Some leaders hit a point where every decision feels high‑stakes—career, family, calling, money.
A client leaving medicine after 30 years said I walked with his family through “profound complexities” with compassion and clarity.
His full story: https://t.co/RJLD778ofg
Isaiah 26:3–4 reminds us that every moment is a trust contest.
God doesn’t start with scolding. He keeps in perfect peace the one whose mind stays on Him, because He is an everlasting rock.
As His love moves from head to heart, false safeties lose their shine.
“I in them and You in Me…You…loved them even as You loved Me.” (John 17:23)
The Father loves you with the same love He has for His Son. As that moves from head to heart, worship shifts from audition to gratitude. “Lord, let Your ‘even as’ love be the loudest voice I hear today”
A YouVersion devotional on Jesus in the wilderness reframed temptation for me
The question isn’t just “Can I resist this?” but “Who am I trusting right now?
Denying myself isn’t God withholding good. It’s Him leading me to what’s best with a love as real as His love for His Son
@PaulTripp Love this!
Leaders are built to carry weight. But hunger and sleep remind us every single day that you were never designed to be self-sufficient. When that dependence on God moves from head to heart, it doesn't make you weaker. It makes you steadier in every room you walk into.
@DailyKeller Leaders carry weight every day that demands performance. But the Gospel says your status was already changed- done for you, not earned by you. When that truth moves from head to heart, it rewires how you lead, how you love, and how you face every pressure that comes your way.
The leaders I serve don’t just want miracles.
Like the Emmaus disciples, they want their hearts to burn again as the risen Jesus walks with them through His Word—quietly turning ordinary roads and hard seasons into places of living hope.
His voice shapes how they lead.
One of my favorite parts of this work is watching high‑capacity leaders grow as God’s love moves from head to heart.
Recently, a leader reflected on released burdens, deeper emotional awareness, and new freedom in how he leads, loves, and decides.
That’s the work I love.
The leaders who experience the deepest change aren’t the ones who try harder.
They’re the ones whose leadership is quietly rooted in something deeper than willpower: trust in a faithful Father whose love holds under pressure.
Willpower fades. God’s love doesn’t.
When your calendar owns you instead of serves you, even good things start to feel heavy.
Today’s Daily CHEW offers one small way to invite God into the way you steward time
https://t.co/zoktJTojsX
Sabbath isn’t a rulebook—it’s God’s gift to high performers hungry for soul-level rest.
Try these Sabbath principles for leaders: receive, delight, and worship without pressure.
Unlock the full guide here:
https://t.co/4hIgmNbQlx
Emotional resilience isn’t about being unshakeable—it’s about letting God’s love anchor every feeling.
Try this Gospel-rooted CHEW process for everyday energy and deeper hope:
https://t.co/5j7rvl37Hb
Why does “good enough” always feel impossible for ambitious Christians?
Perfectionism can lead to burnout—but the Gospel offers freedom.
Read: [https://t.co/gCz2c1RAfh]
#FaithAndBusiness#Leadership#Perfectionism#Gospel
Success alone isn’t enough. If you’re tired of chasing achievements that leave you empty, maybe it’s time to rediscover what really matters and see God’s love fill the gap. #ChristianLeadership#FaithInBusiness#HeadToHeart
https://t.co/Q76n21Edml
What does it look like to have our lives centered on Christ? In our latest blog post series, we explore what is means to have Christ as our first principle and unpack tools for connecting with Christ.
https://t.co/9TPjykYdHj
Divorce is difficult and unsettling for children, so preparing ahead of time to help them make the transition is extremely valuable. In our latest blog post series, we unpack how to help children in a divorce, from processing emotions to coparenting. https://t.co/2XQ7mYa2eC
In part two of our blog post series on identity, we look at the antidote to shame. When we label ourselves with shame, we forget that God is our Master and that we are His forgiven saints. The answer to our shame is to look at our identity in Christ.
https://t.co/0qdDiQ0SIO
What is our identity as Christians? In the first blog post of our identity series, we explore the facets of our identity and how our identity directly impacts our day-to-day lives.
https://t.co/UjjFjmqfdL