Tag: spiritual growth

  • A Free Preview of Veronica

    A Free Preview of Veronica

    Meeting Veronica

    The Legend That Isn’t Scripture

    An Imaginary Friend Who Might Not Be Good for You

    Today I want to introduce you to an imaginary friend. But not the kind you had as a child—the invisible companion who joined you for tea parties or sat beside you in the car. No, this imaginary friend is far more dangerous because millions of people believe she’s real. Her name is Veronica, and the question “Who the heck is Veronica?” might just become the most important tool you’ll ever use in your spiritual journey.

    Let me start with how this question came to be.

    A Hill, A Statue, and A Very Good Question

    My wife Kathy and I were celebrating our 29th wedding anniversary with a romantic getaway to Paraparaumu, a beautiful coastal town in New Zealand. We were staying near the beach, and from our accommodation—specifically from our bathroom window—we could see something remarkable on the hilltop: a twelve-metre-tall statue of Mary, the mother of Jesus, illuminated at night with a glowing halo of lights.

    On a beautiful Sunday afternoon, we decided to climb the hill to visit this impressive monument. The pathway had been carefully prepared as a devotional walk featuring the Stations of the Cross—a Catholic practice that commemorates Jesus’s final journey to Calvary. As we walked hand in hand up the hill (remember, I was being especially well-behaved given the anniversary), we came upon various monuments marking each station.

    Then we reached Station Six.

    There, on a plaque, was a tribute to someone named Veronica. Kathy turned to me with genuine curiosity and asked, “Who the heck is Veronica?”

    Now, for a brief moment, you might think she was checking whether I had a girlfriend on the side. But I can assure you, I’m far too old and far too tired to have a girlfriend. Besides, I much prefer the one I already have! No, this was a different kind of question entirely—one that would spark what you’re reading right now.

    The Legend of the Veil

    So who is this Veronica person? Let me tell you what I discovered.

    According to Catholic tradition, Veronica was a compassionate woman who encountered Jesus as He carried His cross through the streets of Jerusalem toward Golgotha. Moved by His suffering, she stepped forward from the crowd and offered Him her veil to wipe the blood, sweat, and dirt from His face. When Jesus handed the cloth back to her, His image had been miraculously imprinted upon it—a perfect impression of His holy face, captured in that moment of agonising sacrifice.

    It’s a beautiful, moving story. The kind that inspires devotion and compassion. The act itself—reaching out to comfort someone in their darkest moment—reflects the heart of Christ’s own teaching about mercy and love.

    The presence of this relic can be traced back to at least the 14th century, with references to a chapel dedicated to Saint Veronica existing as early as the eighth century. The story became enshrined as the sixth Station of the Cross, wherein Saint Veronica encounters Jesus along the Via Dolorosa and wipes His face with her veil. For centuries, pilgrims have venerated this cloth, which reportedly resides among the treasures of the Church in Rome.

    The name “Veronica” itself is fascinating—it’s a Latin alteration of the name Berenice, but its spelling was influenced by the ecclesiastical Latin phrase “vera icon,” meaning “true image”. Some scholars suggest that the cloth bearing Jesus’s image was originally known as the “vera icon” (true image), and this name for the relic was later misinterpreted as the name of a saint. Whether the woman created the name or the name created the woman is a question that brings us to the heart of our problem.

    The Problem: She’s Not in the Bible

    Here’s what you need to know, and why I’m giving you this story as a tool: In all my years of reading the Gospels—Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John—in all my study of the accounts of Jesus’s life, death, and resurrection, in all the eyewitness testimonies recorded in Scripture about His journey to the cross, I have never, ever encountered anyone named Veronica.

    Not once.

    Not even a hint of her.

    The Gospels tell us about Simon of Cyrene, who was compelled to carry Jesus’s cross. They describe the weeping women of Jerusalem whom Jesus addressed. They record the soldiers, the crowds, the mockers, and the mourners. But nowhere—absolutely nowhere—does Scripture mention a woman who wiped Jesus’s face with a veil and received His image upon it.

