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Showing posts from 2026

Positioned for Purpose: Recognizing God in Every Season

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  There are moments in life when we pause and ask, “How did I get here?” Not always out of celebration—sometimes out of exhaustion, uncertainty, or quiet longing. Where you are right now may not look like what you prayed for. It may not feel comfortable or clear. But one truth remains steady: you are positioned, not misplaced. God is intentional. He does not waste seasons, experiences, or people. Whether you are preparing for a storm, standing in the middle of one, or slowly emerging on the other side, God is present—and purposeful—in every stage. Positioned, Not Random It’s easy to believe purpose only exists once everything is settled. But Scripture reminds us that our steps are ordered, even when the path feels uneven. God places us where our faith can stretch, where our ears learn to hear Him more clearly, and where our dependence shifts from ourselves to Him. This season you’re in—yes, this one—is not accidental. God knows exactly where you are, and He knows exactly why. Prepa...

Faith Without a Promise: The Long Walk to the Pool

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  There is a moment in Scripture that often gets overlooked—not because it isn’t miraculous, but because it is uncomfortable. In Gospel of John chapter 9, Jesus encounters a man who was blind from birth. The disciples ask a theological question—Who sinned?—but Jesus answers with purpose: “This happened so that the works of God might be displayed in him.” Then Jesus does something unexpected. He spits on the ground, makes mud, and anoints the man’s eyes. Before healing. Before clarity. Before sight. And instead of immediately restoring vision, Jesus gives the man an instruction: “Go, wash in the Pool of Siloam.” (John 9:7) That’s it. No promise. No explanation. No guarantee of results. Just… go. Anointed, Yet Still Blind The man was anointed but still blind. That detail matters. So often we believe that if God has called us, touched us, or set us apart, everything should instantly make sense. But Scripture shows us something different: sometimes the anointing comes before understand...

Moving Forward in Peace, Joy, and Purpose

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  There comes a moment when we realize we don’t have to relive every hard season to honor what it taught us. We can acknowledge the journey, keep the wisdom, cherish the love—and still choose joy. This is that moment. This reflection is not about minimizing pain or rushing healing. It’s about recognizing how grace carried us, how peace settled us, and how joy now invites us forward. What once felt heavy no longer defines us. God has gently shifted the weight and filled our steps with light. Grace Was Always at Work Grace doesn’t announce itself loudly. Often, it shows up quietly—making space where we felt crowded, giving strength where we felt thin, and opening doors we didn’t know how to push. Looking back, it’s clear: we were never alone. Grace carried us through, and it’s still leading us now. We didn’t have to be perfect or prepared. Grace met us exactly where we were and walked with us, step by step, into peace. Strength Can Be Gentle We sometimes think strength has to be loud...

From Pain to Purpose: How God Transforms Our Journey

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  There are moments in life when the road feels unbearably heavy—when pain lingers, grief settles in our chest, tests stretch our faith, and regret whispers if only. In those moments, it’s easy to believe our journey has been wasted or derailed. But God sees differently. What feels like broken chapters to us are often the very pages God uses to write purpose, gratitude, triumph, and redemption. Nothing you have walked through is random. Nothing has been overlooked. God is intentional—even with the hard parts. This is the sacred work He does: transforming pain into purpose, grief into gratitude, tests into triumph, and regrets into repentance. When Pain Becomes Purpose Pain has a way of slowing us down and forcing us to pay attention. It exposes what we can no longer carry on our own. While we often pray for pain to be removed, God sometimes allows it to remain long enough to shape us. Pain teaches compassion. It deepens empathy. It creates space for God to meet us in ways comfort n...