There is a specific kind of fear that comes just before you say the true thing. Not the fear of physical danger, though that is real for many in this world. The quieter fear of being misunderstood. Of being labeled. Of losing the audience you were just starting to reach. Of someone deciding you’ve gone too far. That fear has silenced more truth than any official threat ever could, because it operates from the inside and does its work before you even open your mouth. The early church did not pray for safety. They prayed to keep speaking. And God moved the building to say he heard them. Peter and John did not ask God to remove the threat. They asked him to make them equal to it. He did. And then some.
Tag Archives: courage
Verse & Vision | May 21, 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.
Broken, But Not Destroyed: What Every Sacred Text Says About Suffering
There comes a point where suffering isn’t just something you go through—it becomes you. Where life strips away everything you thought you were, everything you thought you had, and leaves you standing in the wreckage, wondering if you were ever real to begin with. And what then? What do you do when you aren’t justContinueContinue reading “Broken, But Not Destroyed: What Every Sacred Text Says About Suffering”
