el olaM
Unfinished stories carry a quiet tension. We long for clarity, resolution, and answers that make sense of the journey. Yet much of life is lived in the middle—where prayers feel unanswered and the path ahead is unclear. El Olam, the Everlasting God, reminds us that what feels incomplete to us is not incomplete to Him. He is steady across every chapter, faithfully working beyond what we can see.
memorizing scripture
Memorizing Scripture is an invitation to meditate on God’s living Word. As Hebrews 4:12 reminds us, God’s Word is alive, active, and powerful enough to reach the deepest parts of our hearts. When we hide Scripture in our hearts, it becomes a tool God uses to expose truth, remove lies, and shape us into the people He created us to be.
becoming her
When God called Gideon a mighty warrior, nothing about Gideon’s circumstances supported the title. He was hiding, afraid, and unsure. Yet God spoke to him according to his calling, not his fear. Becoming the woman God intended is not about striving into strength. It is about surrendering the identities shaped by insecurity and trusting the voice of the One who sees your future more clearly than you see your present.
Burnout at the Broom Tree
Elijah had just witnessed some of the most powerful miracles recorded in Scripture, yet he collapsed under the weight of fear and exhaustion. God did not rebuke him or demand more faith. Instead, He offered rest and food. This story reminds us that spiritual fatigue is not failure and that God often meets us in our exhaustion with practical provision rather than spiritual pressure.
honoring the temple
Many Christian women feel exhausted, insecure, and unsure how to honor God with their bodies. In this blog, we dismantle the lies of hustle culture, explore the spiritual impact of stress, and reclaim a biblical vision for health and wholeness. Your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit, but it’s also your home — and God is inviting you into a rhythm that brings life, not shame.
manna mindset
In a culture obsessed with control, God invites us into something entirely different: daily dependence. Through a terrifying accident and a season of uncertainty, I learned what it meant to surrender worry and receive the “manna” God provides each morning — peace, mercy, and just enough grace for today.
speak, lord!
God used the simplest moment—an elderly friend leaning in to hear and turning on a light to see—to remind me what it means to position my heart toward Him. In a season filled with noise and distraction, He invites us to sit still, lean closer, and whisper, “Speak, Lord. I am listening.”
a table in the dark
Today, most of our “enemies” are not soldiers with spears. They are opinions, worldviews, notifications, and quiet lies that follow us into the night. Some live online, some sit across the table, and some whisper inside our own heads. Psalm 23:5 reminds us that God does not wait for those enemies to disappear. Right in the middle of the noise, fear, and comparison, He prepares a feast and saves us a seat. We do not have to fight for our place at the table. We just have to come, sit, and receive what He has lovingly prepared.