Welcome, Sister

Welcome, sister.
If you’ve ever felt too broken, too tired, or too far gone for God to use – you’re in the right place.
Jesus still sees you, loves you, and calls you worthy.
Let’s walk this road of healing and faith together.

Welcome, sister.
If you’ve ever felt too broken, too tired, or too far gone for God to use – you’re in the right place.
Jesus still sees you, loves you, and calls you worthy.
Let’s walk this road of healing and faith together.
When life feels heavy and your faith feels stuck, it’s easy to freeze – overwhelmed by everything you should be doing and unsure where to even begin. In this post, I share how God is teaching me to surrender, not all at once, but one faithful step at a time – and five practical ways you can begin again, too.
The Faith to Follow lifestyle means we can dream our dreams and work to make them happen, but we must be content while working them out because too much hustling means we’re trying too hard to make the dream work and not trusting God.
The Simple-to-follow Lifetime Bible Reading Plan will help you read the Bible at a pace that is just right for you!
Healing that feels slow is not healing that has stalled. Growth beneath the surface is still growth — even when you cannot see it yet.
If you’re in a slow healing season — doing the work, praying, trying to change old patterns — but still feeling like progress is invisible, this is for you.
Encouragement for women navigating emotional healing, trauma recovery, and faith in the in-between.
New on the blog: Still Looking for Good When Healing Feels Slow.
The Lent season is almost upon us, and some of you may already know what that is, but some of you may not. So I wanted to take time out of the schedule this week to go over this practice and let you in on what Lent is and why I still observe it as a Christian believer.
I hope that you will decide to join me for this year’s Walking through Lent: 40 Chapters in 40 Days!
Survival carried us through seasons we did not choose.
But survival also leaves its mark. And sometimes the strongest thing we can do is admit that endurance has taken a toll — not as a sign of failure, but as an honest recognition of how much we have walked through.
And this is where the message of hope begins again: the God who strengthened you to survive is also the God who longs to restore what survival wore down.
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