At the muddy edge of the Jordan, God speaks a name before anything is earned or achieved. Baptism reveals a grace that steps into our mess and claims us as beloved, delighted in, and forever God’s own.
At the muddy edge of the Jordan, God speaks a name before anything is earned or achieved. Baptism reveals a grace that steps into our mess and claims us as beloved, delighted in, and forever God’s own.
You are not your job title, your inbox, or your output. This Labor Day, reclaim the truth: your worth is not earned through exhaustion. It is received through grace.
You’re not a self-made somebody—you’re a beloved nobody, saved by grace. This sermon reminds us what Lent is really about.
Easter invites us not to run faster but to stop and listen—to remember that Christ is alive, knows our name, and has been by our side the whole time. Sometimes all it takes is a pause to hear the promise.
As the Old Testament ends and the Gospels begin, we are invited to remember who we are and whose we are. Through scripture, repetition, and sacred memory, God writes our story on our hearts—again and again.