Religion

Tuesday, July 15, 2025

When God Leads You Out by Another Way


“And being warned of God in a dream… they departed into their own country another way.” — Matthew 2:12

Some exits aren’t loud.

They’re not dramatic.
They’re not wrapped in closure.
Sometimes, the greatest transformations happen in silence, with ashes still on your shoes.

God doesn’t always rescue us after the fire.
Sometimes, He joins us in it—unseen, unwavering, and already preparing another way.


🔥 The Fire Changes Everything

Fire has a way of clarifying.

It strips away illusions.
It burns off false assumptions.
It reveals which parts of our lives were made of straw—and which were rooted in something eternal.

When you’ve walked through profound grief or betrayal, the terrain of your soul is forever altered.
The people, places, and expectations that once felt like home no longer fit.

It’s not that you’ve become bitter.
You’ve become honest.

You no longer settle for what once pacified you.
You no longer chase what once defined you.
You no longer bend around what broke you.

And God, in His mercy, doesn’t lead you back to what once was.

He leads you forward—by another way.


🛤️ Another Way Is Not a Detour. It’s Divine Redirection.

In Matthew 2, the magi were warned in a dream not to return to Herod.
They came seeking the Messiah, and after they found Him, God gave them new instructions:

“Go home another way.”

The route had changed.
The road was unfamiliar.
But the guidance was clear.

Sometimes, God doesn’t restore what was.
He re-routes what’s next.

And the new way—though uncharted—becomes the holier path.

Because it's not built on nostalgia.
It's built on revelation.


🌱 What “Another Way” Often Looks Like

Not all redirections come with fanfare.
Most look like:

  • A smaller circle of friends, but deeper trust.

  • A quieter faith, but one forged in fire.

  • Less certainty about the world—but more conviction about God.

You speak less—but with more weight.
You expect less—but love more intentionally.
You guard your heart—but not with walls—with wisdom.

This is the path of those who’ve seen too much to go back.


🕊️ You Come Out Truer

The old version of you may have survived by hustling for approval.
This version of you is anchored in discernment.

The old version kept giving the benefit of the doubt long after it cost you peace.
This version knows how to say goodbye—with grace and finality.

You didn’t come out of the fire shiny.
You came out real.
And God has honored that authenticity by leading you differently.

Because what you carry now is not just survival—
It’s clarity.
It’s truth.
It’s anointing that was refined in sorrow.


✨ Final Thought: You’re Not Lost. You’re Led.

When the familiar becomes foreign, and the old paths close behind you—don’t panic.

You’re not off track.
You’re on the holy road.

The one God custom-built for those who refused to lose their soul in the storm.

You may not recognize where you’re going.

But heaven does.

Because when God leads you out by another way—
It’s not for your comfort.

It’s for your calling.

And the fire that almost took you?

It made sure you’d never mistake shallow ground for sacred space again.


💬 Have you felt God lead you by a different road than you expected?
Share your reflections in the comments. Your journey may help someone else recognize the sacred redirection in their own.

Thursday, July 10, 2025

Epaphras: The Power of Faithfulness When No One’s Looking

 

What a little-known man in Scripture teaches us about prayer, spiritual labor, and legacy


📖 Who Was Epaphras?

Epaphras is mentioned only a few times in the New Testament, but every mention is weighty. His name doesn’t headline books of the Bible, but his life reveals a quiet kind of greatness—faithfulness in obscurity, strength in prayer, and labor born from love.

We meet him in Paul’s letters to the Colossians and to Philemon:

  • Colossians 1:7“You learned [the gospel] from Epaphras, our dear fellow servant, who is a faithful minister of Christ on our behalf.”

  • Colossians 4:12–13“He is always wrestling in prayer for you, that you may stand firm in all the will of God... I vouch for him that he is working hard for you and for those at Laodicea and Hierapolis.”

  • Philemon 1:23“Epaphras, my fellow prisoner in Christ Jesus, sends you greetings.”

From these few lines, we learn a lot.


🔍 Epaphras at a Glance:

TitleTraitScripture
Fellow servant  Humble and team-oriented Colossians 1:7
Faithful minister  Trustworthy and consistent Colossians 1:7
Prayer warrior  Intercessor who “wrestles” in prayer Colossians 4:12
Hard worker     Spiritually and practically engaged Colossians 4:13
Fellow prisoner  Suffering for the gospel Philemon 1:23

🧠 A Theological Reflection

Epaphras embodies what theologians sometimes call “hidden obedience”—the type of faithfulness that doesn’t make noise but moves heaven.

