Isaiah 58
  Home  /  Books  /  Financials  /  Calendar        
Berean Fruit Logo

“Search the scriptures daily and see whether these things are so.” — Acts 17:11

Goal
10,000 books
Sold
1,239
Remaining
8,761
Progress 12%

Our goal is to sell 10,000 books to support ongoing ministry to the “least of these.” Every copy helps us extend practical care and Gospel witness. 90% of money earned from each sale goes to the ministry. 10% goes to the workers.

Support Our Mission

You can also provide direct aid (socks, toiletries, etc.) to those in need. Buying in bulk from places like bagsinbulk.com stretches every gift further.

Venmo: @bkucenski
Click or Scan to Donate

Scripture

And the brethren immediately sent away Paul and Silas by night unto Berea: who coming thither went into the synagogue of the Jews. These were more noble than those in Thessalonica, in that they received the word with all readiness of mind, and searched the scriptures daily, whether those things were so.

What business is it of mine to judge those outside the church? Are you not to judge those inside?

Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven.

For this is the love of God, that we keep his commandments: and his commandments are not grievous.

For as the body without the spirit is dead, so faith without works is dead also.

For verily I say unto you, Till heaven and earth pass, one jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the law, till all be fulfilled. Whosoever therefore shall break one of these least commandments, and shall teach men so, he shall be called the least in the kingdom of heaven: but whosoever shall do and teach them, the same shall be called great in the kingdom of heaven.

Check Out Our Albums On Spotify

Check Out Our Books On Amazon

Latest Articles

The Cross That Reveals, Not the Cross That Demands
Dec 15, 2025

For much of Christian history, the death of Jesus has been described as the moment when God’s justice was satisfied — when a divine penalty was paid.

For much of Christian history, the death of Jesus has been described as the moment when God’s justice was satisfied — when a divine penalty was paid. But what if the deeper biblical story tells us something far more intimate, and far more subversive?

What if the cross wasn’t about God needing suffering — but about God entering ours?

The story begins in Genesis 3:15, when God speaks to the serpent:

O Holy Night (Cantique de Noël)
O Holy Night (Cantique de Noël)
Dec 15, 2025

A Berean Christmas

Verse 1

Midnight! Christians, it is the solemn hour
When the God-man came down to us,
To erase the stain of the whole world’s sin
And to halt His Father’s anger.
All the world trembles with hope
On this night that gives it a Savior.
People, fall to your knees—await your deliverance!
Christmas! Christmas! Here is the Redeemer!
Christmas! Christmas! Here is the Redeemer!

Verse 2

Mene, Mene, Tekel, Upharsin
Mene, Mene, Tekel, Upharsin
Dec 13, 2025

A Berean Christmas

Verse 1

In a manger so small, ‘neath a cold winter sky,
shepherds tremble as the angels cry.
No throne, no crown, just straw and hay,
yet the King of Heaven has come to stay.
The night holds its breath in wonder,
as the Word becomes flesh and light,
and the silence of the stable
breaks the darkness of the night.

Chorus
Mene, Mene — Christ is coming soon,
Tekel — your burden He removes.
Upharsin — all you built will turn to dust,
but grace still calls to us.

The Sinner and the Wicked: What Judgment Day Really Means for the Sheep
Dec 13, 2025

There’s a deep fear that many Christians quietly carry: What will happen when I stand before God on Judgment Day? Will every sin I’ve ever committed be replayed like a courtroom record?

There’s a deep fear that many Christians quietly carry: What will happen when I stand before God on Judgment Day? Will every sin I’ve ever committed be replayed like a courtroom record? Will I face the shame of all I’ve done wrong?

A friend once voiced this worry in a discussion about Matthew 25 — the passage where Jesus separates the sheep from the goats. Their concern was simple but piercing: Even if I’m one of the sheep, won’t I still have to face everything I’ve ever done wrong?

I responded with a story about a judge who, after hearing the same facts repeated, finally said, “That’s just not relevant.”

Lullaby of the Broken
Lullaby of the Broken
Dec 13, 2025

A Berean Christmas

Verse 1 – Herod’s Slaughter

Tiny cries in Bethlehem,
Footsteps in the night.
Herod’s sword in trembling hand,
Silences the light.

