Unity That Tells The Truth
We know how to be together. We've learned to share our lives. But have we learned to speak the gospel into them? Psalm 133 and Ephesians 4 call us past a warm room and into the harder, better country of a unity that tells each other the truth.
Flourishing in the Fear
Discipleship often feels like subtraction. Psalm 128 says it's actually addition — Christ expands our capacity for love, for work, for family, and for blessing others. The fear of the Lord is not the obstacle to the good life. It's the door.
The End Of Anxiety
Most of us are quietly exhausted from chasing dreams we chose ourselves. In three verses, Psalm 131 opens the soul of a king and shows us something we've never been taught to want: a life calmed, quieted, and content in God alone.
What The Lord Does With Our Tears
When grief actually shows up, most of us either hide it or drown in it. Psalm 126 offers a stranger path: go out weeping, and carry the seed with you. What does God do with our tears? He doesn't waste them—he plants them, and has promised the harvest.
If The Lord Had Not Been For US
We've gotten good at explaining our survival without God—grit, timing, luck. Psalm 124 pulls us back to the truth we keep editing out: we were caught and could not free ourselves, and the God who is for us broke the snare from the inside.
You Are not The Keeper
Most of us aren't tired from working — we're tired from watching. Psalm 121 asks the question we are often afraid to ask, and then names the relief we haven't yet allowed ourselves to feel: we were never built to be the keeper.
When You Realize You’re Not Home
We begin this summer not with arrival but with exile — because pilgrimage begins when we stop pretending temporary things can carry eternal weight.