Isaiah 58
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“Search the scriptures daily and see whether these things are so.” — Acts 17:11

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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.

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Latest Articles

The Children Are Never the Burden
May 7, 2026

We’ve built our lives around everything except them — and then we’re shocked when they feel like an interruption.

There’s a viral post making the rounds right now. Kate Lucky writes about how motherhood was supposed to be a slog, and she found joy instead. It’s beautiful. It’s true. And tucked in the comments is the part nobody wants to say out loud:

Misery happens when the father is a worthless potato.

Let me expand on that — because it goes deeper than who does the dishes.

It Was Never Just About Wives and Pastors, Hence the Sexism Everywhere Always
May 6, 2026

On the Dane Ortlund ruling, Western Christian complementarianism, and the gap between stated theology and lived reality

Last week, an Illinois Administrative Law Judge ruled that Naperville Presbyterian Church — led by Dane Ortlund, author of the beloved Gentle and Lowly — unlawfully retaliated against Emily Hyland, its former director of operations. Hyland had worked at the church for eight years. She was fired nine days after privately raising concerns to two elders that she was being treated differently because she was a woman.

The judge awarded her roughly $93,000 in back wages, emotional distress damages, and medical expenses.

The ruling was careful. Judge Azeema Akram did not find that Ortlund or the church discriminated against Hyland on the basis of sex in the technical legal sense. Ortlund never made overtly sexist remarks. There was no smoking gun. What the judge did find — and what the evidence overwhelmingly supported — was that the moment Hyland named what was happening to her, she was swiftly and haphazardly fired for it. The church’s witnesses, the judge wrote, “seemed to discount even the possibility that gender discrimination could exist at the Church.”

“We’re hiring more people so our team can take vacations” — Said No Hiring Manager Ever
May 6, 2026

How chronic understaffing turns coworkers into enemies — and why that’s exactly the point

When Spirit Airlines announced it was ceasing all operations on May 2, 2026, roughly 17,000 workers lost their jobs overnight. Flight attendants, pilots, mechanics, dispatchers — gone. Reports indicated benefits were cut off the moment the last plane landed. That same weekend, court filings showed Spirit’s lawyers seeking $10.7 million in retention bonuses for executives overseeing the wind-down.

Within hours, a post went viral on social media: “Pour one out for the Spirit flight attendants today. When an airline goes bankrupt, they lose their seniority — which when you’re an FA is your entire career. If they want to go to a new airline, they have to start at the very bottom.”

The replies were full of sympathy. But also, quietly, a more uncomfortable truth: why were workers fighting over seniority in the first place?

Your Name Is on the Mortgage — But Not the Deed. Here’s Why That’s a Problem.
May 6, 2026

Understanding the most overlooked distinction in real estate ownership

Most people assume that if you’re responsible for paying a mortgage, you must own the home. It seems logical. But legally, those two things are completely separate — and confusing them can cost you everything.

This piece breaks down the difference between a deed and a mortgage, why they can diverge, and what happens when one person controls the asset while another is stuck holding the debt.

These are the two documents that matter most when a home is purchased:

The Myth of the Motivated Poor
May 6, 2026

Sting says he won’t leave his fortune to his children because scarcity builds character. There’s an ancient text that agrees with him — but not in the way he thinks.

Sting, the 74-year-old musician worth an estimated $300 million, announced recently that he won’t be leaving his fortune to his six children. His reason: telling a child they don’t have to work is, in his words, “a form of abuse.” The statement was celebrated in certain corners of the internet as a refreshingly tough-love philosophy. What went largely unremarked upon was the quiet irony threading through all of it — that a man sitting on three hundred million dollars was offering a theory of motivation built entirely around the virtue of not having three hundred million dollars.

This is not a new idea. It is, in fact, one of the oldest rationalizations in the history of wealth. The rich have long believed that scarcity is the engine of human drive — and that this engine is most necessary for people who aren’t them.

The people most convinced that hunger builds character are rarely the ones going hungry.

The Worldwide Church: 70–400 AD
May 5, 2026

A Catalog of Regional Communities, Leaders, and Surviving Writings

This document is a corrective to the common Eurocentric framing of early Christianity. The church that emerged in the first four centuries was geographically vast, theologically diverse, and rooted in communities far beyond Rome. What follows is a region-by-region catalog of known centers, leaders, and texts that survive today.

Often the intellectual and theological powerhouse of early Christianity — yet routinely underrepresented in popular retellings.

One of the most important centers of Christian thought in the entire period.

