Religion

Wednesday, December 31, 2025

The Quiet Truth Beneath Church Thinning, Part Two: When Absence Becomes Obedience

 

If Part One named what collapsed, Part Two names what changed.

Because thinning is not random.
It follows the fault lines of pain.

Those who left were not the least faithful.
They were often the most saturated.

They were the ones who knew where the cracks were because they had been standing inside them for years.
They were the ones who could no longer translate their suffering into usefulness.

They were not leaving God.
They were leaving exposure.

When capacity becomes a moral limit

Trauma does not only exhaust the body.
It exhausts consent.

After COVID, many people reached a quiet but immovable clarity:

“I can no longer belong in ways that require me to disappear.”

That realization was not rebellion.
It was discernment.

Belonging that depends on silence around loss/grief is not covenant.
It is compliance.

And God does not build the church on compliance.

Absence as obedience

For many, leaving was not dramatic.

There was no announcement.
No confrontation.
No exit speech.

There was simply a withdrawal that matched internal truth.

Absence became the only faithful language left.

Not because they had nothing to offer.
But because continuing to offer themselves would have required self erasure.

In this season, absence is not apathy.
It is obedience to the truth of one’s limits.

The people who left were often the carriers

Scripture repeatedly shows that those who leave first are rarely shallow.

They are often:

• the ones who noticed injustice early
• the ones who felt dissonance before words existed
• the ones who absorbed pain to keep the system calm
• the ones who believed deeply and therefore noticed deeply

When suffering removes the capacity to keep absorbing harm, departure becomes the only honest response.

This is not loss of faith.
It is faith refusing distortion.

God sometimes heals by removal

We often speak of God gathering people into community.

But Scripture also shows God removing people for their preservation.

Elijah under the broom tree.
Hagar in the wilderness.
Jeremiah silenced and isolated.
Jesus repeatedly withdrawing from crowds.

God does not only heal by sending.
Sometimes God heals by extracting.

Not to punish institutions.
But to protect persons.

What thinning exposes in leadership

Church thinning unsettles leaders because it removes insulation.

When people leave quietly, there is no conflict to resolve and no narrative to manage.

Only questions remain:

Who was carrying more than we realized?
Who stayed out of loyalty rather than nourishment?
Who stopped being seen long before they stopped attending?

These questions cannot be answered with strategy.

They require grief.

And grief cannot be optimized.
It must be endured.

The church after spiritual bypass

What is emerging now is a community shaped by refusal.

Refusal to rush pain toward usefulness.
Refusal to replace presence with language.
Refusal to call endurance faith.

The people who remain, or who return slowly, are not looking for polish.

They are looking for truth that can sit still.

They are drawn to leaders who can say “I do not know” without defensiveness.
To communities that make room for pain without demanding resolution.
To faith that does not require emotional performance.

This church may never be large.

But it may be trustworthy.

Thinning as reorganization

What we are witnessing is not numerical decline.

It is a sorting by capacity for truth.

Those who cannot tolerate unresolved pain will either leave or tighten control.
Those who can sit with complexity will remain or reappear quietly.

Neither group is evil.

But they are no longer interchangeable.

What God is preserving

If the church had continued unchanged, many would have been lost internally while remaining externally faithful.

God interrupted that.

Not with revival language.
But with limitation.

With fatigue that could not be overridden.
With grief that could not be spiritualized.
With silence that exposed relational gaps.

That interruption is not abandonment.

It is restraint.

And restraint is one of God’s most underrecognized mercies.

What remains

The church that survives this season will feel sparse.

It will be:

less crowded
less loud
less certain

But it will also be:

less manipulative
less extractive
less dependent on invisible sacrifice

It will make room for whole people, not just useful ones.

When absence becomes obedience

Thinning is not the death of the church.

It is the end of church built on endurance without care.

What is emerging is smaller, slower, and more fragile.

Which is exactly how resurrection always begins.

Not with crowds.

But with those who stayed human enough to leave when staying required self erasure.

And that, too, is holy.

Monday, December 29, 2025

The Quiet Truth Beneath Church Thinning

 

In the years since COVID, many churches have grown smaller. Attendance has thinned. Longtime members have disappeared. Programs have been scaled back. Leaders have grown anxious.

This thinning is often framed as failure:
a loss of commitment
a loss of discipline
a loss of faith

But that framing may be profoundly mistaken.

