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Holding What Is Real: Mystical Encouragement for a Faith That Is Still Becoming
There are seasons in life when faith cannot survive on borrowed language.
What once felt familiar may begin to feel thin. Easy answers no longer satisfy. Religious habits that once gave comfort may begin to feel too small for the ache, beauty, grief, and wonder of actual life. And in that place, many people fear they are losing faith, when in truth they may be standing at the threshold of a deeper one.
Not a smaller faith. Not a looser faith. Not a faith emptied of substance.

Joe Dea
Mar 309 min read


Faithfulness Over Strength: What God Truly Desires
Again and again, God reveals that what He desires most is not the kind of strength the world applauds. He is not searching for people who can impress Him with their capacity. He is looking for hearts that will trust Him. He is not drawn to self-made power. He delights in faithfulness.

Joe Dea
Mar 278 min read


The Theology of Human Worth
Christian theology speaks into that uncertainty with a radically different claim. Human worth does not begin with the self. It does not arise from recognition, productivity, or public approval. It is not bestowed by the market, by popularity, by talent, by health, by youth, or by success. Human worth begins in God.

Joe Dea
Mar 249 min read


Who is St. Telemachus? and why does he matter today?
The story of St. Telemachus shows us something different. That when we practice what Jesus taught and put ourselves in the gap to preach true peace, then change can actually take place. Even if we suffer or never see it for ourselves.

Andrew Fouts
Mar 173 min read


The Beatitudes in the Modern World
The Beatitudes are some of the most beautiful words Jesus ever spoke, and they are also some of the most disruptive. In Matthew 5, Jesus begins the Sermon on the Mount not with commands, but with blessing: “Blessed are the poor in spirit.“Blessed are those who mourn.”Blessed are the meek.“Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness.” These words are familiar to many of us, but they should still surprise us.

Joe Dea
Mar 115 min read
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