When strength thins and the road does not explain itself, faith needs more than resolve. It needs language for remaining with Christ when obedience is small, hidden, costly, and still unfinished. These pages enter the places where endurance is most often tested: the unseen yes, the slow work of waiting, the wound brought into mercy, the temptation to quit, the weakness that can no longer pretend, and the shared table where believers are kept from walking alone.
Through Scripture-shaped meditations, the book turns the reader's attention away from self-proving strength and toward the grace of Christ, who bears His people through the narrow way without making their frailty a disgrace. This is a book for the believer who wants to keep faith honest before God: not loud, not polished, not built on performance, but rooted, cleansed, carried, and made steady by mercy.
Its value is not in offering a method for becoming unbreakable, but in giving the heart a truer way to remain. Open it slowly. Keep it near for the days when the next faithful step must be received before it can be taken.
When strength thins and the road does not explain itself, faith needs more than resolve. It needs language for remaining with Christ when obedience is small, hidden, costly, and still unfinished. These pages enter the places where endurance is most often tested: the unseen yes, the slow work of waiting, the wound brought into mercy, the temptation to quit, the weakness that can no longer pretend, and the shared table where believers are kept from walking alone.
Through Scripture-shaped meditations, the book turns the reader's attention away from self-proving strength and toward the grace of Christ, who bears His people through the narrow way without making their frailty a disgrace. This is a book for the believer who wants to keep faith honest before God: not loud, not polished, not built on performance, but rooted, cleansed, carried, and made steady by mercy.
Its value is not in offering a method for becoming unbreakable, but in giving the heart a truer way to remain. Open it slowly. Keep it near for the days when the next faithful step must be received before it can be taken.