Practical Christianity:  The Unmade Self Part 1 — Questions You Don’t Understand

(Part 1 of 7)

Floatie:  The Question Before the Silence

Genesis 22:1–2  (1)After these things God tested Abraham and said to him, “Abraham!”  And he said, “Here I am.”  (2)He said, “Take your son, your only son Isaac, whom you love, and go to the land of Moriah, and offer him there as a burnt offering on one of the mountains of which I shall tell you.”(ESV)

There are moments in the Christian walk when God asks a question that does not feel like a question at all.  It feels like a preparation.  It feels like a warning wrapped in gentleness.  It feels like God pointing to the next chapter long before the page turns.

Before my identity shattered, God asked me only one thing:  “Do you trust Me?”

I answered yes without hesitation.  It felt like the right answer.  It was the only answer I knew to give.  What I didn’t understand is that God was not asking about my willingness to obey.  He was asking about my willingness to survive what obedience would require.

Abraham was told to walk toward a loss he could not comprehend.  I was too.

There are moments where trust is not about the future.  It is about the unmaking God knows is coming.


✒️ Forge:  When God Asks for Trust Before the Breaking

Job 12:10  In his hand is the life of every living thing and the breath of all mankind.(ESV)

Colossians 1:17  And he is before all things, and in him all things hold together.(ESV)

Identity feels stable right up until the moment it isn’t.  We take for granted that we know who we are because we have always been the person we wake up as.  We assume our memories tell the truth.  We assume our roles define us.  We assume our patterns are permanent.

None of that is real.

Identity is not the sum of memory, personality, history, or function.  Identity is the thread God holds when the fabric tears apart.  The world can tear.  Trauma can tear.  Memory can tear.  Even the mind can tear.  God’s hand does not.

When He asked me if I trusted Him, He was not preparing me to obey a command.  He was preparing me to endure a fracture.

God sometimes asks for trust not because He intends to lead us somewhere, but because He intends to hold us together when everything else falls apart.

He asks for trust because He sees the break before we feel the crack.


⚒️ Anvil:  The Precursor to Identity Death

Psalm 139:1–3  (1)O Lord, you have searched me and known me!  (2)You know when I sit down and when I rise up; you discern my thoughts from afar.  (3)You search out my path and my lying down and are acquainted with all my ways.(ESV)

Before the wreck, my life looked whole from the outside.

I had:

  • a job I loved,
  • a marriage being restored,
  • children thriving,
  • stability returning after a long season of struggle,
  • prayer that flowed like conversation,
  • and clarity in my walk with God I had never known before.

This is important:  Identity collapse rarely happens in chaos.
It often happens right after a season of blessing.  Why?

Because broken identity cannot be rebuilt until false identity has been revealed.  And false identity hides best during seasons of success.

God was not dismantling my life.  He was dismantling the parts of me that could not survive the calling ahead.

The question was His scalpel.  The silence was His theater.  The unmaking was His operation.  This is the truth no one teaches in church:  Sometimes God allows the soul to break so that He can rebuild the parts we thought were permanent.


🔥 Ember:  The Trust That Carries You Into Darkness

Psalm 56:3–4  (3)When I am afraid, I put my trust in you.  (4)In God, whose word I praise, in God I trust; I shall not be afraid.  What can flesh do to me?(ESV)

The ember moment of this message is simple and terrifying:  God asked me for trust right before He went silent.

He did not say why.  He did not warn me.  He did not hint that my entire identity was about to vanish.  He let me walk into the dark with nothing but the memory of His voice.

What I didn’t understand then is what I know now:  Trust is the bridge between who you were and who God intends to remake you into.

You cannot cross the valley of identity death with doctrine alone.  You cross it with trust.  And the trust is not blind.  It is anchored in a God who sees the full architecture of the soul, even when we stand in the ruins.


🌿 Covenant Triumph:  The God Who Prepares Before He Unmakes

Isaiah 42:16  And I will lead the blind in a way that they do not know, in paths that they have not known I will guide them.  I will turn the darkness before them into light, the rough places into level ground.  These are the things I do, and I do not forsake them.(ESV)

Here is the triumph of this first message:  God does not unmake to destroy.  He unmakes to rebuild.

