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Character Still Matters More Than Winning

For years, I’ve struggled to put my finger on why I’ve been so intuitively disconnected from my Republican Party. Yes, to the shock of many, I am still registered in the GOP. But if I’m frank about the whole thing, I’ve always been more concerned with how the “upside-down and backwards way of Jesus” intersects with the messy world we live in than with the political parties themselves. My ballot is shaped less by loyalty to a particular political ideology and more by my attempt to discern how the Sermon on the Mount can inform public policy for all who bear the image of God.

Nonetheless, my disheartenedness with the Grand Ol’ Party has only grown over the last decade. So I’ve continued to churn on why. Why am I so outside of the tribe I was once in? What shifted? What were the policy issues? And it finally dawned on me:

I never became a Republican primarily because of the platform or a set of policies. It was for one reason only: character first.

Like many evangelicals of my generation, I had certain issues that mattered deeply to me. But what first drew me to the GOP in my twenties was a conviction I heard repeated over and over again: character counts. In fact, character was presented as the nonstarter for all leadership.

The message was clear. A candidate could have all the right policies, all the right positions, and all the right promises, but if they lacked proven character, they were unfit to lead – hard stop. Character was the fault line, the watershed issue, and the non-negotiable standard that could not be compromised.

Going a step further, I believed the primary process existed, in part, to protect that conviction. “We the people” of the “character-first party” would never allow someone who might undermine this stalwart value to become our candidate. Character was not simply an issue among many. It was the foundation beneath all the others; without it, we labor in vain – or worse, for our vanity.

Now I’m in my mid-fifties. And over the last decade, I have watched that conviction steadily erode.

What has surprised me most is not simply that character has become an elective rather than a compulsory standard regarding leadership, but also how often its absence is excused. And all for what? For policy gains? For political victories? For social change? For fiscal responsibility? To combat the left? The culture? The uncertainty of the future?

I often hear, “Yeah, but the character of the opposition on the left is _____________!” (fill in the blank). As though the new standard is that character no longer matters, so long as the other side is worse. But that was never the principle I thought we were advancing. If character truly matters, it must matter even when it costs us something. It must matter even when it means losing. Otherwise, character is not a conviction. It’s just a platitude.

Personally, I would rather lose while upholding the belief that character matters than win by convincing myself that poor character is tolerable if I can hold my nose long enough. Credibility is lost the moment we excuse in our own leaders the very things we once – oftentimes still – condemned in others.

Unfortunately, the result has been a seismic shift. We once argued that a good leader must first be a good person. Increasingly, we seem to argue that effectiveness matters more than integrity, strength more than goodness, winning more than virtue. And every time the absence of character succeeds, it only proves the point more. Maybe character never really mattered after all.

And that’s the hinge on which my disheartened soul swings.

For me, that is the sole – and soul – great loss. Not political accountability but moral credibility.

I joined a party that once insisted character was essential to leadership. Today, it is often treated as incidental. Which then sacrifices credibility.

And when credibility is lost, it is notoriously difficult to recover.

And when character no longer commands respect, power is often used to do what integrity once did.

And when the carrot of character is proven to be optional, the stick of control is reached for as the most effective substitute.

And when this happens, the cycle can only spin downward because we don’t require anything different except more of the same.

Yet, I still believe what I was taught all those years ago. Character matters. It matters in our homes, churches, businesses, communities, and especially in our politics. Wise policy matters. Competence matters. But character matters most. Character is still first.

Maybe that’s why I’ve felt politically homeless. Not because I care most about politics, but because I’ve always believed character comes before politics. And perhaps more tragically along the way, I’ve watched much of my evangelical tribe trade away its witness and moral credibility for the idols of political power, certainty, and victory. Things the Scriptures would call the spirits of the age.

Personally, I would rather lose while preserving character than win by excusing it away. Why? Because when we abandon our own standards, the world takes notice. But when we hold to them no matter the cost, they notice that too.

The Southern Baptists May Have Just Banned More Than Women Pastors.

I am a graduate of a Southern Baptist Seminary, but I am not a member of the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC). So my thoughts come from an outsider perspective, but an adjacent one.

The SBC has once again moved to canonize its position that women should not be called pastors and should not teach men in gathered church settings. While many within the SBC view this as a necessary defense of biblical faithfulness, I find myself drawn to a broader concern than the specific conclusion.