What if post-COVID thinning is not God abandoning the church?

What if it is God stripping away what could not carry suffering?


When suffering exposed the limits of our structures

COVID was not just a disruption of routines.
It was a collective trauma.

It brought death into daily conversation.
It isolated the grieving.
It dismantled the illusion that stability was guaranteed.

And suffering has a way of testing what is real.

Churches that were built on:

  • momentum

  • habit

  • performance

  • silence around pain

could not hold the weight of that season.

So people began to slip away, not always consciously, not always angrily. Often quietly. Often with sorrow.

This was not rebellion.
It was capacity meeting reality.


Thinning reveals what was being carried invisibly

Much of what made churches feel “strong” before COVID was unseen.

Emotional labor.
Unpaid caregiving.
People who absorbed conflict.
People who stayed quiet to keep peace.
People who served automatically, without being asked how they were doing.

When trauma hit, those people reached the end of what they could carry.

And when they stopped over-functioning, the structure revealed its true strength or lack of it.

God did not remove them.

God stopped asking them to hold up what was never meant to rest on them.

That is not judgment.
That is mercy.


Smaller does not mean weaker

Scripture is remarkably consistent on this point.

God has never equated faithfulness with size.

Again and again, we see God allowing:

  • crowds to thin

  • temples to fall

  • institutions to be humbled

  • illusions to collapse

Not because God delights in loss but because truth cannot coexist indefinitely with pretense.

Crowds followed Jesus until suffering was named.
Then many left.

Jesus did not chase them.
He did not soften reality to preserve numbers.

He let the thinning happen.

Because truth always thins illusions before it deepens faith.


What remains after thinning is often quieter and truer

What survives collapse is rarely impressive.

It is:

  • less loud

  • less certain

  • less polished

  • more honest

  • more human

Post-COVID faith often feels quieter because it has passed through death.

It does not shout.
It listens.

It does not rush to meaning.
It sits with pain.

This is not diminished faith.
It is faith stripped of substitutes.


God is removing substitutes for presence

Before COVID, many churches unknowingly relied on:

  • activity instead of care

  • teaching instead of accompaniment

  • optimism instead of lament

  • programs instead of presence

COVID exposed those substitutions.

What could not survive isolation was not essential. It was compensatory.

What endured was quieter:
faith whispered at bedsides
prayer spoken alone
hope carried without language

God stayed close there.


Thinning forces a harder ecclesiology

The church is being confronted with a truth it can no longer avoid:

Belonging cannot be extracted from people who are hurting.

You cannot:

  • mobilize the traumatized

  • pressure the grieving

  • shame the exhausted

  • measure faith by visibility alone

Any church that tries will continue to thin.

Not because God has left but because God is protecting people.


Smaller may be truer because it is chosen

What remains now in many churches is more consensual.

People are present not because:

  • it is expected

  • it is enforced

  • it is socially required

But because they have chosen it: carefully, honestly, and with awareness of cost.

This kind of church may never be large.

But it may be safe.

And safety is holy.


The truer church can sit with what doesn’t resolve

Pre-COVID church culture often rushed:
grief toward hope
doubt toward answers
pain toward purpose

Post-COVID faith is learning to say:
“I don’t know yet.”
“This still hurts.”
“God is here, even if I’m not okay.”

This posture does not attract crowds.

But it reflects reality.

And reality is where God dwells.


This thinning is not the end of the church

It is the end of a version of church that depended on unexamined loyalty, invisible labor, and silence around suffering.

What is emerging may be:

  • smaller

  • slower

  • less certain

  • less impressive

But it may also be:

  • more truthful

  • more humane

  • more capable of holding grief

  • more worthy of trust

God is not pruning the church to punish it.

God is pruning the church to save people.

And sometimes that protection looks like absence.

But absence, in this season, may be grace.

Faith in Motion: The Train Series

 

Session Four: Shared Compartments

Closeness Without Ownership

As the journey continues, space narrows.

Compartments replace open seating. Doors slide shut. What was once casual proximity becomes shared enclosure. You are no longer simply beside others. You are with them.

Shared compartments reveal something important. Closeness does not automatically create intimacy. And intimacy does not require possession.

On a train, a compartment is shared for a time. You place your bag beneath the seat. You negotiate light and silence. You learn where your body ends and another begins. The space belongs to everyone and to no one.

