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.

Christ in Us, Our Hope of Glory
Today's entry invites us to marvel again at the glorious dual reality of union with Christ: not only are we in Christ, but Christ is also in us. For those of us who believe, this isn't abstract theology—this is the foundation of our daily confidence. When Paul speaks of Christ in you, the hope of glory (Colossians 1:27), he is unveiling a divine mystery that was once hidden but is now revealed by the Spirit.

The Light of Understanding
Oswald Chambers reflects on Jesus’ command to the disciples after the Transfiguration—not to share what they had seen until “the Son of Man had risen from the dead.” This wasn’t about secrecy for its own sake. It was about readiness—readiness to see, to understand, and to bear the weight of glory.

Hand Hewn
The devotional titled Hand Hewn calls us to remember the source from which we were drawn—Christ Himself, our Rock. The passage from Isaiah urges those who follow after righteousness to “look unto the rock from which ye are hewn,” a poetic call to remember that our identity is not self-made but derived from the eternal, unchanging Christ.

Baptized Once for All: The Spirit’s Unified Outpouring
Today's eManna entry, Baptizing the Entire Body Once for All, unfolds a beautiful and often overlooked truth—Christ, our exalted Head, has already baptized His entire Body into the Holy Spirit. The significance of Acts 2 and Acts 10 is not just historical; it is doctrinally monumental. On the day of Pentecost, Christ immersed Jewish believers into the Spirit, and in Cornelius' house, He did the same for the Gentile believers. These two moments were not repeatable experiences for new believers to seek after. They were the once-for-all baptism of the entire Body of Christ into the Spirit.

Nehemiah 3: Unity in God’s Work Through Every-Member Ministry
Nehemiah 3 might at first read like a dry list from a city engineer’s notebook—gates, walls, names, districts. But beneath the architecture lies a beautiful theology of collaboration. What the Grace and Truth Study Bible expositor draws out is this: the work of God is not for the elite or the especially gifted. Instead, it’s the shared responsibility of every member of God’s people. The chapter presents a snapshot of ancient teamwork that stretches across social classes, occupations, genders, and regions. Priests, merchants, daughters, rulers, and commoners alike all have their assigned portion—literally, a piece of the wall near their own homes—to rebuild. Some, like Shallum’s daughters, surprise us with their joyful contribution. Others, like the nobles of Tekoa, remind us that pride can dull our zeal for God’s work.

Ezekiel 34
Ezekiel 34 lays bare the failure of Israel’s leaders—called “shepherds”—who used their positions to serve themselves rather than tending to the people entrusted to their care. They consumed the benefits of leadership while neglecting their most basic responsibilities: nurturing the weak, healing the sick, seeking the lost, and protecting the vulnerable. Because of their neglect, God’s sheep were scattered and vulnerable to danger. God’s judgment against these selfish shepherds is clear: He will remove them from their posts and personally take over the role of Shepherd.

Job 36
In Job 36, Elihu speaks for the last time before God Himself enters the conversation. Elihu insists he is speaking on God’s behalf, not from human speculation but from divine insight. He sets out to defend the justice of God, urging Job—and us—to trust in God’s righteous ways. Elihu’s core message is that God is mighty in both judgment and mercy. He emphasizes that God does not despise anyone because of their weakness, nor does He ignore wrongdoing. God uses suffering not as a random punishment, but as a redemptive call—a loving wooing meant to draw hearts back to Him. Those who listen are drawn into blessing and restoration, while those who harden themselves against Him miss that grace. Elihu encourages Job to humble himself and listen carefully because even the storms of life carry God’s voice. Rain that nourishes and storms that shake both issue from the same sovereign hand. The heart of this chapter is that God's greatness is not cold and distant—it is intimately involved with each soul, speaking through suffering to awaken trust, obedience, and communion.

The Ultimate Intention: Chapter 4 - Living for the Whole
In Chapter 4, Fromke tenderly invites us to move beyond a self-focused understanding of grace into a God-centered participation in the divine purpose. He challenges us to recognize how easily we settle into enjoying the benefits of grace—cleansing, comfort, calling—without ever inquiring into the greater intention behind our redemption. Through a homely story of his son distracted by a new toy, Fromke paints a portrait of believers who have been rescued from the mud, clothed in righteousness, and yet are content to stay home and play. God, however, calls us onward—not merely to be redeemed but to participate in His eternal purpose. True fellowship deepens as we ascend levels of koinonia: beginning with the gospel, then the Spirit, the Son, His sufferings, and finally into the mystery—the shared vision of God's ultimate desire. This chapter is a clarion call to live not for isolated parts of God's work but for the whole—His grand design in Christ.

The Ultimate Intention: Chapter 3 – One Ultimate Theme
In this chapter, DeVern Fromke graciously confronts a subtle error that pervades much of our theological vision: the confusion of means with ends. We often latch onto the significant strands of God's work—creation, providence, redemption, sanctification—as if they were the whole cord. But Fromke reminds us that all these magnificent expressions are only methods and means, not the central theme. The true and ultimate purpose, he argues, is paternal: that God the Father, from eternity past, lovingly chose and formed a family to be His own in Christ. Everything else—every doctrine, event, and divine intervention—flows from this one eternal heartbeat: a Father desiring sons before Him, in His presence, for His pleasure.