    This doesn’t mean the story isn’t inspiring. It doesn’t mean we should mock or dismiss those who find spiritual meaning in it. What it means is that we must acknowledge a crucial distinction: this is tradition, not Scripture. It’s a story that developed centuries after the events it claims to describe, passed down through legend and eventually formalised into religious practice.

    And that distinction matters more than you might think.

    A Tool for Your Journey

    Let me be clear about why I’m sharing this with you. I’m not interested in tearing down Catholic tradition or anyone’s faith expression. I have deep respect for believers across all denominations who genuinely love Jesus and seek to honour Him. What I am interested in is giving you a tool—a question you can use throughout your life to distinguish between what’s true according to God’s Word and what’s true according to human tradition.

    That question is simply this: “Who the heck is Veronica?”

    Say it out loud with me now: “Who the heck is Veronica?”

    This question becomes your checkpoint, your white flag, your moment to pause and ask yourself: “What am I believing? Is this based on Scripture, or is this based on tradition, culture, or personal experience?”

    The Clarkie Test

    Let me give you another example of how this kind of gentle questioning works. Years ago, I worked with a wonderful couple—Denis and Coralie Clark. At the end of a week, we would sit together and debrief: celebrating wins, discussing challenges, and dreaming about the future.

    Clarkie (as everyone called Denis) was bold and passionate. He would often burst out with grand announcements, decisive declarations, or exciting aspirations. And without missing a beat, his wife Coralie would look at him and ask, “Clarkie, is that what we think?”

    It was brilliant. She wasn’t attacking him or putting him down. She was waving a white flag—a safe way to check in, to challenge an idea without challenging the person. She was asking, in essence, “Are you sure about this? Have you thought it through? Is this really true, or is this just how you’re feeling right now?”

    That’s exactly what “Who the heck is Veronica?” does for us. It’s a gentle but essential question that helps us examine our beliefs without defensiveness or shame.

    Little T Truth vs. Capital T Truth

    Here’s the framework that will help you understand why this matters so much.

    Many of us carry what I call “little t” truths—beliefs that are true for us, that feel true based on our experience, upbringing, or cultural context. These might include things like:

    • “God only blesses me when I’m successful.”
    • “I have to work harder to earn God’s love.”
    • “Bad things happen to me because I’ve sinned.”
    • “Real Christians never struggle with doubt.”
    • “If my prayers aren’t answered the way I want, God doesn’t care.”

    These “little t” truths shape our behaviour, inform our decisions, and influence how we relate to God and others. The problem? They’re often wrong.

    In contrast, there’s “capital T” Truth—the unchanging, unshakeable, eternally reliable Truth of God’s Word. This is what Scripture reveals about who God is, who we are, and how we’re meant to live. It’s infallible. It withstands every test. It remains the same yesterday, today, and forever.

    The tragedy is that too many believers—good, sincere, faithful people—build their lives on “little t” truths instead of “capital T” Truth. They end up on the wrong path, carrying burdens God never intended them to bear, missing the freedom that Jesus died to give them.

    Veronica is a perfect example. She represents something that feels spiritual, looks religious, and has been practiced for centuries. But she’s not in the Bible. She’s a “little t” truth—true in the sense that the tradition exists, but not true according to the only source that can be fully trusted: Scripture.

    Why This Matters for You

    You might be thinking, “Okay, so Veronica isn’t in the Bible. So what? I’m not Catholic. This doesn’t apply to me.”

    But here’s what I’ve learned in decades of pastoral ministry: we all have Veronicas in our lives. We all carry beliefs, practices, and assumptions that seem true but aren’t actually based on God’s Word. These might be things we learned in childhood, absorbed from our church culture, or picked up from well-meaning Christians who themselves were operating on “little t” truths.

    And if we don’t confront these false beliefs, several things will happen:

    1. We’ll end up on the wrong path. Instead of walking in the freedom Christ offers, we’ll trudge along under burdens He never intended us to carry.
    2. We’ll miss the best God has for us. Like climbing a hill to worship Mary when we could be encountering Jesus, our spiritual energy gets directed toward things that can’t actually satisfy or save.
    3. We’ll pass these false beliefs to the next generation. Our children and grandchildren will inherit our “little t” truths, and they’ll struggle under the same bondage we experienced.