My concern here is not primarily about where one lands on women serving as pastors, though I do have a primary interest in that bigger question. My concern is what happens when a denomination takes a debated question and attempts to permanently settle it for future generations through constitutional force.

History suggests that rarely ends well. Trust me, I have been on the receiving end of canonized denominational dogma.

The reality is that theology is not static. The Scriptures do not change, but our understanding of them often does. Christians today understand many passages differently than believers did centuries ago. We have access to ancient documents, inscriptions, papyri, and linguistic discoveries that previous generations never possessed. Scholars continue to sharpen our understanding of Greek grammar, Hebrew idioms, ancient cultural practices, and the meaning of words within their original contexts.

In my own three decades of studying the Scriptures, I have watched discoveries in linguistics and the ancient world overturn interpretations that many Christians once considered permanently settled. Some understandings stood virtually unquestioned for centuries, only to be reconsidered when new evidence, better lexical data, or broader manuscript discoveries provided a clearer picture of how words and phrases were actually being used in the first century. What was once presented as certainty are now shown to hang there with a level of ambiguity. What was once considered obvious sometimes became more nuanced.

That does not mean the text changes. It means our understanding improves. The history of biblical scholarship is filled with examples of interpreters revisiting long-held conclusions in light of better information. Humility requires us to acknowledge that future generations may see things more clearly than we do, just as we sometimes see things more clearly than those who came before us. It is nothing less than hubris to believe that our generation, in one small nook of the historic and universal Church, stuck the landing for all time on a theological topic.

The church has always been learning.

This should not frighten us. It should humble us.

Every generation inherits the responsibility of wrestling honestly with the Scriptures. Every generation must ask whether long-held interpretations accurately reflect what the biblical authors intended to communicate.

But when a denomination effectively declares that future generations may not revisit a question, it risks forcing tomorrow’s church into yesterday’s debates. Instead of preserving unity, such actions often guarantee future division. The fact that the SBC has disaffiliated churches over this one issue while remaining aligned on virtually every other major theological conviction reveals just how elevated a traditionally secondary issue has become.

Yet, tragically, church history is full of examples.

And, the irony is that many of the people who now insist that the question is settled belong to traditions that were themselves born from challenging settled interpretations.

What especially concerns me is the way this conversation is often framed. Increasingly, the debate is presented as a choice between being conservative or liberal, faithful or progressive, biblical or compromised. It’s loaded as a clear and present danger, with dog-whistle nomenclature, before it’s openly and sincerely investigated.

However, many conservative scholars, pastors, and churches affirm the authority of the Scriptures, reject progressive theology, and still reach different conclusions regarding women serving in leadership roles, holding ecclesial titles, teaching in church services, and influencing the direction of the church alongside men. They do not see their position as a concession to culture. They see it as an attempt to faithfully interpret the relevant texts.

One may disagree with their conclusions. One may even strongly disagree. But to reduce the discussion to “conservative versus liberal” is to replace exegesis with tribalism.

What makes this framing especially dangerous is that it creates a false measuring stick for future generations since the question quietly shifts from “What do the Scriptures teach?” to “What kind of church are you?”

Once that happens, the debate is no longer merely about interpretation. It becomes about identity. And yes, identity politics is as much, if not more, a feature of evangelicalism as any left-wing social group.

Tragically, then, if a church appoints a woman as a pastor or elder, many will no longer ask how that church arrived at its conclusion. They will simply assume the church has become compromised. The label arrives before curiosity or conversation ever begins.

But reality is even far more complicated than that.

One may disagree with those conclusions. But it is simply inaccurate to suggest that every church with women pastors or elders has abandoned a conservative hermeneutic. Many churches arrive at different conclusions while still approaching Scripture with a high view of its authority and a serious commitment to careful exegesis.1

When the labels “liberal” vs. “conservative” become the framework (did you know those words are not in the Scriptures as virtues or vices), the issue becomes a case of the tail wagging the dog.

Instead of allowing the Scriptures to drive the discussion, we let political and tribal categories determine which conclusions are permissible before the study even begins. The category becomes the argument.

The result is a dismissive “or” where there may actually be room for an “and.”

Conservative and open to women serving in leadership.

Committed to the authority of the Scriptures and persuaded by a different interpretation of several contested passages.

Whether one agrees with those positions is not the point. The point is that these combinations exist. Once we deny that reality, we stop evaluating interpretations on their biblical merits and start evaluating them according to which tribe they appear to strengthen or threaten.

