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.
Held From Within
There are days when confidence comes easily, and other days when doubts line up at the door. Ray Stedman reminds us that assurance is not built on our moods or our track record. It rests on the Spirit whispering within that we belong to the Father. Paul names this witness in Romans 8. It is the Spirit of adoption crying Abba, Father through us. That cry is not weak optimism. It is the living presence of God confirming that we are His children in Jesus.
When Pride Runs the Palace, Grace Still Knocks
Manasseh’s story reads like a caution sign posted on the road of every heart. He was raised in Jerusalem, in the long shadow of a godly father. Yet he rebuilt what should have stayed torn down. He filled the land with what God had already cleared away. He even dragged idols into the very place where God had said His name would dwell. The writer of Chronicles does not soften the account. Manasseh led Judah into practices that were darker than the nations God had driven out.
Love That Builds Up, Not Burns Out
If we want a rule of life that actually forms people into the likeness of Jesus, we need a clear center. Scripture gives it to us, love. Not the vague feeling that drifts with moods, but the cruciform love that flows from the Spirit of God. What follows gathers lessons I have been learning over the years, organized so they work on the ground. My aim is simple. Give handles that are faithful to the Bible, workable in the real world, and centered on union with Jesus as our life.
Faith That Rests, Jesus Alive In Me
I woke up today with Galatians 2:20 ringing in my heart. I have been crucified with Jesus, and I no longer live, yet He lives in me. A. B. Simpson points my eyes to this simple reality. The Christian life is not me trying to live up to promises. It is Jesus living His life in me, and God’s promises carrying me.
Two Miles On Purpose
The call Jesus gives in Matthew 5 is not about squeezing out a little more endurance from tired hearts. It is about a new kind of life within us. Oswald Chambers points us to that inner source. The second mile is not heroic grit layered on top of the first. It is Jesus Himself expressing His patience, purity, and joy in ordinary roads where resentment once took root.
Truth That Lives In Us
When Paul says he presses toward the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus, he is not chasing information, he is pursuing a Person. Miles Stanford reminds us that if we want to be centered on Jesus, we must be centered on truth, yet never separated from Him who is the Truth. Thank you, Brother Stanford, for calling us back to a living relationship, not mere data points.
Fresh Wine For Fresh Hearts
The picture is simple and beautiful. Jesus speaks of new wine that belongs in fresh wineskins. The wine is His own life, lively and cheering. The skin is the person who receives Him. When His life fills a willing heart, it does not sit still. It energizes, gladdens, and moves us toward joyful communion with Him. I am grateful for how Witness Lee draws out this picture with warmth and clarity.
Heaven Open, Heart Anchored
Stephen’s last sight on earth was not a temple, a crowd, or even the stones in the air. He saw the heavens opened, and Jesus standing at the right hand of God. T. Austin-Sparks points to this as the center of New Testament life. Authority is not housed in a building or a human program. It is vested in the risen Lord, seated in heaven, and we, His people, draw our life from Him.
Adopted, Alive, and At Home in God
We rarely start our day by naming who we are. Ray Stedman invites us to do exactly that. He reminds us that followers of Jesus are not spiritual orphans trying to behave well enough to earn a place at the table. We are already God’s children, welcomed, loved, and secure. Paul’s words in Romans 8 tell us that the Spirit does not lead us back into fear. He leads us into the freedom of sonship and daughterhood, the kind that says Abba with quiet confidence.
Lifted Eyes, Restored Heart
Nebuchadnezzar’s story is a mercy drenched warning and invitation. Pride narrowed his world to the mirror, then grace widened his gaze to heaven. The king who said, this is my Babylon and my majesty, was brought low until he lifted his eyes to the Most High. When he looked up, clarity returned. Worship followed. And restoration came with it.
When God Names It, It Becomes
The thread that A. B. Simpson pulls on today is simple and stunning in its clarity. God speaks, and what He speaks becomes. Paul points to Abraham and to the God who gives life to the dead and calls into being what does not yet exist. This is not wishful thinking. This is covenant speech from the One whose Word carries the power to do what it declares.
Psalm 34: The Song That Lifts Heavy Hearts
David’s psalm opens with a call to worship that refuses to wait for perfect circumstances. He commits to bless the Lord at all times and invites the humble to magnify God with him (Psalm 34:1–3). The setting behind the title is messy and human. David escaped King Achish by feigning madness, yet the focus of the psalm is not on David’s cleverness. It is on the God who met him in fear and turned danger into deliverance, so that the downcast could find a song on their lips.
Hosea 13: Death’s Sentence, Love’s Righteous Discipline
God holds up a mirror to Ephraim’s rise and fall. They had influence among the northern tribes, yet Baal worship hollowed their life with God. Spiritual death took root, and idolatry multiplied. They broke the covenant and became like the nations around them.
Isaac’s Laughter, Hagar’s Tears, and the God Who Keeps His Word
God’s promise to Abraham and Sarah arrives right on time, not a minute early and never late. Genesis 21 repeats that the Lord did exactly what He said He would do, anchoring our confidence in His character as the Promise-Keeper. Isaac’s birth highlights more than a miracle baby to an elderly couple. It is the public witness that God’s word stands, even when barren places insist otherwise. Sarah’s laughter is transformed from doubt to delight. The child’s very name reminds us that joy has the last word when God fulfills what He promised.
First Go, Then Give
We all know the urge to rush into spiritual moments with energy and emotion. Oswald Chambers slows us down and points us to Jesus’ words in Matthew 5:23 and 24. Before you bring your offering, first go and be reconciled. In other words, preparation is not a flash of zeal. It is a steady way of living that keeps relationships clear and consciences tender.
Filial Faith, Trusting the Father’s Will
Faith that rests in the Father’s heart is not a lever that makes God move. It is the quiet confidence that the Spirit forms in us as He aligns our desires with the will of God. Miles Stanford reminds us that Jesus and the Holy Spirit never prayed outside the Father’s will. As we abide in Jesus, we share that same posture. Faith is not human force. The power is God’s.
Clothed for the Bridegroom’s Table
The picture in today’s reading is simple and stunning. Jesus is the Bridegroom who draws near to people who know they are not qualified. Witness Lee reminds us that our own effort and polish cannot make us worthy for His presence. Isaiah says our best efforts are like a filthy garment. That stings a little, yet it also clears the fog. If worthiness can be sewn by our hands, we will always be tugging at the seams.
When The Church Feels Silent And Your Heart Is Loud
Some Sundays raise hard questions. A public murder shakes the community, yet the service moves on without corporate lament or prayer. Ongoing patterns of sin surface in a congregation, yet little is said. How do we carry this in a Christ centered, abiding life, grace oriented way. The best place to begin is Scripture, then let the Holy Spirit shape tone and timing.
Written Into Everything
Paul’s words in Colossians sound like bedrock. Jesus is the image of the invisible God, and in Him all things were created, through Him and for Him. E. Stanley Jones asks us to stop treating that as a flourish. If we were made through Him and for Him, then meaning is not something we invent. It is Someone we know.
Built For What Lasts
Psalm 31 lifts a simple confession. I trust You, Lord. My times are in Your hands. The entry in His Victorious Indwelling asks us to think about what is being formed inside the scaffolding of our days. Jobs, schedules, and milestones are temporary frames. What remains is the inner house that love is building.