    This is why asking “Who the heck is Veronica?” is so vital. It’s not about being critical or cynical. It’s about being discerning. It’s about valuing truth enough to examine what we believe and making sure it aligns with Scripture.

    Modern Veronicas

    Let me bring this closer to home with some contemporary examples.

    The Social Media Veronica: 

    How many times have you seen something shared online that claims to be Christian truth, only to discover later that it’s misquoted, taken out of context, or completely fabricated? “God said it, I believe it, that settles it”—except God didn’t actually say what’s being attributed to Him.

    The Prosperity Gospel Veronica: 

    The teaching that God rewards faithful Christians with health, wealth, and success—a “little t” truth that sounds appealing but crumbles under biblical examination. Tell that to the apostle Paul, who experienced shipwrecks, beatings, and imprisonment.

    The Performance Veronica: 

    The belief that you have to do certain things, act a certain way, or achieve certain standards to earn God’s approval. This is perhaps the most common Veronica in modern Christianity, despite Scripture’s clear teaching about grace.

    The Comparison Veronica: 

    The idea that your faith journey should look like someone else’s—that you should have the same experiences, feel the same emotions, or express your devotion in the same ways.

    Each of these represents a “little t” truth that many sincere believers hold. Each one can lead us away from the pure, liberating Truth of the Gospel.

    An Invitation to Freedom

    As we begin this journey together through this book, I want you to know that my goal isn’t to destroy your faith or make you suspicious of everything. Rather, I want to invite you into greater freedom—the kind of freedom that comes from building your life on solid rock rather than shifting sand.

    Jesus Himself dealt with this issue constantly. The Pharisees were full of “little t” truths—traditions and interpretations that had been passed down for generations, treated as equal to (or sometimes more important than) Scripture itself. Jesus challenged them repeatedly, pointing them back to God’s actual Word rather than human additions to it.

    In the chapters ahead, we’re going to look at biblical examples of people who held false beliefs and see what happened when they did—or didn’t—let go of them. We’ll explore practical ways to identify the “Veronicas” in your own life. We’ll discover how humility becomes the key to freedom, and we’ll learn a simple but powerful process for replacing “little t” truths with “capital T” Truth.

    But it all starts here, with a simple question: “Who the heck is Veronica?”

    Your First Exercise

    Before you move on to the next chapter, I want you to take some time for reflection. This isn’t busy work—it’s the beginning of your journey toward freedom.

    Journal Prompt: 

    Write down three beliefs about God, yourself, or the Christian life that you’ve held for as long as you can remember. Don’t filter or judge them yet—just write them down.

    Do you want to dive deeper?

    I’ve prepared a 10-week, 7-day devotional guide especially for for you!

    Click this link and to check out the comprehensive Devotional Guide for walking in freedom.  Beyond Veronica is available for you to pre-order.

    Prayer Prompt: 

    “Father God, I’m willing to examine what I believe. I’m willing to let go of anything that isn’t true according to Your Word. Would You show me if there’s a ‘Veronica’ in my life—something I’ve been treating as Truth that isn’t actually in Your Word? Give me courage to see it and humility to release it. I want to build my life on Your Truth alone.”

    Looking Ahead

    In the second chapter, we’re going to develop this framework of “little t” versus “capital T” truth more fully. We’ll look at how false beliefs gain power in our lives and why they’re so hard to let go of. We’ll also begin to explore the biblical principle that changes everything: what we agree with, we give power to.

    But for now, let the question settle into your heart: “Who the heck is Veronica?”

    It’s a question that might just set you free.

    “Then you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.” — John 8:32

    A Final Word

    I want to be clear: my heart toward anyone who venerates Veronica or participates in the Stations of the Cross is one of respect and love. These practices have brought comfort and inspired compassion in millions of believers over centuries. The devotion is real, the hearts are sincere, and God works in mysterious ways.

    But sincerity doesn’t equal accuracy. And when we’re talking about building a foundation for our faith—something we’ll stake our lives on, something we’ll pass on to our children—we need to make sure we’re building on the Word of God, not the traditions of men.

