Category Archives: MyNotes

Three words.

Don’t say you don’t know what God requires of you! If you are looking for a challenging text in Scripture that speaks of mercy in the face of poverty and injustice, then grab your phone, open your Bible, and bookmark Micah 6:8. (Paper versions are available!) He has told you, O man, what is good; and what does… Read More »

The man with a feather

The man who impressed Jesus There’s a story in the Gospels—short, easy to miss—that’s really relevant right now. It’s a short but important one about authority, humility, power, and… well, let’s just say it might make you rethink what strength actually looks like. It’s the kind of story, like a Netflix drama, that has a twist in the… Read More »

What We Cannot See

Why Romans 8 might be a verse for 2025 As a new Christian, I was taught to memorise scriptures, the first being John 3:16–17. Once that was locked in, there was a scramble for all the ‘biggies,’ which were necessary for when I couldn’t figure everything out but needed hope and context. These included the likes of Romans… Read More »

Inability, obscurity, and promise

Another delve into the life of Samson I wrote about Samson recently. It’s a well-known story, but I think there’s still a little more to unpack. In fact, it probably warrants a book—but let’s not get carried away! Judges 13 is a story that unfolds in layers: it’s about a people lost in cycles of rebellion, a barren… Read More »

Seek the Welfare of the City

Seek the Welfare of the City: A Prophetic Call to Be Different There are challenges ahead for us in 2025—but God, being God, is already there, waiting for us—not to confront us, but to be with us. We can draw encouragement from the truth that God has a plan. It’s not Plan A, B, or C. More like… Read More »

Time to Bring Back the Deacons?

Somewhere along the way, amidst the busyness of church structures and other “welcomed” distractions, we seem to have lost sight of some of the gifts of the Holy Spirit and also of a simple but profound role that was birthed in the early days of the Church: the deacon. I wonder if it’s a challenge that we need… Read More »

Do Not Be Anxious

Every generation probably has a moment when they take a weary glance at what is going on around them and come to the conclusion that the precarious days they are living in must be the most anxious ever—can things get any worse? We can’t ignore our anxiety—it keeps us awake at night, steals our joy, and fills us… Read More »

The Rock, the Storm, and the Church

Let’s talk about essential foundations. A few years ago, on holiday in Fethiye, Turkey, I borrowed a canoe and made my way across what I considered a short distance over the sea to what I thought was a nearby island. A few hundred yards from the island, I suddenly found the canoe being covered by bees! They had… Read More »

The Three Gifts No One Else Got

What’s the best gift you’ve ever been given at Christmas? More than likely, you’ll find yourself lost for words, scrambling through your memories. Some gifts are practical—clothes, kitchen utensils, and so on. Others bring pure joy and great purpose. But have you ever received three gifts that no one else in the world received—guaranteed? That’s precisely what happened… Read More »

The Baby, the Chaos, and the Call

As the year draws to a close, it feels like the whole world is holding its breath. Not just in that “Christmas is coming” kind of way, but in the kind of way where people are bracing themselves. There’s an ache in the air, a tension you can almost taste. For all of us, it’s been a chaotic… Read More »

Who Was the Last Off Noah’s Ark?

An interesting theological and philosophical question often posed is this: If you cut a tree down in the Garden of Eden minutes after creation, how many rings would it have? There are answers (the day-age theory, for example), but my question is about Noah’s Ark. You know the story: a man, a flood, a giant boat, and animals… Read More »

Donkeys in revival

Revival. The word itself crackles with divine energy, doesn’t it? Revival is God’s great unveiling—a manifestation of the Holy Spirit that strips back the eggshell-thin membrane between heaven and earth and shows us, in vivid clarity, both the glory of God and the utter depth of our need for Him. It’s like standing in a thunderstorm, drenched and… Read More »

99 to 1?

I’ve heard a few sermons about the parable of the lost sheep—and to be fair, the preachers on those days did a good job—but I couldn’t help but think about one thing… well, 99 of them. The parable was so named by us, not Jesus. He told the parable-story, and we added the title, ghost-writing it, ready for… Read More »

The Unfettered Power of God

There is nothing like the manifest presence of God and witnessing His seemingly raw omnipotence at work. That omnipotence—unrestrained, limitless power—knows no boundaries and is accompanied by the Lordship of Christ, embodying power, authority, and omniscience in all things, for all time and beyond. Where am I going with this – what am I alluding to? Where do… Read More »

Encouragement in Unexpected Places

I’m thankful to be part of a church where the “encouragement tank” is always full. This might not be the case for everyone, and perhaps it’s not for you either. Yet, encouragement is vital. We are told, urged, and even commanded to encourage one another, especially given the challenging times in which we live. You’ve experienced encouragement, so… Read More »

When the Glory Fades

My wife and I recently met with a young Christian leader who preaches regularly at our church. As we sat around the wood burner that evening, our conversation shifted to the moves of God in recent years. My friend has never experienced a move of God—that manifest presence, that heavy sense of His glory that lingers over worship.… Read More »

Fear and Faith in your Storm

You might need to read this … Matthew 8:23–27 is a big challenge—not just to me, but to you too, as you’ll see. This story isn’t just a story; it’s a mirror, a picture of what it means to live, to trust, and to follow Jesus in the real world—in life, because, to be honest, storms are everywhere;… Read More »

A Story of Ears, Swords, and Grace

Meet Malchus There’s a moment, tucked away in the chaos of Gethsemane, that most of us overlook. The garden is dimly lit, tension fills the air, and Jesus—fully God, fully man—stands on the brink of His ultimate purpose. And right there, in the middle of betrayal, violence, swords, and confusion, we meet Malchus. Malchus? Who is he? His… Read More »

Angels? What angels…?

Keep looking. Whatever happened to the angels? The ones who lit up the sky over Bethlehem with “Glory to God in the highest”? The ones who rolled away stones and sat on them as if death were a mere inconvenience? Do they not show up anymore? Or is it that we’ve forgotten how to see? Throughout Scripture, angels… Read More »

A dagger, a king, and a very messy end.

Ehud does not disappoint…. The story of Ehud in Judges 3 is one of those gritty, unpredictable tales where God works in ways no one sees coming. It’s uncomfortable, even shocking at times, but it’s laced with divine purpose. First, we see that God uses the unexpected. Ehud was left-handed—a detail that seems trivial until you realise how… Read More »