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Grace for the Part of the Road You Can See

 Chapter 1: The Morning That Asked for More Than You Had The alarm goes off, and before your feet touch the floor, your mind is already running. There is a bill you still need to deal with, a conversation you have been avoiding, a person who needs something from you, and a quiet fear that today may demand more strength than you have. You reach for your phone, see the time, and wonder how the day can feel heavy before it has even begun. Maybe you found your way here because you needed Jesus’ invitation to the weary and burdened to feel real in an ordinary morning, not only in a church service or a familiar verse. Maybe you also needed finding hope when today feels heavier than expected to become more than a pleasant idea. You need something you can carry into the kitchen, the car, the workplace, the waiting room, or wherever this day is taking you. The first thing I want you to hear is simple. You do not have to feel ready for the whole day before you begin it. You do not need ...

Before You Say Amen: What Praying in Jesus’ Name Requires of Us

Chapter 1: The Words We Say Without Hearing The prayer lasted less than twenty seconds. A family sat around a kitchen table, the food was getting cold, someone’s phone buzzed near a plate, and the person praying moved quickly through familiar words before ending with, “In Jesus’ name, amen.” No one had done anything wrong. The prayer was sincere. Yet the moment passed so quickly that the closing phrase was barely noticed. That is why the meaning of praying in Jesus’ name deserves more than a quick explanation in a video. It deserves an honest look at how those words enter ordinary life and what they ask of the person saying them. Most of us did not decide to make “In Jesus’ name” automatic. We learned it by hearing other people pray. Parents said it at the dinner table. Pastors said it in church. Friends said it in hospital rooms and parking lots. Over time, the phrase became the familiar doorway into “amen.” The related question raised in how Jesus teaches us to examine our motives...

The Mirror Before the Correction

Chapter 1: The Rule at the Dinner Table A father sits down at the dinner table after a long day and asks his teenage son to put away his phone. The son keeps glancing at the screen while his mother is talking, and the father finally says, “When someone is speaking to you, you need to show respect and listen.” The correction is reasonable. The son puts the phone face down, and for a moment the point seems settled. Less than a minute later, the father’s own phone lights up beside his plate. He picks it up, reads the message, and starts typing while his wife is answering a question he asked her. That small moment explains why what Jesus meant by judge not is so often missed. The problem is not that the father recognized disrespect. The problem is that he demanded a standard from someone else that he had not first applied to himself. That same tension appears in the Christian lesson of examining yourself before correcting others . Jesus did not tell people to stop noticing harmful behavio...