He reminds us of Jesus’ words in Matthew 6:6:

“When you pray, go into your room, close the door and pray to your Father, who is unseen. Then your Father, who sees what is done in secret, will reward you.”

Epaphras lived that verse. He wasn’t in front of crowds. He wasn’t planting churches like Paul or debating Pharisees like Peter. But his wrestling in prayer—his “agonizing” (Greek: agonizomenos)—became spiritual oxygen for the believers in Colossae.

And this wasn’t passive praying. It was active, persistent, agonizing love.

Paul used that same verb (“agonize”) to describe his own spiritual striving in Colossians 1:29:

“To this end I strenuously contend with all the energy Christ so powerfully works in me.”

Epaphras wasn’t just “saying prayers.”
He was engaging in holy combat on behalf of the people he loved.


✨ Applications for Us Today

1. Faithfulness Doesn’t Have to Be Loud to Be Eternal

“Moreover, it is required of stewards that they be found faithful.” (1 Corinthians 4:2)

Epaphras served without a spotlight.
You may be doing the same.

If you’ve been walking through a season where:

  • You’re praying for people who no longer check in.

  • You’re showing up for others while grieving silently.

  • You’re not in leadership, but you feel like you’re holding others up behind the scenes...

Then you are walking the way of Epaphras.

And Scripture says that kind of service matters—eternally.


2. Prayer Is Spiritual Labor—Not Just a Spiritual Practice

“The prayer of a righteous person is powerful and effective.” (James 5:16)

Paul doesn’t describe Epaphras as a great preacher or evangelist—he describes him as someone who wrestles in prayer.

This is a powerful reminder: prayer is work.
It’s ministry.
It’s spiritual protection.
When you intercede for others, you’re joining the holy labor of Epaphras—and your prayers have real impact, even when you don’t see it.

Your quiet prayers are not small.
They are spiritual scaffolding holding up people’s lives.


3. Hard Work in Love Leaves a Spiritual Legacy

“God is not unjust; he will not forget your work and the love you have shown him as you have helped his people…” (Hebrews 6:10)

Paul says:

“I vouch for him that he is working hard for you.” (Col. 4:13)

Epaphras wasn’t coasting. He was toiling—emotionally, spiritually, and practically—for the health of others.

This is encouragement for anyone who feels exhausted in service:

  • Parents

  • Caregivers

  • Ministry volunteers

  • Friends who keep calling when others don’t

  • People showing up to pray, even when their own heart is breaking

God sees you. God remembers. And God rewards.


4. Your Chains May Feel Private, But They Are Precious to God

“Epaphras, my fellow prisoner in Christ…” (Philemon 1:23)

We don’t know if Epaphras was literally in chains or imprisoned in spirit as a suffering servant, but the message is clear: he paid a cost.

So have you.

Maybe you’re not in a literal prison,
but you’ve carried grief, betrayal, or silent sorrow.

And like Epaphras, you didn’t stop serving.

That kind of hidden sacrifice is not missed by the God who watches over even the sparrow (Luke 12:6).


💬 Final Encouragement

Epaphras may only take up a few verses in the Bible,
but his faithfulness echoes across eternity.

You may never see a stage.
You may never hold a title.
But if you:

  • wrestle in prayer,

  • work hard in love,

  • endure through sorrow,

  • and serve without applause...

Then you are walking in the legacy of Epaphras.

And heaven is saying over you:

“I bear her witness. She’s working hard. She’s wrestling in prayer. She’s faithful.”

Wednesday, July 9, 2025

Some Things Are Better Broken: When God Uses the Fracture to Set Us Free

There are truths so weighty they arrive not as whispers but as reverberations, shaking the foundation of a weary heart: some things are better broken.

Not because brokenness is easy. Not because it doesn't ache. But because some relationships, illusions, or identities must shatter before the soul can breathe again.

The Beauty Hidden in the Breaking

Scripture does not shy away from brokenness. In fact, it often reveals it as the very doorway through which healing walks. Consider Psalm 34:18: "The Lord is close to the brokenhearted and saves those who are crushed in spirit."

The brokenhearted are not abandoned; they are accompanied. God does not despise the breaking. He draws near to it.

In Judges 7, Gideon's army carried clay jars concealing torches. It was only when the jars were broken that the light could shine forth (Judges 7:20). What concealed the fire had to be shattered so that the victory could begin.

Sometimes, what breaks us is the very thing that frees what was hidden inside us.

When Wholeness Becomes a Cage

There are seasons when what looks whole is actually withholding. Relationships may appear intact but are silently draining. Roles we assumed in life—dutiful, accommodating, quiet—may no longer fit. In those times, the breaking is not destruction. It is mercy.

