Religion

Wednesday, April 8, 2026

The Spirit in the Descent: Truth, Confession, and Freedom


When honesty becomes the only way out

“Then you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.” (John 8:32)



There is a kind of truth that does more than inform you. It moves you.

Not because it is dramatic.
Not because it is loud.

But because it brings something into alignment that has been out of place for a long time.

We often think we don’t know what to do next.
But more often, we have not yet said what is true.

Most people are not lacking direction.
They are avoiding a truth they already know.

When truth is fully acknowledged, something shifts.
Not externally at first, but internally, where movement begins.


A Story That Mirrors This Reality

The film As Above, So Below follows a group of explorers descending into the catacombs beneath Paris in search of a hidden artifact. What begins as an archaeological mission becomes something far more psychological and spiritual, as each person is confronted with unresolved guilt, memory, and truth.

The deeper they go, the less they navigate tunnels and the more they face themselves.


Truth as the Way Out

Escape is not found through strength, intelligence, or strategy. It comes through something far more uncomfortable: truth.

Each person enters carrying something unresolved, and the descent strips away everything that allowed it to stay hidden.

This is the quiet spiritual law the story reveals:
You do not escape by avoiding truth.
You escape by facing it.

You can only move as far as you are willing to be honest.


Confession as Movement

There is a point where progress becomes impossible until something is named.

Not explained.
Not minimized.
Not reframed.

Named.

In Scripture, confession is not about humiliation. It is about movement.

“Therefore confess your sins to one another and pray for one another, that you may be healed.” (James 5:16)

Confession breaks stagnation. It interrupts the loop and opens what has been closed.

Those who cannot tell the truth remain trapped.
Those who do, even imperfectly, begin to move.

There is no way forward that avoids what is true.


The Weight of the Unspoken

Unspoken truth does not disappear. It becomes atmosphere.

It fills the space.
It shapes perception.
It distorts reality.

You can feel it in a conversation where something important is being avoided.

What is hidden does not stay buried. It presses upward and demands to be seen.

This is not just cinematic. It is human.

The relationship where something was never named
The grief that was never spoken out loud
The realization that was felt but not acknowledged

Sometimes you realize it long before you say it. You just don’t know yet what it will cost to name it.

These things do not resolve themselves. They wait.


Truth Without Performance

Truth does not need to be eloquent. It only needs to be real.

No speeches.
No perfect articulation.

Just honesty.

This mirrors the way God meets us. He is not asking for polished language. He is asking for truth.

“Search me, O God, and know my heart, and lead me in the way everlasting.” (Psalm 139:23–24)

The power is not in how well something is said.
The power is in the fact that it is no longer hidden.


Freedom Is Not Escape. It Is Alignment

This is where the shift becomes clear.

Most people try to move forward without changing what is true.

Escape is not running.
It is not bypassing.
It is not avoiding consequence.

It is alignment with reality.

When what is true internally matches what is acknowledged externally, things begin to shift.
This is where the path opens.


The Spiritual Pattern

This pattern runs through Scripture:

David names his sin and begins restoration (Psalm 51).
The prodigal son comes to himself and begins his return (Luke 15).
The woman at the well is seen fully and leaves transformed (John 4).

Truth is not the end of the story.
It is the beginning of freedom.


Application: Telling the Truth as a Spiritual Act

Telling the truth is not just emotional work. It is spiritual alignment.

When you name what is real, you step out of distortion.
When you acknowledge what is true, you step into movement.
When you stop negotiating reality, you begin to walk in freedom.

Truth does not create the problem. It reveals it.
And once it is revealed, you are no longer deciding whether it exists, only whether you will live in it.

You don’t escape until you tell the truth.

Not because truth punishes you.
But because truth releases you.


The Way Into the Light

“If we walk in the light, as He is in the light, we have fellowship with one another, and the blood of Jesus His Son cleanses us from all sin.” (1 John 1:7)

To walk in the light is not to be perfect.
It is to be honest.

Because truth does not trap you.
It reveals where you already are.

And once something is fully seen, it loses its power to hold you.

The way out is not hidden.
It is not complicated.

It is the moment you stop turning away.

And nothing changes until you stop avoiding it.

You don’t escape until you tell the truth.

And when you do, the way opens.

***********


If this reflection resonated, you may also want to explore:

Saturday, April 4, 2026

Holy Saturday and the Life That Is Still Becoming

 

Living in the in-between when the past is gone and the future is not yet visible


There is a space in the Easter story
that is easy to pass by.

Not the cross.
Not the resurrection.

But the day in between.


There is a space in our lives
that feels just like it.

It is not the life you had.
And it is not yet the life that is coming.

This is the in-between.


Airports are built for this kind of space.

No one lives there.
No one arrives there to stay.

They exist for passage,
for waiting,
for movement not yet formed.

At the gate, a boarding pass rests in your hand,
your name already tied to a destination,

while your body stays here.