The question He asked was not a test of worthiness.  It was a covenant reminder:  “You will not face this alone.  Even when you think you are alone.”

Before identity breaks, God prepares the spirit.  Before silence comes, God gives a word.  Before the valley darkens, God sets a light inside the believer that the darkness cannot extinguish.

I answered the question before I understood the cost.  But God asked the question because He understood the value.

The Practice of Obedience:  Trust Before Understanding

Obedience must be embodied.  It cannot remain internal.

This week’s threefold discipline:

1. Physical Act:  Kneel Somewhere Unexpected

Choose a place where you normally stand strong — your office, your living room, your garage.  Kneel there.  Say aloud:  “Lord, I trust You before I understand You.”

2. Relational Act:  Tell Someone One Fear You Haven’t Admitted

Trust requires vulnerability.  Tell one trusted person:  “I don’t understand what God is doing here, but I choose to trust Him.”

3. Spiritual Act:  Surrender a Question to God

Write down a question you’ve been silently demanding an answer for.  Instead of asking again, lay it before God and pray:  “I will trust You in the silence.”

Trust is not agreement.  Trust is allegiance.


[⚓ Floatie] [✒️ Forge] [⚒️ Anvil] [🔥 Ember] [🌿 Covenant Triumph]
This post follows the Forge Baseline Rule—layered truth for the discerning remnant.

28 responses to “Practical Christianity:  The Unmade Self Part 1 — Questions You Don’t Understand”

  1. RW - Disciple of Yahshua Avatar
    RW – Disciple of Yahshua

    What a timely message…

    Abba, I pray for the strength to withstand the unmaking and the courage to endure the rebuilding.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Don Avatar
      Don

      Always remember that what He has begun He will finish.

      Liked by 2 people

  2. cleaners4seniors Avatar

    I kind of understand this. I do not consider myself fake , in fact my personality is formed from youngster age.
    In removing sin or renewing/transforming… the rebuilding happens?
    My character defects that hurt others , that I never realized are an awakening, as other traits that need tweeking.
    I notice moving from New England to Florida, a huge change in culture as well as most every client I cared for. (From all nations)
    There are ethics and integrity, respect in how we treat others. All people have it to some level.
    But setting apart a Born Again believer is vital . Because our love and fruit is unique. We have the Holy Spirit whereas other religions do not.
    So this is something to consider. My battle is with pleasing others, where I dont budge. They dont like this. Im different because I am firm and do not compromise where I used to. My self examining , checking my intentions and motives why I do whatever it is, or why I dont. This offends others badly.
    Im told what a terrible Christian I am.
    Sooo, this gets old after time. For me anyhow. It seems the old me was favored. Which is backwards.
    And in current world events… everyone is offended and Christians are being bullied pretty bad.
    There is one standard for how we are expected to speak and one for everyone else. Its too much. The old me thinks about some really good responses 🤐

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Don Avatar
      Don

      This first message really comes down to where our identity is anchored. “A house built on sand…”

      When God leads us through some seasons it’s because He knows that something we lean on as identity needs to be corrected or removed. In my case it was a full reset. The whole house of cards got knocked down. For Abraham, the identity that he leaned on was that of a father. God tested that his alignment was still proper and that his fatherhood hadn’t replaced God as first priority. The fact that Abraham was willing to offer Isaac up as a burnt offering just because God told him to was the test. For others? Only God knows. The things we each cling to to identify ourselves can be as unique as we are. We can cling to names, titles, roles, jobs, physical items, people, places, memories, trauma, and more. Those things might describe us, but they should never define us. Nothing that happens to us defines us. Only God can really define us. It’s up to us to recognize this.

      I think this whole series can be defined as being properly aligned with God. When that happens then unimaginable good comes from that. If we have a proper identity for God, proper identity for ourselves (from God), proper alignment with His will, and proper boundaries (according to His will) then we can live in peace and joy knowing that there is purpose for every step we take.