This is a rare kind of closeness.

Many of us learned intimacy through intensity. Through urgency. Through the blurring of edges. We were taught that if something mattered, it would consume us. But shared compartments offer a different formation.

Here, closeness is bounded. You are present without being absorbed. You are seen without being claimed.

Scripture honors this kind of nearness.

Jesus shared meals, roads, and rooms with others, but He did not surrender His identity to proximity. He withdrew when needed. He remained when love required it. He knew the difference between communion and collapse.

Shared compartments teach us how to practice that difference.

In close quarters, we discover our habits. Do we shrink to avoid tension? Do we overextend to keep peace? Do we control the atmosphere so we do not have to feel exposed?

The compartment makes these patterns visible.

This is not about self protection. It is about self possession. You are allowed to take up space without explanation. You are allowed to be quiet without apology. You are allowed to notice another without managing their comfort.

Closeness becomes holy when it is mutual and free.

The train moves while the compartment holds. You share time, air, and stillness. You do not promise permanence. You do not force meaning. You simply remain present for the duration you are given.

There is grace in that.

Some relationships in our lives are seasonal. They are not meant to be carried forward forever, but they are meant to be honored while they last. Shared compartments teach us how to be faithful without binding.

This kind of presence resists fear. It trusts that love does not need to grip in order to be real.

You can share space without surrendering your center.
You can be close without losing your name.
You can allow connection without demanding outcome.

That is mature love.

The compartment will open again. The train will continue. And you will carry forward not possession, but clarity.


Reflection Questions

  1. Where in my life am I experiencing closeness that feels both meaningful and bounded?

  2. How do I typically respond to intimacy in close quarters, by shrinking, managing, or overgiving?

  3. What would it look like to remain fully myself while allowing genuine nearness?

  4. How do I discern the difference between communion and enmeshment?

  5. What relationships am I being invited to honor for a season without trying to make them permanent?

Sunday, December 28, 2025

Faith in Motion: The Train Series

 

Session Three: The Sleeper Car

Rest While the Journey Continues

Not every part of the journey asks for alertness.

Eventually, night falls. Lights dim. Voices soften. The movement of the train becomes a steady rhythm rather than a signal to act. This is where the sleeper car enters the story.

The sleeper car carries a quiet truth we often resist. You can rest without stopping. You can sleep without losing ground. You can release vigilance and still be carried forward.

This is difficult for many of us to trust.

We have learned to associate rest with risk. If we stop paying attention, something might fall apart. If we close our eyes, we might miss what matters. If we rest, we might lose momentum.

But the train does not require your consciousness to keep moving.

Scripture speaks often of this kind of rest. Jesus tells a parable about seed scattered on the ground that grows while the farmer sleeps. The growth happens without management. The life unfolds without oversight.

The sleeper car teaches the same lesson. Progress does not depend on your constant effort.

Rest here is not escape. It is consent.

In the sleeper car, you lie down not because the journey is over, but because you trust the rails beneath you. You trust the direction has already been set. You trust that movement does not require your strain.

This kind of rest is different from collapse. Collapse is what happens when exhaustion finally wins. Rest is what happens when trust replaces control.

Some of us were praised for endurance long before we were taught how to rest. We learned how to stay awake through pain, grief, responsibility, and loss. We learned to remain vigilant because no one else would carry us.

The sleeper car gently interrupts that pattern.

Here, you are not asked to disappear. You are not asked to numb yourself. You are simply invited to stop proving that you are needed for the journey to continue.

The train rocks. The night passes. Borders are crossed while you sleep.

You wake up not to chaos, but to arrival closer than before.

This is holy rest. Not rest that retreats from life, but rest that trusts God to work beyond your awareness.

Jesus slept in the boat during a storm. Not because the storm was small, but because fear did not determine His authority. His rest was not denial. It was assurance.

The sleeper car is where we learn that same assurance in smaller, quieter ways.

You are allowed to sleep.
You are allowed to stop monitoring outcomes.
You are allowed to trust that faithfulness does not require exhaustion.

Some growth only happens when you are no longer watching.

And when you wake, the journey has not stalled.

It has carried you forward.


