spiritual formation

  • Paul’s prayer in Colossians 1:9–14 treats gratitude not as a polite add-on but as a mark of spiritual maturity. When thanksgiving becomes a way of walking—shaping endurance, patience, joy, and community—it resists fear, dismantles pride, and roots daily life in God’s rescue and grace.

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  • Groaning Is Not Failure

    Groaning is not spiritual failure—it is ethical protest. In Romans 8, Paul says those who have the Spirit groan. Why? Because the Spirit tunes us to God’s future, and makes us feel just how wrong the present still is.

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  • I. Introduction The challenge of speaking meaningfully about divine Personhood today is as much cultural as it is theological. In the modern imagination, the word “person” typically conjures an image of an autonomous individual—a self-contained subject with private consciousness, personal preferences, and the right to define their own identity. This is the air we breathe:…

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  • Many Christians unknowingly embrace a subtle lie—that salvation is escape from the physical world. But Scripture teaches something far more powerful: redemption. This post exposes the dangers of dualism—spirit vs. body, heaven vs. earth—and reclaims the holistic gospel of Jesus Christ, who came not to discard creation, but to restore it. The gospel makes all…

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  • A theological reflection on Philippians 2:6–14 exploring Jesus before time, in time, and beyond time—revealing who God is and what it means for us.

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