Religion

Tuesday, March 24, 2026

The Way That Descends Before It Rises

 Where belonging replaces the need to grasp

Traced through Philippians 2:5–11 and Psalm 24


“Who shall ascend the hill of the Lord?
And who shall stand in His holy place?”
— Psalm 24:3

We often mistake predictability for security.

Knowing what’s coming can feel like safety.
Trusting the person can feel like safety.
Familiar structures can feel like safety.
A life where nothing shifts suddenly can feel like safety.

But Psalm 24 offers a different kind of security.

Not predictability.
Possession.

Not,
“I know what will happen.”

But,
“I know whose world this is.”


A steadiness begins to emerge here.

Predictability can disappear.
People can change.
Structures can fail.
Bodies can break.
Loved ones can die.

Psalm 24 does not deny any of this.

It anchors beneath it.


When the Ground Beneath You Feels Unsteady

In a season where so much has felt like shifting ground,
Psalm 24 does not begin by telling you to climb.

Instead, it begins by telling you
that the ground itself already belongs to God.

The losses happened on His earth.
The disorientation unfolded within it.
And the relearning is happening within it too.

Your quieter life now
less scanning,
less chasing,
less trying to hold what would not hold you
is still happening on His earth.


If He can found the world upon the waters,
He can also steady a life
that has known deep waters.


“The earth is the Lord’s…”

Still.

On the day after the phone call.
When the house feels altered by absence.
When the future no longer resembles what you expected.

Your life is still unfolding
inside divine claim
even when your sense of orientation has cracked.


“The world and those who dwell therein.”

There is a quiet dignity here.

You are included in the belonging.

Not only your soul.
Not only your “spiritual life.”

You—
in a real body,
in real time,
with grief, memory, fatigue, and hope.

You are one of those who dwell therein.


So when the psalm says
the earth is the Lord’s,

it is also saying:

your life is not outside His claim,
your season is not outside His claim,
your unanswered questions
are still within it.


Even seasons of loss
do not place you beyond belonging.

Grief can feel like dislocation.

But the psalm speaks belonging first.


The psalm begins with creation
because worship begins with reality.

Before asking who can ascend,
everything is first situated
inside what already is:

the earth,
its fullness,
its inhabitants.

Worship is not escape.

It is return.


To worship rightly
is to see truly.

That the world is not abandoned.
Not random.
Not ownerless.

It belongs.


Holiness is reframed here.

Not withdrawal—
but seeing the world
under God’s claim.


Spiritual maturity is often imagined
as leaving ordinary life behind.

Yet the psalm begins
with ordinary life

and says: begin here.


So the ascent that follows
is not escape.

It is alignment.

A life coming into agreement
with what has always been true.


When Release Begins

This is where the pattern becomes visible.

Not with control.
With belonging.

What is secure
does not need to be grasped.
That is the pattern.


Growth is often imagined
as upward.

Climbing.
Advancing.
Becoming more.

Closer.
Stronger.
Higher.

But Philippians reveals a different movement.


Before ascent,
there is descent.

Before elevation,
there is release.

The early church preserved this movement
in a confession:

“though He was in the form of God,
He did not count equality with God
a thing to be grasped,
but emptied Himself…”

He did not grasp.

Did not cling
to what could have been held.


He released.

Not in loss.
In freedom.

What is secure
does not need to be grasped.


He emptied Himself.

Not by becoming less
but by refusing control.

He stepped into limitation.

Into vulnerability.
Into the ordinary weight
of being human.


And He remained
without reaching back.


This is where the pattern resists us.

Because descent feels like loss
and everything in us moves to recover it.


But the pattern does not turn
until the descent is complete.

“…He humbled Himself
by becoming obedient
to the point of death…”

Not halfway.

Only when nothing is being grasped.


This is the turning.

Not forced
but yielded.


“Who shall ascend the hill of the Lord?”

The Psalm asks the question
as if ascent is the goal.

But Philippians answers it differently.


“Therefore God has highly exalted Him…”


Not as reward.

As revelation.


What is real
becomes visible.


The ascent is not created.

It is revealed
when nothing is being held in place.


This is the pattern.

Descent.
Release.
And then—
a rising
that does not need to be forced.


We try to reverse it.

To rise without releasing.
To ascend without descending.