    That’s not judgment. That’s just wisdom.

    And it’s wisdom that applies to all of us, regardless of our denominational background. We all have our “Veronicas”—the beliefs and practices we’ve inherited that need to be examined in the light of Scripture.

    So let’s examine them together.

    Let’s ask the hard questions.

    Let’s be willing to let go of what isn’t true so we can grab hold of what is.

    Let’s find out who the heck Veronica really is—and what we should do about her.

    Are you ready?

    Then let’s begin.

    Click the image below to get your copy of this book.

  • Get Free Like Me

    Get Free Like Me

    If you’ve ever felt like you’re doing everything “right” as a Christian but still feeling exhausted, anxious, and not good enough… you’re not alone.

    You show up at church. You serve faithfully. You read your Bible and pray. You’re trying so hard to measure up, to earn God’s approval, to be spiritual enough.

    But here’s what no one tells you: You might be building your entire spiritual life on beliefs that aren’t actually in the Bible.

    I call them “little t” truths—beliefs that feel right, sound spiritual, and might even be taught in church… but aren’t found in Scripture. And they’re keeping you in bondage.

    How do I know? Because I’ve spent decades counseling believers who are carrying crushing burdens God never intended them to bear.

    Like the woman who believed: “God only loves me when I’m useful”
    Or the man convinced: “I must work harder to earn God’s favor”
    Or the teen who thinks: “If I’m struggling, I must not have real faith”

    None of those beliefs are biblical. But they’re powerful because they’ve been reinforced by experience, culture, or well-meaning Christians who themselves believed lies.

    That’s where Veronica comes in.

    Veronica is a legend—a woman who supposedly wiped Jesus’s face on the way to Calvary. It’s beautiful. It’s inspiring. It’s taught in Catholic tradition.

    And she’s not in the Bible.

    Not once. Not in any Gospel. She’s a “little t” truth—true in the sense that the legend exists, but not true according to Scripture.

    And here’s the question that will change your life: “Who the heck is Veronica?”

    It’s a tool. A checkpoint. A way to examine what you believe and ask: Is this actually in God’s Word, or is this tradition, culture, experience, or assumption?

    In this book, you’ll:

    • Learn the difference between “little t” and “capital T” Truth
    • Discover the Five R’s process for replacing lies with Scripture
    • Explore biblical stories (Naaman’s pride, Gehazi’s greed) that mirror your struggles
    • Identify false beliefs causing anxiety, shame, and spiritual exhaustion
    • Break generational patterns affecting your children
    • Find practical tools for living in freedom instead of performance

    This isn’t theory. It’s transformation.

    This isn’t just information. It’s invitation—to question what you’ve believed, test it against Scripture, and experience the freedom Jesus died to give you.

    Whether you’re:

    • A teen drowning in social pressure about identity and worth
    • A parent exhausted from trying to be “good enough”
    • A church leader helping others find freedom
    • A believer who’s done all the “right things” but still feels empty

    …this book is your roadmap.

    Because true faith isn’t built on legends, traditions, or what you’ve always heard.

    It’s anchored in the unchanging, unshakeable Truth of God’s Word.

    Stop climbing the wrong hill. Discover who Veronica really is—and what you should do about her.

    Get your copy of this powerful book today.

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    or… you can read the first chapter for free here.

  • Building Your Faith

    Building Your Faith

    Are you building your faith on lies disguised as truth?

    Most Christians carry beliefs that feel spiritual, sound biblical, and have been practiced for generations—but aren’t actually in Scripture. These “little t” truths keep you in bondage while “capital T” Truth sets you free.

    What if the beliefs holding you back aren’t even in the Bible?

    Drawing from the legend of Veronica—a woman Catholic tradition says wiped Jesus’s face on the cross, yet appears in zero Gospels—this book teaches you to ask: “Who the heck is Veronica?”

    It’s a checkpoint. A white flag. A tool for questioning inherited beliefs, cultural Christianity, and personal assumptions that masquerade as biblical truth.

