Many Christians spend more time wondering when Christ will return than living out the work He gave us before He does. Our job isn’t to predict the day but to walk with Him each day. Let’s stop worrying about His return and start living in His rest.
What We Get Wrong About Prayer
Prayer can become procrastination. We say we’re waiting on God, but often we’re afraid to move. Not deciding is still a decision. Prayer is where we start—but it’s not where we stop.
Stop Building What’s Breaking You
It wasn’t until the third story of what’s now the Leaning Tower of Pisa that builders realized the foundation wasn’t solid. But they kept building. Building on a weak foundation never works. You can’t fix what’s broken by doing more of what broke it. Admitting what’s broken isn’t failure — ignoring it is.
When You’ve Drifted From Your First Love
In Rev. 2:4–5, Jesus calls out a church for drifting from their first love—Him—and says, “Do what you did at first.” Our faith dies when we stop doing what once kept it alive. To make a fresh start, go back to what helped you at the start.
The Problem with More
Striving for more can leave you with less. The unchecked drive to be better and accomplish more, while well-intentioned, can leave you with a full schedule and an empty soul. Balance what stretches you with what restores you.
Finding Security in a Shaky World
Many trust God with their afterlife. Few trust him with their daily life. We find security in what is seen. Good foundations are rarely seen but they always hold you up. When life shakes you, anchor to the rock that is never shaken