On January 7th, I turned 28. And it’s not really about the number. It’s about what this season of life is teaching me. The older I get, the more I understand one thing: everything is grace. Life, opportunities, relationships, even the hard moments; none of it is guaranteed. For a long time, I thought some things were supposed to stay. Stability, certain plans, certain people. Now I know that nothing is owed to us. Everything can change. And strangely, that truth doesn’t scare me anymore. It grounds me. Because if nothing is guaranteed, then every day matters, every breath, every small step forward, every open door. At 28, I don’t have all the answers. But I’m learning to live with more gratitude, less entitlement, and more faith. I’m learning to receive life as it comes, without taking it for granted. This is where I am right now: everything is grace. Nothing is guaranteed. ⸻ 28 ans — tout est grâce, rien n’est acquis Le 7 janvier, j’ai totalisé mes 28 ans....
This morning, while meditating on the story of David after his victory over Goliath, one truth deeply touched my heart. Just after being powerfully used by God, David found himself threatened by King Saul, driven by jealousy and fear. Saul wanted him dead. Yet in the middle of this trial, God had placed Jonathan. Jonathan, Saul’s son, could have remained silent. He could have chosen family loyalty or personal safety. Instead, he chose friendship. He warned David of the danger and then spoke well of him before his father. Through Jonathan’s intervention, Saul’s heart changed, and David’s life was spared at least for a time. This story reminds us of an essential truth: true friendship can become a source of joy, protection, and life. In a world where trust is increasingly rare, where relationships can be shallow or self-serving, we are called to discern. Not every presence is a blessing, and not every friendship is a refuge. We need people around us who are willing to defend us when...
There is a concept I recently encountered that deeply challenged me: the idea of the “spiritual consumer.” The more I reflect on it, the more I realize how accurately it describes our generation. We live in a world saturated with spirituality. Religious language is everywhere. Churches are full, social media is flooded with verses, prayers, sermons, and references to God. Speaking about God has never been easier. And yet, in the midst of this spiritual abundance, something essential is missing: true conversion.💔 The spiritual consumer is someone who consumes spirituality without embracing its cost. They pray, attend services, receive communion, and sometimes even preach. They speak about God, serve God, share God. But deep inside, there is a quiet resistance: the pain of real change, the fear of a genuine transformation of the heart. At some point in life, we all face this reality. For some, it has been revealed, and they have chosen the path of deep ; often painful conversion. For...
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