Some Things Can Wait Until Monday

As the weekend nears it’s end, it is worth remembering that not everything needs to be solved, answered, or finalized right now. Some things matter—but they can wait until Monday. Setting a few things down creates space for rest, joy, and presence, which are not distractions from faithfulness, but often expressions of it.

Process.

As the new year begins, I’m not drawn to bold resolutions or declarations about what I’m going to accomplish—because boldness doesn’t guarantee reality. Instead, I’m committing myself to a posture of process: identifying what matters, trusting God’s work over time, and staying open-handed to the formation He is doing. Growth doesn’t come from chasing outcomes, but from faithful presence within the process God is shaping.

Be Kind to Yourself as the Year Ends

As the year ends, reflection matters—but how we reflect matters just as much. While honesty and responsibility are necessary, harsh self-criticism often leads to paralysis, not growth. Scripture reminds us that God is still at work, faithfully bringing to completion what He began in us. As this year closes, be kind to yourself and allow God the space to continue shaping what comes next.

The Gift of Being There

A night at a basketball game with my parents turned into a reminder I didn’t know I needed. Doing things with people often carries more meaning than providing things for them. Time spent, shared moments, and presence have a way of multiplying the value of whatever else we bring.

Christmas Day: God With Us

Christmas Day arrives quietly, after the noise and expectations begin to fade. At the center of the story is a simple truth: God chose nearness. God did not wait for ideal conditions. He came near anyway. Emmanuel is not something to be explained or achieved, but a presence to be received—right where we are.

When Christmas Feels Just Out of Reach + A Christmas Blessing

Sometimes at Christmas, our best intentions are unattainable and our expectations feel just out of reach. Instead of peace, we find ourselves flooded by emotions that make it difficult to locate the Prince of Peace in the middle of the season. This reflection is for those carrying unmet hopes, quiet disappointment, or unanswered prayers. Christmas reminds us that God draws near even when things remain unresolved.

Letting the Season Catch Up to Us

We’re only a few days away from Christmas, and Advent invites us to pause long enough to let the season sink in. Peace doesn’t come from everything being finished or decorated—it comes when we make room in our hearts for the nearness of Christ. Sometimes the most faithful thing we can do is stop and let the season catch up to us.

A Front-Row Seat to What Matters Most

Some Sundays carry a different kind of weight. Baptism days never get old because they remind us what all of this is actually about. Every person who steps into the water carries a story of faith, obedience, and quiet pursuit. These moments re-center us on the One who is still changing lives. Baptism doesn’t start the story—it reveals what God has already been doing.

Carrying Less Into the Weekend

By the time Friday arrives, most of us are carrying more than we realize. Leadership has a way of quietly adding weight we don’t notice until we slow down. Rest is not a sign of disengagement, but a practice of trust—remembering that God continues His work even when we step away. Rest reminds us that the Kingdom isn’t built on our constant effort, but on God’s faithfulness. Carrying less is sometimes the most faithful thing we can do.

For the Kingdom: Raising Up Others Is Part of the Calling

If what you do matters, then raising up others to do it matters too. Ministry was never meant to end with us—it was meant to be shared, stewarded, and handed forward. Over time, God forms leaders not only through what they build, but through who they invest in. Multiplication is rarely neat or predictable, but it is always worth the work, because the Kingdom advances when leaders make room for the next harvesters God is already preparing.

What Has Your Attention Today?

Every day, something is competing for our attention, quietly shaping how we see the world and respond to pressure. As I prepare to teach, I’m reminded that message preparation often requires heart preparation—clarity of words usually follows clarity of attention. In a world that constantly demands reaction, faithfulness begins by choosing what deserves to shape us.

Choosing Joy When Happiness Isn’t Available

Advent joy is not the same as happiness. Happiness shifts with circumstances, but joy is something we choose to practice. That choice requires honesty. If we want to choose joy consistently, we also have to own the things that get in the way—unresolved grief, comparison, control, disappointment, and busyness that crowds out reflection. Advent doesn’t ask us to manufacture cheer; it invites us to anchor our joy in the nearness of Christ, even when life feels complicated.

Leaders Don’t Just Build Teams — They Build People

At FCA last week, someone asked me why I do what I do. Years ago, God formed a life mantra in me — to authentically lead and empower others to flourishing life. And that conviction has shaped everything: ministry, officiating, sports announcing, developing interns, training younger leaders. Leadership isn’t measured by what you build but by who you develop. Your greatest legacy won’t be your accomplishments—it will be the people who learned to lead because you showed them how.

When Peace Feels Far Away (An Advent Reflection on Week Two: Peace)

Peace is easy to talk about and hard to hold onto — especially in December. I don’t usually lose peace in dramatic ways; I lose it subtly, one small distraction or pressure at a time. Advent reminds me that peace hasn’t left me… I’ve drifted from it. This week, I’m reflecting on the four ways we unintentionally lose sight of peace — and how the arrival of Jesus invites us to return to it. If peace feels far away, this Advent might be God’s invitation to hope again.

You Don’t Have to Lead Like Someone Else: The Freedom of Authentic Leadership

Comparison opens the door. Imitation walks through it. And before you know it, you’re trying to lead like someone God never called you to be. This is the danger every leader faces — losing yourself while trying to imitate someone else’s calling. David refused Saul’s armor for a reason. God’s anointing isn’t a call to imitate leadership; it’s an invitation to authentic leadership.