Reflections on Faith and Study: The Value of Slowing Down
Much of modern discourse moves quickly. Opinions are formed rapidly, conclusions are shared instantly, and certainty is often rewarded more than understanding. In matters of faith, this speed can be costly. Reflection requires time. It asks for pause rather than reaction, attention rather than assumption. It is not opposed to conviction, but it refuses to […]
Restored Theology: Recovering Meaning Without Reinventing Faith
Restoration is often misunderstood. It is frequently assumed to mean rejection of tradition, invention of new doctrine, or rebellion against inherited belief. Restored Theology proposes none of these. Its concern is not novelty, but recovery. Restored Theology begins with a simple premise: faith does not need to be reinvented, but it does require careful re-examination […]
Theology and Faith: Why Scripture Must Be Studied, Not Assumed
Faith is often spoken of as something instinctive — something felt, inherited, or simply received. Theology, on the other hand, is frequently viewed as complex, academic, or even unnecessary. This separation is artificial. Faith and theology are not opposites; they are inseparable. Theology is not the enemy of faith. Careless theology is. Scripture was not […]
Why This Space Exists: Faith, Language, and the Call to Restoration
Faith is not static. Language is not neutral. And truth is not discovered by accident.