      As far as new versus old, the world wants the old. God already sees what will be. That’s who He wants you to become.

      Liked by 2 people

      1. cleaners4seniors Avatar

        Absolutely
        New creation in Him 🙏
        But
        I dislike
        Fake people
        Christian alike… they act righteous by works only. While their heart remains wicked.
        Im not a fake and never intend to be.
        Im always growing in His grace more and more along with the anount of faith He gives me.
        Im pretty sure in this particular writing it’s only a word you chose I disagree with .
        I do not think our created self is not real .. but our sin natures that we must let go of more and more.

        Im very grateful immediate conviction of His Holy Spirit came first.

        🙏

        Liked by 2 people

      2. Don Avatar
        Don

        Amen! You are very much on the right track. I would say that there are two kinds of fake people. I’m not pointing fingers at anyone, this is just a comment. There are those people who put on a front or a façade so that the people they meet will hopefully have a carefully crafted opinion of them. These are the people you’re probably talking about. They know they are fake. They know that they have an image to protect. It’s personal branding. A lot of people do it today.

        It’s the other kind that I’m most concerned with. The ones who don’t know they are fake. They’ve tricked the world, including themselves, into believing that they are this person, but the truth is that there is a scared and broken person hiding inside. They don’t even know that they are wearing a mask because they’ve worn it for so long.

        Again, this isn’t an accusation towards anyone. I’m just pointing out that this kind of person exists.

        That said. This second kind of person is the one that breaks the heart the most. They think that they’ve been healed because they denied the trauma so strongly that they’ve truly forgotten about it. I know a few people like this. If you ask them about this event or that event they will just say they have no idea what you’re talking about. It never happened. They can actually block the memories out. It’s not that they want to be dishonest. It’s that they don’t want to be broken. They don’t want to hurt. So, they tell themselves that they aren’t. They deny that anything ever happened until the memory of it goes away like it never happened. The unfortunate truth is that it did happen. They do carry the scars. It might not be physical. They might go through life with a spiritual or emotional limp while pretending it’s normal and people are weird for bringing it up.

        I strongly dislike the first category of fake people myself. They want to manipulate others for personal benefit. The second group almost brings me to tears because they refuse to face the trauma. The fear of the undoing keeps them from becoming whole.

        Btw, what word did you disagree with? It’s probably something I said that could have been said differently. Even if we do actually disagree, that’s perfectly fine. You don’t have to agree with everything I say. I actually like it when people disagree so long as they can help me to understand why. I love the debate.

        Liked by 2 people

      3. cleaners4seniors Avatar

        The word ‘ fake’

        The reason being their are counterfeit = fakes
        And
        Sincere people saved & unsaved (yet) who strive to heal and grow.
        Example: Recovering addicts.
        They must get up and walk sober regardless of how inferior they feel inside. I’ve been there and I was a very functional party person. My bottom was (within)… my disgraced self . I don’t believe these types ate fake. They have just not reached their potential and perhaps maybe never will. However, they put the drink & drug down .

        Fakes come in all forms. Like satan has many faces….
        Fakes are like cons or scans , pretending to be someone they are not. And fakes can be prideful people (ego) driven (puffed up) to portray something they are not .
        Both are liars and deceitful. But still have hope to come out of .. that fake identity. They too are probably broken but choose to deceive unless of course they are some day convicted by His Holy Spirit, until then they carry guilt (shame), because their conscience has most likely got them at some point. But they are trapped until (set free).
        Lastly are the Christians.
        This mix also could be (prideful) until (they fall)… and get humbled by Gods loving correction. This is a blessing because its the only way really to learn His Grace . So are they fakes? Or unlearned (growing) , or striving to stand up at last for something of (real value ,)..being Jesus.
        Next
        Plenty of church people are fakes. Including pastors. They are not all that. They think they are fully ideal and show no mercy towards
        —all the people God called , sitting with them.
        Yes, those religious people who put unreasonable expectations on others, do not relate to them (in spirit) and push them to the back of the church. ” pass the basket”.
        If anyone fits fake , its the religious counterfeit.
        This is why I believe as the people
        We are to serve , where we stand .. the ground is holy ?
        Not in a building. And exactly why we must ‘ pray always ‘ for all things’. While we are bruised and broken. Heck if it weren’t for godly men like yourself ministering right here …. who would it be?
        🌱