Jesus Himself, before feeding the multitudes, took bread, blessed it, broke it, and then gave it (Luke 9:16). The blessing and the giving were bookended by breaking. Why should we expect our lives to be any different?

And in our modern moments of reflection, sometimes a lyric can echo truth with haunting clarity. In Sarah McLachlan’s recent song "Better Broken," she sings:

"Let it be all it is, small and still, a memory like a stone—
Some things are better broken."

There is permission in that refrain. Permission to release what once defined us but no longer fits. Permission to allow the jagged edges to soften, not by holding tighter, but by letting go. The song becomes a kind of benediction—an affirmation that brokenness isn’t always failure, but sometimes the very path to freedom.

"Maybe if I wait a little, I'd remember how it hurts and stop before I fall...
Let memory wash over me, forgive but don't forget."

There’s holy wisdom in those lines. Sometimes the most sacred thing we can do is to stop trying to return to something that cannot hold us anymore—and to bless the ending.

Discernment in the Shattering

Not all breaking is holy. Some fractures come from harm, not from heaven. Yet, even then, the God who brings beauty from ashes (Isaiah 61:3) can transform even the most painful break into sacred ground.

Discernment is key. Ask: Did this break awaken something I had silenced? Did it invite me closer to truth, even through pain? If the answer is yes, then it is not cruelty—it is clarity.

Applications for the Mending Heart

  1. Release what no longer brings peace. If a relationship, role, or expectation is only sustained by your silence or shrinking, it may be time to let it break.

  2. Stay open in the aftermath. Don’t rush to fix what was fractured. Some healing only comes through sitting in the quiet aftermath.

  3. Let Scripture interpret the pain. Reflect on verses like Isaiah 57:15: "I live in a high and holy place, but also with the one who is contrite and lowly in spirit."

  4. Trust that clarity will rise. The loss may still sting, but clarity is a holy reward. And God often does His finest work in the ruins.

Final Reflection

Some things are better broken.

Not because God delights in our pain, but because He sees what we cannot: the freedom on the other side. The light that only shines when the jar is shattered. The wholeness that only arrives through surrender.

If you're holding a fracture today, take heart. God is not wasting your break. He may just be setting you free.

Let the song and the Scripture speak as one: healing often begins not with the mending, but with the moment we dare to break open and believe that what comes next can be holy.

"I'd forget to come apart, I'd catch myself and hold on tightly—
Let memory wash over me, forgive but don't forget."

— Sarah McLachlan, "Better Broken"

Wednesday, July 2, 2025

🕊 Peace That Stays: What Scripture Really Says About the Peace of God

In a world full of noise, pressure, and perpetual unrest, peace can feel like an abstract concept—something we chase but rarely catch. Yet Scripture tells us peace isn’t just a fleeting feeling or temporary calm. It’s a promise. A fruit. A gift. And for the believer, it’s meant to be a dwelling place, not a weekend retreat.

So what is the peace of God? How do we live in it? And what happens when everything around us seems designed to rob us of it?

Let’s take a closer look—biblically, theologically, and practically.


1. 📖 Biblical Peace Isn’t Just the Absence of Trouble

When the Bible speaks of peace, it uses rich, layered language. The Hebrew word shalom doesn’t simply mean “tranquility” or “quiet.” It implies wholeness, harmony, completeness, and flourishing. It’s peace with God, with others, and within ourselves.

In the New Testament, Jesus declares to His disciples:

“Peace I leave with you; my peace I give to you. I do not give to you as the world gives.” (John 14:27)

This peace isn’t circumstantial. It’s not the kind the world offers—dependent on smooth schedules, conflict resolution, or predictable outcomes.
It’s anchored in the person of Christ, who Himself is called the Prince of Peace (Isaiah 9:6).


2. 🧭 Peace Is Not Passive—It’s a Position of Trust

Peace in the Christian life is not merely the byproduct of relaxation or simplicity—it’s the result of rightly ordered trust.

Paul writes:

“Do not be anxious about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God.
And the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.”
(Philippians 4:6–7)

Note that peace here is not earned—it’s received, but only after release.

Paul is inviting us into a divine exchange:

  • Trade anxiety for prayer

  • Trade control for surrender

  • Trade fear for thanksgiving

Only then does the peace that transcends understanding arrive—not as a temporary mood, but as a guard for both the heart and the mind.


3. 🔥 God’s Peace Often Comes In Spite of Circumstances, Not Because of Them

Throughout Scripture, God’s people experience peace in chaos, in fire, in exile, and in storms. Why? Because peace is never rooted in perfect conditions—it’s rooted in the presence of God in imperfect ones.