God Refuses to Be a Formula
May 4, 2026

On covenant blessing, collective faithfulness, and the danger of reading prosperity as a sign

There is a theological framework that circulates widely in Christian thinking about wealth and poverty, and it has enough biblical support to feel convincing on first reading. It goes something like this: God blesses the faithful with prosperity, and when a society turns from God, His blessings are withdrawn. Poverty and suffering are therefore signs of spiritual failure — either personal or collective. Wealth is evidence of God’s favor. Hardship is evidence of His discipline.

It is tidy. It is intuitive. It maps onto deep human instincts about cause and effect, desert and reward. And it has genuine roots in Scripture. Deuteronomy does connect covenant obedience with blessing and covenant rebellion with consequence. Proverbs describes patterns linking diligence with flourishing and laziness with want. The moral structure of reality is a real biblical theme and dismissing it entirely would be its own kind of error.

But there is a critical difference between a pattern and a formula. A pattern describes what tends to happen across time and community. A formula promises a predictable, individual, observable outcome. The Bible consistently affirms the pattern. It just as consistently refuses to let that pattern become a formula — something you can read in real time from someone’s bank account or medical history or neighborhood.

They Hired the People They Tell You Not to Be
May 4, 2026

A field guide to how business leaders perform ignorance, privatize thinking, and ended up running your country

There’s a genre of video that does extremely well on TikTok and YouTube. Someone — usually, though not exclusively, a man — stares into the camera with the particular confidence of someone who has never finished a book and tells you that college is a scam, that reading is for losers, that they built a seven-figure business by following their gut, and that you could too, if you’d just stop overthinking everything.

These videos get millions of views.

Meanwhile, that same person almost certainly has a lawyer, an accountant, a CFO with an MBA, engineers with computer science degrees, and a marketing team that has read every book on consumer psychology that exists. They did not build anything alone. They built something on top of a substrate of intellectual labor they pay for, don’t credit, and publicly scorn.

The Text Is a Mirror
May 4, 2026

What the Bible and the Quran actually say about dominion — and why reaching for it puts you on the wrong side of both.

An essay addressed to those who believe the sacred texts endorse their power over others

This essay is not for careful readers who hold scripture in tension — who understand that breaking one law breaks all the laws, that every verse lives inside a manifold of other verses, and that the whole must be read against itself before any part can be applied. Those readers already know what follows.

This is for a different audience: people who have found, in the Bible or the Quran, permission to dominate. People who read the slavery passages and heard good. People who cite Surah 9:29 or Deuteronomy 17 with confidence, as though God had handed them a deed to other human beings. People who believe the texts, read plainly, are on their side.

Karen. Karen. Karen! We’re in Heaven.
May 3, 2026

On free grace, manufactured law, and the theology that shows up after the bill is paid.

Let’s talk about what IVF actually is before we talk about what it means.

It is injections — daily, self-administered, into bruised and exhausted tissue. It is monitoring appointments at 7am before work, because the clinic fills up. It is the particular silence of an ultrasound room when the technician’s face changes. It is egg retrieval under sedation, and the phone call the next morning about how many fertilized, and the phone call two days later about how many are still dividing, and the arithmetic of hope getting smaller with each call.

It is, on average, $15,000 to $30,000 per cycle. It frequently takes more than one cycle. Insurance often covers none of it.

The King Who Symbolizes How Women Ended Up Giving Birth on Their Backs
May 3, 2026

A colorful royal anecdote, a centuries-long medical shift, and how each new “solution” made the original problem harder to fix

There is a position that over a billion women have given birth in. A position so normalized, so standard, so embedded in the hospital experience that most people assume it must be the most natural, medically optimal way to bring a child into the world.

It isn’t. And the history of how it became the default involves a voyeuristic king, the rise of male-dominated obstetrics, a new surgical instrument, and the slow disappearance of the midwife.

Louis XIV is often cited as the villain of this story. The reality is messier — and in some ways more troubling — than that.

Springtime for Hitler in Heaven
Springtime for Hitler in Heaven
May 3, 2026

On grace, transformation, and the uncomfortable theology of who gets in

The caterpillar in Alice in Wonderland asks the question with perfect indifference. He is sitting on a mushroom smoking a hookah and he could not be less impressed. Who are you?

It sounds simple. It is not.

Most people, if pressed, will eventually answer with their history. Their failures. Their worst moments. The things they have done that they cannot undo. In Christian circles this sometimes hardens into a kind of theological identity statement: I am a sinner. Which is true, as far as it goes. But it does not go nearly far enough, and when it is treated as a complete answer it produces a theology badly deformed at the root.

The Jeans That Started a Global Movement: Everything You Need to Know About Denim Day
May 2, 2026

Every April, millions of people around the world pull on their favorite pair of jeans for a reason that goes far deeper than fashion.

You’ve probably seen it on social media — a coworker’s Instagram post, a university’s flyer, a nonprofit’s tweet. “Wear denim today for Denim Day.” Maybe you’ve participated without knowing the full story. Maybe you’ve scrolled past it entirely.