Refrain

We Don’t Have Faith Because Our Suffering Will End Today — But Because All Suffering Will End One Day, and I Can Help Today
Dec 11, 2025

“I lost my job this month, right at the start of what was supposed to be the best month of the year… The most confusing thing is that I thought the job I lost was an opportunity from God too… I keep praying but it just hurts.”

“I lost my job this month, right at the start of what was supposed to be the best month of the year… The most confusing thing is that I thought the job I lost was an opportunity from God too… I keep praying but it just hurts.”
— A Reddit user

I came across that post a few weeks ago. It’s raw, honest, and deeply human — the kind of lament that fills the Psalms and still echoes in modern hearts.
But beneath the pain is a quiet theology that many of us have inherited without realizing it — a belief that faith is supposed to protect us from pain, and that suffering means something has gone wrong in our relationship with God.

That’s not biblical faith.
That’s prosperity logic dressed in devotional language.

When Faith Feels Like It Failed: The Hidden Theology Behind Our Disappointment
Dec 11, 2025

Recently, I came across a Reddit post that perfectly captured a common but dangerous way of thinking about faith.

Recently, I came across a Reddit post that perfectly captured a common but dangerous way of thinking about faith. It read:

“I lost my job this month, right at the start of what was supposed to be the best month of the year. It was going to be the month I proposed to my girlfriend, the month we finished moving into our first house, and the month I started studying again to achieve the new goals I had spoken to God about. The most confusing thing is that I thought the job I lost was an opportunity from God too… I keep praying but it just hurts.”

It’s heartfelt and painfully honest. You can almost feel the writer’s exhaustion — the shock of losing not only a job but a sense of divine direction. And yet, this post reveals something deeper than personal pain: it exposes a quiet strain of prosperity gospel thinking that has seeped into everyday Christian life.

Is That All You See
Is That All You See
Dec 11, 2025

A Berean Christmas

Verse 1

Is that all you see?
Lights from a store
Not a soul,
Nothing more
She weeps as she falls at His feet
Anoints Him in oil,
Her heart at His knees
“What a waste,” they said, “this could’ve fed the poor”
But it was more than oil — it was love poured to the King
And Jesus said, “She’s done a beautiful thing.”

Chorus

Where Are You Christmas?
Dec 9, 2025

Finding Grace Between the Gift and the Giver

Every December, the same argument returns — the one about whether Christmas has become too commercial. For many, the lights, the music, and the shopping are proof that we’ve lost the “real meaning.” But maybe that’s not quite right.

I recently read Peter Kucenski’s “Be Unfair This Christmas”, a thoughtful meditation on how true generosity doesn’t calculate returns. It’s a strong piece, but it also risks drifting into that familiar anti-commercial sentiment — the moral pose that sounds holy but often ends up joyless. Sometimes, in trying to reject materialism, we accidentally reject love.

My favorite version of A Christmas Carol is the George C. Scott one. In a pivotal scene, Scrooge grumbles about all the gifts people are buying, muttering about waste and foolishness. The Ghost of Christmas Present stops him cold:

The Old Prophet: Booker T. Washington
Dec 9, 2025

We like our prophets loud, certain, and righteous.

We like our prophets loud, certain, and righteous. We prefer them when their words flatter our feelings, when their fury aligns with our own. But truth rarely comes wrapped in charisma. It often hides behind contradictions — in people who seem to bend rather than break, who say what the times will allow and act on what conscience demands.

Booker T. Washington was one of those prophets.

He is too often dismissed as an accommodationist, a man who made peace with white supremacy. Yet history shows something more complex. Washington was strategic, even subversive. Publicly, he preached patience and industry; privately, he funded anti-racist lawsuits, supported Black journalists, and quietly bankrolled efforts to challenge segregation. His book Up From Slavery was not naïve self-congratulation. It was bait — a narrative designed to open white purses so that Black children could have schools.

Swept Away
Swept Away
Dec 9, 2025

Verse 1

Verse 1

They stand on the shore with their books in hand,
Preaching chains as a holy plan.
Quoting prophets they’ve never read,
While the poor cry out for daily bread.
They talk of heaven, they talk of grace,
But build their kingdoms on another race.
They call it order, they call it right,
But truth is revealed in the light.

