1 Chronicles

  • David had reached the end of his reign. The ark was secure. The people were at peace. The plans for the temple were in hand. And the giving? It was extravagant. Gold. Silver. Bronze. Iron. Onyx. Marble. Tribes. Leaders. Families. All giving willingly. Lavishly. Joyfully. But when David stands before the people to pray, he…

    A House of Borrowed Things

  • A few days before it happened—before the saw, the scream, the severed fingers—I ordered our family Christmas card. As usual, I chose the layout. The photos. The font. And the words from one of my favorite hymns: Turn your eyes upon Jesus this Christmas. Look full in His wonderful face. And the things of earth…

    The Song Before the Storm

  • Today, my daughter got braces. It’s a rite of passage for many kids. A necessary step toward a straighter smile. But for a 13-year-old girl, it can feel like a mouthful of metal—tight, painful, awkward. When she and Talacey came home from the appointment, Sophia didn’t say much. She just looked at me and asked,…

    Love That Shows Up with Mac & Cheese

  • I have two younger brothers: Garrett and Michael. Both were born athletes. Growing up, they could throw a spiral, hit a curveball, bench press a Buick. I, on the other hand, could design a killer student council campaign poster with nothing but a glue stick, a sharpie, and a layout grid. They spent their high…

    When Envy Silences the Gift

  • The New King James Version puts it plainly: “each one takes his own supper ahead of others…” (1 Corinthians 11:21) They were rushing to the table. Hungry, yes. But not just for bread. Hungry to be first. Hungry for control. Hungry to be filled—before anyone else. That kind of hunger still lives in us. And…

    When the Table Becomes a Mirror

  • Freedom is a funny thing. It’s easy to idolize. Hard to steward. We say we want it. Crave it. Chase it. But rarely know what to do with it. And when we say we want freedom, what we often mean is, “I want to do what I want.”

    Free to Bow

  • Nine days from now, I’ll be back on the operating table. Another surgery. Another round of scalpels and sutures and anesthesia. This time, to cut through the scar tissue in my middle finger that’s keeping it from bending. The surgeon calls it tenolysis. I call it more torture. The goal is restoration—full motion. A hand…

    Reshaping Reverence

  • I write these posts for the world to see. And if you don’t know me personally, maybe they sound like the words of a faithful man—anchored, steady, devoted. But I haven’t arrived. And most days when I click “publish,” I cringe a little. Because I know who’s going to read it. Talacey. Sophia. Jason. Monica.…

    Fighting When You Feel Like a Fraud

  • Every crown that isn’t surrendered to God will eventually fall. That’s the sobering takeaway from 1 Chronicles 10.

    When the Crown Crumbles

  • Sometimes, the battle isn’t visible. It’s not with armies or accusers—it’s with doubt. Discouragement. The slow suffocation of unanswered questions and unseen progress. And sometimes, God sends someone closer than a brother to remind you: this is just a test. Not of strength—but of trust. A refining fire, not a punishment. A chance to believe,…

    The Battle Was Never Mine