        Liked by 2 people

      4. Don Avatar
        Don

        Are you referring to the references to false identity? If that’s what you meant then I need to do a better job explaining myself. I apologize.
        The false identity is the labels we wear while denying who God says we are. Anything that can be removed from your life that changes who you believe you are can be considered a false identity. For me it was husband, father, son. All of that got removed and I got to see who I was without them. That’s a scary place to be.
        This isn’t to say that we shouldn’t have these labels. I am a husband. I am a father. I am a son despite both parents having passed. Those things certainly describe me. They don’t define me. They do not exclusively identity me. The name God gives me is different. He knows me by name. He knows you by name. The name He gave.
        We can add things to that. Don’t get me wrong. The problem is when we lose that identity in favor of the labels (father, husband, son, etc.) that we gain through the world.
        Am I making sense?

        Liked by 1 person

      5. cleaners4seniors Avatar

        False identity is still a fake and I dont think it applies to a broken person. (Fragmented)

        Also
        Plenty of people have experienced periods of denial. Including myself.
        Example in sobriety you will find people who really just want to go drink , usually do. Until they return again after discovering drinking didnt work.
        Being in denial unintentionally when a healed person can see your brokenness but the broken person doesn’t. That’s not necessarily a fake.. its a denial.
        Is a beginner striving for olympics a fake since they only pretend to be a star? At first like a vision of who you want to become . In a Born Again life it should be more like Christ Jesus. We never reach that place of perfection, so are we fake while trying? Isnt that more like our spirit vs flesh battle? Which is very real.
        The fakes will pretend it isnt. And they art better than thou. 😏

        I guess Im trying to differentiate here , where fake/false applies and where it doesn’t. Also, comparing those intentionally pretending vs those who are striving … and just are not seeing yet.
        Do we all plant seeds … and water while God does the rest?

        What about the parables of the soils.. do they fit in here?

        Liked by 1 person

      6. Don Avatar
        Don

        BTW, I completely agree with everything you said here. The kinds of fakes you describe, the counterfeit, should be avoided.

        I’m also not talking about people being genuine and honest even if that means they are confused. No, this is specifically speaking about the identity we have in Christ versus anything we add.

        Liked by 2 people

      7. cleaners4seniors Avatar

        Should be avoided
        These are the people who deliberately choose to be a hypocrite.
        The difference is
        There are broken people still learning who will be judged in error and falsely accused because they are not up to par. But are not hypocrits.
        Im pretty sure thats why we are told not to judge before their time.
        Even in trying to determine truth … we are falsely accused if being judgemental .
        Christians can be the worst , very clicky , especially women .
        Its not so easily said and done.
        This is why for myself, learning
        What on earth is love??????

        Liked by 2 people

      8. Don Avatar
        Don

        My apologies. I’ve been trying to read and respond in between sets at the gym. I’m home and can actually type out a better response.

        I think you and I are talking about two different kinds of “fake,” and that’s where our wires are crossing.

        The kind you’re describing, the hypocrite, the intentional counterfeit, the one who puts on a show and deceives others, that’s not who I’m talking about at all. I agree with everything you said about them. Those people exist, and Jesus confronted that kind of falsehood constantly.

        What I’m speaking about in this message is something different, not moral deception, but identity misalignment.

        A “false identity” in the way I’m using the term isn’t a person pretending. It’s any identity we build that isn’t the one God gave us.

        For example, I was a husband, a father, a son, a provider, a helper. Those things were true, but when they were stripped away, I realized they weren’t my actual identity. They were roles. Good and real roles. But still roles. They could be removed.