Pre-Chorus

Gesù Bambino
Gesù Bambino
Dec 7, 2025

A Berean Christmas

In the humble stable,
in cold and poverty,
the holy little child is born
whom the world will adore.

Hosanna, hosanna they sing
with joyful hearts,
your shepherds and angels,
O King of light and love.

Come, let us adore,
come, let us adore,
come, let us adore
the Lord.

Christ Alone We Need: When Faith Refuses to Be a Political Pawn
Christ Alone We Need: When Faith Refuses to Be a Political Pawn
Dec 2, 2025

When Chris Butler wrote in Christianity Today that both parties “need religious Americans to succeed,” which reflects how political parties rely on religious voters to win elections — a reality that reveals both opportunity and danger, he wasn’t wrong — but he revealed something deeply broken about our politics.

When Chris Butler wrote in Christianity Today that both parties “need religious Americans to succeed,” which reflects how political parties rely on religious voters to win elections — a reality that reveals both opportunity and danger, he wasn’t wrong — but he revealed something deeply broken about our politics. In a nation where faith is often used as a prop to win elections, “Christ Alone We Need” was born out of holy frustration.

This isn’t a protest against faith in the public square. It’s a protest against faith being bargained away — traded for influence, proximity to power, or campaign promises that come at the expense of our most vulnerable neighbors.

“Christ Alone We Need” is a country-gospel anthem sung with a fierce, female voice — a sound that carries both tenderness and righteous fire. It declares that we won’t “beg” for political scraps or let parties define our morals.

Outsourcing Emotional Labor to AI
Dec 2, 2025

What the Fulnecky Essay Controversy Reveals About Fairness, Faith, and the Future of Teaching

When a college student turns in a paper that clashes with an instructor’s deepest identity or beliefs, grading can feel less like pedagogy and more like moral triage.
The recent case of Samantha Fulnecky, an Oklahoma college student who received a zero on her reaction paper about gender and biblical design, is a vivid example.

Fulnecky’s essay—rooted entirely in Christian theology—argued that erasing traditional gender categories moves society “farther from God’s original plan.” Her instructor, who identifies as transgender, gave her zero points out of twenty-five, citing the absence of empirical evidence and describing parts of her essay as offensive.

The decision ignited predictable outrage in the media. But beyond the culture-war headlines lies a deeper pedagogical question:

“The Stranger at Our Gates”: A Biblical Response to Calls for a Total Travel Ban
Dec 2, 2025

When Fox News reported that Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem recommended a “full travel ban” on nations “flooding” the United States with “killers and leeches,” the reaction was immediate and visceral.

When Fox News reported that Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem recommended a “full travel ban” on nations “flooding” the United States with “killers and leeches,” the reaction was immediate and visceral. Some applauded her bluntness. Others recoiled at the rhetoric. But beneath the politics lies a deeper question — a moral and spiritual one.

What does it mean, in a nation that still calls itself “under God,” to speak of human beings as parasites? What does our faith say about fear, protection, justice, and the stranger among us?

It is not wrong to desire safety. Scripture affirms the right of leaders to protect their people. The Apostle Paul calls governing authorities “God’s servants for your good” (Romans 13:4). Nations are not anarchic; they have borders, laws, and duties to maintain peace.

Creator of the Stars at Night
Creator of the Stars at Night
Dec 1, 2025

A Berean Christmas

Verse 1

Conditor alme siderum,
aetérna lux credéntium,
Christe, redémptor ómnium,
exáudi preces súpplicum.

Creator of the stars of night,
Eternal light of faithful hearts,
O Christ, Redeemer of us all,
Hear now the prayers your people call.

Christmas in Heaven
Christmas in Heaven
Nov 30, 2025

A Berean Christmas

Verse 1

Snow is falling on the empty street,
The lights are warm but my heart skips a beat.
Your shadow lingers in every glow,
But I can’t love you now, I had to let you go.
The carols ring with what might’ve been,
Silent prayers for a love worn thin.

Chorus

Christ is Born Let Love Unite
Christ is Born Let Love Unite
Nov 29, 2025

A Berean Christmas

Verse 1

In the still of the night,
Heav’n’s glory shines;
Calling tribes, every tongue
Into Your light.
From the lost and the weak
To the strong and free,
You are gathering all
Into unity.
Your promise remains
For each land and race:
One family of nations
In Your house of grace.

Pre-Chorus