Consider:

  • Daniel in the lions’ den

  • The disciples on a storm-tossed sea

  • Paul writing from prison

  • Jesus sleeping in a boat mid-tempest

In each case, peace wasn’t circumstantial—it was relational.

“You keep him in perfect peace whose mind is stayed on You, because he trusts in You.” (Isaiah 26:3)

Theological peace is sustained attention to God’s presence, even when everything else demands panic.


4. 🕯 Peace Is Not Just for You—It Makes You a Peacemaker

Jesus said:

“Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called sons of God.” (Matthew 5:9)

The peace of God is not meant to be hoarded—it’s meant to be shared. It moves outward. It seeks justice. It leans into reconciliation. It calms tension without compromising truth.

To be a peacemaker is not to be passive or conflict-avoidant. It’s to be someone who creates space for peace to take root: in relationships, in churches, in communities, and even in political and cultural discourse.

God’s peace is both an inner stillness and an outward calling.


5. 🌱 Peace Grows Where Faith Is Practiced Daily

Peace is not a one-time download—it’s a fruit of the Spirit (Galatians 5:22). That means it must be cultivated. Watered. Tended to.

Practices that nourish peace:

  • Prayer – Releasing control and listening for God

  • Scripture – Renewing the mind with eternal truth

  • Sabbath – Resisting the idolatry of busyness

  • Forgiveness – Releasing resentment to make room for grace

  • Boundaries – Protecting the soul’s space to hear God clearly

Without these rhythms, peace is easily lost. But with them, peace becomes not only possible, but habitual.


🧘‍♂️ Final Takeaway: Peace Is a Person

Ultimately, peace is not a product of positive thinking—it’s a person.

“For He Himself is our peace…” (Ephesians 2:14)

To know Jesus is to have access to a peace that the world cannot offer and cannot take away. It is a grounded, rooted, holy stillness that stands firm in trial and stays soft in suffering.

So if peace feels distant today, don’t try to manufacture it.
Instead, draw near to the One who is peace Himself.
He doesn’t promise a storm-free life, but He does promise this:

“In Me you may have peace. In this world you will have trouble. But take heart! I have overcome the world.” (John 16:33)


🙏 Questions for Reflection:

  • What circumstances in your life feel most peace-resistant right now?

  • Are you chasing the world’s version of peace, or receiving Christ’s?

  • What practices help anchor your peace in God’s presence?

Sunday, June 29, 2025

The Road to Emmaus: When God Walks With You But You Don’t Recognize Him Yet


Luke 24:13–35 — A Devotional for the Moments Grief Makes God Hard to See


Some moments in life feel like the road to Emmaus.

You’re walking away from something that broke you.
The loss is too fresh, the dreams too buried.
The cross you witnessed was too real—
and the resurrection you were promised feels too far.

So you leave Jerusalem—the place of pain—and you start walking toward Emmaus,
not because it’s where hope lives,
but because it’s away.

And as you walk,
grief becomes your companion.
Disappointment your narrator.
You rehearse what happened. You explain what you saw.
And even when Jesus Himself comes near…
you don't recognize Him.


🌫️ "Their eyes were kept from recognizing Him." — Luke 24:16

Grief does that.
It blurs vision.
Not always the kind that makes you cry—but the kind that clouds clarity.

Sometimes, the presence of Jesus doesn’t look like power.
It looks like quiet company.
Like someone asking, “What are you discussing as you walk along?”

You don’t expect God to come in the form of a question.
You want a sign.
A flash of glory.
A reversal of what just tore your life apart.

But instead—He walks beside you.
As a stranger.
As a presence who listens before explaining.


🥀 Grief Speaks First

“We had hoped He was the one to redeem Israel…” (Luke 24:21)

Those five words—we had hoped—are among the most heartbreaking in Scripture.
They hold past-tense faith.
They hold shattered expectations.
They carry the weight of people who trusted, believed, waited—and watched it all unravel.

You know that feeling.
Maybe you’re still in it.

You had hoped the treatment would work.
You had hoped the friendship would hold.
You had hoped the prayers would be answered in time.

But then Friday came. And Saturday lingered.
And by Sunday afternoon, you’re walking away from Jerusalem,
not because you don’t believe in God,
but because your hope didn’t survive the crucifixion.


🔥 But Then the Stranger Speaks

He walks with you long enough to let you talk.
Then He opens the Scriptures.
Not with preaching, but with presence.
He doesn't scold your unbelief.
He interprets the pain.

And slowly—something begins to burn.

“Were not our hearts burning within us while He talked with us on the road…?” (Luke 24:32)

Sometimes, faith returns not with fireworks but with flickers.
Not all at once, but moment by moment, as God gently reminds you:

You were never walking alone.