But the pattern does not bend.


Psalm 24 continues:

“He who has clean hands and a pure heart,
who does not lift up his soul to what is false.”


This is descent.

To stand inside reality
without reaching for something else.


And from there,
ascent becomes possible.


Not everything rises
by climbing.

Some things rise
only after they have been released.


This is not a call to diminish.

It is an invitation
to trust the pattern.


To let what is being laid down
remain laid down.


Because there is a rising
that does not come
through grasping.


And when it comes,
it will not feel achieved.


It will feel
like something true
finally standing
in the open.


Nothing real has been lost.


Already standing
on what belongs to Him.


“Who shall ascend the hill of the Lord?”

The one
who did not resist
the descent.

*********


If this reflection resonated, you may also find rest here:

The End of Scanning (when vigilance softens into trust)

Belonging Without Performance (living as held rather than earning love)

The Future Is Not Hunting You (when goodness follows instead of threat)

The Day After Survival (when God ministers through rest)

Saturday, March 21, 2026

The End of Scanning

 

Resting in a God who holds what you release

Part of the Learning to Live Again series: reflections on faith and the quiet work of rebuilding life after survival.



You notice it in small moments.

A room you step into.
A shift in someone’s tone.
Something in the air that changes,
before anything is said.

Attention moves just ahead of you.

Not sharply.
Not loudly.
Just first.

Quietly arriving before you do.

Rooms get read.
Conversations felt beneath the surface.
Atmosphere sensed for what others might miss.

Some habits do not begin in thought.

They begin in the body.

A steady awareness of what could go wrong.
A subtle scanning of tone, expression, environment.
A readiness that rises before anything happens.

Not always named.

But always there.


It can look like wisdom.

Discernment.
Responsibility.
Care.

Sometimes, it is.

Over time, something else settles underneath.

A body that never quite rests.
A mind that never quite lands.
A life shaped by quiet vigilance.

A quiet kind of exhaustion
the kind that comes
from never fully setting anything down.

Not because danger is still here.

But because once, it was.

And the body remembers.

You learned to stay alert for a reason.
You don’t have to stay ahead anymore.


When Vigilance Becomes a Way of Living

Scripture meets this gently.

Be still.

And know
that I am God.


Not sharpened into a command.

Offered.

Like an open hand.

Stillness is not withdrawal.

It is the loosening of effort
that stayed long after it was needed.


The nervous system does not trust this right away.

It learned that attention keeps things safe.

Awareness prevents harm.
Vigilance protects what matters.

So when stillness appears, something inside resists.

Not because it is wrong.

Because it is unfamiliar.

The body keeps reaching outward,
searching,
tracking—

even when nothing is being asked.


Nothing is being asked of you in this moment.

You are allowed to stop watching everything.


Change begins quietly.

Not in the world first.

But in how you stand inside it.

Awareness softens.

Not gone.

Just … softer.

Less urgent.
Less gripping.
Less responsible for holding everything together.

Rooms no longer ask to be managed.

The future loosens its pull.

The body no longer leans ahead
of what has not yet happened.


Be still, and know.

Knowing here is not information.

It is relationship.

A quiet recognition—

what holds the world together
is not the vigilance of the one who is tired,

but the presence
of the One who is not.


At first, the shift is barely noticeable.

A breath that deepens on its own.
Shoulders lowering without being told.
A mind that stops rehearsing what might happen next.

Nothing dramatic.

Just … less.


When You No Longer Brace

There is nothing to hold against anymore.

Stillness changes shape here.

No longer something to reach for.

Something you step into.

A space where nothing is being monitored.
Nothing is being managed.
Nothing is being anticipated.

Only lived.


Faith grows quieter here.

Deeper.

No longer proven through effort.
No longer held together by attentiveness.

It rests.

Trust that does not scan.
Awareness that no longer braces.
Presence that does not need to prove itself.


I have come to recognize this now.

The slow release
of needing to stay aware of everything.

The quiet knowing
that holding the world together
was never mine to carry.

What once required constant scanning
no longer asks that of me.


It does not feel like victory.

It feels like relief.

Space opening inside.
Effort loosening where it once lived unnoticed.

Moments where nothing is being tracked.

Presence replacing anticipation.

The body no longer leaning forward,
but arriving fully
where it already is.


Not disengagement.

