Photo by Brett Jordan on Unsplash Gentle Rhythms: A 4-Week Series on Sustainable Spiritual Practices There are seasons when our souls don’t need a spiritual restart—they need a gentler rhythm. Gentle Rhythms is a four-week blog series built for real life: full calendars, tired bodies, distracted minds, and hearts that still want to stay close to God. This is not about building an impressive routine. It’s about learning sustainable practices that help you return to Jesus with steadiness and grace. Over the past few weeks, I stepped back from blogging to re-center my weekly rhythm. Not because I had nothing to say, but because I needed to come back to my own re-centering on what I’m writing about: a gentle, sustainable life with God. That pause reminded me of something simple and true—spiritual formation is usually shaped more by small, faithful returns than big, dramatic moments. Each week, we’ll explore practices that are accessible, repeatable, and rooted in Scr...
Photo by Liana S on Unsplash Most of us want to help. We just don’t know what to say. Grief can make people feel fragile, and we’re afraid of making it worse—so we either overtalk, offer quick fixes, or quietly disappear. But if you’ve ever been the grieving one, you know what matters most isn’t perfect words. It’s presence. This month has been a reminder: grief is long faithfulness. And one of the greatest kindnesses we can offer a grieving friend is to stay steady long enough for their grief to be real. What Grieving People Actually Need 1) Someone who doesn’t rush them. Grief doesn’t move on a schedule. The best friends don’t try to speed it up. 2) Someone who can handle tears (and silence). You don’t have to fill the space. You just have to stay in it. 3) Someone who remembers. Names, dates, stories. Remembering is love. What to Say (Simple, Safe, True) Here are a few phrases that land gently: “I’m so sorry. This matters, and they mattered.” “I don’t have the right...