The War That Was Already Written: Biblical Prophecy & The Current War in Iran, In a Nutshell

The conversations have shifted from vague ‘signs of the times’ talk to naming chapters and verses and watching them align in real time. Here’s a plain-language look at what people are seeing – and why it matters.

Dear Christians… | Does This Look Like Faith to You?

Not every post that mentions God is Christian. Not every post that uses familiar vocabulary is rooted in a true foundation. I’m not saying this to be divisive. I’m saying this the way you warn someone you love – with urgency, because the stakes are real and not everyone can see the car coming yet. Let’s talk about what’s actually there. And what isn’t.

Sunday Sessions | You’re Not Overthinking: Discernment, Pattern Recognition, and the Mantle You Carry

The world has a word for people who see too much. Overthinker. Anxious. Too sensitive. But somewhere along the way, a lot of us learned to second-guess the very thing God was sharpening in us. The “problem” is pattern recognition, and it’s only a problem for people who don’t have any skill in it. Discernment is pattern recognition under anointing. And the weight you’ve been feeling? That’s not a crisis. Scripture calls it a mantle. God does not press people He does not intend to use.

Dear Christians… | You MUST Employ Discernment in the Mainstream Church

A lot of people who decide to read the Bible for themselves for the first time quickly realize something uncomfortable, and in many ways disturbing: when it comes to mainstream theology, we’ve been duped.

The institutional church is in the falling away, but it’s happening systematically, and most of us have been looking for the wrong signs.

I want to show you what scholars wrote two hundred years ago, before the drift, and let you decide whether the plain text agrees with what you’ve been taught.

Did You Know? | The Credibility of the Bible

The Bible is sixty-six books written by forty different people over fifteen hundred years. Archaeologists have used it to uncover civilizations scholars insisted never existed. Over three hundred prophecies described one specific person centuries before he arrived – and then Jesus fulfilled all of them. The witnesses who saw him die and come back didn’t return to wealth or power. They returned to testimony, and died for it. The proof is abundant. It is, at the very least, worth considering.

Prophecy Without the Panic: Before You Build the Bunker | Daily Bread

You can run to and fro through scripture and still go hungry. The motion itself doesn’t feed you. And that’s the thing about prophecy. It was never meant to produce the panicked running to and fro it often seems to. Prophecy is meant to produce people who stopped running long enough to wait, who waited long enough to receive, and who received enough to rise. The wise will understand, not because they were smarter or more studious, but because they asked. Because they stopped. Because they let the Word do what the Word does when you give it room.

The Fourth Cup | Daily Bread

Someone told me to look up the fourth cup. So I did. What I found locked into place something I had already sensed was true – that there is a literal thread running from the upper room straight to the cross, held together by a cup Jesus deliberately did not drink. This is not symbolism. This is the most purposeful love story ever told.

Verse and Vision | May 11, 2026

Verse and Vision is a daily series exploring the verse of the day — not just what it says, but what it means. Each post unpacks the biblical context, digs into the original language, and traces the historical and philosophical world behind the text. Where the Word echoes across history, we follow it. Where it lands in the present, we don’t look away.

It’s All Nonsense, Except Soul | Daily Bread

The people who are willing to honestly acknowledge when something feels deeply wrong are often the ones closest to real clarity. Not because discomfort or suffering is somehow noble in itself, but because the courage to sit with that unease, to follow the questions all the way down instead of numbing them or pushing them away, is exactly how truth begins to find us.

Speaking Truth Is Not the Same as Judging | Daily Bread

To say “don’t judge” sounds humble. It sounds gracious. But underneath it is a confusion that quietly does harm to the very people it wants to protect. Speaking truth is not, in and of itself, judgment. And the kindest thing anyone can do for someone caught in sin is not to make them comfortable in it — it is to point them toward the One who can wash it clean.

Science & Spirituality | Surrender Is Not Powerlessness: What Your Brain and Your Bible Both Know About Anger

Being pissed off feels powerful. But psychologically and spiritually, it’s a trap. Here’s what your brain and your Bible both know about anger, resentment, and why surrender is the most powerful thing you can do.

Authenticity Unveiled | When Winning Isn’t the Point

What’s the real reason I share anything I share? That question snuck up on me recently — not from someone else, but from myself. The honest answer turned out to matter more than I expected.

This post is about that question, and what it revealed when I started looking around at how faith gets performed online versus how Scripture actually models it. The Bible is full of people who questioned God, fact-checked apostles, wrestled all night, demanded evidence, and were honored for it. Truth doesn’t need a bodyguard. It thrives in the open.

So here’s my invitation: push back. Ask harder. Say “but what about ____?” That’s not a threat to what I believe. Growth is the point. Not winning.

Sunday Sessions | When You Actually Go Look | A Deeper Dive + Follow-Up

I used to take the Bible at face value, or dismiss it just as quickly. Then I started going and looking. Really looking.

What I found surprised me: forty-plus authors spread across three continents and fifteen centuries, writing in exile, dungeons, wildernesses, and royal courts. Most never met. Most never coordinated. And yet they produced one unbroken story.

Creation. Fall. Promise. Rescue. Restoration.

That’s the arc, and it’s held throughout fifteen centuries, three continents, and forty voices who never once compared notes

The promised seed in Genesis 3:15. The lamb provided by God in Genesis 22, echoed in the Passover, fulfilled in John’s cry: “Behold, the Lamb of God.” Prophecies specific enough to name the details centuries in advance: thirty pieces of silver, a donkey, pierced hands and feet, a birthplace called Bethlehem.

No committee could have engineered that.

The more I studied the geography, the manuscripts, the Dead Sea Scrolls, the languages, the sheer improbability of the coherence, the harder it became to wave away.

Questions still remain. I expect they always will. But they don’t push me out anymore. They pull me deeper in.

This is what happens when you actually go look.

Alarms Are Sounding: Grief Over the Great Falling Away and Deception Regarding Israel

Amidst the rising tensions, believers face the profound responsibility to be watchmen of truth. As Ezekiel foretells, we must sound the alarm against deception, even when met with hostility. The weight of this duty stems not from our own faith but from the deep bonds we share with fellow believers. Those who turn away from God’s will risk eternal separation, as prophesied by Matthew. It is imperative that we honor God’s gifts and remain steadfast in His plans, avoiding any alignment with falsehoods.

Jane Fonda’s Wounds Drive Her Activism. What Drives Yours? | Daily Bread

It has come to my attention that many in the younger generations are confused about Jane Fonda’s recent statements on the Iran strikes. They’re not asking hard questions. They’re following and supporting them blindly. From the crow’s nest, I’d like to sound a warning: that’s a mistake. If you’d like to see things from thatContinueContinue reading “Jane Fonda’s Wounds Drive Her Activism. What Drives Yours? | Daily Bread”

Simplifying “The Alarms of Prophecy: Elam in the Headlines” | By Request

This post explores the recent strikes against Iran on February 28, 2026, through a biblical lens, highlighting parallels with Purim and the Book of Esther. It examines the fall of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in the context of divine sovereignty, drawing connections to historical figures like Haman, Pharaoh, and Nebuchadnezzar. The post emphasizes patterns of God’s justice, divine reversal, and the enduring relevance of Scripture in understanding current events.