That is not theological discernment. It is boundary maintenance.

And history suggests that whenever tribal identity takes precedence over careful interpretation, the church inevitably pays a price.

The moment a position is declared invalid simply because it falls on the wrong side of a doctrinal, political, or cultural binary, the discussion has ceased to be primarily about the Scriptures.

Ironically, this is its own form of undermining the very Scriptures groups claim to protect. Whereas liberalism tends to extract texts from the Scriptures, legalism tends to inject more than is there. Yet, legalism is not merely adding rules. It is also the tendency to create boundaries that prevent faithful believers from honestly wrestling with the text. It occurs whenever institutional certainty begins to outrun biblical debate.

The issue becomes even more complicated when we remember how rarely the word “pastor ” actually appears in the New Testament. The term is surprisingly rare. The vast majority of leadership discussions focus on elders, overseers, shepherds, teachers, apostles, prophets, and deacons.

Yet modern church structures often import assumptions about the pastoral office that would have been foreign to the first century. To make the title pastor the defining line of orthodoxy seems particularly precarious when the New Testament itself places so little emphasis on the title.

This is one reason I worry that the SBC’s decision reflects something larger than careful interpretation. It may also reflect the cultural moment. Dog, meet your already wagging tail.

We are living through an era shaped by reactions against wokeness, identity politics, and broader cultural shifts regarding gender. Some of those reactions are understandable. Some are even necessary.

But every generation has blind spots.

Every generation is tempted to mistake its cultural battles for biblical battles.

The church should always ask whether it is defending the Scriptures or simply baptizing the anxieties of its own age.

Future generations will inevitably revisit these questions. They always do. The question is not whether future generations will revisit this issue. The question is whether we will leave them room to do so. Will they inherit a framework that encourages careful study and humble dialogue, or one that forces them into another painful denominational fight?

At Redemption Church, we are currently investigating this question ourselves. We have not treated the matter as settled merely because others have. Nor have we assumed that newer conclusions are necessarily better than older ones.

When I drafted our founding documents fifteen years ago, I can guarantee that I was shaped by a host of factors. Some were reactive. We were coming out of a four-year challenge within an egalitarian denomination. Some were dogmatic. At the time, I was becoming decidedly more Calvinistic, due in no small part to my reaction against that same dastardly Arminian denomination. And some influences, in hindsight, have proven far less healthy than I recognized at the time. The cool cowboy Calvinism and complementarianism of the era—Acts 29, James MacDonald, Mars Hill, Mark Driscoll, and others—shaped my perspectives then, as they did for many evangelical leaders of my generation. Perspectives that we are all now critiquing.

The reality is that none of us interpret Scripture or formulate theology in a vacuum. We are all shaped, to varying degrees, by our experiences, our reactions, our cultural climate, and the zeitgeist of our age. That does not mean our conclusions are necessarily wrong. It simply means we should approach them with a measure of humility. And it is precisely why there should always be room to wrestle, revisit, and reexamine our assumptions in the light of Scripture.

So, like my sophomore algebra teacher always said, it’s time to check our work. And as I’ve done that, I’ve found things I said and wrote years ago that I no longer believe are as clear or in alignment with the Scriptures as I once thought.

Thus, we are attempting to listen carefully to the Scriptures, to church history, to the best scholarship available, and to one another.

Where that process ultimately leads remains to be seen.

But I am convinced of this:

The church is healthiest when it approaches difficult questions with humility rather than certainty, with curiosity rather than fear, and with confidence that truth has nothing to fear from honest investigation.

The Scriptures have survived every generation’s questions.

They do not need protection from careful study.

They need people willing to study them carefully.

  1. As a sidebar, I do believe the label “conservative hermeneutic” can sometimes hinder authentic Scriptural study. It subtly introduces a predetermined expectation that the text must be read in a particular way before the investigation even begins. Ideally, our first commitment should not be to reading Scripture conservatively or progressively, but to reading it honestly and allowing the text to challenge our assumptions wherever it leads. But that is a different discussion for a different day. ↩︎

Let’s Talk About Orthodoxy, Unorthodoxy, & Heresy Pt. 1

This topic has swirled around in my mind ever since I took a seminary class on the evolution of theology in church history. Not church history, but how different doctrines rose and fell and divided Christianity into thousands of factions over 2000 years. It was perhaps the only class I found to be truly novel, and surprisingly honest about the inconsistent and messy business of practicing theology (see “practicing” here in the same way you would see practicing medicine, it’s important, but not always as certain or settled as we like to believe). The gaping hole in the course is that it quickly diverged to only track doctrinal development in the western church of Catholics and eventually Protestants, which automatically cuts out a full 1/3 of historic Christianity, but it was still eye-opening.   

