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"Not only the gospel but our own selves" (1 Thess 2:8)
When you read Paul's letters with even a hint of emotional investment you will hear his deep love for the church. The entire chapter of 1 Thessalonians 2 you can hear the heartbeat of family love and attachment: "brothers and sisters" (v.1, 14, 17) "we were gentle among you, like a nurse tenderly caring for her children" (v.7), "we dealt with each one of you like a father with his children" (v.11), and perhaps most gloriously, "When we were made orphans by being separated fro
Jun 13 min read


Wired for God: Faith and Neuroscience of Spiritual Connection
Most people think faith and neuroscience are worlds apart. They're not. Brain science is revealing something beautiful: we are designed for spiritual connection. Our bodies, our brains, our nervous systems... they all point toward something bigger than ourselves. This isn't about reducing faith to biology. It's about discovering that the God who made us also made us for Him. Let's explore what happens when biblical truth and brain science meet. Your Brain on Prayer Scientists
Feb 153 min read


Leadership That Feels Like Home
There is a version of leadership that runs on adrenaline. It is loud. Fast. Driven. Always performing. But there's another kind. This one is steady. Present. Attuned. It leads from connection . Most of us were trained in the first one. We were told that leadership means vision, confidence, answers, and endurance. We learned the skills. We missed the deeper work. No one taught us how to stay connected to our own bodies. Or how to notice when we're overwhelmed. Or how to lead w
Feb 123 min read
"He Took our Illnesses and Bore our Diseases" (Matthew 8:17)
That evening, they brought to him many who were oppressed by demons, and he cast out the spirits with a word and healed all who were sick. This was to fulfill what was spoken by the prophet Isaiah: “He took our illnesses and bore our diseases.” (Matt 8:16-17) When scripture says Jesus "took" and "bore" our infirmities and diseases, it has a twofold meaning: he took them upon himself, experiencing them ultimately on the cross, and he took them away, leaving us healed. His abi
Apr 10, 20182 min read
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