Reflection Questions

  1. Where in my life am I resisting rest because I fear losing control or momentum?

  2. What does my body need in this season in order to trust rest rather than collapse?

  3. How have I learned to equate vigilance with faithfulness?

  4. What might it look like to consent to being carried rather than managing the journey?

  5. Where might God be working while I sleep, release, or stop striving?

Saturday, December 27, 2025

Faith in Motion: The Train Series

 

Session Two: Assigned Seats

Learning To Stay With What We Are Given 

Eventually, the train arrives.

Waiting gives way to movement, not with fanfare, but with direction. Doors open. Passengers board. Tickets are checked. And then comes a detail we rarely linger over.

Assigned seats.

On a train, you do not usually choose who sits beside you. You do not redesign the car. You do not negotiate proximity. You are given a place, and often, a person.

This is where the journey begins to shape us.

Assigned seating confronts a fantasy many of us carry about spiritual growth. We imagine that once movement comes, we will feel more control. More choice. More agency. But the train teaches a different lesson. Progress does not mean autonomy. It means presence within limits.

Scripture is honest about this.

Jesus does not invite people into abstract belief systems. He invites them into proximity. Crowds press in. Disciples follow. Lives intersect in ways no one curated. Growth happens not through ideal arrangements, but through shared space.

Assigned seats teach us how to remain ourselves without managing the environment.

When you sit beside someone you did not choose, a quiet work begins. You notice your body. Your impulses. Your desire either to disappear or dominate. Proximity reveals where you are still reactive and where you have learned restraint.

This is not about endurance for endurance’s sake. It is about consent. You are not required to merge. You are not required to perform intimacy. But you are asked to remain human.

On a train, there is closeness without ownership. Elbows brush. Knees adjust. Silence is shared. You learn how to take up space without taking over space.

That is spiritual formation.

Many of us come from seasons where proximity was unsafe. Where closeness meant demand. Where being seen meant being consumed. Assigned seats can stir old fears. But the train offers a different possibility.

You can remain seated without shrinking.
You can remain present without being possessed.
You can share space without surrendering selfhood.

This kind of presence requires maturity. It asks us to stop narrating our worth through accommodation or resistance. It invites us to practice groundedness instead.

Jesus models this again and again. He eats with those who misunderstand Him. He walks with disciples who disappoint Him. He remains present without overexplaining Himself.

Assigned seating is not punishment. It is practice.

It is where we learn how to be with others without losing ourselves.
It is where we discover which boundaries are walls and which are simply clarity.
It is where love becomes quieter and more honest.

The train moves whether the seating is comfortable or not. But who you become during the movement depends on how you inhabit the space you are given.

Some journeys do not ask you to relocate. They ask you to remain.

And remaining, done well, is holy work.


Reflection Questions

  1. Where in my life am I being asked to stay present with people or situations I did not choose?

  2. What reactions surface in me when proximity feels uncomfortable or inconvenient?

  3. How do I typically protect myself in close quarters, through withdrawal, over-accommodation, or control?

  4. What would it look like to remain fully myself without managing the other person?

  5. How might this season be teaching me the difference between intimacy and possession?

Wednesday, December 24, 2025

Faith in Motion: The Train Series


The Train Series explores faith as steady movement rather than dramatic change. These reflections consider platforms, shared compartments, tunnels, and arrival as sacred spaces where discernment deepens, rest becomes possible, and identity remains intact. 

Written for those who are no longer trying to escape their lives, this series invites readers to notice how God carries us forward quietly, faithfully, and without urgency.


Session One: The Platform

When Waiting Is Still Movement

There are seasons when life does not ask us to leave, but it does not allow us to stay the same.

We find ourselves standing on a platform.

The platform is not the destination.
But it is not nothing.

Trains arrive here and depart from here, yet the platform itself does not move. Still, something is happening. 

Timetables shift. 
Bodies orient. 
Eyes scan the horizon. 
Luggage is gathered not because departure is guaranteed, but because readiness matters.

Scripture understands this kind of waiting.

Habakkuk writes, “Though the vision tarries, wait for it. It will surely come; it will not delay.” This waiting is not passive. It is attentive. It is anchored. It is faithful without being frantic.

The platform teaches us that waiting can be a form of obedience.

This kind of waiting is different from stagnation. Stagnation feels closed and heavy. Platform waiting feels quiet, but awake. You are not asleep to your life. You are simply not forcing it forward.

