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Latest Articles
Most people have ended a prayer with “in Jesus’ name” without stopping to ask what it actually means. This article unpacks John 14:13-14 and why “in My name” is not a formula — it’s a posture.
The disciples were afraid because Jesus was leaving. And His answer — “I go to prepare a place for you” — is one of the most misread promises in Scripture. The preparation He’s describing isn’t heavenly construction work. A few verses later He explains exactly what it is: “I am the way.” He doesn’t prepare the place by building it. He prepares it by becoming the way to it.
Most people read John 14:12 as a challenge to outperform Jesus. But the “greater works” were never about your faith being big enough. They were about Him leaving, sending the Spirit, and the gospel going global. That changes everything.
Jesus said two things that still unsettle readers: hate your father and mother and love your enemies. Both sound extreme. Both feel impossible. But neither was about moral shock value. They were exposing something far deeper — and pointing to a righteousness only Christ could fulfill.
You can be a sincere doctor and still harm a patient if you mishandle the medicine. The same is true in preaching. Grace must be handled with precision, because the human conscience is fragile and assurance must rest fully on Christ’s finished work.
Tired of trying to measure up spiritually? Rest in Grace explains what the finished work of Christ actually means and why your standing with God does not depend on your performance. Discover the freedom of living from righteousness already given.
Hebrews 11:6 is often used to pressure believers into trying harder to believe. But the verse is not about intensity of faith. It is about location. Outside of faith in Christ, pleasing God was never possible. This verse draws a boundary, not a benchmark.
When Scripture speaks of “the promises of God,” it is not talking about money, healing, or improved circumstances. It is announcing something far deeper and already fulfilled - Christ Himself. When the promise is rightly understood, faith stops chasing outcomes and begins resting in what has already been given.
Many believers are quietly tired when it comes to money. Tired of wondering why giving did not work. Tired of measuring faith by income. Does the Cross guarantee financial prosperity, or has something deeper already been secured? This article explores what Scripture promises about provision — and what it never guarantees.
Does God still heal? Scripture says yes, but not in the way many of us were taught. This article separates what the Bible actually promises about healing from the quiet burdens believers have been asked to carry.
NAILED IT!
Has Arrived!
NAILED IT! isn’t about your effort—it’s about Jesus’ perfection.
Discover how grace hit the mark once and for all.
“This book didn’t just explain grace—it let me breathe it in. For the first time, I stopped striving and started resting in what Jesus already finished.”
“Reading NAILED IT! felt like someone turned on the lights. I’ve been in church for years, but this book helped me finally see the difference between trying to earn God's love and living from it.”