A Personal Journal of Grace and Discipleship
“I have been crucified with Christ and I no longer live, but Christ lives in me. The life I now live in the body, I live by faith in the Son of God,who loved me and gave himself for me.” - Galatians 2:20

From the blog
The Exchanged Life: Finding Freedom and Wholeness Through Spirituotherapy
In a world filled with competing counseling models, it’s not uncommon to find contrasting views on what “biblical” or “Christian” counseling truly means. Searching for answers can feel overwhelming, and the terms alone—“biblical counseling” versus “Christian counseling”—can spark endless debates on how, or whether, secular counseling methodologies fit within a Christian framework.

Trusting God in the Tangible
Jesus makes no distinction between trusting Him for spiritual needs and trusting Him for physical ones. In fact, He highlights that our Father already knows what we need—down to the very clothes on our backs and food on our tables. But material trust often feels harder. When it comes to spiritual growth or emotional comfort, we may convince ourselves we’re “trusting” even when we’re subtly leaning on our own understanding. But when the refrigerator is empty or the bills pile up, such illusions vanish.

God Glorified by Working Obedience in Us
Today’s reflection from Bob Hoekstra centers on the reassuring and instructive truth that God Himself is the One who produces obedience in us—and He alone deserves the glory for it. Hebrews 13:20–21 reminds us that it is “the God of peace” who makes us complete in every good work and works within us what is well pleasing in His sight—through Jesus Christ.

Seek If You Have Not Found
Oswald Chambers challenges us to examine what drives our pursuit of God. He warns that if we’re seeking fulfillment from life rather than from God Himself, we may be chasing self-realization, not transformation. Such seeking leads us further from God, not closer.

Divine Layaway
Today’s reflection from Miles Stanford reveals the slow, deliberate, and often hidden process by which God works out His purposes in our lives. While our faith may apprehend the promises of God in a moment, their unfolding is typically a matter of divine timing. Just as Abraham believed God decades before offering Isaac, we too may live in the gap between believing and becoming—between receiving light and seeing its full expression.

God Sending the Ascended Christ
The outpouring of the Holy Spirit on the day of Pentecost was not merely an event—it was a Person coming to dwell among us. Peter’s bold proclamation in Acts 3:26 was this: The One whom God raised and exalted—Jesus Christ—is the same One He has now sent again, not physically, but as Spirit. This is how God blesses us—not from a distance, but by giving us the very presence of Christ through His Spirit.

Genesis 7 – When the Door Closes
Genesis 7 draws the reader into a solemn moment in redemptive history: God's mercy and judgment converging. The passage features a Hebrew storytelling style marked by repetition—this isn't just redundancy, it's reflection with precision. We’re reminded that Noah didn’t enter the ark haphazardly. He entered in obedience, as commanded, at the exact moment God appointed. We're also given a richer detail than before: instead of simply "two by two," God instructs Noah to take seven pairs of clean animals, indicating early sacrificial intent. These distinctions, far predating Leviticus or Deuteronomy, show God was always working with clarity and purpose.

Daniel 11
This powerful stretch of Daniel’s vision unfolds a sweep of history from the Medo-Persian Empire through to the rise and tyranny of Antiochus IV Epiphanes, and even points ahead to a future oppressor who will exalt himself against God. The transitions of power between northern and southern kingdoms (descended from Alexander the Great’s divided empire) consistently impact the promised land. God’s people find themselves caught in the crossfire—sometimes ruled by the North, other times by the South—but always seen by God.

Psalm 19
Psalm 19 unfolds like a two-part symphony of revelation. In the first movement (vv. 1–6), David draws our eyes upward toward the heavens, declaring that creation itself is a continual testimony to the reality of God. The skies need no language; their witness transcends words. Their proclamation of God’s glory is relentless, reaching every soul on earth through the silent eloquence of sunrises, sunsets, and starlit skies. Paul echoes this truth in Romans, underscoring that no one is without excuse—everyone is exposed to this cosmic sermon.

Justified All Around
E. Stanley Jones invites us to consider the order of Paul’s statement in 1 Corinthians 6:11: you were washed, you were sanctified, you were justified. It’s not a theological oversight or an arbitrary arrangement. Rather, it offers a glimpse into how God’s work of redemption is seen—not only from Heaven’s viewpoint but from the earthbound reality of our daily lives.