Many of us were taught that faith always looks like motion. Leaving. Launching. Deciding. Declaring. But Scripture is full of people who were faithful without moving an inch.

  • Israel waited at the edge of the sea.
  • Mary waited after the angel spoke.
  • The disciples waited in an upper room with no instructions beyond stay.

The platform is where hope learns to breathe without demanding certainty.

You do not know which train is yours yet.
You do not know who will be seated beside you.
You do not know how long the journey will take.

But you are present.

And presence is not neutral. Presence shapes what you notice, what you carry, and what you refuse to leave behind.

Waiting on a platform requires restraint. It asks you not to board the wrong train simply because it is loud, fast, or already open. It asks you to trust that movement will come in its proper time, and that premature motion often costs more than patience.

Some seasons of faith are not about choosing direction. They are about refusing panic while direction clarifies.

The platform is where discernment sharpens.
Where longing is named without being indulged.
Where readiness grows without performance.

Nothing looks impressive here. No one applauds waiting. But Scripture insists that God often does His most careful work in places where nothing appears to be happening.

If you are on a platform right now, you are not behind.

You are oriented.
You are awake.
You are becoming someone who can move without losing yourself.

And when the train arrives, you will not have to rush.

You will already be standing.


Reflection Questions

  1. Where in my life am I standing between what was and what will be, neither leaving nor arriving yet fully present?

  2. What does waiting feel like in my body right now, and how is that different from stagnation or avoidance?

  3. What trains am I tempted to board simply because they are loud, familiar, or immediately available?

  4. What am I being asked to gather in this season, not to hurry forward, but to be ready when movement comes?

  5. How might patience in this season be forming discernment rather than delaying it?

The Door Series: Thresholds of Faith

 

Session 9: The Door of Incarnation

Based on Luke 2:1–7 and John 1:14


I. A Door Opened in the Ordinary

The coming of Christ does not begin with spectacle.
It begins with census forms and travel.
With fatigue and inconvenience.
With a young couple displaced from home.

“While they were there, the time came for the baby to be born.” (Luke 2:6)

The door through which God enters the world is not impressive.
It is ordinary.
It is human.
It is small.

Christmas reveals a door God opens quietly.
Not into power, but into flesh.

Henri Nouwen wrote,

“God became man not to impress us with His power, but to walk with us in our weakness.”

The threshold of Christmas is humility.


II. No Room and an Open Heart

Luke tells us there was no guest room available.

“She wrapped Him in cloths and placed Him in a manger.” (Luke 2:7)

The closed doors of Bethlehem did not stop God’s arrival.
They shaped it.

God does not wait for ideal conditions.
He enters where there is room enough, not perfection.

Thomas Merton wrote,

“Christ is born wherever men and women are willing to make room for Him.”

The door of incarnation opens wherever hearts are available.


III. God Crossing the Threshold

John names the mystery plainly.

“The Word became flesh and made His dwelling among us.” (John 1:14)

God crosses the ultimate threshold.
From eternity into time.
From glory into vulnerability.
From heaven into human skin.

This is not God shouting from outside.
This is God stepping inside.

Dallas Willard wrote,

“God’s way of overcoming evil is not force, but presence.”

Christmas is the door through which presence enters the world.


IV. A Door That Changes Everything

The incarnation redefines where God is found.
Not only in temples.
Not only in power.
But in bodies.
In breath.
In the everyday.

The manger becomes a doorway.
From fear to hope.
From distance to nearness.
From waiting to fulfillment.

Henri Nouwen wrote,

“In Jesus, God reveals that closeness is His deepest desire.”

The door of incarnation stays open.


V. The Invitation

Christmas invites us to receive God not as an idea, but as presence.
Not as a solution, but as companionship.

“Today in the town of David a Savior has been born to you.” (Luke 2:11)

The door of incarnation asks only one thing.
Room.


Practicing the Door of Incarnation This Christmas

  1. Make room intentionally.
    Create space for quiet presence amid the season’s noise.

  2. Welcome God into the ordinary.
    Notice His nearness in simple moments.

  3. Release the need for perfection.
    Trust that God enters imperfect spaces.

  4. Receive Emmanuel personally.
    Pray,
    “Lord, dwell with me here.”

  5. Pray with gratitude.

    “Jesus, thank You for crossing the threshold into our world.
    Make Your home in my life.
    Teach me to recognize Your presence in the ordinary.
    Amen.”

