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.
Without Faith It Is Impossible to Please God: Hebrews 11:6 Through the Lens of Union with Christ and the Exchanged Life
Few verses are quoted more often, and quietly misunderstood more deeply, than Hebrews 11:6:
“Without faith it is impossible to please Him.”
For many sincere believers, this verse has carried an unspoken burden. It can sound as though God is pleased only when we manage to believe hard enough, consistently enough, or correctly enough. Faith becomes something we must generate, sustain, and measure, often leaving tender hearts wondering whether they are pleasing God at all.
Salvation, Finality, and Union with Christ: Why the Gospel’s Urgency Is Rooted in Participation, Not Fear
One of the quiet misunderstandings surrounding salvation is the assumption that its urgency must be driven by threat. When forgiveness is spoken of as belonging to this life and not extending beyond death, many instinctively hear limitation rather than gift. It can sound as though God is rationing mercy, guarding grace behind a deadline.
But Scripture presents something very different.
Where Mercy Meets Finality: How the Question of Salvation and Death Intersects with God’s Character
Why would a loving God allow forgiveness and salvation to end at death?
One of the deepest reasons this question lingers in the hearts of thoughtful believers is simple and honest:
It does not seem to match the God we know.
We know Him as compassionate and slow to anger. We know Him as patient, forgiving, and abounding in steadfast love. We know Him as the Father who runs toward the prodigal, not away. So when Scripture speaks of finality at death, something in us pauses and wonders whether this teaching aligns with who God truly is.
Why Does Scripture Treat This Life as the Decisive Moment for Salvation?
There are few questions that carry as much weight, tenderness, and eternal significance as this one:
Why would a loving God allow forgiveness and salvation to end at death?
When the Christian Life Finally Begins to Move Forward
There comes a moment in the Christian life when a sentence does more than inform. It reorients.
The sentence may sound simple, even obvious at first, but once it settles, it exposes something structural. It does not add another step. It changes the ground you have been standing on.
For many, that sentence sounds like this:
The Christian life does not move forward by learning how to live better for God. It moves forward when Christ Himself becomes the source of living and expresses His life through us.
Held When Our Stories Become Tangled
Genesis 27 is one of those chapters that resists being smoothed over. It exposes a family that knows God’s promises, yet struggles to trust how those promises will unfold. Isaac is old and blind, aware that his days are numbered. He intends to pass the covenant blessing to Esau, his firstborn, despite the word God had spoken years earlier about the younger son. Rebekah hears Isaac’s plan and responds with urgency, strategy, and deception. Jacob hesitates, yet allows himself to be drawn into a scheme that secures the blessing through falsehood.
If You Find Yourself Still Learning How to Rest
There are moments in the Christian life when everything you are hearing sounds true, and yet nothing inside you feels settled.
You hear that Christ is your life.
You hear that the old life has ended.
You hear that rest is real and available.
And still, you feel tired.
Still unsure.
Still unable to rest the way others seem to describe.
If this is your experience, I want to say something plainly.
Nothing has gone wrong.
From Shouting Across the Jordan to Standing Beside the Traveler
There is a moment every guide eventually faces when clarity is no longer the problem.
The truth is clear.
The Scriptures are understood.
The exchanged life makes sense.
And yet the person we are walking with remains stuck on the far side of the Jordan.
When Love Refuses to Stay Silent
Amos speaks into a moment when Israel assumed that closeness to God meant exemption from accountability. They were chosen, delivered from Egypt, and set apart as God’s people. Over time, that privilege hardened into presumption. They believed their relationship with God guaranteed safety, even as injustice, violence, and corruption spread within their borders. Amos dismantles that assumption with clarity. Election was never meant to excuse sin. It was meant to reveal God’s character through a transformed people.
Waiting That Was Not Wasted
Psalm 40 opens with words that carry the weight of lived experience. David says he waited for the Lord. Not briefly. Not casually. He waited through conditions that felt like sinking, as though his life had lost its footing. The image of mud and mire is not poetic exaggeration. It names the kind of trouble that pulls a person downward, where effort only deepens the struggle. David knows what it is to remain there longer than he wanted.
A Once for All Salvation
The ninth chapter of Hebrews brings us into the heart of Israel’s worship and then carries us beyond it. The author describes the tabernacle with care because it represented the center of Israel’s relationship with God. Every lamp, curtain, vessel, and chamber had meaning. The priests served daily in the outer room, and once a year the high priest entered the Most Holy Place with blood for himself and for the people. These rhythms marked Israel’s life with God, yet the chapter tells us that even these sacred acts hinted at something incomplete. The presence of God remained behind a veil. The sacrifices required repetition. The conscience was never fully cleared.
