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.

👀 Seeing Beyond the Surface
Believing Thomas Believing Thomas

👀 Seeing Beyond the Surface

T. Austin-Sparks invites us to peer through an open window and behold something superior: Jesus Christ in one another. Quoting Paul’s charge in 2 Corinthians 5:16, he brings our attention to a vital shift in perspective—no longer evaluating others by mere human standards but learning to see one another through the Spirit.

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⚠️ When Pressure Becomes the Platform
Believing Thomas Believing Thomas

⚠️ When Pressure Becomes the Platform

The uproar in Ephesus wasn’t a disruption to Paul’s ministry—it was part of the lesson. Just when everything seemed to be moving forward, chaos erupted. A riot broke out that threatened not only Paul’s life but also the entire fledgling community of believers in the region. Luke doesn’t record Paul’s farewell speech, but Paul himself reflects on that terrifying episode in his second letter to the Corinthians: he had despaired of life itself. He thought it was over.

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💡 He Declares What Is Already Ours
Believing Thomas Believing Thomas

💡 He Declares What Is Already Ours

The Holy Spirit has never sought to draw attention to Himself. His role is beautifully self-effacing, pointing us instead to the risen Christ. Jesus said plainly that when the Spirit came, He would glorify the Son by taking what belongs to Christ and declaring it to us. That means the Spirit’s mission is not just to inform us, but to bring us into a deeper experience of what is already ours in Jesus.

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💍 Claimed and Complete
Believing Thomas Believing Thomas

💍 Claimed and Complete

The Song of Songs reveals a deeply intimate truth: we belong to Christ, and He belongs to us. This is not symbolic poetry alone—it reflects a covenantal reality between the risen Christ and those united with Him. When we rest in this mutual belonging, we realize that all Christ is has been made available to us, and all we are now finds meaning in Him.

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💎 The Dignity of Debt
Believing Thomas Believing Thomas

💎 The Dignity of Debt

Oswald Chambers reflects on the Apostle Paul’s deeply personal sense of indebtedness—not to people, but to Christ. From that overflowing gratitude and reverence came a life poured out in proclamation. Paul saw himself as one redeemed at a price, and from that purchase came both freedom and obligation—not as a burden, but as a sacred honor.

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🌾 Yielded in the Furnace of Life
Believing Thomas Believing Thomas

🌾 Yielded in the Furnace of Life

Today’s devotional from Miles Stanford speaks tenderly—but truthfully—about the bittersweet path of the redeemed. Rather than evidence of failure, trials are marks of grace. It’s not that we suffer because we aren’t redeemed; it’s because we are. The Father loves us enough to deal with what no longer belongs in us—the remnants of the crucified old man, the flesh, that still attempt to rule.

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📖 Faith Is the Doorway to Union
Believing Thomas Believing Thomas

📖 Faith Is the Doorway to Union

Today’s meditation from Witness Lee turns our gaze to Abraham—the man Scripture calls the father of all who believe. His story isn’t told to spotlight heroic deeds or religious performance, but rather to reveal the simple reality that God calls, and we respond in faith. Abraham did not work his way into righteousness. In fact, any attempt to be justified by self-effort would have made room for pride. But Abraham believed God, and that belief—not his achievements—was counted as righteousness.

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✒️ Marked by the Signature of Christ
Believing Thomas Believing Thomas

✒️ Marked by the Signature of Christ

We often think of our Christian witness as fragile, inconsistent, or marred by imperfection. And it's true—we may express our life in Christ with trembling hands, blotted lines, or awkward phrasing. But today’s reflection compiled by Nick Harrison reminds us: what matters is not the quality of our expression, but the seal under which it was written. Just as a check is honored because of the signature, not the penmanship, so our lives are validated by the signature of Christ.

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🛎 Empty Hands, Full Inheritance
Believing Thomas Believing Thomas

🛎 Empty Hands, Full Inheritance

Today’s reflection from E. Stanley Jones draws a bold and liberating line in the sand: the only true goodness is the life and character of Jesus Christ. Anything outside of His likeness—regardless of who performs it—is not good, no matter how noble it may seem on the surface. Jones invites us to see that Christ is not merely a moral standard but the very essence of goodness itself. The bar isn’t cultural decency or even religious sincerity—it’s Jesus.

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🔥 No Neutral Ground
Believing Thomas Believing Thomas

🔥 No Neutral Ground

Jesus did not come to maintain the peace of this world; He came to divide it with the fire of truth. T. Austin-Sparks reminds us that the work of the Holy Spirit doesn’t glide gently through the world without disruption. His work brings confrontation—not because of harshness, but because it draws a line between life and death, Spirit and flesh, kingdom and culture.

