When You Can’t Find Your Faith
What do you do when faith has gone quiet, prayer feels empty, and the certainty you once had is gone? A reflection on doubt, grief, and the Jesus who has not changed His mind about you.
Writing for the big questions of Christian belief — Scripture, the church, suffering, the cross, resurrection, and what the gospel actually means in real life. Thoughtful, rooted, and written for people who want more than easy answers.
What do you do when faith has gone quiet, prayer feels empty, and the certainty you once had is gone? A reflection on doubt, grief, and the Jesus who has not changed His mind about you.
The end times are not mainly about getting out. They are about the God who is making all things new.
When a church hurts you, it is natural to want distance from everything associated with it. But the institution that failed you is not the same as the wider Christian tradition it was supposed to be keeping. This piece explores why some older things are still worth serious engagement.
Some things taught in churches were not ancient tradition or hard truth. They were just wrong. This article names those patterns clearly and makes room for grief, anger, and honest healing.
The church is not a moral improvement society, a political coalition, or a therapeutic service. It has one job: to announce the gospel.
A lot of what people are deconstructing is not the core of Christianity, but the cultural assumptions that were handed to them as though God Himself had required them. This piece looks at Tier Three questions: the wallpaper, not the load-bearing walls.
What if worship is not a performance you have to pull off, but a song already underway that you are invited to enter?
Why are so many people deconstructing? This article looks at the real failures, questions, and pressures beneath it—and why examining what you were taught is not the problem.
A lot of people are tearing down their faith right now, and some of what they were given really does deserve to go. But not every part of the house needs to burn just because one room was full of smoke. This piece offers a way to sort what you are actually looking at: the load-bearing walls, the built-in features, the wallpaper, and the rot.
If God is good and all-powerful, why does He allow suffering? This piece looks honestly at the limits of easy answers, the failure of shallow theology, and the deeper Christian claim that God does not stay outside our pain, but enters it in Christ.