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When God Tests the Questions We Ask — A Journey Through Mark Chapter Twelve

 Mark chapter twelve does not begin with answers. It begins with a story, and not a gentle one. Jesus speaks of a vineyard, tenants, servants, and a son who is killed. It is a parable, but it lands with the weight of a verdict. The vineyard is not the problem. The care is not the problem. The harvest is not the problem. The problem is the human heart when it forgets who the vineyard belongs to. This chapter is about ownership, authority, and the dangerous habit of pretending that what God entrusted to us was always ours. That is why the religious leaders feel exposed. They recognize themselves in the story, and instead of repenting, they start planning how to silence the One telling it. Mark shows us something sobering here: when truth threatens power, power often tries to kill truth. The parable reveals a God who keeps sending messengers even after they are beaten, shamed, and rejected. That alone should move us. God is not quick to give up on His vineyard. He is patient to a fau...

When Faith Walks into History Instead of Hiding from It

  There is something deeply human about wanting certainty. We want to know that what we believe is not just comforting but true. We want our faith to be more than a feeling, more than a tradition we inherited, more than a story we repeat because it sounds beautiful. We want to know that it rests on something solid. Yet for many people, the moment faith brushes up against history, they grow uneasy. They worry that questions will weaken belief, that investigation will unravel devotion, that looking too closely will somehow make Jesus smaller. I used to think that way myself. I thought faith and facts lived in different rooms of the house and should never meet. But over time, I discovered something surprising. Faith does not shrink when it steps into history. It stands taller. It breathes deeper. It becomes calmer. It becomes more honest. And honesty is always where God feels most at home. For years, I heard the same bold claim repeated again and again. People would say there were te...

When the King Walks Into the City and the Temple Falls Silent

 There are moments in Scripture that feel like thunderclaps in history, not because they are loud, but because they change the air. Mark 11 is one of those chapters. It opens with a parade and ends with a question about authority, but what happens in between is not a story about crowds or trees or buildings. It is a story about what happens when God comes too close to the systems we’ve built to manage Him. It is a story about expectation colliding with reality. It is a story about the danger of looking religious while living fruitless. And it is a story that refuses to stay in the past, because everything Jesus does in this chapter is still happening wherever faith becomes performance and prayer becomes transaction. Jesus enters Jerusalem not as a general on a warhorse but as a pilgrim on a borrowed animal. That detail alone carries more weight than we usually give it. Borrowed things tell the truth about who really owns power. A king who needs nothing still chooses to need somet...

The Day I Spoke to a Stranger and God Spoke to Us Both

 There are moments in life that do not arrive with thunder or announcement. They do not knock loudly. They do not interrupt your schedule in ways that feel important at first. They arrive quietly, disguised as ordinary time, wrapped in small sentences and passing thoughts. One of those moments is when you look at another human being and decide to speak kindness instead of silence. Not because you are required to. Not because you are correcting them. Not because you have an answer. But simply because something inside you says, “Say something that brings life.” That is how this message was born. Not as a sermon. Not as a theological argument. Not as a motivational speech designed to stir emotion for its own sake. It was born out of a simple impulse: to look at someone and say hello, and to mean it. To tell them they are doing a good job, and to mean it. To tell them not to worry about everything all at once, and to mean it. To tell them that today can be a good day, not because cir...