Baptism marks God’s enduring claim—engraved by mercy, lived with open hands, and calling us to daily choices of grace.
Jesus’ fire disrupts false peace, clears away what suffocates life, and refines us for transformation into a community that bears lasting fruit.
Because he lives, you are being made new—through honesty, vulnerability, and the Spirit’s call to show up unmasked and truly alive.
Resurrection turns endings into beginnings. What feels final may be the soil where new life is already breaking through.
God names us salt and light. Faithfulness means shining boldly, not blending in with the world’s fading wisdom.
What if God’s new thing is already here—and we’re missing it? Let a breath prayer guide you to stillness, release, and holy attention.
What if grief and joy aren’t opposites but companions? Ezra 3 invites us to hold both as we honor the past and welcome God’s unfolding future.
Join the Spirit’s work already unfolding in your life and community. Let go of waiting and respond to the present movement of God.
To be a saint is to share in Christ’s suffering and resurrection. All Saints Sunday reminds us we are shaped by death and made alive in love.
To be born again is to be remade by God’s mercy—a transformation that connects us to God's life, will, and work.