Grounded presence.

A way of being
that allows life to unfold
without getting there first.


Stillness becomes faith here.

Anchored.

Trust that does not scan.
Awareness that does not brace.
Presence that does not perform.


Be still, and know that I am God.

Not everything depends on you.

Not everything needs your attention.

Not everything requires your readiness.


There is nothing to stay ahead of.


Some things are already being held.
Some outcomes already carried.
Some spaces already steady.


And in that realization,

something inside you
finally rests.

Not because life is predictable.

Because you are no longer responsible
for predicting it.

And for the first time in a long while,
nothing inside you is leaning forward.

You can stop now.
Everything is already held.

*********************



This reflection continues the Learning to Live Again series, exploring how faith restores what survival required.

If this reflection resonated, these pieces continue the same gentle thread:

The Future Is Not Hunting You
The Day After Survival
Sung Over
The Holiness of Ordinary Hours

Wednesday, March 18, 2026

When God Softens What Once Felt Necessary


How the Spirit gently reshapes the desires of the heart

Sometimes the heart changes quietly.

A longing that once felt urgent grows still.
Something you once held tightly
no longer asks for your attention.

You notice it one afternoon while walking through the house.

Light falls across the floor.

Something that once weighed heavily on your mind
simply isn’t there anymore.

Not solved.
Not resolved.

Just… lighter.

Many people know the promise in Psalm 37:

“Delight yourself in the Lord,
and He will give you the desires of your heart.”

The verse is often heard as reassurance
that God will grant what we ask for.

But over time the soul discovers
a quieter mercy inside those words.

Sometimes God answers that prayer
not by giving us what we wanted,

but by gently changing what we want.

The change rarely arrives with fanfare.

It moves quietly through ordinary life.

A relationship that once felt central loosens its hold.
A role once pursued with urgency no longer feels necessary.
Places that once carried the weight of belonging
begin to feel smaller than they once seemed.

Nothing dramatic happens.

Only a quiet turning within the heart.

What once felt essential becomes optional.
What once carried weight grows light.

At first the shift feels unsettling.

We wonder if we are becoming distant.
We question whether something important is slipping away.


When the Nervous System Begins to Settle

But sometimes what is happening is not loss.

It is alignment.

The Spirit is quietly rearranging the heart,
teaching it to release
what it once believed it could not live without.

Scripture describes this hidden work simply:

“For it is God who works in you,
both to will and to act according to His good purpose.”
— Philippians 2:13

God does not only guide our steps.

He reshapes the will itself.

The desires of the heart slowly reorder.

What once drove us loosens its grip.
What once demanded our energy begins to quiet.

Often this work unfolds so gently
we barely notice it happening.

Grief rearranges what matters.
Exhaustion reveals which pursuits were never life-giving.
Silence makes room for a steadier kind of peace.

Over time the soul begins to notice something unexpected:

the things once chased
no longer feel necessary.

The urge to prove ourselves softens.
The desire to be understood loosens.
Holding certain relationships in place
gives way to something gentler.

This is not indifference.

It is freedom.

The heart learning to rest
where it once strained.

Psalm 131 names this quiet transformation.

“I have calmed and quieted my soul,
like a weaned child with its mother.”

A weaned child no longer cries
for what it once depended upon.

Not because love has been withheld,

but because the relationship itself
has grown deeper than urgency.

Need gives way to trust.

Something similar unfolds in the spiritual life.

Desires that once felt urgent begin to soften.

Pursuits fall away without bitterness.
Some relationships release without hostility.
Ambitions lose their hold.

And in their place
something quieter grows.

Peace.

Not the peace that arrives through achievement.

The peace that appears
when the soul stops needing things
to remain the way they once were.

Sometimes the clearest evidence
that God is at work in a life
is not what we receive,

but what we quietly stop needing.

The Spirit often works beneath the surface of our lives—

not forcing change,
not demanding surrender,

but gently reshaping
the landscape of the heart.

One day you realize something subtle has happened.

The urgency is gone.

What once occupied your thoughts
no longer asks for your attention.

What once felt necessary
has loosened its hold.

Not because you fought to release it.

Because God quietly softened your grip.

The Shepherd who leads beside still waters
does not only guide our steps.

He teaches the heart to rest
in places it once believed
it could not live without.