Tuesday, December 23, 2025

The Door Series: Thresholds of Faith

 

Session 8: The Door That Sends Us Out

Based on Acts 1:8 and Acts 13:2–4


I. The Door That Opens Away From Comfort

Not all doors lead inward.
Some doors send us outward.

Jesus tells His disciples to wait, but not forever.

“You will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes on you,
and you will be My witnesses.” (Acts 1:8)

The door of sending opens once preparation is complete.
It moves us away from familiarity and into mission.

Henri Nouwen wrote,

“The spiritual life does not remove us from the world,
but sends us into it with open eyes.”

This door opens toward responsibility.


II. Being Sent Without Full Control

In Acts 13, the church is praying and fasting.

“Set apart for Me Barnabas and Saul for the work to which I have called them.” (Acts 13:2)

The call comes in community.
The direction comes from the Spirit.
The details remain unclear.

They are sent without a map.

Thomas Merton wrote,

“A vocation is not discovered by self-analysis, but by obedience.”

The door that sends us out rarely provides full certainty.


III. Leaving What Is Known

Scripture simply says,

“So they were sent on their way by the Holy Spirit.” (Acts 13:4)

No speeches.
No assurances of safety.
Only obedience.

The door of sending asks us to trust God beyond familiar boundaries.

Dallas Willard wrote,

“God’s guidance often comes in the form of a direction, not a destination.”

Faith steps forward without seeing the whole path.


IV. Being Sent With God’s Presence

The door of sending does not open into abandonment.
It opens into partnership.

Jesus promised,

“I am with you always.” (Matthew 28:20)

Presence travels with obedience.
God does not send without accompanying.

Henri Nouwen wrote,

“Wherever we go, God is already there, waiting to meet us.”

The door sends us into places where God is already at work.


V. The Invitation

The door that sends us out completes the journey of faith.
Protection.
Invitation.
Waiting.
Return.
Narrowing.
Belonging.
And now, sending.

“Here am I. Send me.” (Isaiah 6:8)

Faith matures when we step through the door that leads beyond ourselves.


Practicing the Door of Sending This Week

  1. Notice where you feel nudged outward.
    Pay attention to invitations that stretch you.

  2. Release the need for certainty.
    Pray,
    “Lord, I will go where You send.”

  3. Move in small obedience.
    Take one faithful step rather than waiting for full clarity.

  4. Stay rooted in presence.
    Remember that God goes with you.

  5. Pray for availability.

    “Lord, I offer myself to Your sending.
    Lead me where You are already at work.
    Give me courage to go.”

Monday, December 22, 2025

The Door Series: Thresholds of Faith

 

Session 7: The Door That Requires Waiting

Based on Habakkuk 2:1–3


I. Standing at the Door Without Movement

Habakkuk positions himself deliberately.

“I will stand at my watch and station myself on the ramparts.” (Habakkuk 2:1)

He does not walk away.
He does not force an answer.
He stations himself at the threshold.

Waiting here is not indecision.
It is attentiveness.
It is the choice to remain present at a door that has not yet opened.

Henri Nouwen wrote,

“Waiting patiently in expectation is the foundation of the spiritual life.”

Some doors require staying rather than entering or leaving.


II. The Vision That Comes Slowly

God answers Habakkuk, but not with urgency.

“For the revelation awaits an appointed time.
Though it linger, wait for it.” (Habakkuk 2:3)

Waiting is woven into the promise.
The delay is not denial.
The timing is not accidental.

God does not rush thresholds.
He shapes the heart that waits at them.

Thomas Merton wrote,

“We are not meant to control the pace of grace, but to consent to it.”

The door that requires waiting teaches surrender of control.


III. Remaining Without Resolution

Habakkuk does not receive full explanation.
He receives assurance.

“It will certainly come and will not delay.” (Habakkuk 2:3)

Faith here rests not in clarity, but in trust.
Waiting becomes the place where confidence in God’s character deepens.

Dallas Willard wrote,

“Faith is confidence in the reliability of God when outcomes remain unseen.”

Some doors open only after trust has been formed.


IV. Waiting as Formation

Standing at a closed door reshapes our desires.
It clarifies motives.
It strips away impatience.

Waiting is not wasted time.
It is preparatory ground.