        Anything that can be removed isn’t who you are, it’s something you do.

        That’s the sense of “false identity” I’m talking about. Not counterfeit people, but temporary labels. Not hypocrisy, but misplacement. Not intentional deception, but the parts of us that get shattered when life takes them away.

        The broken, the wounded, the ones learning, the ones in denial, the ones striving to grow, none of that is fake. I agree with you completely. That’s the soil where God plants the new creation.

        My point is simply this:
        When all the labels fall off, whatever identity remains, that’s the one God is rebuilding. That’s the identity He names.

        Does that explanation help?

        Like

      9. cleaners4seniors Avatar

        I still do not think our identity is false. It may not yet be aligned with who we are created to be (new creation in Christ). But, nonetheless we lived an entire part of our lives before salvation (Born Again) , to which we became. For me its very real and really me. Old and New becoming (growing). Because now I know better . (His way)

        I do understand your purpose here, now.
        Im 62 years old and still can’t get things together. But no way am I writing off any particular life experience as false or fake or not real.
        **More like ‘unreal’ , thank you Jesus for saving me ✝️

        Anyhow
        Thank you
        I get it .
        I plan to slow down in reading at least three times from now on. Before responding.

        Liked by 1 person

      10. Don Avatar
        Don

        Thank you. Yes, your past absolutely matters. Nothing God saved you from is meaningless. Every part of your story before Christ is real, and God uses all of it. He doesn’t erase the past. He redeems it.

        What I’m talking about with identity is something different. Our story is what God transforms. Our identity is what God names.

        Your experiences were real. Your wounds were real. Your survival was real. Your testimony is real.

        But those things are not the definition of who you are in Christ. They are the story He rescued, not the identity He gave.

        A simple example may help.
        I have a close friend who was a drug addict for decades. Everyone, including him, would have said “drug addict” was his identity. It shaped his choices, relationships, and even how he saw himself. It was real, and it nearly killed him.

        Then he met Jesus.

        He got clean. God restored him. His past is still part of his testimony, but it is not who he is anymore. He doesn’t carry that name. And when we stand together in heaven someday, “drug addict” will have no authority or relevance at all, not because the past wasn’t real, but because God has named him something greater.

        That’s what I mean when I distinguish identity from story. The story matters. But God gives the identity.

        So when I say “false identity,” I don’t mean the past was fake. I mean it isn’t ultimate. It isn’t the final word over your life. It’s what God brought you out of, not what He calls you now.

        The old life matters, but it doesn’t define you. The new life defines you, and it changes how you see the old.

        For me, everything comes down to one question: “Who does God say I am?”
        That answer is unchangeable, and it becomes the lens that gives our past meaning instead of identity.

        Thank you again for leaning into this. These conversations sharpen both of us.

        Liked by 1 person

      11. cleaners4seniors Avatar

        …. but
        Our past is what made us . Every experience helped mold me into becoming who I am today. My relationships good and bad through work , friendships, social , romantic and family are all with purpose.
        The ‘sin’ is the part that caused destructions. The destruction brought the effects. All pieces of bringing us to recognize our need Jesus.

        After comes restoration (renewal)of what was lost , transformation into what we never had. Both are good.
        While repentance is correct direction, along with His Grace . Without His Grace , it’s impossible along with , our faith (trust/believe) He can ….

        Is this accurate?

        Liked by 1 person

      12. Don Avatar
        Don

        You’re right that God absolutely uses our past. Every experience, every relationship, every mistake, and even the consequences of sin become part of the story that leads us to Christ. Nothing is wasted, and God weaves all of it into our testimony.
        Where I make the distinction is here: our past shapes us, but it does not define us. Yes, God uses our story, but He alone gives our identity.
        Sin caused destruction. Destruction revealed our need for Jesus. And once we come to Him, He restores what was broken and transforms what we never had before. That part you said is exactly right.
        Grace makes repentance possible. Faith makes transformation possible. And God makes identity possible.
        So yes, your understanding is accurate. The only thing I’m adding is this: God redeems our past, but He names our identity. Those are connected, but they’re not the same thing.

