A guarded heart cannot be argued into nearness with God. It must be met by mercy, steadied by truth, and drawn toward the living Christ with room enough to bring what is scattered, tired, resistant, or afraid. These pages offer a slow passage into life before God: the will opened in surrender, love purified from divided desire, prayer made honest, ordinary hours received as places of communion, and hope carried toward the day when faith becomes sight.
The movement is deeply Christian, shaped by Scripture, centered on Christ, and attentive to the work of the Holy Spirit in the hidden life of the soul. Rather than offering techniques for religious feeling, the book gives language for returning: to prayer without performance, obedience without fear, holiness without coldness, and belonging without self-protection. It is written for readers who want their inward life brought nearer to God with reverence, clarity, and tenderness.
Open it slowly. Keep it where the heart can come back to what it most needs to remember: communion with God is not mastered by striving, but received as mercy.
A guarded heart cannot be argued into nearness with God. It must be met by mercy, steadied by truth, and drawn toward the living Christ with room enough to bring what is scattered, tired, resistant, or afraid. These pages offer a slow passage into life before God: the will opened in surrender, love purified from divided desire, prayer made honest, ordinary hours received as places of communion, and hope carried toward the day when faith becomes sight.
The movement is deeply Christian, shaped by Scripture, centered on Christ, and attentive to the work of the Holy Spirit in the hidden life of the soul. Rather than offering techniques for religious feeling, the book gives language for returning: to prayer without performance, obedience without fear, holiness without coldness, and belonging without self-protection. It is written for readers who want their inward life brought nearer to God with reverence, clarity, and tenderness.
Open it slowly. Keep it where the heart can come back to what it most needs to remember: communion with God is not mastered by striving, but received as mercy.