Led by a Light the World Could Not Understand
Matthew opens this chapter with movement. Foreign travelers cross deserts. A murderous king plots from a palace. A threatened child is carried in His mother’s arms. The narrative is filled with contrasts, and every contrast reveals something about the God who sent His Son into a world determined to resist Him. The Magi arrive not as spiritual heroes, but as men shaped by a mixture of curiosity, speculation, and whatever fragments of truth they carried from their homeland. Yet even they are drawn by a light God Himself placed before them. Their search leads not to Rome or to Herod’s throne in Jerusalem, but to a quiet house in Bethlehem where a young family shelters a child whom no one expected.
Where God Makes Room for the Soul
Isaac’s journey in this passage begins with abundance. He sows, and the land yields a hundredfold. In simple terms, everything seems to flourish around him. Yet the blessing quickly becomes a point of tension. The Philistines respond with envy, filling his father’s wells with earth, pressing him out of the place where he prospered. What began as a season of fruitfulness becomes a season of opposition. Isaac must move, not because he lacks God’s favor, but because resistance rises from those around him.
When God Names What We Have Turned From
Amos speaks words to Judah that are difficult to ignore. The Lord identifies a long pattern of rejecting His instruction. This is not a sudden misstep or a single season of drifting. It is a history of turning aside from the covenant that was meant to shape their life with Him. He names the influence of false teaching and the pull of voices that distorted His truth. He names the role of ancestors who handed down practices and beliefs that were far from His heart. These verses show a people who had slowly reoriented their lives around illusions instead of God’s revealed way.
Held by the God Who Sees Me
David’s prayer at the end of Psalm 39 is startling in its clarity. He calls himself a stranger before God and a sojourner, someone who knows he cannot settle into the world with lasting security. The ones who came before him have already returned to the earth, and their absence tells a truth that cannot be ignored. Life is brief. Strength fades. The heart longs for something this world cannot offer.
The High Priest Who Sits Beside Us
Hebrews brings us to a turning point in the story of God and His people. The writer shows us how the Lord promised, long ago through Jeremiah, that a new covenant would come. Not a covenant carved into stone or maintained through repeated sacrifices, but one written directly on the hearts of His people. As evening settles in, this promise shines with gentle warmth. It tells us that God has always intended a closeness that rules and rituals could never produce.
The Lineage of Grace That Leads Us Home
Matthew begins by laying out a long line of names, and at first glance it can seem like a simple record. Yet when we linger with it, we see Matthew lifting our eyes to a story that has been quietly unfolding since the beginning. Luke records the wonders of Jesus’ life in vivid scenes, but Matthew lets us hear the footsteps of generations walking toward the moment when Jesus steps into our world. The genealogy becomes a doorway, and Jesus stands at the threshold.
Sheltered by a Greater Fire
Acts 28 gently brings us into the final movements of Paul’s long journey to Rome. After a terrifying storm and shipwreck, he and the others wash up on the island of Malta, where unexpected kindness meets them like a warm fire after cold rain. Luke paints a picture of simple hospitality, yet behind the scenes the Lord is weaving provision, protection, and purpose. I am grateful for Luke’s careful record here, and for the way his writing invites us to trace the fingerprints of Jesus in every detail.
Resting in the God Who Carries Generations
Abraham’s final chapter feels like the quiet closing of a long, faithful pilgrimage. As I read the flow of Genesis 25, I notice how the Spirit moves through every line with a steady reassurance. Abraham lived one hundred years after God first called him. One hundred years of learning to trust, to wait, to rest, to stumble, and to rise again in the grace of the God who called him friend. I am grateful for the writer whose reflection on this passage guided my thoughts, and I want to pass that same encouragement on to you.
When Justice Begins With God’s Heart
The opening chapter of Amos settles our hearts by reminding us that God sees everything, even the hidden cruelties among nations. The writer, Amos, began his message in a little town south of Jerusalem. The Lord gave him a vision that carried weight and purpose, and as we sit with his words, we see how deeply God cares about how people treat one another. It is striking that Amos starts not with Israel, but with the nations around them, showing us that the Lord’s concern is broader and more compassionate than we often realize. I thank God for the devotional writer who has opened this doorway for us, helping us see the heart beneath the text.