        Liked by 1 person

      13. cleaners4seniors Avatar

        “God redeems our past, but He names our identity. Those are connected, but they’re not the same thing.”

        So Im here ⬆️
        😄
        Going to get this …
        Thank you for your patience.
        I do appreciate it.!

        A question that came to mind.
        I notice I like to get to a point of understanding and sometimes this comes quickly, rather naturally.
        Other times, not so. I can not move forward until I grasp something to build on . (My brain literally sticks)
        In school I was limited by this because If I was stuck and for (whatever reason) wasn’t able to get it, I didn’t budge.
        An example being Roman numerals.
        My poor math teacher , Mr Tomis.
        Stood over me frustrated because I could not grasp how letters represent numbers. If only perhaps it was taught (Its Roman)… I could have moved on.
        I eventually as an adult , learned Roman Numerals.
        🤷‍♀️

        Liked by 1 person

      14. Don Avatar
        Don

        This actually makes perfect sense to me because my mind works in almost the same way. I can’t move forward until the foundation is clear. I can see pieces of a concept, but nothing truly connects until I understand how the pieces fit together.

        A simple example is spelling. To understand how a name is spelled and pronounced, you have to understand the building blocks underneath it: First the individual letters, then the rules for how each letter works, then how letters blend together and change each other’s sound (like the “T” and “H” blending to form the “TH” in the).

        If I don’t understand the rules behind the letter “H,” then the combination “TH” won’t make sense. And if the blends don’t make sense, then the whole word won’t make sense either.

        Once the lower-level rules are clear, the higher-level structure becomes simple. But if the foundation is missing, the whole thing jams — nothing moves.

        That’s exactly what you described, and it explains why the identity conversation stalled until the distinction between story and identity clicked. Once that root made sense, everything above it began to align.

        I need to be extremely clear here. You’re not being difficult at all. You’re being thorough, and I can’t tell you how much I appreciate that. And that kind of clarity-seeking is a strength, not a flaw.
        It’s the same way God teaches: He builds truth layer by layer so that the higher things rest on the right foundation.

        I genuinely appreciate your patience and questions. They sharpen the message and the conversation. It’s refreshing to have a discussion where understanding is the goal instead of just being right.

        Liked by 1 person

      15. cleaners4seniors Avatar

        *The question
        The process . Once understanding the (topic/problem) thats need to change/grow…
        *What is the process? (Our works)

        I’ve always had God remove things or show me what to remove or change. My part (after I see it), is it
        Pray and Ask ? Obedience to be willing? Praying to be willing?
        Asking for grace and favor ?
        I know its not as easy as reading and re-reading happy scripture like chanting or speaking things into existence 🤭

        Forgive me if we already went over this.. if so, where? I will return there.

        No rush , ever.
        Thank you 🙏

        Liked by 1 person

      16. Don Avatar
        Don

        Great question. This is the part many believers never learn clearly. There is a process, and Scripture gives us the same pattern again and again.

        Here’s the simplest way I can say it:
        1. God reveals.
        That’s His part. He exposes the thing that needs to change; attitude, habit, wound, sin, belief, posture, etc. We don’t start the process. He does.

        2. We agree with what God has shown.
        That’s repentance at the root level, not guilt, but agreement. We say, “You’re right, Lord. This is real. This needs to change.”

        3. We surrender the thing back to Him.
        This is where obedience begins. Not in fixing it, but in handing it over.

        4. God supplies the power to change.
        Transformation has never been “our works.” It is always His grace; the fuel, the strength, the willingness, the follow-through.

        5. We walk it out.
        Our part is cooperation: obey what He shows, remove what He points out, say yes to the next step, stay willing, stay yielded.

        We don’t generate the change. We respond to what God is doing.

        So to answer your question more directly:
        Do we pray? Yes.
        Do we ask? Yes.
        Do we obey? Yes.
        Do we ask for willingness? Absolutely.
        Do we need grace? Every single time.
        Is it chanting scripture or hyping ourselves up? No. Never.

