1 Corinthians

  • 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

  • God’s given me influence. Words. Insight. And most days, I try to use them for His glory. But some days… I want to use them to win. To prove a point. To set the record straight. To correct the narrative.

    The Love That Lays Down Liberty

  • I want to believe my identity is fixed in Christ. I know the theology. I’ve read it. I’ve written it. I’ve even taught it. I know better. And I still forget. Still every day, I still have to fight these same lies…

    The Number That Couldn’t Save Him

  • Some tensions don’t have clean resolutions. That’s what today’s reading reminded me. In 1 Corinthians 7, Paul addresses a hard, often heartbreaking reality: a believer married to an unbeliever. It’s not a category most people prepare for on their wedding day. But it happens. And when it does—it raises questions most of us aren’t equipped…

    The Gospel in Uneven Yokes

  • David is on his way back to the throne. The rebellion is over. Absalom is dead. And the long, awkward return begins.

    The Right to Be Wronged

  • He thought his hair would make him glorious. It was thick. Flowing. A crown of beauty that turned heads and fueled his fame. Scripture says he cut it once a year because it got too heavy—five pounds worth of ego cascading from his scalp. And in the end, that glory got him killed.

    The Son Who Hangs from a Tree

  • It was the most sacred object in all of Israel. A golden chest that held the Ten Commandments. The mercy seat where God’s presence once rested in fire and smoke. The symbol of victory, judgment, holiness, and favor. So David sends it away…

    When the Ark Isn’t Yours to Keep

  • For the dads: Don’t be a drunk captain.

    The Silence That Sinks Ships

  • Sometimes, the most merciful thing God can do… is confront you. Because sin rarely starts as rebellion. It starts as entitlement. Justification. A subtle shift in attention. A small decision that snowballs into a big regret.

    The Mercy of Conviction

  • The Apostle Paul once wrote that “the word of the cross is folly to those who are perishing” (1 Corinthians 1:18). But sometimes… the folly shows up in a cardiology exam. Let me explain. Yesterday morning, I had an appointment with my cardiologist. Routine stuff—an EKG, a chest ultrasound, all the pokes and prods that…

    When the Wise Look Foolish (and the Foolish Look Hairless)