Henri Nouwen wrote,

“The great task of waiting is to trust that God is doing something far more than we can imagine.”

The door that requires waiting forms humility.


V. The Invitation

This door invites endurance rather than action.
It asks us to stay faithful without progress.

“Be still before the Lord and wait patiently for Him.” (Psalm 37:7)

Waiting is not passive faith.
It is practiced trust.


Practicing Faithful Waiting This Week

  1. Name what you are waiting for.
    Speak it honestly before God.

  2. Resist premature action.
    Practice staying rather than forcing movement.

  3. Anchor yourself daily.
    Begin with the prayer,
    “Lord, I will stand and wait.”

  4. Notice inner resistance.
    Pay attention to impatience or fear that surfaces.

  5. Pray for steadiness.

    “Lord, teach me to wait without losing trust.
    Shape my heart while I stand at this door.”

Saturday, December 20, 2025

When Staying Is the Bravest Thing Left

 

A reflection on faith that does not flee after loss

The book of Ruth reads differently after loss.

It no longer feels like a romance with a neat redemptive arc.
It feels like a record of what happens when life keeps going after everything meaningful has already been taken.

Ruth is not about rescue.
It is about continuation.

What stands out is not drama or destiny, but pace.

Life continues without fanfare.
Love forms without urgency.
Faithfulness appears without guarantees.

Nothing in Ruth is rushed.
Nothing is explained while it is happening.
Nothing is labeled redemption in real time.

This is one of the most honest books in Scripture because it refuses to narrate meaning while people are still inside loss.

Naomi’s Bitterness as Truth, Not Failure

Naomi’s bitterness no longer sounds like spiritual failure.
It sounds like honesty that is allowed to remain.

She names her emptiness.
She does not soften it.
She does not hurry toward hope to make others comfortable.

And notably, God does not correct her.

No one urges her to reframe her pain.
No one explains what it will all lead to.
No one asks her to be inspiring.

She is simply accompanied.

Ruth does not argue with Naomi’s grief.
She does not try to heal it with words.
She chooses presence instead.

“Where you go, I will go” is not a romantic vow here.
It is a grief decision.

It is fidelity without promise.
Love without outcome.
Commitment without assurance that anything good will come of it.

Sometimes staying is the bravest thing left because leaving would require pretending that loss did not change you.

Redemption Without Commentary

God’s work in Ruth unfolds quietly.

There is no divine announcement.
No angelic interruption.
No explanation offered ahead of time.

Instead, redemption arrives through ordinary things.

Fields.
Seasons.
Shared labor.
Daily bread.
Protection that looks like kindness.
Provision that looks like routine.

Ruth gleans.
Naomi waits.
Days pass.

Nothing feels miraculous while it is happening.

And that may be the point.

Redemption here is not dramatic.
It is relational.

It grows because two women remain faithful to one another inside unfixable loss.

Faithfulness After Catastrophe

Ruth resonates so deeply after grief because it tells the truth about what faith looks like when everything has already fallen apart.

It does not demand courage.
It does not require clarity.
It does not reward performance.

It shows faithfulness that is gentle, unremarkable, and persistent.

The kind of faithfulness that wakes up and does the next right thing.
The kind that stays when leaving would be easier.
The kind that does not expect restoration, but makes room for life anyway.

Ruth does not replace what Naomi lost.
She stands inside the loss with her.

And over time, that becomes enough soil for something new to grow.

Not because anyone chased it.
Not because anyone understood it.
But because they stayed present long enough for life to begin again.

The Courage of Remaining

Ruth offers a mercy many grieving people need.

It says you do not have to be brave in the way the world defines bravery.
You do not have to be hopeful.
You do not have to know where this is going.

Sometimes faith looks like staying when nothing is asking you to stay.
Sometimes courage looks like remaining when no outcome is guaranteed.

When staying is the bravest thing left, God does not rush it.

He works quietly.
He works relationally.
He works through ordinary faithfulness that does not announce itself.

And somehow, without spectacle, redemption takes root.

Not heroic.
Not triumphant.

Just gentle.
Just faithful.
Just enough for today.

Friday, December 19, 2025

When Faith Trains the Body to Endure but Not to Heal


Most churches do not intend to harm people.

They intend to form faith.

And yet formation always happens somewhere.
Often it happens not only in beliefs, but in what the body learns to tolerate.

