Latest posts
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What Writing UNITED Taught Me About Disunity
There is a particular kind of burden that arrives not as a sudden conviction but as a slow accumulation. You do not wake up one morning resolved to write a book about biblical oneness. You simply start noticing. And then you cannot stop noticing. That is where UNITED began — not with an argument, but…
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What Biblical Oneness Actually Looks Like on Tuesday
One of the easiest mistakes to make when discussing church unity is to leave the subject suspended in abstraction. We speak about oneness, fellowship, community, and the body of Christ in ways that sound theologically rich while remaining practically undefined. The result is that many believers affirm biblical unity in principle while possessing almost no…
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The Misallocation of Human Resources in the Church
I once sat on a team developing a membership class for a church. Wanting perspective, I looked at how a well-known and highly respected church within Reformed circles handled the process. I expected something highly sophisticated. Instead, what struck me first was how simple the process actually was. But something else unsettled me more deeply.…
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Ransomed for Priesthood
In Book of Revelation 5, the four living creatures and the twenty-four elders fall before the Lamb and sing a new song. It has content. It gives a reason. “Worthy are you to take the scroll and to open its seals, for you were slain, and by your blood you ransomed people for God from…
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Have We Misread 2 Timothy 2:2? The Hidden Gap in Modern Theological Training
There are moments in the life of the church when unease is not a threat but a gift. It signals that something important deserves closer attention—not dismissal, not reaction, but careful examination. One such area is how we form and recognize those who teach. Paul’s instruction in 2 Timothy 2:2 is often quoted, regularly affirmed,…
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The Unity That Already Exists
Most teaching on Christian unity starts with behavior. “Try harder to get along.” “Overlook differences.” The result is exhaustion or pretense. Your lived experience says division is real. The church splits. You avoid that person after the business meeting. You quote doctrine at each other instead of bearing burdens. If unity is only a command,…
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What This Ministry Is — And Where It Stands
There is a kind of honesty available from the pew that is harder to sustain from the pulpit. Not because pastors are dishonest. But because institutional responsibility shapes what can be said, how carefully it must be framed, and what must remain unspoken for the sake of the room. The ordinary member carries none of…
