March is not about choosing a direction, but learning how to notice when something is already moving.
By Phil Ault
You are always accumulating something, rest or fatigue, clarity or noise, patience or pressure. Accumulation does not require effort, only the absence of interruption.
By Phil Ault
A quiet reflection on January, inherited expectations, and learning to notice the patterns that shape us before anything changes.
By Phil Ault
Biblical Interpretation
Jonah’s story leaves us with a question it refuses to resolve. What happens when God’s mercy outruns our categories? What
By Phil Ault
transformation
March is not about choosing a direction, but learning how to notice when something is already moving.
By Phil Ault
Faith and Reason
Before Jonah ever fled from God, he hesitated. And that hesitation shaped everything that followed.
By Phil Ault
transformation
You are always accumulating something, rest or fatigue, clarity or noise, patience or pressure. Accumulation does not require effort, only the absence of interruption.
By Phil Ault
Biblical Interpretation
The Tower of Babel was never about reaching too high. It was about agreeing too easily. Today, a new kind of tower is rising, not out of brick and stone, but out of language itself. And once again, the danger is not power, but the collapse of difference.
By Phil Ault
transformation
A quiet reflection on January, inherited expectations, and learning to notice the patterns that shape us before anything changes.
By Phil Ault
Christmas
The gifts were not meant to explain who the child would become, but to acknowledge what had already begun.
By Phil Ault
Christmas
An ancient night sky showing multiple bright planets moving in coordinated patterns, suggesting time and meaning unfolding across the heavens.
By Phil Ault
Christmas
We remember the Magi as three figures frozen in a story we think we already know. But long before gold, frankincense, and myrrh, before a child, before a house, before a name, there was a sky that unsettled them. Something appeared that did not belong. And rather than dismiss it, they moved.
By Phil Ault
Biblical Interpretation
The final Cain chapter uncovers the silent war between sacrifice and surrender, showing how an ancient field still mirrors the modern heart’s search for grace.
By Phil Ault
Biblical Interpretation
Exploring the story of Cain not as a tale of violence, but as a warning against worshiping the work of our own hands, and the mercy that still meets us east of Eden.
By Phil Ault