Leaving is certain.
Arrival is not yet yours.


Time shifts in places like this.

Suspended.
Unanchored.
Slightly unreal.

Announcements fade.
Flights are delayed.
Names are called that are not yours.
Screens flicker overhead.

Around you, people move with purpose toward places you cannot see,
while you remain seated,

in a space that does not ask you to stay
but does not yet release you forward.


A day in the Christian story carries this same feeling.

Not Friday, where everything breaks.
Not Sunday, where everything is restored.

Saturday.


Holy Saturday is the quietest day in the entire story.

The cross has already happened.
The final words have already been spoken.
The body has already been placed in the tomb.

Nothing moves here.

No miracles.
No voices.
No sign that anything is still unfolding.

Only silence.
The day the earth grew quiet,
while love was hidden from sight.


For those who loved Him,
it must have felt as though the ending had already been decided.

The story they had given their lives to
now sits still.

Unanswered.
Unmoving.
Sealed.

Like standing beneath a departure board
where your flight is no longer listed,
and no one is explaining why.


And yet, something was still happening.

Hidden.
Unseen.
Working beneath what looked like stillness.


When nothing moves, everything is being made ready

Movement feels safer.

Clarity feels kinder.
Direction feels like relief.

A gate number.
A boarding call.
Some signal that tells you when to stand and go.

Holy Saturday offers none of that.


Instead, it becomes the airport terminal of the soul.

Something has already been left behind you,
whether you were ready or not.

Its outline remains,
in memory,
in ache,
in the quiet imprint it left in you.

Return is no longer possible.

Forward has not opened yet.


So you sit.

Your life beside you.
Your name called nowhere.
No clear sense of when things will begin again.

Others board.
Time passes.
Questions rise without answers.


This is the space of becoming.

Rarely does it feel that way.

More often, it feels like delay.
Like silence.
Like being passed over by whatever comes next.

As if something has gone wrong
because nothing is happening.


And still, something is unfolding.

Not where you can see it.
But where it matters.


Inside the one who waits, change is already underway.

Grip loosens around what was.
Room forms for what cannot yet be named.
What cannot come with you begins to fall away.

Direction shifts.
Understanding deepens.
What matters is quietly rewritten.


Holy Saturday carries that same hidden work.

Nothing appears to move,
yet something is being made ready.

Grief settles into truth.
Illusion falls away.
What could not continue
is allowed to end.


This is where many quietly lose heart.

Progress does not show itself here.

No evidence.
No confirmation.
No voice saying, “You’re on your way.”


But this space is not empty.

It holds an unseen transition.


Stillness can be reordering.
Silence can be protection.
What feels like absence may be presence not yet recognized.


Resurrection does not begin on Sunday morning.

It begins here.

The dark holds more than it reveals.
The quiet carries what has not yet been named aloud.
Sealed places keep what is still becoming.

Something is already taking shape,
even now, beyond what can be seen.


A life can change before it reveals where it is going.

This is that place.


If this is where you find yourself,

waiting,
unformed,
standing where the past is gone and the future is not yet visible,

you are not lost.

You are in Holy Saturday.


Even now, it is not the end of the story.

Something has already begun,
even now, beyond what you can see.

What is seen will not last,
but what is unseen is already holding everything together.


You are not stuck.
You are between.

And between
is where becoming begins.

*********



This reflection rests within an Easter thread,
where what is unseen is quietly at work,
and what is present is not always recognized right away.

If you find yourself here,
these reflections remain nearby:

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

Before Resurrection Was Recognized


Mary had already been held

An Easter reflection on John 20:11–16


There is a moment in the resurrection story
that is easy to miss.

Not the empty tomb.
Not the turning.
Not the moment her grief opens into recognition.

But the moment just before.

Mary stands there, weeping,
carrying what feels final.

She has come to tend
what she believes is loss.

Jesus is already there.

Close enough to speak.
Close enough to ask why she is crying.
Close enough to be seen—

and still not recognized.

Nothing outward has shifted.

Understanding has not changed.
Grief has not lifted.

And yet—

everything is already different.

He is standing right in front of her.
Alive.
Present.

She does not know it yet.

There are seasons that feel like this.

You carry what has ended.
You orient yourself around what feels unresolved.
Questions remain.

Nothing in your circumstances suggests
that anything has changed.

But something has.
Quietly.

A nearness
that does not immediately reveal itself.

A presence
not dependent on recognition.

A kind of holding
that does not wait to be understood.

It is already happening.

There is a way of being held
that has nothing to do with whether you can name it yet.

This may be why it can feel so difficult to trust—

because nothing in the moment has changed,
and yet something already has.

As Frederick Buechner reminds us,
the world holds both beauty and sorrow
and even here, you do not need to be afraid.

You can be standing right inside it
without knowing.

This moment does not rush her.

There is no correction.
No explanation.
No forcing of recognition.

Only presence
steady,
unmoving.