Unrecognized Temptation
When Jesus taught His disciples to pray, “Lead us not into temptation,” He was not suggesting we ask God to spare us from every testing moment. After all, even Jesus was led into the wilderness by the Spirit to be tempted by the devil. The Christian life is not a life free from temptation—it is a life in which God uses temptation as a tool for our growth.

City on a Hill
Today’s reflection by A.B. Simpson calls me to remember: I am the light of the world because Christ is the Light within me. The devotional emphasizes that we do not possess light in ourselves, but like lamps and candlesticks, we must first be lit by the flame of His Spirit. It is Christ who shines, and we are His chosen vessels to carry that light into a world otherwise cloaked in darkness. He could have chosen any means, but He chose us.

God Working in Us What Pleases Him
God never intended us to strive in our own strength to please Him. His delight is not found in self-effort, but in surrendered hearts through whom He expresses His life. Today’s devotional from Bob Hoekstra reminds us that pleasing God flows not from trying harder, but from trusting deeper. The obedience He desires is a fruit of His work within us, not our frantic efforts for Him.

Ask, Because You’re Already a Child
Oswald Chambers gently exposes a tension in our relationship with God—our hesitancy to ask. Not because God withholds, but because our pride resists recognizing our true state: spiritual poverty apart from Him. We wait until desperation breaks our self-sufficiency before asking. Yet even then, Chambers clarifies, asking isn’t about groveling for provision like a stranger at the gate. It is about entering the intimacy of sonship—where what we need is already stored up for us, and asking simply brings us into alignment with our dependence on Him.

Victorious Vinedresser
Today’s reflection by Miles Stanford invites us to embrace a divine paradox: the path to fruitfulness often travels through the valley of pruning. Many believers, stirred by a glimpse of deeper intimacy with Christ, mistakenly assume they’ve arrived at spiritual fullness. But that foretaste is only the beginning—a whisper of what the Spirit longs to unfold.

The Building of God’s Eternal Habitation
In today’s devotional by Witness Lee, we are invited to lift our eyes beyond familiar truths about salvation and to gaze upon something even grander: God’s eternal purpose. Many believers rightly rejoice in the saving name of Jesus but pause there, unaware of the deeper work that God is accomplishing through Christ. Scripture paints a greater picture—one in which God is not only redeeming people but building a dwelling place for Himself.

1 Timothy 3 — Godly Leadership and the Household of Faith
In 1 Timothy 3, Paul outlines the character and qualifications of those called to lead the household of God. Rather than requiring a mystical divine calling, Paul affirms the nobility of aspiring to be an overseer. What follows is a set of character-based qualifications—not rooted in perfection but in integrity. The elder must be a one-woman man, not shaped by the cultural norms of permissive sexuality but aligned with God's original design for marital fidelity.

Acts 9
Acts 9 opens with Saul’s fierce opposition to followers of Jesus. Fueled by religious zeal, he’s hunting down those who walk in “the Way,” aiming to silence the growing movement. But God interrupts Saul’s path—not with destruction, but with light and purpose. On the Damascus road, Saul’s entire life is reversed. Though struck blind and disoriented, he is led by the hand into a city where the Lord begins reshaping him into His chosen instrument.

Washed, Sanctified, Justified
In one of the most hope-filled passages in Scripture, Paul reminds the Corinthians—and us—of the power of God's grace to transform even the most sin-stained lives. The list of sins in 1 Corinthians 6 is sobering, not just for its content but because we all, in some form or another, have walked those crooked paths. Yet Paul doesn’t end with condemnation—he offers the glorious truth: “Such were some of you.” Past tense. A different story now unfolds.

Forgiven and Forgiving
Today’s reflection from Ray Stedman invites us into the heart of true emotional rest—the kind that flows from a conscience made clean by the forgiveness of Christ and kept clear by extending that same forgiveness to others. Ray Stedman draws our attention to a pattern common to all believers: the inner unease that grows when guilt and resentment linger. He calls these the two “monsters” of fear and guilt—dragons that consume peace and stir emotional turmoil.

Complete for Every Good Work
Today's reflection from Bob Hoekstra continues from Hebrews 13:20–21, focusing on the beautiful reality that it is God Himself—the God of peace—who equips us for every good work. In the previous entry, we rejoiced that His peace was made possible through the shed blood of Christ, which not only reconciles us to God but also inaugurates the new covenant of grace. That covenant becomes the basis for how we now live—by receiving His provision moment by moment.