The book of Jonah offers a quiet way to see this.

Jonah does not struggle because he misunderstands God.
His theology is accurate.
He knows God is gracious, merciful, slow to anger, abounding in steadfast love.

What Jonah cannot tolerate is what that mercy asks of him.

His body tells the story his words cannot.


Jonah obeys but his body shuts down

Jonah sleeps through the storm.
Not because he trusts God, but because his system is overwhelmed.

He would rather be thrown into the sea than remain emotionally present.
He would rather die than be changed by mercy.

This is not rebellion.
It is survival.

And that is where Jonah begins to feel uncomfortably familiar.


How churches unintentionally form “Jonah bodies”

Churches rarely do this on purpose.
But certain well-intended patterns can quietly train people to survive rather than heal.


When endurance is praised more than honesty

Many churches celebrate those who stay.

Who keep serving.
Who keep showing up.
Who endure quietly.

What is less often named with the same reverence:

  • naming limits

  • telling the truth when it is inconvenient

  • leaving when something no longer holds life

Over time, the body learns:
Pain is safest when it is contained, not expressed.

Faithfulness becomes synonymous with override.

Jonah can obey.
Jonah can preach.
Jonah can endure.

But his body has never learned that honest pain will be held.


When theology substitutes for safety

Churches are often skilled at teaching truth.
They are less practiced at helping people feel safe enough to feel.

So theology quietly becomes:

  • a regulator for anxiety

  • a bypass for grief

  • a way to remain upright without remaining present

People learn to quote what is true instead of staying with what hurts.

Jonah knows who God is.
But his body cannot tolerate what God does.

That gap is not sin.
It is formation without integration.


When leaders model certainty instead of presence

Many leaders are rewarded for clarity, decisiveness, and answers.

They are rarely rewarded for:

  • staying with pain

  • not fixing

  • admitting uncertainty

  • saying “I don’t know, but I’m here”

Over time, people learn often unconsciously:
If I am undone, I am behind.

Grief becomes something to manage quickly rather than metabolize slowly.

Jonah lives under this pressure.
So do many faithful people.


When grief is rushed toward meaning

Churches love resurrection language and rightly so.

But sometimes resurrection is offered before burial is honored.

People are encouraged to:

  • forgive before they have grieved

  • praise before they have protested

  • move on before they have integrated

The result is not healing, but tightening.

Pain survives by becoming rigid.
Resentment forms quietly.
Mercy begins to feel destabilizing.

Jonah is not angry because God is cruel.
He is angry because mercy threatens the fragile structure holding him together.


When leaving is framed as failure

Perhaps the most formative message of all.

If leaving a church is framed—explicitly or implicitly—as:

  • rebellion

  • lack of submission

  • spiritual drift

then people learn to override their own signals in order to remain “faithful.”

They stay long after their bodies know something is wrong.

Jonah obeys while dissociating.
Many church members do the same.


God stays with Jonah but Jonah is not the destination

One of the most tender truths in Jonah is that God does not abandon him.

God asks questions.
God provides shade.
God stays present even with Jonah’s resentment.

But the story also shows the limits of survival-based faith.

Jonah ends still standing outside the city.
Still resistant.
Still unintegrated.

That matters.

Jonah is not a model to imitate.
He is a mirror to recognize.


What comes after Jonah

There is another way faith can live in the body.

A faith that:

  • does not require self-erasure

  • does not confuse endurance with holiness

  • does not rush pain toward meaning

  • does not demand certainty as proof of trust

A faith where mercy does not erase pain but holds it.

Some people discover this slowly, often through grief.
Through leaving places they once loved.
Through realizing that staying is no longer faithfulness but self-abandonment.

When that realization comes, leaving often does not look angry or dramatic.

It looks quiet.
Clear.
Complete.

Presence is no longer something to negotiate.

And that is not rejection.

It is completion.


A final word for anyone still inside Jonah

For anyone who recognizes themselves here:

You are not weak.
You are not faithless.
You are not failing.

You may simply be surviving in a system that taught endurance more thoroughly than healing.

God is patient with Jonah bodies.
God stays.

But God also leads some people quietly, gently beyond Jonah.

Not away from faith.
Into embodiment.

And when that happens, leaving does not look like rebellion.

It looks like truth finally allowed to live in the body.