        It’s this:
        God reveals → we agree → we surrender → God empowers → we walk.

        That’s the process every time.

        If we already covered some of this earlier, it was probably in the section where I said, “Obedience must be embodied.” But this is the heart of it.

        And truly, no rush at all. These questions matter.

        One thing I love is that people asking questions forces me to consider a lot of things on a deeper level. I have to ask a lot of the same questions you are. I can’t give you an answer if I don’t have. I also have to recognize that my answers might change over time because I’m still learning myself.

        Liked by 1 person

  3. RW - Disciple of Yahshua Avatar
    RW – Disciple of Yahshua

    I think we all have growing and awakening to do throughout our lives. I pray I never stop! This to me is the Ruach ha Chodesh (Holy Spirit) working in all of us to continue refining us. There are times we get to certain points in our walk that we discover something new that refines us a little bit more, hopefully everyday, but that doesn’t mean we were fake before, it just means we’re growing more like Messiah everyday. Some have learned to walk humbly, while others are still not there yet, but as long as we don’t stagnate and/or go backwards, we continue to have our hearts of stone replaced with hearts of flesh.

    I saw a video the other day that described this very well, like a cement truck, it must keep moving or it hardens. Our walk in Messiah must be the same, we either keep moving or we become hardened.

    Love the conversation here.

    Liked by 2 people

  4. cleaners4seniors Avatar

    Agree refiners fire. Thats an old school church preaching Bible’
    Good reminder. That is exactly correct

    Liked by 2 people

  5. cleaners4seniors Avatar

    Also
    Holy Spirit can not be counterfeited.
    Those are the encounters people chase to get the ‘ feeling’…
    Like doing drugs 😕

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Don Avatar
      Don

      You’re exactly right. The Holy Spirit cannot be faked, but emotional experiences can. A lot of people chase a sensation instead of surrender, and it becomes a kind of spiritual drug.

      But the refiner’s fire doesn’t give us a feeling — it gives us a new nature.
      It’s the difference between encountering God and being remade by God.
      One fades. The other becomes identity.

      Liked by 2 people

  6. cleaners4seniors Avatar

    Funny story . My son in second grade math had a word problem.
    Marked wrong. I said no Rick we did it correct, no ma .. teacher insisted its wrong.
    Simple math:
    Suzy had 6 cookies and gave Johnny 2 cookies. How many cookies did Suzy have left?
    Answer : 3
    Cant be… I go to the school. Teacher said answer book says 3.
    Im telling her , must be a typo.
    She said no . It says Suzy put one in her pocket and therefore has only 3 cookies left.
    Im explaining.. that’s an assumption not a fact. The word (math) problem is solved with the information within.
    She shrugged her shoulders. 🤷‍♀️

    I removed Rick from public school by the fourth grade. After they also started to teach sight reading .. oh geez now we are guessing words based on pictures?
    And writing… correct spelling not necessary only looking for content.
    😟

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    1. RW - Disciple of Yahshua Avatar
      RW – Disciple of Yahshua

      😔🥴

      Liked by 2 people

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Who am I?

I’ve walked a path I didn’t ask for, guided by a God I can’t ignore. I don’t wear titles well—writer, teacher, leader—they fit like borrowed armor. But I know this: I’ve bled truth onto a page, challenged what I was told to swallow, and led only because I refused to follow where I couldn’t see Christ.

I don’t see greatness in the mirror. I see someone ordinary, shaped by pain and made resilient through it. I’m not above anyone. I’m not below anyone. I’m just trying to live what I believe and document the war inside so others know they aren’t alone.

If you’re looking for polished answers, you won’t find them here.
But if you’re looking for honesty, tension, paradox, and a relentless pursuit of truth,
you’re in the right place.

If you’re unsure of what path to follow or disillusioned with the world today and are willing to walk with me along this path I follow, you’ll never be alone. Everyone is welcome and invited to participate as much as they feel comfortable with.

Now, welcome home. I’m Don.

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