While a number of things have prompted me to begin this series lately, a headline I came across this week finally made me pull the trigger. The headline read, “Kirk Cameron’s Position on Hell Is ‘Unorthodox’ but Not ‘Heresy,’ Says Apologist Wesley Huff.”  Now, my point here isn’t to get into the weeds of that discussion in this installment. Rather, I think it’s interesting that somehow Wes Huff, whom I appreciate, especially for his sometimes surprising candor regarding the overstated facts by conservative apologists on manuscript transmission and textual criticism, has become the voice of pronouncing what is orthodox, unorthodox, heterodox (I left this one out of the title – too wordy), or heretical (see below for a definition of each).

Here is why this type of assessment has always sat uneasily with me. The challenge with declarations about what constitutes orthodoxy or heresy is that there is no transcendent, divinely inspired rulebook that draws clear lines for all Christians as people wrestle with the implications of Scripture. Terms like orthodoxy, unorthodoxy, heterodoxy, and heresy often exist in the eye of each group’s doctrinal beholder. Thus, they are human assessments, yet often presented as divine declarations.

For example, the Protestant “orthodoxy” of salvation by grace through faith alone is deemed a damnable “heresy” by the Catholic Church, as articulated at the Council of Trent. The same holds in reverse in the polemical writings of the Reformers and in confessional statements such as the Augsburg Confession. So one group’s orthodoxy becomes another group’s heresy. But in the end, it is still people rendering judgments about other people, arguing from the same Bible through differing dogmatic paradigms.

The same could be said of original sin. The Eastern Orthodox Church, one of the oldest expressions of Christianity, regards the Augustinian view of original sin as a heretical error (they use different terminology, but the idea is the same) and not represented in apostolic teaching. Personally, my issue with Augustine is that I find him more informed by Stoic-Platonism than Judaism, but I digress. Anyway, if you trace Augustine’s reasoning for the version of original sin he promoted (see especially City of God XIV), it is rooted in the idea that Adam’s first sin, after eating the fruit, was an involuntary erection. Yes, you read that right.

Augustine believed that before the fruit, Adam and Eve possessed perfect rational control over their bodies. Bodily functions, including sexual arousal, were fully subject to the will, and sexual union occurred calmly, deliberately, and with reason over passion. After sin, such mastery was shattered, and libido took charge. For Augustine, the first experiential consequence of Adam’s sin was the emergence of bodily movements that no longer obeyed rational command. The most vivid and humiliating example of this loss of mastery was involuntary sexual arousal. Adam felt lust for his wife, had an involuntary erection, and acted on both. From this, shame follows immediately, hence Adam and Eve covered their nakedness.

Thus, his conclusion – from this wildly Freudian speculation (see his Confessions, especially books II, III, VI, and VIII to get perhaps the real genesis of his take on Genesis) – was that original sin is transmitted through sex. I have seen some reading into the white lines between verses, but this is as bad as the time I heard a pastor tell people to write the word “Rapture” in the white space between Revelation 3 and 4, a book of the Bible that literally warns of judgment on anyone who “adds to or takes away from the words of its prophecy.” Yet this is the genesis of our Western orthodoxy, which in the East is regarded as heresy.

I say all of this simply as a reminder that while we may use categories like orthodox, unorthodox, heterodox, or heretical, these labels do not speak for God with the level of certainty they sometimes imply. They function more as internal tribal benchmarks set by one community to caution against what they perceive as doctrinal error in another, and often rush to “we are extremely right = orthodox” and “you are extremely wrong = heretical.” This, in and of itself, should give us pause, given how much theological evolution has occurred over 3500 years of Scriptural interpretation and wrestling. Besides, we Protestants are the Johnny-come-latelys after all.  

So to conclude Part One, let’s end by defining the terms, which I am sure some people will push back on because, well, that is the very point I am making about there being no single papal voice that defines everything for everyone. But I have to offer something. Then, in Part Two, we will dive deeper into how to navigate these trigger words and how to better measure the merits behind their use.