The Ultimate Intention – Chapter 2
In this chapter, Fromke invites us to rethink the lens through which we interpret God’s activity in history. Many begin with man’s Fall or with God’s response to it—His redemptive work. Others start with man’s commission to subdue the earth or with God’s act of creation. But Paul, Fromke reminds us, begins even earlier: with the eternal Fatherhood of God before time began. This is the proper starting point for understanding God’s intention. Redemption is not the primary goal but a parenthesis within His eternal purpose—a recovery plan, not the original design. God’s aim has always been the expression of His Father-life through a family of sons conformed to the image of Christ. We must stop interpreting God’s intention through the lens of sin and begin to behold all things in the light of the eternal love between the Father and the Son.

The Ultimate Intention — Chapter 1
DeVern Fromke opens his book not with doctrines to dissect but with prayers that draw our hearts into the very purpose of God. He invites us to lay aside man-centered thinking and ask deep, searching questions—questions about our existence, God's intention, and the preeminence of Christ. These prayers, he explains, are not mere requests for answers but awakenings to purpose: a life-searching prayer for understanding, a life-liberating prayer from self-absorption, and a life-changing prayer to grasp the Father's delight in exalting His Son.

From Thy Throne… Dispense Pardon and Grace
E. Stanley Jones draws a sharp and necessary line in this entry between true Christian prayer and distorted religious traditions. He begins with Jesus’ own words in John 14:13—“Whatever you ask in My name, I will do it”—and unpacks what it means to truly pray in Christ's name. Jones makes it clear: praying “in His name” isn’t a formulaic closing line tacked onto the end of a wish list. It means praying in the spirit, authority, and nature of Jesus. And when that is the heart behind our prayer, the basis on which we are heard shifts entirely—it’s no longer about our personal goodness, our credentials, or our spiritual track record. It’s not about having some special spiritual status or "being good enough" to get God’s attention. It’s about Christ.

The Need to Restore
In today’s devotional, Ray Stedman explores the final of the five Old Testament offerings—the guilt offering—and highlights its enduring relevance for us today. While the earlier offerings centered around a person’s relationship with God, this last one shifts the focus to our relationship with others. It deals specifically with the injuries we inflict on one another—through dishonesty, fraud, betrayal, or neglect—and how these wounds require more than time to heal. The guilt offering teaches us that resolution demands acknowledgment, confession, and where possible, restitution. Time doesn’t erase the fracture; only truth and grace can.

Belonging to One Another in Christ
A.B. Simpson reminds us that disunity within the body of Christ can disrupt our fellowship with God. We often think of communion with God as a purely vertical connection, but Scripture paints a richer picture—one where our relationships within the body directly affect our communion with the Head. The metaphor he uses is bodily health: a wound or injury anywhere in the body can affect the whole, even if the brain itself remains untouched. In the same way, a grudge, offense, or coldness toward a fellow believer can inhibit the Spirit’s flow in our lives.

Jesus Christ, Our Only Foundation
Today’s reflection unveils a truth as steady as the bedrock of the earth itself—Jesus Christ is not just a moral teacher or a religious figure, but the foundation upon which all true life is built. Bob Hoekstra wants us to see that any attempt to build life on human wisdom, power, influence, or riches is like erecting a cathedral on quicksand. It may look stable at first, but it’s destined to collapse.

The Collision of God and Sin
Image Credit: Unsplash
Oswald Chambers urges us to recognize the cross not as a tragic interruption in Jesus’ mission, but as its triumphant and eternal centerpiece. It was not the story of a martyrdom, but the deliberate act of God’s love and justice colliding with the full weight of human sin. Jesus didn’t happen upon the cross—He aimed for it from before the foundation of the world. He was the Lamb slain from the beginning, and His sacrifice was not merely substitutionary but victorious.

Reliance In Toto
The devotional “Reliance in Toto” draws our attention to the beauty of total dependence upon God—not as a one-time act but as a daily unfolding of trust rooted in grace. The author reminds us that learning to live in full reliance upon God is not instantaneous. It unfolds over a lifetime through lived experience. This reliance is not born out of striving to impress God with our efforts, but out of acknowledging our inadequacy and joyfully resting in Christ's sufficiency.

God's Salvation Being for the Whole Family
Today’s devotional invites us to widen our lens when we think of salvation. So often we frame it around individual belief and personal decision—and rightly so in many contexts. But there’s a powerful biblical theme that traces God’s saving work not just to the individual but to the household. When Noah was found righteous before God, the ark wasn’t built for Noah alone—it was for his whole family. Similarly, Jesus said to Zacchaeus, “Today salvation has come to this house.” The scope of God’s grace extended beyond the man who responded—it touched everyone under his roof.

Whatever You Ask in My Name
In this entry from In Christ, E. Stanley Jones meditates on the deeper meaning behind Jesus’ words in John 14:13—“Whatever you ask in My name, I will do it, that the Father may be glorified in the Son.” Jones draws a sharp but beautiful distinction between glorifying God through our actions and glorifying Him through our responses to others’ requests. To do right ourselves is one level of spiritual integrity, but to do rightly in response to others' demands—where wills and expectations collide—is a deeper test of character.

The Surprise Within
Today’s devotion shines light on the deeply embedded sin nature that lurks even beneath our best intentions. Leviticus 5 introduces the idea of unintentional sin—a concept that rattles the illusion that we’re mostly good people who occasionally mess up. Ray Stedman, with grace and honesty, reminds us that these “surprise sins” are not merely accidents, but reflections of a deeper nature we cannot manage through effort or moral resolve.