Either way, the history behind Denim Day is one worth knowing. It begins in a courtroom in Italy, travels to the steps of a parliament building, crosses an ocean, and eventually becomes what Peace Over Violence describes as the longest-running sexual violence prevention and education campaign in history. It’s a story about injustice, outrage, and what happens when people refuse to stay silent.

In 1992, an 18-year-old Italian woman was sexually assaulted by her driving instructor during what should have been a routine lesson. He was convicted of rape. For years, it seemed like justice had been served.

Bumper Sticker Slogan Fights Are Not Intellectualism
May 1, 2026

We have confused performance with knowledge.

We have confused performance with knowledge. This is not a new problem, but the internet has industrialized it.

A man called @professor_mike_ recently posted a gym mirror selfie wearing a t-shirt that reads Democrats Can’t Debate. He challenged Democrats to prove him wrong. Comedian Steve Hofstetter accepted, picked voting rights as the topic, and announced he would do no additional research — he’d go in on what he already knows.

June 9th. Tickets available. Live digital audience.

The Journey to Marriage
May 1, 2026

On effort, intention, and the rituals we’ve quietly hollowed out

This is not an article about who to marry, or how to know when you’ve found the right person. Those are different questions — important ones — but they’re not this one.

This is about what happens before the question is even asked. The years of preparation, the quiet accumulation of effort and intention that precedes the ring, the dress, and the day itself. It’s about what those rituals were always supposed to represent — and what we lose when we stop taking the journey seriously.

It’s worth starting with a fact that surprises most people: the diamond engagement ring as a cultural institution is not ancient tradition. It’s a marketing campaign.

The Demolition of the Vote: What the Supreme Court Just Did to Black America, and What Scripture Says About It
May 1, 2026

A theological and legal reckoning with Louisiana v. Callais

“Do not deprive the foreigner or the fatherless of justice, or take the cloak of the widow as a pledge.” — Deuteronomy 24:17

“Learn to do right; seek justice. Defend the oppressed. Take up the cause of the fatherless; plead the case of the widow.” — Isaiah 1:17

“Woe to those who make unjust laws, to those who issue oppressive decrees, to deprive the poor of their rights and withhold justice from the oppressed of my people.” — Isaiah 10:1–2

What the Hell Are You Talking About?
Apr 30, 2026

On the weaponization of damnation — and why some of us finally walked out

There is a particular kind of sermon that lands like a fist. You know the one. The preacher’s voice drops to gravel, the music swells ominously beneath him, and the message is clear: shape up, give, obey, submit — or burn.

It has been preached from ten thousand pulpits. It has driven people to their knees in terror and kept them there. It has filled offering plates and emptied the self-respect of generations of believers.

And if you take the Bible seriously — really seriously — it may be one of the most wicked things happening in American Christianity today.

The Fig Tree Argument
Apr 27, 2026

A single tree can feed, clothe, and shelter a person. So why is survival illegal?

There’s a meme going around — cynical, a little tired, but with a sharp edge that doesn’t dull no matter how many times you see it. It goes something like: food, clothing, and shelter aren’t free. Someone has to pay for it.

The implication being that this is simply the nature of things. Scarcity. Reality. The cold logic of the world.

But here’s the thing. In the right climate, with access to water, a fig tree can provide all three — and has, for thousands of years. This isn’t a universal solution. It’s a proof of possibility. And that proof is enough to ask the uncomfortable question: if survival without the market is possible even in principle, why is it systematically restricted, legally precarious, and in practice available only to those who can already afford to opt out?

Put the Ukulele Down, Sir. She Needs Formula and Rent.
Apr 26, 2026

On the difference between changing someone’s mind in a moment and changing the conditions of their life — and what happens when the strategy actually succeeds.

Last week, a 77-year-old retired pastor named Clive Johnston stood outside a hospital in Northern Ireland, strummed a ukulele, preached John 3:16, and waited — patiently, politely — for the police to arrive.

They did. He was warned. He refused to leave. He accepted his summons with good cheer, thanked the officers for their courtesy, and went home.

He got more than a court date. He got Fox News. He got a U.S. State Department statement. He got a legal team, a PR apparatus, bodycam footage packaged for maximum virality, and a narrative that will outlast the verdict by years.

On Data Centers: The Physics Is Done. The Politics Isn’t.
Apr 25, 2026

Nature has already solved the infrastructure crisis. Here’s the math.

This piece is not a policy proposal.

It’s a physics argument.

The numbers below describe what the laws of nature permit — what becomes possible when you stop asking “what will the regulatory environment allow” and start asking “what does thermodynamics allow.” The gap between those two answers is the whole point.