🍞 The Breaking of Bread

Jesus stays when invited.
He doesn’t force recognition. He waits for it.

And it’s not until the breaking of bread—
that utterly human act of shared sustenance—that their eyes are opened.

“Then their eyes were opened, and they recognized Him.” (Luke 24:31)

Not in the storm.
Not in the tomb.
Not even on the road.

But at the table.

Maybe that’s how God shows up after grief—not in displays of power,
but in quiet moments where nourishment is offered and eyes finally see what hearts already knew.


🕊 Final Reflection

If you're on your own Emmaus road,
walking with grief,
narrating your loss,
wondering where God went after everything fell apart—
take heart:

He may be closer than you think.

Sometimes Jesus doesn’t reveal Himself until you’ve walked long enough to know what absence feels like.
So when He does show up, it’s unmistakable.

So keep walking.
Keep inviting.
Keep breaking bread.

And when the time is right,
your eyes will open too.


📖 Companion Scripture 

“I will never leave you nor forsake you.”
— Hebrews 13:5

She Touched, He Turned: What Happens When God Sees You

 

Luke 8:43–48 – A Devotional on Relentless Initiation and the God Who Finally Turns Toward You


There are some of us who know what it means to be the one who always reaches first.

We are the ones who initiate the hard conversations.
The ones who remember birthdays and send the check-in texts.
The ones who press through relational silence like a woman pressing through a crowd—hoping someone, anyone, might turn around and see us.

We don’t wait for doors to open. We knock. We push. We bleed.

This was the woman in Luke 8. Bleeding for twelve years, spending all she had on physicians, and still deteriorating—unseen, untouched, unhealed.

Her pain had become a private wilderness.
Her condition, a quiet exile.
Twelve years of blood. Twelve years of being ceremonially unclean.
Twelve years of people stepping away—while she still moved toward.

And on that day? She wasn’t even supposed to be in the crowd. Let alone reaching out.
But something in her refused to stay invisible.

“If I only touch the hem of His garment, I will be healed.” (Luke 8:44)

She didn’t need a conversation. She didn’t ask for eye contact.
She didn’t even expect Him to notice.

She just reached.


💔 When You’re Always the Initiator

If you’ve ever felt like the one who always reaches but rarely gets reached for, this story is for you.

You know what it feels like to crawl through life, emotionally hemorrhaging, hoping for some response.

To show up with your wounds at the edge of someone else’s celebration, only to be met with silence.

To extend grace again and again—through forgotten birthdays, one-sided friendships—while your own need for tenderness goes unmet.

You’ve pressed through disappointment.
You’ve reached through grief.
You’ve extended yourself again and again, hoping this time someone might turn around.

And when they don’t?
You learn to touch hems instead of hands.
You learn to find healing in hope alone.

But here’s the turning point in Luke 8:

“Who touched me?” Jesus asked.
“Someone touched me; I know that power has gone out from me.” (Luke 8:45–46)


🌿 The Turning Toward

She reached without expectation—but He noticed.
She touched in desperation—but He turned.

In a sea of people, Jesus felt her faith like a pulse.
He didn’t just let the healing happen in silence—He called her forward.

“Daughter, your faith has healed you. Go in peace.” (Luke 8:48)

He named her Daughter—not patient, not stranger, not problem.

Daughter.
Belonging.

That’s what Jesus does for those of us who are used to reaching without being reached for:
He turns.
He sees.
He speaks peace into places we’ve only known depletion.


🙏 Final Reflection

Maybe you’ve been the one who initiates for so long that you’ve forgotten what it’s like to be pursued.

Maybe your reaching has started to feel like begging.

But take heart: Jesus doesn’t just respond to the loud, the celebrated, the obviously needy.

He feels the faith that comes in the smallest touch.
He sees the effort it takes to keep pressing through.
And in time, He turns toward you.

Not just to heal your bleeding.
But to name your worth.
To return your gaze.
To remind you that you are more than what others didn’t offer.

You are not invisible.
You are not forgotten.
You are not always going to be the one who has to reach first.

Sometimes—finally—God reaches back.


📖 Companion Scripture 

“The Lord your God is with you, the Mighty Warrior who saves.
He will take great delight in you;
in His love He will no longer rebuke you,
but will rejoice over you with singing.”
Zephaniah 3:17

Saturday, June 28, 2025

When Intimacy Is Unequal or Unexplored, Someone Bleeds


What happens when one person brings their full heart—and the other stays safely distant


There’s a quiet violence in half-formed intimacy.

