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.

Three Habits That Block God’s Voice | Daily Bread

There’s a particular kind of ache that comes when you feel like your prayers are hitting the ceiling. You’re not walking away from God. You’re calling out, but you can’t seem to hear Him.

The Bible doesn’t leave us without an answer to this experience. It tells us how to position ourselves to hear God, and if the problem is positioning, then the positioning can change.

In That Day: Zechariah, Psalms 83, and the Prophetic Picture Nobody Is Discussing

The ceasefire expired today. The USS George H.W. Bush is in the region. Iran is filling its oil tanks and its lawmakers are openly floating a preemptive strike. And underneath all of it, four prophetic passages — Zechariah 12, Psalms 83, Isaiah 17, and Jeremiah 49 — may not be a sequence of future events at all, but a single moment already taking shape. In this post I walk through the biblical framework, what is happening on the ground, the spiritual architecture of the strong delusion, and what it means to live ready. These are not my conclusions. They are an invitation to yours.

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.

Sunday Sessions | One Gospel, Two Roads (Or, The Argument I Once Used Against My Own Faith)

Many years ago, I tried to use this exact argument to prove my father’s faith was built on sand. I was wrong. Thirty years later someone posted it online and asked anyone to disprove it with scripture. I hope this answers their invitation well, and helps whoever reads it.

When Your Faith Shakes | Daily Bread

This is not a polished testimony with a tidy ending. This is what it actually looks like when the shaking is happening — in real time, in a real life, with a real God who is not confused even when I am. I had thought my faith was at the strongest it had ever been. And then the month I’m about to describe happened. This is what I found when I got quiet enough.

Authenticity Unveiled | When the Serpent Wears Robes

The serpent didn’t deny God outright in the garden. He added to his words, reframed them, and used them to serve a different agenda entirely. When Pope Leo recently put words in the mouth of Christ that Christ never spoke, I recognized that pattern immediately. This is not new. It has a very old author.

Patterns, Cycles, and Ancient Warnings: Exploring the Work of Jonathan Cahn

There was a sycamore tree at the corner of Ground Zero. On September 11, 2001, it was struck by debris from the falling towers and destroyed. The stump was kept. You can look it up, see the photographs, and visit the location. It happened whether anyone was looking for it or not. That is one of nine documented harbingers Jonathan Cahn traces between a single verse from the eighth century BC and the events of that morning. This post is my full engagement with his work — because the material deserves more than a summary.

Authenticity Unveiled | Pick a Side (No, Really, That’s the Problem)

I left a comment online. A simple observation about cognitive dissonance. What came back wasn’t conversation — it was tribal defense, projected motives, and the near-total collapse of nuanced thinking. This is what that looks like, why it happens, and what it’s actually costing us.

Authenticity Unveiled | The “Professor” Problem: Tucker, Jiang, and the Art of Demoralization

“Professor” Jiang holds a Bachelor of Arts in English Literature. No advanced degrees. No university professorship. The title is a brand — and borrowed authority, accepted without examination, is one of the oldest manipulation tools there is. Before you argue about what was said, you need to know who said it, and why that label was chosen.

When Leaves Aren’t Enough: The Real Work of Spiritual Formation | Daily Bread

Spiritual appearance comes naturally. Showing up, saying the right things, checking the right boxes — from a distance, it all looks like faith. But Jesus wasn’t fooled by a leafy tree with nothing underneath, and He isn’t fooled by us either. In this promised deep dive from the Leaves but No Fruit post, we get honest about the gap between looking formed and actually being formed — what creates it, why it’s so easy to miss, and what real transformation actually looks like from the inside out. Spoiler: it’s slower, harder, and more honest than most of us expect.

Soul Over Ego: In the World, Not of It | Daily Bread

The church is witnessing a profound spiritual battle in 2026, where the struggle between ego and soul is reaching a fever pitch. This isn’t just a debate; it’s a dramatic confrontation, exposing deep-seated divisions rooted in our spiritual identity.

We’re observing an age-old contest between who we are in the flesh and who we’re called to be in Christ, amplified by current cultural and political pressures. This isn’t a comfortable reality, but it’s crucial that we confront it openly and honestly.

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.

Sunday Sessions | What I Heard in the Quiet, and What I’m Still Wrestling With

“If you’ve turned your back on Israel, you hate your own Savior.” A meditation-born truth that won’t let go. Honest reflections on Jesus’ Jewishness, biblical contradictions, Paul’s challenging passages, and why some questions stay with us until the other side.

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.

Leaves but No Fruit: When Jesus Calls Out Spiritual Show for What It Is | Daily Bread

In Mark 11, Jesus hungers, spots a leafy fig tree promising fruit, finds it barren, and curses it. It withers from the roots.

This story offers us a prophetic sign: outward religion without inward transformation withers. His call isn’t performance, it’s abiding in the Vine.

Jesus doesn’t just expose fruitless leaves. He invites us back to the Vine. Judgment on pretense is mercy in disguise: it clears space for real growth. Slow, often painful, but alive.

“Abide… let the Spirit prune.”

Where do you need renewal today?