And slowly, quietly,
the soul becomes lighter.

Perhaps you notice it again
in an ordinary moment—

walking through the house,
light falling across the floor,

when something that once felt heavy
simply no longer follows you.

You pause.

And you realize
you can live
with less urgency

and more peace.

Saturday, March 14, 2026

The Day After Survival

 

When God Meets Exhaustion with Bread and Sleep

A reflection on 1 Kings 19:5–8

Part of the "Learning to Live Again" series: reflections on faith and the quiet work of rebuilding life after survival.

If goodness and mercy truly follow our lives rather than harm, then the day after survival carries its own kind of grace.

Some moments of survival arrive loudly.

Sirens.
Phone calls.
Decisions made quickly because there is no time to hesitate.

Other moments arrive more quietly, when the danger has already passed but the body has not yet understood that it is safe to stop.

The crisis ends.
The room grows still.
Strength that carried you through begins to drain away.

What remains is a kind of collapse, the exhaustion that follows survival.

Not failure.
Not weakness.

Simply the body remembering what it carried.

Scripture makes room for that moment.

The story of Elijah in the wilderness unfolds after courage has already been required and faith has already been tested. The prophet who stood firm the day before now lies beneath a tree, emptied of strength.

The scene is surprisingly gentle.

No correction arrives.
No new command interrupts his rest.

Instead, God meets exhaustion with something simpler.

Bread.
Water.
Sleep.

An angel wakes him only long enough to eat.

Then Elijah lies down again.

The rhythm feels almost domestic in its tenderness.

Rest.
Nourishment.
Sleep again.

Heaven does not rush him forward.

The soul often expects that after survival comes immediate clarity.

A new mission.
A renewed sense of direction.
A sudden return of strength.

Yet the story unfolds differently.

Before any future appears, the body is allowed to recover.

The journey, the angel says, is too great for you.

Those words carry more compassion than instruction.

Too great for you.

Not a rebuke.

A recognition of human limits.

The God who formed the body does not treat exhaustion as a moral problem. He treats it as something that deserves care.

Sacred work disguised as ordinary care.

Bread warmed on coals.
Water placed within reach.

Nothing elaborate.
Nothing dramatic.

Just the quiet provision needed for the next breath and the next small step.

A culture shaped by urgency often grows uncomfortable with this kind of tenderness.

We celebrate resilience.
We admire endurance.
We praise the ones who keep moving.

Collapse makes us uneasy.

Yet Scripture holds this moment without embarrassment.

A prophet sleeps under a tree while heaven prepares breakfast.

No disappointment hangs in the air.

Only patience.
Only care.

Many people quietly carry the belief that spiritual strength should override physical limits. Faith should push through exhaustion. Devotion should rise above human need.

But the God of Elijah does not bypass the body.

He ministers to it.

Food before instruction.
Rest before revelation.

Healing begins in places that rarely receive applause.

A meal eaten slowly.

Water that steadies a trembling system.

Sleep that arrives like mercy.

These are not distractions from spiritual life.

They are part of it.

The soul does not float above the body. It lives inside it.

When the body is depleted, restoration must begin there.

When Bread and Sleep Become Grace

The nervous system loosens gradually.

Breath deepens without effort.
Shoulders lower a fraction.
Thoughts move more slowly.

Attention widens enough to notice the ground again.

Recovery rarely looks dramatic.

It often unfolds through quiet, ordinary moments.

A meal finished without hurry.

A long breath taken without bracing.

A stretch of time when nothing urgent demands your strength.

These moments can appear insignificant to the outside world.

Yet something sacred is taking place.

The body is remembering safety.

I know this quiet now, after carrying more than I could.

The quiet that arrives when effort finally loosens its grip.

In Elijah’s story, nourishment comes twice.

The angel returns a second time with the same instruction.

Arise and eat.

Because the journey is too great for you.

Not because Elijah failed.

Because he is human.

Care returns before calling.

Strength returns before direction.

Sometimes we expect God to meet us through answers.

Yet often He meets us through something simpler.

A meal.

A pause.

Permission to lie down again.

When survival has taken everything out of you, the next step may not be bravery.

It may be rest.

And rest, in this story, carries no shame.

The wilderness does not become holy because Elijah performs well there. It becomes holy because heaven tends to him.

