Posts

You Are Stronger Than The Storm

There are seasons in life that take you lower than you ever imagined you could go, not just tired or discouraged, but brought to a place where everything feels like it is closing in at once. It is a place where the noise of the world fades and you are left alone with the weight of your own thoughts, your fears, and your questions. In those moments, you begin to realize how fragile everything can feel. You look around for something or someone to steady you, to remind you that you are not alone in it, but sometimes there is no one who can step into that space for you. Sometimes the road you are walking is one you have to move through on your own, and that kind of loneliness changes you in ways you never expected. It strips away the illusions you once held about control, about certainty, and about how life is supposed to unfold. It brings you face to face with the parts of yourself you may have never wanted to see, the fear, the doubt, and the vulnerability that quietly lived beneath th...

My Living Hope

There was a chasm between us once—wider than I could measure and deeper than I wanted to admit. At first, I didn’t see it clearly. I thought I could build bridges out of good intentions, stack accomplishments high enough to reach across it, or climb my way toward something that looked like righteousness. But the more honest I became, the more I realized how vast that distance truly was. It wasn’t just a gap between who I was and who I wanted to be; it was a separation between broken humanity and perfect holiness. No matter how hard I tried, I could not close it on my own. The mountain before me was higher than I could climb. I strained against it through self-discipline, striving, and promises to “do better next time.” I tried to conquer guilt with effort and silence shame with busyness, but every attempt only made me more aware of my limitations. I could see the summit, but I could not reach it. I could understand what goodness looked like, but I could not sustain it. The harder I tri...

The Quilt Called My Life

There are parts of my story that I carried in silence for a very long time. Not because they didn’t matter, but because they mattered so much that I didn’t know how to put them into words. Pain has a way of doing that. It buries itself deep, convincing you that it’s safer to leave it there than to bring it into the light. For years, I believed that. I believed that my story was something to survive, not something to share. But over time, something began to change inside of me. I began to realize that the very things I had tried to hide were the very things that could bring hope to someone else. When I speak now, when I share what my life has been, I don’t do it because it is easy. It is not easy. There are pieces of my story that still carry weight, still carry emotion, still remind me of places I once stood where I didn’t think I would make it through. But I share it because I know there are others standing in those places right now. People who feel alone in their pain. People who be...

The Story Doesn’t End in the Dark

Easter has always been a beautiful reminder that the darkest moments in life are never the end of the story. It is a quiet but powerful declaration that even when everything looks lost, even when hope feels buried beneath the weight of grief and uncertainty, something is still happening beneath the surface. Something is still being written, even in the silence. Something is still being redeemed. This year, Easter feels closer to me than it ever has before. It feels less like a story I’ve heard and more like a truth I’m living. When I think about the journey we’ve been walking through with your health, Tim, I can’t help but see pieces of that same story woven into our own lives. Not in a distant or dramatic way, but in the quiet, everyday moments where faith is tested, where hope feels fragile, and where love has to stretch further than we ever imagined it would. There have been days on this journey that have felt heavy in ways I never expected. Days where fear quietly lingers beneath...

A Quiet Easter Eve

The snow is gently falling on the night before Easter, as if heaven itself has chosen to whisper instead of speak. Each flake drifts softly to the ground, covering the world in a hush so deep it feels sacred. The earth, once restless with the noise of daily life, now rests beneath a blanket of white—pure, still, and waiting. There is something holy in this kind of quiet. It mirrors the pause between sorrow and joy, between the cross and the empty tomb. The world seems to hold its breath tonight, just as it did long ago, suspended in that tender space where grief had not yet given way to hope. And yet, even in the silence, there is a promise carried on the falling snow—a promise that something beautiful is about to awaken. The snow does not rush. It does not force its arrival. It simply falls, one delicate piece at a time, covering what was once worn and weary with a fresh beginning. It reminds us that renewal often comes softly, not with thunder or spectacle, but in gentle, faithfu...

Something More Than This

Isn’t truth supposed to set you free? That’s what we’re told, that once you see clearly, once the fog lifts and the blindfold falls away, freedom follows. But no one really talks about the weight that can come with seeing. No one warns you that clarity can feel heavy, that once your eyes adjust to the light, you can’t unsee what you’ve seen. And sometimes, knowing changes everything. There was a time when I lived comfortably inside assumptions, inside patterns that had been handed down, inside ideas I never thought to question. It was easier that way, simpler. Believing what you’re told can feel safe until something shifts, until you witness something that doesn’t line up, until you experience something that cracks the surface. And then truth doesn’t just knock politely, it barges in. If truth sets you free, why does it sometimes feel like it isolates you first? Why does it feel like standing alone in a crowded room? Why does it feel like carrying knowledge that others don’t want to ...

Why They Called It Good

Good Friday has a way of quieting everything inside of you if you really stop and sit with it. It is not a loud day. It does not rush past you with celebration or easy joy. Instead, it slows you down and invites you into something deeper—something heavier, something sacred. It is the day where love chose to suffer, where grace chose to stay, and where hope looked like it had been lost. There is something almost unsettling about calling it good . Because when you really think about it, there was nothing easy about that day. It was filled with pain, with betrayal, with sorrow that must have felt unbearable to those who witnessed it. The disciples didn’t understand what was happening. The crowd didn’t recognize who stood before them. And even those who loved Him most stood at a distance, watching a story unfold that didn’t make sense. It looked like loss. It looked like the end. And yet, that is exactly where the beauty of Good Friday begins to unfold—not in what it looked like, but ...