Orthodox: Beliefs, teachings, or practices that align with the accepted, official, or historically affirmed doctrine of a particular religious tradition.

Nuance: Considered “right belief” (from Greek orthos = straight or right, doxa = belief or opinion). Functions as the doctrinal center or boundary marker. What counts as orthodox depends on the group (Catholic, Protestant, Eastern Orthodox, etc.).

In short: Inside the group’s doctrinal fence, but with points that sometimes differ from those of other groups. Usually, fine-tuning subcategories beyond the historic Christian Creed.

Unorthodox: Beliefs or views that differ from standard or traditional doctrine but are not necessarily condemned.

Nuance: Can be innovative, speculative, or unconventional. May raise eyebrows but not alarms. Often tolerated as minority opinions, theological exploration, or non-essential disagreements.

In short: Outside the norm of the group, but not against the historic Christian Creed.

Heterodox: Beliefs that deviate from established orthodoxy in more serious or substantive ways, though not always formally condemned.

Nuance: From Greek heteros, meaning other or different. Seen as doctrinally problematic or theologically risky. May conflict with core teachings but stop short of outright denial of essential doctrines. Often used in academic or ecumenical dialogue.

In short: Significantly off-center of the group, concerning but not universally rejected by the historic Christian Creed.

Heresy: Beliefs or teachings that directly contradict essential, defining doctrines of a faith and are formally rejected or condemned by that tradition.

Nuance: Denies or distorts core tenets (for example, the Trinity or the divinity of Christ in historic Christianity, think contrary to the Nicene Creed). Historically, subject to church discipline, excommunication, or conciliar condemnation. From Greek hairesis, meaning “choice” or “sect,” later used for a divisive doctrinal faction.

In short: Outside the historic Christian fence entirely that all groups universally see as the center.

My Burden And Motivation As An Evangelical Pastor: Tending To Our Logs Before “Their” Specks Regarding Culture, Politics, and Partisanship.

I’ve been thinking about this for some time, and in light of some recent commentary, I thought it might be helpful to lay out my thoughts and motivations for why I address the issues I do and the topics I tend to engage, be it on social media, my blog, or my podcast, The Everyday Missionary. I refrain from most of this on Sundays, on purpose, because my objectives and audience there are more nuanced than on other platforms of communication. Quite honestly, the people who make up Redemption Church already tend to get what I am getting at, which is why I use other forums as supplementation. They are a truly remarkable community, and I am deeply grateful to be a part of it.

Now, this is by no means exhaustive and, in the interest of brevity, will inevitably rely on some caricature, but I hope it offers a basic sense of what I’m trying to communicate—or perhaps more accurately, why I choose to communicate about the things I do.

In my casual observation, there are three general postures I see among my fellow evangelical pastors when it comes to how they use their position and platform.

First, there are those who generally choose to stay out of the fray when it comes to policy, politics, and culturally sensitive matters. The benefit of this posture is that it often avoids criticism from either side since the focus is simply on spiritual stuff. The downside, however, is that it can miss meaningful opportunities to connect Jesus and Scripture to real-life situations, areas where both are well equipped to speak with wisdom and conviction. I sincerely don’t fault this position, and quite honestly which I felt I could take that track. It would make my life a whole lot more peaceful.

Second, there are those who engage very directly by calling out what they perceive as the sins of groups they view as unsaved, morally compromised, or not as doctrinally aligned as their tradition asserts. This often includes sharp critiques of cultural movements and political positions associated with the Left or progressive causes. The strength of this approach is that it resonates deeply with a significant portion of the evangelical base and is frequently affirmed as courageous truth-telling. It’s also the fastest way to build an audience. The cost, however, is that it can leave those being addressed feeling judged or even disliked by people who claim to follow Jesus—the same Jesus who, in the Gospels, seemed to genuinely enjoy, love, and befriend those on the margins or those with complicated, messed-up, scandalous lives.

Within this posture, I also observe a considerable investment of energy in defending evangelicalism, its partisan alignments, and particularly its close relationship with the current administration’s evangelical political ecosystem. What often proves more difficult is a willingness to acknowledge or repent of our own inconsistencies, blind spots, and failures. As a pastor, I regularly encounter people who are genuinely curious about Jesus, yet hesitant or resistant because of the way His name has been publicly represented among some of these groups. I wish I could take this road; I imagine my podcast would be larger. But for reasons that will soon be apparent, my conscience will not permit it.

