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In Prayer – Asking with Confidence as God's Children, we learn that Jesus doesn’t just teach us how to pray—He shows us who we are when we pray. Luke 11:1–13 reveals the heart of our Father and invites us to pray with childlike trust. Jesus urges us to ask, seek, and knock—not to pry open God’s hands, but to receive the gift of His presence by the Spirit. This post helps us respond in prayer, not from performance, but from our identity in Christ.

In Repentance – Seeing Our Sin and Savoring Christ, Psalm 32 invites us to experience the joy of confession and the freedom of forgiveness. David describes the weight of hidden sin, the relief of being honest before God, and the blessing of being covered by grace. Through Jesus, our transgressions are lifted, our sins are covered, and our guilt is removed. This post explores how daily repentance renews our communion with God and fills our lives with gladness.

In Fruit – Living the Gospel through the Word, James 1:22–27 challenges us not to just hear the Word but to do it. A Gospel-shaped life is one that looks intently into the perfect law of liberty—Jesus Himself—and becomes a Gospel-lover, Gospel-liver, and Gospel-giver. This post calls us to gaze deeply at Christ, respond in love, and live out the fruit of real discipleship.

In Silence – Waiting and Listening in the Presence of God, we look at Psalm 62 as a picture of discipleship rooted in stillness. When David was surrounded and weary, he didn’t fight or flee—he waited in silence. This post unpacks how that silence points to Jesus, our true Rock and Refuge. In Him, we find the strength to stop striving, listen, and trust. Learn how to practice gospel-centered silence as a rhythm of grace in your walk with God.

In A Pattern: A Rule of Life for Citizens of Heaven, we see that discipleship is not aimless. Drawing from Philippians 3:12–21, this post explores Paul’s example of pressing on toward Christ and introduces the idea of a “rule of life”, a Spirit-led rhythm that keeps Jesus central. We’re invited to reject patterns of legalism and selfishness, and instead embrace intentional practices that grow us in love, worship, and mission as citizens of heaven.