Posts

Most Recent Post

Everyone Calls Esther Brave. The Bible Shows Us Something Far More Interesting Than That

Image
Everyone calls Esther brave. But read the text carefully and a far more layered portrait emerges — one shaped by loss, formed by faithfulness, and moved by a costly love that bravery alone could never have produced. She is on the mugs and the motivational posters. She is the theme of women's conferences and the subject of devotionals and the name invoked whenever someone needs to summon courage for a hard conversation or a difficult season. "Be an Esther." "You were made for such a time as this." The phrase has become so familiar it has almost lost its edge — a soft-focus inspirational banner draped over a story that is, in the actual text, considerably darker and more complicated and more human than the poster version allows. Read Esther carefully — not as an icon but as a person — and something far more instructive emerges. A woman formed by grief long before she was formed by glory. A woman who, when the crisis came, did not immediately rise to the occasion. ...

1 Kings Explained: The Danger of Drifting from God

Image
1 Kings explained: discover how Israel's greatest kings drifted from God, and what their stories reveal about the subtle, slow, and deadly nature of spiritual compromise — and how to guard your own heart today. It rarely happens all at once. Nobody wakes up one morning and decides to abandon everything they once believed. The drift is gradual — a small compromise here, a neglected habit there, a relationship that pulls in the wrong direction, a success that quietly reshapes your priorities. And then one day you look up and realize you are nowhere near where you started. That is the story of 1 Kings. It is a book about kings and kingdoms, about political intrigue and palace drama, about prophets and false prophets, about fire falling from heaven and still small voices in the wilderness. But underneath all of that, 1 Kings is fundamentally a study in spiritual drift — and the catastrophic consequences it brings. Solomon begins with a heart so close to God that the two have personal c...

The Greatest Fathers in the Bible - and - What They Got Right (and Wrong)

Image
The Bible's greatest fathers were flawed men who loved imperfectly — yet God worked through them anyway. Explore what Abraham, Jacob, Joseph, and others got right, got wrong, and what their lives still teach us today. Nobody warned them. No parenting books, no podcasts, no father figures who had it all figured out. The men we meet in the pages of Scripture stumbled into fatherhood the same way most men do — unprepared, overwhelmed, and absolutely certain they were about to change everything for the people they loved. Some of them did. Some of them broke things that took generations to heal. Most did both. And that tension — between the love a father carries and the damage he sometimes does — is exactly what makes the Bible's portrait of fatherhood so searingly honest and so deeply human. This Father's Day, we're looking at the greatest fathers in the Bible: not because they were perfect, but because their lives show us something true about what it costs to love a child ...