Beyond Dogma: What I’ve Learned About Books That Change Us

I’ve always been a little wary of the phrase religious book. Not because I don’t value faith-based writing, I do, but because the label carries so much baggage. Dense arguments. Heavy certainty. The sense that you’re about to be instructed rather than encountered. For years, I associated religious books with information: doctrines to absorb, positions […]
When Writing Becomes an Act of Listening

I’ve always been fascinated by the way certain books speak. Not the arguments they make or the conclusions they reach, but the feeling they leave behind. Some books feel like they’re talking at you. Others feel like they’re sitting beside you, quietly pointing toward something you’re meant to notice on your own. I first became […]
When the Messenger Matters as Much as the Message

I’ve always been fascinated by how people come to the truths they carry. Not just what they believe, but the quieter question behind it: Where did this come from? What kind of life had to be lived for this insight to arrive? That question came back to me one early morning while the house was […]
The Night the Author Realized a Book Needed to Be Close, Not Just Owned

Late one evening, while revising a paragraph that had already been rewritten too many times, the author’s phone buzzed on the desk. The room was quiet except for the faint scratch of a pen and the low hum of a desk lamp. Its narrow circle of light left the rest of the room in shadow. […]
God’s Plan for Man: The Complete Revelation of Why You Exist and Where You’re Going

It usually begins in the quiet. Not in church. Not in debate. Not in a philosophy lecture. It begins when the house is asleep, and you’re left alone with your own breathing. And the question slips in uninvited but persistent: Why am I here? Not in the poetic sense. Not as a social media caption. […]