Until the moment comes
when her name is spoken.

And for a moment
nothing changes.

Then everything turns.

Not because He has just arrived,
but because she is finally able to see
what has already been there.

Moments like this come.

Everything has already changed
and is not yet visible.

What you are standing in
is no longer what you think it is.

Something like a threshold forms
something shifts in a way that cannot be forced,
predicted,
or rushed.

If you find yourself here—

carrying what feels unresolved,
waiting for something to move,
unsure if anything is changing at all

you may be closer than you think.

Not to an answer.
Not to clarity.

But to something being quietly revealed.

You may be standing
in the moment just before.

Before the turning.
Before recognition.
Before your name is spoken
in a way that changes how you see everything.

Nothing in that moment was empty.

And what she would come to see
was not that presence had arrived

but that she had already been held
all along.

*********


she stood where sorrow told her stay
and did not quickly turn away

no sign had come
no light had grown

and still she was not alone

the air unchanged
the silence deep
the kind that settles into grief

and somewhere, just beyond her sight

she stood already held that night

*********



This reflection continues a quiet Holy Week thread, where presence is sometimes recognized only after it has already been given.

If this reflection resonated, these pieces follow that same quiet thread:

  • The End of Scanning (Psalm 46:10: when vigilance softens)
  • God Meets You in the Pain (Luke 7:13: where compassion draws near)
  • Love That Walks With You (a presence that does not withdraw)
  • The Future Is Not Hunting You (Psalm 23:6: when goodness follows)

Another reflection will follow this thread on Saturday.

Saturday, March 28, 2026

God Meets You in the Pain


Where presence replaces the need to brace


“And when the Lord saw her, He had compassion on her, and said unto her, ‘Weep not.’”



The body does not forget
what it once had to hold.

Even after the moment has passed,
it remembers.

In the chest.
In the breath.
In the quiet readiness
that returns without asking.

And even now,
in a life that has grown quieter,

something in you still braces.

Even when there is no clear reason.


We often begin to equate calm
with safety.

If the body can settle,
that feels like safety.

If the tension lifts,
that feels like safety.

If the nervous system quiets,
that feels like safety.

A life where nothing inside us is bracing
can feel like safety.

But Luke 7:13 offers a different kind of security.

Not calm.

Presence.

Not,
“I am no longer reacting.”

But,

“I am no longer alone
in what I carry.”


A steadiness begins to emerge here.

The body may still hold tension.
The breath may still shorten without warning.
Sleep may come lightly, or not at all.
The past may still echo in physical ways
that do not ask permission.

Luke 7 does not deny this.

It meets it.


When the body remembers what it survived

In a life that has known loss,
or prolonged strain,
or the quiet ache of not being met,

the body learns.

Not in theory.
In pattern.

It learns to prepare.
To anticipate.
To stay slightly ahead
of what might happen next.

And even when the moment has passed,
the body may not release right away.

Not because something is wrong—
but because something was learned
that once mattered.

Luke 7 does not begin by correcting that.

It begins by revealing
how God enters it.


There is a woman in the passage
whose loss is not abstract.

It is embodied.
Visible.
Being carried in front of her.

Before anything changes—
before restoration,
before explanation—

Jesus sees her.

Fully.


Where presence comes before release

The text does not move quickly here.

It pauses long enough to show us
what comes first.

Not words.
Not action.

Compassion.

“He had compassion on her…”

Before He speaks,
He is moved.

Before anything resolves,
He feels.


This is the order.

Not healing first.
Not calm first.

Presence first.


And then He says:

“Weep not.”

Not as interruption.
Not as correction.

But from within
what He has already entered.


Luke 7 reframes something quietly.

The woman is not asked
to steady herself
before being seen.

She is seen
while everything in her is still breaking.


And this is where the shift begins.

Not in the body first.
In the reality surrounding it.

Because if compassion comes before release,

then the body does not have to unbrace
for God to come near.


We often wait for the body to settle
before we believe we are safe.

But the passage reverses it.

Safety is not the absence of tension.

It is the presence of Someone
who has already drawn near.


There is a kind of healing
that does not begin with letting go—

but with being seen
while still holding everything in place.


Over time,
the body begins to learn something new.

Not by force.
Not by instruction.

By presence.


What once had to be held alone
is no longer being held alone.

And that changes
what the body expects.


Slowly, something becomes visible.

This is the pattern.

Not release first.
Nearness.

Not calm first.
Compassion.

And then—
slowly, quietly—

a loosening
that does not need to be forced.


The body does not unbrace because it is told to.
It unbraces when it realizes it is no longer alone.


Nothing in you has to settle
for God to stay.

He has already come near
to what still trembles beneath the surface.


Not because the grief was dismissed.
But because it was met.


You are not outside this moment.

Already seen.
Already met.
Already held
inside His compassion.

********


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
The End of Scanning
The Holiness of Ordinary Hours

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)