When uncleanliness reaches— refuse to surrender. Stand still, even when your soul trembles. Somewhere between the bridge of hope and the valley of helplessness, something unseen fractured the air— and I felt it. A vile spirit crept in quietly and called it residence. Each time it appeared, my loyalty—misplaced—responded. Not out of strength, but out of familiarity. Remember when Sarah laughed at what God declared? Not because God was weak, but because doubt grew louder than promise. She believed her time had expired, so she reached for what was accessible— and birthed Ishmael outside of divine timing. So I ask you— How many Ishmaels has your doubt conceived? How many promises have you interrupted just to feel in control again? Each time God plants a seed within you— do you cover it with faith or expose it to fear? At the intersection of belief and uncertainty, do you abandon the process for the illusion of progress? Or do you remain— rooted, unmoved, anchored in truth? You always ...
Once upon a time— I wanted to believe something was real so desperately that I silenced the Spirit within me just to keep the illusion alive. I saw every red flag— not as warnings, but as tests of how much I was willing to endure to feel chosen. I asked no questions because truth was already whispering, and I feared what obedience would cost me. So I made a covenant with denial— calling lies “grace,” and confusion “patience,” because the truth felt too vast, too holy, too disruptive to the future I had built in my mind. I clung to potential like it was promise, and mistook absence for peace. Yet the weight of it— this thing I called love— crushed my spirit daily. Still, desperation dressed itself as loyalty and convinced me to stay. And it didn’t get better. It decayed. Quietly at first… then unmistakably. Each time God unveiled truth, I chose the comfort of shadows over the calling of light. I pleaded. I prayed. I begged— not for revelation, but for permission to remain where I w...