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Being Seen Without Proving
Rest does not mean that we stop doing hard things. It does not mean we withdraw from responsibility, obedience, courage, or the realities of life. What rest begins to dismantle is the need to prove who we are while we do them. Many of us fear that if we truly rest, we will become passive or disengaged. But beneath that fear is something more personal. If we stop striving, stop producing, stop offering something to justify our place, what will hold us? Rest brings us face to f


When Prayer Begins to Echo the Father
As we continue our December focus on spiritual warfare, this post builds directly on what we explored in Warfare From Rest. If you have not yet read the first post in the series, I encourage you to return to it before you continue here, because the foundations we laid there shape everything we are about to step into. Today we begin looking at how prayer matures into intercession and why this shift is essential for learning to wage warfare from rest. Before we can explore the


Playing with the Father: The Joy of Coming as a Child
There is a sound that carries more weight than the thunder of armies, more beauty than a symphony, more healing than the most eloquent...


The End of Right and Wrong: Letting Go of Judgement in a World that Demands It
We are made perfect in His love. The world works, strives, and toils, trying to measure up, trying to make itself clean. But we are not...


Reaching for His Faithfulness
There are certain stories in Scripture that never leave you the same. You can read them a hundred times and still find yourself undone by...


Control Based Love - Exposing Counterfeit Religious Love Pt. 3
Control-Based Love (When “Care” Comes With a Leash) “I love you—so let me decide what’s best.” Many of us have heard that line (or...


How Control-Based Love Blocks God-Given Uniqueness
Some of us learned a kind of “care” that came with a leash. It sounded like safety, looked like unity, and promised growth— if we...


The Finished Work Doesn't Need Your Appropriation
A Loving Call Back to the Cross. There’s a popular teaching in many healing and deliverance circles that says: "Yes, Jesus accomplished everything on the cross, but it must now be appropriated to become real in your life." It sounds spiritual. It sounds wise. But it’s not found in Scripture. As someone who once believed and taught this very thing, I want to speak gently but clearly: this idea is not biblical . In fact, it keeps people striving for what Jesus already gave, del
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