Thomas

When Mercy Speaks First

1 John 2 reminds me that when a believer stumbles, Jesus Christ the Righteous is already speaking for us before the Father. The Scripture does not push us into shame. It points us to an Advocate who stands on finished work and draws us back into the light. Today’s eManna reading helped me slow down and really hear that kindness, so thank you to Witness Lee for the way he highlights this grace.

Read More
 

About This Journal