Not the kind that screams betrayal or slams doors, but the kind that lives in unfinished conversations. In ghosted texts. In delayed apologies. In the ache of having opened your soul—only to realize the other person never really showed up.

This is the story so many of us carry, though we rarely name it:

We brought our whole selves.
They brought… hesitation.
And in the space between our vulnerability and their avoidance,
we bled.


The Wound of Unequal Intimacy

Sometimes, the deepest heartbreak doesn’t come from people who intentionally harmed us—it comes from those who stayed passive while we offered them something sacred.

  • You showed up in your grief, your honesty, your need.

  • They responded with silence, delay, or self-protection.

  • You asked for presence. They gave you performance.

  • You offered relationship. They retreated into routine.

And what cuts deepest?
You weren’t asking for perfection.
You were asking for mutuality.
You were asking for someone to meet you halfway.

But when intimacy is unequal—when you’re giving depth and they’re staying surface-level—you become the one who bleeds.
Emotionally. Spiritually. Quietly.


The Cost of Unexplored Intimacy

There’s another kind of bleeding: when the intimacy was possible, but the other person simply never went there.

This is especially painful with:

  • Long-term friendships that never evolve.

  • Spiritual mentors who never acknowledge your pain.

  • Family members who keep you in a version of yourself you’ve outgrown.

It’s the unspoken truth:

They could have known you deeper—but chose not to.

They were afraid. Or lazy. Or distracted.
They avoided the sacred discomfort required to build something real.

And while they stayed in the shallow end, you were drowning in the deep—alone.


The Bleeding Is Not Your Fault

Here’s what needs to be said with holy clarity:

You didn’t bleed because you were too much.
You bled because the other person stayed too little.

You didn’t cause the wound by being open.
The wound came when your openness was met with withdrawal.

And in many cases, you stayed longer than you should have,
hoping that one day they’d meet you there.

But they didn’t.

And you’ve been bandaging your soul ever since.


What God May Be Saying Now

If you’ve walked through this—if your heart has scar tissue from one-sided closeness—then this truth may meet you where you are:

“My daughter, your bleeding was not in vain.
I saw every drop. I counted every tear.
And I never once asked you to prove your worth through suffering.”

Sometimes, God allows the rupture so we can stop reliving a cycle we didn’t even realize we were stuck in.

He lets the silence echo so loudly we can’t pretend it’s conversation anymore.

He lets the “not enough” finally hurt enough that we walk away—not in bitterness, but in truth.


A New Way Forward: From Bleeding to Blessing

You’re allowed to walk away from relationships that only function when you’re the one doing all the emotional labor.

You’re allowed to stop explaining your pain to people who never learned how to sit with their own.

You’re allowed to close the chapter—not out of anger, but because the ink has run dry.

You can move forward not as the one who bled,
but as the one who learned what covenant really means.


Final Words

When intimacy is unequal or unexplored, someone bleeds.

But that doesn’t have to be the end of the story.

Because now, you’re not just the person who bled.

You’re the person who survived.

And that survival?
That clarity?
That strength?

It’s the beginning of something more honest. More mutual. More holy.

You’re done bleeding.

Now, you’re healing.

Thursday, June 26, 2025

🩹 Where No One Pretends: The Safety of Spiritual Honesty in the Wake of Grief


There is a kind of safety that doesn’t come with locked doors or security systems. It comes with truth. With presence. With being surrounded by people who have nothing to prove and no desire to perform.

That’s what I found in the small group I attend at church—ten souls, mostly men in their 60s and 70s, gathered not for performance, but for survival. We meet each week to work through Scripture and the wounds we carry. 

The class is called Renew, and though we are technically studying how to rewire our thinking to match the Word of God, what we’re really doing is learning how to be honest in a world that rewards pretending.

And after everything I’ve lost, that kind of honesty feels like salvation.


🕊 When Grief Makes Pretending Impossible

Grief stripped me bare. Not just emotionally—but socially, spiritually, even neurologically. After my husband died suddenly, the energy I once spent “keeping it together” simply vanished. I could no longer pretend I was fine. I could no longer tolerate conversations that skimmed the surface. I wanted real, or I wanted silence.

That’s why this group matters so deeply.

There’s no posturing in the circle. No Sunday-school platitudes. These are men who’ve lost wives, fought depression, faced addiction, and questioned whether God was still listening. No one talks like they’ve mastered the curriculum of life. They talk like survivors—and that, somehow, gives me permission to do the same.


🤝 Faith in a Place That Doesn’t Flinch

When someone in the group says, “This has been a really hard week,” no one tries to fix it.

When someone else says, “I’m angry. Not all the time. But more than I want to admit,” no one reaches for a verse to slap on the wound.