Third, there are those like myself, an evangelical speaking to evangelicals, about cultural evangelicalism. Those who are more concerned with addressing the log within evangelicalism than the speck they see in the broader culture. This posture echoes the prophets, who consistently called Israel to account for failures of mercy, justice, and faithfulness to God’s heart for the nations. It also reflects the ministry of Jesus, who spoke far more often about the hypocrisy of God’s people than about the moral failures of Rome. The downside here is that this approach rarely earns affirmation from one’s own evangelical tribe, and as Scripture itself asserts, it does not often find a warm welcome. It also doesn’t tend to draw an audience as much as ire. And yet, as the apostle reminds us, “judgment begins with the house of God.” Unfortunately for me, this is what the Spirit has placed on me as my burden.

In my own context of the Pacific Northwest, I feel a burden to reach people whom I often see the broader evangelical world either belittling or fighting—frequently over specks—while overlooking our own planks. Yet, the apostle warns more sharply against the religious self-righteousness of Romans 2 than the pagan excesses of Romans 1, concluding with the haunting indictment, “The name of God is blasphemed among the Gentiles (disbelievers/deconstructors/nones/I love Jesus but not the Church-ers/I just can’t do it any more-ers) because of you.” Therefore, for me, this is not about equal time or political balance between left and right. It is about addressing what I believe is a harmful “lampstand stripping” trend within evangelicalism, where our potential hypocrisy is, quite literally as Jesus warned, “shutting up the kingdom” to those we are called to reach and causing “little ones” to stumble away from the faith. Too often, this happens because our collective reputation is more about advocating against than advocating for. Demonizing their offenses and downplaying ours. It’s about strength, control, and personal security over the way of sacrifice, humility, and becoming the least to reach the more. In fact, those last two references above from Jesus are directed, not at the permissive Romans or syncretistic Herodians, the former was Yahweh professing, Scripture reading, doctrinally conservative Pharisees (Matthew 23) and to the latter the Apostles themselves who were arguing about greatness as opposed to service (Matthew 18). Jesus warns both of those groups, in those texts, of the dangers of hell for such sinful conduct. So yes, I think it’s important.

However, the good news is, once we address our planks, we can then see well enough to care for others and their specks. And that is the key. Helping a person with their speck is about care, caution, and compassion. Specks are not removed through culture wars, name-calling, or parroting pundits, but through genuine love and investment. If we want anyone to seriously consider the Good News of Jesus, they must be able to see both why it is truly good and how it actually forms good people. The gospel is not only something we proclaim with our words, but something we must make visible with our lives toward all image-bearers. When the good news is truly good, it leaves behind a trail of healing, humility, and love that invites others to take a second look.

Why is the Good News Good?

It’s Good because Our All Powerful God became A Humble Man to Serve and Save a Broken and Burdened Race.

It’s Good because He came with Mercy.

It’s Good because He came with Grace.

It’s Good because He came with Compassion.

It’s Good because He came with Forgiveness.

It’s Good because He came with Restoration.

It’s Good because He came with Servanthood.

It’s Good because He came with Love .

And we should be known for this same Good as well.

The apostle says that God first preached the Good News to Abram when He said, “In you all the families of the earth shall be blessed.” Thus, our calling is to be the blessing than brings the blessing. And Jesus made that posture profoundly, and uncomfortably, clear for all who claim to follow Him. Allow me an amplified version.

Those who are blessings and thus blessed are those who know they need God’s help in this world; God meets them first.

Those who are blessings and thus blessed are those who grieve the brokenness of this world; they will find the comfort of a God who aches with them.

Those who are blessings and thus blessed are the gentle in this world; they outlast the powerful.

Those who are blessings and thus blessed are those who long to do right by God and others in this world; God shares that hunger and will satisfy it.

Those who are blessings and thus blessed are the merciful in this world; they receive mercy for mercy.

Those who are blessings and thus blessed are the wholehearted in this world; they will see God clearly in the world to come.

Those who are blessings and thus blessed are those who seek to create peace rather than merely keep it in this world; they resemble God’s children.

Those who are blessings and thus blessed are those who joyfully suffer for doing right by God and others – be it fellow follower, neighbor, citizen, foreigner, or enemy – for God’s kingdom already belongs to them.

That is flavor for the world.

That is light in the darkness.

That is a city which beckons…

“Come, see these good (news) works, and celebrate the God who inspires them in Heaven.”

Grace