What Does a Christ-Centered Friendship Look Like?
Christ-centered friendship goes beyond surface connection—it builds faith, bears burdens, and helps you grow closer to Jesus together.
Christ-centered friendship goes beyond surface connection—it builds faith, bears burdens, and helps you grow closer to Jesus together.
Tattoos and piercings aren’t inherently sinful—what matters is the heart, your motives, and whether your choices honor God with wisdom and freedom.
Living a holy life in a sinful world is possible—not by perfection, but through God’s Word, His Spirit, and a heart set apart for Him.
Following Jesus means daily surrender and sacrifice—not ease—but it leads to the life you were truly made for, with His strength.
You want to be kind. But you also don’t want to be fake. You want to be honest. But you’re afraid of hurting someone. You want to show grace. But you don’t want to excuse sin or enable bad behavior.These tensions show up everywhere — in parenting, marriage, friendships, church life, and even online interactions. […]
Feeling unqualified doesn’t disqualify you—your weakness may be exactly why God is calling you to serve and work through you.
The fruit of the Spirit isn’t a checklist—it’s Jesus’ character formed in you, growing not by striving but by surrender and trust.
When faith feels distant, returning to your first love isn’t trying harder—it’s letting God’s grace rekindle your heart again.
Spiritual dryness isn’t abandonment by God—it may be where He meets you most; let’s explore why it happens and how to respond.
Bring your doubts to God in prayer, seek truth in Scripture, and grow through community—faith often deepens through honest struggle.