God does not stand at a distance waiting for the prophet to recover his composure.

He draws near through ordinary care.

Bread on coals.

Water at his head.

Sleep beneath a tree.

Grace often arrives through the most elemental forms of provision.

Enough food.
Enough quiet.
Enough time for the body to remember how to breathe without bracing.

Eventually Elijah will rise.

Eventually the journey will continue.

But that moment does not arrive through pressure.

It comes after restoration.

After nourishment.

After the body gathers strength again.

And when rising comes,
grace will be beneath you.

Enough for the next step.
Enough for the road ahead.

***************


This reflection continues the Learning to Live Again series, which began with The Future Is Not Hunting You and explores how faith restores the body and soul after seasons of survival and exhaustion.

If this reflection resonated, these pieces continue the same quiet thread:

The Future Is Not Hunting You
Sung Over
The Holiness of Ordinary Hours

Wednesday, March 11, 2026

The Holiness of Ordinary Hours


Finding God in the work no one applauds
but love quietly sustains

Most of life doesn’t unfold in crescendos.

It moves through quiet middle spaces,
where no one is applauding
and nothing feels remarkable.

A basket of laundry waits on the bed.
The sink fills again, warm water clouding the air.
The car hums along a quiet stretch of road.
Errands stack. Meals repeat. Another small thing arrives.

We’re trained to look for God in the spectacular,
in breakthroughs,
in mountaintops,
in moments that announce themselves as sacred.

Yet the soul rarely lives on mountaintops.

Its home is in kitchens and minivans,
waiting rooms and grocery lines,
in the steady repetition of care
that quietly holds a life together.

Scripture whispers what we forget:

God is there too.


Laundry, folded slowly, can become prayer.

Not because the task impresses anyone,
but because love is woven into the doing.

Small shirts smoothed flat.
Warm towels folded fresh from the dryer, steam rising into stillness.
Familiar fabric held for a quiet breath.

This is more than clothing.
It is the texture of shared life.

“Whatever you do, do it with all your heart.”

Even here. Especially here.

Work begins to feel sacred
when love is what carries it
for people entrusted to your hands.

No spotlight.
No recognition.
Just quiet faithfulness stitching a home together.

And this counts, even if no one sees it.

Daily life rarely pauses for ceremony.
Holiness keeps moving with us.


A silent drive can become holy ground.

No podcast filling the air.
No noise competing for attention.
Just hands on the wheel
and thoughts catching up to the heart.

Late light spills across the dashboard, turning dust into gold.
In that quiet, prayers rise without effort.
Grief loosens.
Gratitude settles gently.

A red light becomes an unexpected pause.

“Be still, and know.”

This is not idleness.
It is inhabiting your own life.
Letting the nervous system settle.
Making space for God
in moments when no one needs anything from you.

Silence is not emptiness.
It is uncluttered presence.


Caregiving is sacred labor.

Rarely dramatic.
Often repetitive.
Constantly interruptible.
Mostly unseen.

Showing up when energy is thin.
Listening when your mind strains to focus.
Holding steady as someone else unravels.

A dim lamp. A tired voice. Staying on the line.

Love expressed as endurance.
Grace expressed as staying.

The world measures impact by scale.
Heaven seems to measure it by faithfulness.

Meals prepared.
Appointments kept.
Quiet reassurances offered.
Unseen sacrifices made.

This is altar work.

Not in sanctuaries of stone,
but in living rooms and bedrooms,
in passenger seats and late-night phone calls.

“The Lord sees in secret.”

For many of us,
this is what devotion looks like now.


Holiness doesn’t always arrive with intensity.

More often, it comes quietly, as attention.

Staying with the next small thing.
Moving gently through familiar responsibilities.
Offering ordinary hours back to God
without needing them to feel extraordinary.

You are allowed to call this enough.

Some seasons, this is the only kind of faith we have left.

These moments form a quiet rhythm the soul already knows,
the prayer of folded towels,
the psalm of steady driving,
the sacrament of showing up again.

The Shepherd who walks at your pace
and leads beside still waters
remains just as present in fluorescent kitchens
and on quiet roads at dusk.

Goodness and mercy don’t wait for remarkable moments.
They follow you into the ordinary hours,
staying close in ways you almost miss,

Ordinary hours become holy
when love is what carries them.