We listen. We nod. Sometimes we cry. Because we know what it’s like to be furious and faithful in the same breath. We know what it’s like to hang onto the hem of Jesus’ robe while wondering if He’s really going to turn around.

This is what spiritual honesty looks like:

  • Not needing to impress anyone.

  • Not pretending grief is gone.

  • Not hiding the questions behind a polished smile.

And for me, that’s the first place I’ve felt truly safe in a long time.


📖 When the Bible Meets Our Broken Places

Each week, we return to Scripture—not as something we’re trying to conquer, but as something that keeps us alive. When we read verses about God being close to the brokenhearted, it doesn’t feel theoretical. It feels desperate. Necessary. Like oxygen.

We’ve talked about loneliness, anger, depression and other difficult emotions. We’re now in a book called Rewired by R.B. Ouellette that challenges us to notice our thinking patterns and compare them with the truth of Scripture. 

But here’s the miracle: no one uses the Bible as a weapon in this group.

It’s not a rulebook. It’s not a checklist. It’s a lifeline. It’s a reminder that our pain isn’t too much for God, and neither is our doubt.


🛐 What the Church Should Be

For years, I thought the church was a place you came to prove you were getting better.

Now, I believe it should be the place where it’s finally safe to say you’re not.

This group—ten people sitting in metal chairs around a worn-out table—has become more church to me than a thousand sermons ever could. There are no polished answers. No curated responses. Just raw, trembling honesty met with grace.

And isn’t that what Jesus always offered?


🌱 Final Reflection: When Safety Feels Like Presence

The kind of safety that heals us doesn’t come from knowing all the right answers. It comes from being known—in our sorrow, in our mess, in our reaching.

In the Renew group, I’m learning that spiritual safety is found not in strength, but in shared weakness.

No one pretends. No one needs to.

And in that kind of soil, grief isn’t something to hide. It’s something God tends to—gently, honestly, and with unflinching love.

Wednesday, June 25, 2025

Job Sat in Ashes: When Worship Sounds Like Wailing and Faith Looks Like Survival

 

Job 2–3 | A Theology of Grief That Doesn’t Demand Composure


🕯️ Introduction: The Sound of Sacred Collapse

There are moments in life when pain knocks the wind out of your body—and all the theology you once neatly held begins to tremble. The story of Job doesn’t begin with praise or understanding. It begins with ashes.

“Then Job took a piece of broken pottery and scraped himself while he sat among the ashes.”
—Job 2:8

This is not the image most of us grew up associating with worship.
And yet, this is the scene heaven itself watched in silence.
No psalms. No polished prayers. Just the body of a man unraveling under loss.

And still… he is not outside of God’s gaze. He is not disqualified from holiness.


💔 Job Didn’t Curse God—But He Didn’t Hide the Hurt Either

When Job finally opens his mouth in chapter 3, it is not to praise.
It is not to preach to himself.
It is to weep.

He wishes he’d never been born.
He wishes the day of his conception had been erased.
He longs for the grave more than food.

This is the man we often describe as “patient.”

But Job is not patient.
He is devastated.
He is human.
And he’s still holy.

The book of Job shatters the illusion that faith must always look composed.
It shows us a man in spiritual freefall who still refuses to let go of God—even when he no longer recognizes Him.


🔥 When Worship Becomes Survival

Sometimes worship is not a song.
Sometimes it’s the act of breathing through another morning you didn’t want to wake up to.
Sometimes it’s sitting in silence because the only words you can find are ones you don’t believe you're allowed to say out loud.

But Job said them.
And Scripture preserved them.
Which means God welcomed them.

This is the theology of ashes:
That grief and faith are not opposites.
That collapse and worship can coexist.
That asking “Why, God?” is not rebellion—it is relationship under pressure.


🧎🏽‍♀️ The Holiness of Unanswered Lament

For 35 chapters, Job’s cries go unanswered. His friends offer explanations, but none of them bring comfort. And God? God waits.

He doesn’t show up with reasons.
He doesn’t tidy up the pain.
He simply arrives.

When God finally speaks, He doesn’t explain the suffering—He reframes it.
He reminds Job (and us) that He is not distant from the chaos, but deeply woven into it—the kind of God who lays the earth’s foundations and listens to one man’s weeping in the dust.


🌑 Your Faith Is Not Broken Because You’re in Pieces

If you are grieving, raging, questioning—your faith is not in crisis. It is alive.

Grief is not the absence of belief.
Grief is the collision of love and loss inside a still-beating heart.

Faith doesn’t always sound like certainty.
Sometimes it sounds like wailing.
Sometimes it sounds like silence.
Sometimes it sounds like “I hate this, but I’m still here.”