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🔥 No Longer Under the Spell
Believing Thomas Believing Thomas

🔥 No Longer Under the Spell

In Acts 19, we witness a remarkable moment in Ephesus where believers, newly awakened by the gospel, came clean about their lingering practices—superstitions, occultism, and magical arts they had once accepted as normal. These weren’t pagans from outside the faith—they were followers of Christ who had unknowingly carried the baggage of spiritual bondage into their new life. But as they sat under the Spirit-filled teaching of Paul and witnessed the liberating reality of the kingdom, they saw clearly that light and darkness could not coexist.

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🕊️ The Spirit Who Unfolds the Mind of God
Believing Thomas Believing Thomas

🕊️ The Spirit Who Unfolds the Mind of God

Today’s reading from Bob Hoekstra reminds us that Jesus didn’t leave us to navigate the Christian life through willpower or intellect. He promised His Spirit to us—not as a distant influence, but as our present and personal teacher. From the moment we believed, the Spirit of truth was given to dwell within us, sent by the Father in Jesus’ name. He doesn’t merely assist in our learning; He is the one who opens our eyes, teaches us all things, and guides us into all truth.

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📖 Lifted by Prayer, Carried by Joy
Believing Thomas Believing Thomas

📖 Lifted by Prayer, Carried by Joy

Today’s reflection from AB Simpson turns our hearts toward the dual rhythm of prayer and praise—two facets of the abiding life that anchor us in God’s presence and release His life through us. It begins with the reminder that Jesus gave a parable to highlight our need to pray always and never lose heart (Luke 18:1). This is not about religious routine but about communion—a life lived in moment-by-moment interaction with our Father, attentive to His Spirit’s promptings and faithful in bringing others before Him.

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💠 The Grace to Absorb the Blow
Believing Thomas Believing Thomas

💠 The Grace to Absorb the Blow

When Jesus taught His disciples to turn the other cheek, He wasn’t calling them to passive cowardice or self-protective silence. He was revealing a new way to live—not by imitation, but by impartation. Oswald Chambers unpacks this by showing how the life of Jesus within us responds to insults, injuries, and injustice—not by retaliation, but by absorbing the blow without bitterness. This isn't weakness; it’s divine strength clothed in gentleness.

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⏳ When Truth Matures in Time
Believing Thomas Believing Thomas

⏳ When Truth Matures in Time

There is a tremendous distinction between knowing Christ as Savior and knowing Him as Life. For even the most earnest soul, the transformation from grasping truth intellectually to experiencing it in the Spirit can span decades. Truth is not downloaded like data—it is sown, watered, and cultivated by the Spirit over time.

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🌾 Casting Out the Counterfeit
Believing Thomas Believing Thomas

🌾 Casting Out the Counterfeit

The line of Christ does not pass through human effort, even if that effort is sincere or religious. Abraham had two sons—one born of self-effort and human logic, the other born through a promise received by faith. God makes it clear: only Isaac, the child of promise, counts toward the generation of Christ.

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🌱 Receptive Hearts, Creative Spirit
Believing Thomas Believing Thomas

🌱 Receptive Hearts, Creative Spirit

E. Stanley Jones reflects on the Spirit-lead life of Abraham, the man who dared to leave behind a thriving civilization in obedience to an inner prompting from God. What propelled Abraham out of Ur wasn’t an impulse of restlessness, but a creative urging born of faith—a faith that welcomed and yielded to the Spirit of God.

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🌿 Planted on Purpose
Believing Thomas Believing Thomas

🌿 Planted on Purpose

Psalm 1 opens the Psalter with a bold contrast: a life grounded in God versus a life untethered from Him. The blessed person delights in the Word of the Lord and is compared to a tree intentionally planted near streams of life-giving water. This isn’t random growth—this is placement with purpose. And where God plants, He sustains.

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The Covenant of Genesis 17: Promise — A New Name, A New Destiny
Believing Thomas Believing Thomas

The Covenant of Genesis 17: Promise — A New Name, A New Destiny

In Genesis 17, God meets Abram after thirteen silent years and does something extraordinary—He reaffirms His covenant, gives Abram and Sarai new names, and introduces a sign that will mark His people forever. Thirteen years since Ishmael’s birth have passed, and there is still no heir of promise. Yet God appears, now calling Himself El Shaddai—God Almighty—the One who is fully able to do what human effort cannot. This name anchors the weight of the promise.

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Hosea 9 – “Fruitless Festivals and Famine of Fellowship”
Believing Thomas Believing Thomas

Hosea 9 – “Fruitless Festivals and Famine of Fellowship”

Israel was once a nation set apart, a people called to reflect the character of their God in a world of idolatry and indulgence. But by the time Hosea delivers this ninth chapter, their identity has been exchanged for imitation. Their joyless festivals and polluted worship reveal a people who traded covenant intimacy for alliances with nations and idols. They mingled the sacred with the profane, turning celebration into self-indulgence and worship into empty ritual.

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