And that is enough.


🕊️ Job’s Reward Wasn’t Just Restoration—It Was Relationship

At the end of the story, Job receives more than material blessing. He receives a vision of God he didn’t have before. He says:

“My ears had heard of you, but now my eyes have seen you.” (Job 42:5)

The ashes were not a detour.
They were the holy ground where Job’s second knowing of God began.


📖 Companion Scripture:

“Even the darkness will not be dark to you; the night will shine like the day, for darkness is as light to you.”
—Psalm 139:12

Even when we sit in silence, dust, and grief, God does not lose sight of us. There is no depth of suffering where His presence does not reach. What feels like night to us still shines in His gaze.


🙏🏼 Final Reflection

If you’re sitting in ashes today—emotionally, spiritually, relationally—you are not outside the presence of God. You are in it.

You don’t have to wrap your pain in platitudes.
You don’t have to sanitize your sorrow to make it sacred.
You don’t have to call this season good for God to still be in it.

He doesn’t demand your composure.
He just welcomes your presence.

Even if it arrives covered in grief.

Leah’s Eyes Were Tender: What It Means to Be Chosen Second but Seen by God

 

Genesis 29–30 | Legacy through the Unloved


👁️ Introduction: Eyes That Didn’t Spark Desire

The Bible doesn’t waste words. So when it introduces Leah by saying only that “her eyes were tender” (Genesis 29:17), it’s not just a statement about her appearance—it’s a window into her place in the world.

In a culture where beauty was currency and firstborn status was power, Leah was both visibly present and invisibly dismissed. Her sister Rachel was lovely in form and favored in love. Leah? She was handed over in deception. Married by mistake. Loved by default—if at all.

But here’s what scripture quietly teaches us through her story:

Even if people choose you second, God sees you first.


💔 The Pain of Being Plan B

Leah wasn’t just rejected once—she was rejected systemically:

  • Her father used her as a pawn.

  • Her husband loved someone else.

  • Her body was wanted, but her heart was not.

  • Her womb was fruitful, but her soul was starving.

Each child she bore echoed a longing not just for motherhood, but for being seen:

“Surely now my husband will love me…”
“Maybe now he’ll be attached to me…”
“At last, this time, I will praise the Lord.”

These are the cries of someone trying to turn function into value. Someone who knows what it’s like to be in the room but not in the heart. Someone who is held, but not chosen.

Leah teaches us something uncomfortable but true:
It’s possible to be used for your gifts but unloved for your soul.


👁️ But the Lord Saw Leah

In the midst of her ache, there is a turning point in Leah’s story—a phrase that shifts the narrative completely:

“When the Lord saw that Leah was not loved, He opened her womb…” (Genesis 29:31)

He saw her.
Not just her productivity.
Not just her position.
He saw her pain.

This is the heart of the gospel hidden in Genesis:
God does not need your life to be symmetrical to make it sacred.

He doesn’t wait for your relationships to be fair.
He doesn’t require applause from the world.
He blesses the ones who are passed over by others—but never passed over by Him.


🌿 What Leah Never Knew: Legacy Hidden in the Unloved

Leah may have died without knowing the full weight of her legacy.
But you know who came from her line?

  • Judah – the son she bore when she stopped striving and simply said, “This time, I will praise the Lord.”

  • David – the shepherd-king who brought worship into war and poetry into power.

  • Jesus – the Savior who was also rejected, overlooked, and chosen last.

The Messiah came through Leah—not Rachel.

The one who was unloved by man was chosen to birth the line through which redemption came.

God does not build legacies the way the world builds affection.

What looks like second place to man may be sacred ground to God.


🙌🏼 For Every Leah Among Us

If you've ever:

  • Been chosen for your usefulness but not your heart...

  • Felt invisible in the presence of someone more “desirable”...

  • Been faithful in a relationship where your love wasn’t returned...

  • Wondered if anyone sees how quietly you carry it all...

Then you know Leah’s ache.

But here’s the better truth:

You are seen.
Not just used.
Not just tolerated.
Seen.

By the God who opens wombs and rewrites stories.
By the God who plants the roots of redemption in women the world underestimates.

Leah's eyes may have been tender—but God’s eyes were fixed on her.

And He has never stopped seeing the ones like her.


📖 Companion Scripture:

“The Lord is close to the brokenhearted and saves those who are crushed in spirit.”
—Psalm 34:18


✨ Final Reflection

Leah didn’t win Jacob’s heart.
She didn’t get the romance.
She didn’t get chosen on earth.

But she was chosen in Heaven.

And that is what God does best—He gives holy legacy to the ones the world leaves behind.