    WHAT YOU’LL LEARN:

    Biblical Discernment – Distinguish “little t” truths (personal beliefs) from “capital T” Truth (Scripture)
    The Five R’s Process – Practical steps to identify lies and replace them with biblical truth
    Naaman’s Story – How pride and false beliefs nearly cost him his miracle
    Gehazi’s Warning – Why greed and worldly values curse future generations
    Modern Applications – From prosperity gospel to hustle culture to social media myths
    Emotional Signposts – Using feelings to identify hidden false beliefs
    Generational Impact – Breaking cycles of shame, performance, and spiritual bondage
    Freedom Framework – Moving from anxiety to peace, performing to resting, striving to trusting

    KEYWORDS: Christian living, spiritual freedom, biblical truth, false beliefs, generational healing, faith and doubt, Christian discipleship, spiritual growth, biblical teaching, freedom in Christ, Christian identity, overcoming shame, performance-based faith, prosperity gospel critique, spiritual bondage, Christian self-help

    WHO THIS BOOK IS FOR:

    • Christians feeling exhausted by performance-based faith
    • Teens navigating identity, worth, and cultural pressure
    • Parents wanting to break unhealthy spiritual patterns
    • Church leaders helping others find freedom
    • Anyone carrying shame, anxiety, or “never good enough” beliefs
    • Believers wanting to build faith on Scripture, not tradition

    WHAT MAKES THIS DIFFERENT:

    Unlike generic “Christian living” books, Who the Heck is Veronica? provides:

    • A memorable tool (the Veronica question) you’ll use for life
    • Deep biblical exposition grounded in 2 Kings 5
    • Psychological insights (confirmation bias, belief formation)
    • Practical exercises and journaling prompts
    • Modern analogies connecting ancient truth to current culture
    • A legacy focus—breaking cycles for your children

    THE PROMISE:

    By the end of this book, you’ll know how to identify false beliefs, test them against Scripture, and replace them with truth that genuinely sets you free.

    Stop living by legends. Start living by Truth.

    Get your copy today!

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    or… you can read the first chapter for free here.

  • Find Transformation in Freedom

    Find Transformation in Freedom

    Picture this: You’re climbing a hill on a beautiful Sunday afternoon, following a devotional path marked by monuments and plaques. Suddenly, you encounter Station Six—a tribute to Veronica, the woman who wiped Jesus’s face on the way to Calvary.

    It’s moving. It’s beautiful. It’s inspirational.

    There’s just one problem: She’s not in the Bible.

    Not in Matthew, Mark, Luke, or John. Nowhere in Scripture. She’s a legend that became tradition, a story that feels true but isn’t found in God’s Word.

    And here’s the uncomfortable question: What else are you believing that isn’t actually biblical?

    In a world flooded with spiritual shortcuts, feel-good myths, and cultural Christianity, Who the Heck is Veronica? invites you on a transformative journey to unmask the “false truths” that quietly sabotage your faith.

    You’ll discover:

    • The powerful difference between “little t” truths (personal beliefs that feel right) and “capital T” Truth (unchanging biblical reality)
    • Why you’re exhausted from performing for God’s approval—and how to rest in grace instead
    • How Naaman’s pride nearly cost him his healing (and what we can learn from his humility)
    • Why Gehazi’s greed didn’t just destroy him—it cursed his descendants for generations
    • The Five R’s process: Renounce, Repent, Remove, Replace, Rehearse—your practical path to freedom
    • How your unaddressed lies become your children’s inheritance

    This book is for:

    • Teens navigating social media myths and peer pressure about identity and worth
    • Adults carrying beliefs like “I must work harder to be loved” or “God is disappointed in me”
    • Parents wanting to break generational patterns of shame, performance, or fear
    • Church leaders helping others distinguish between tradition and Scripture
    • Anyone who’s done all the “right” Christian things but still feels in bondage

    Through biblical exposition, modern analogies (from hustle culture to confirmation bias), and introspective exercises, you’ll learn to question what you believe, test it against Scripture, and replace comfortable lies with liberating Truth.

    The stakes are high: Your false beliefs don’t just affect you—they shape your legacy, influence your community, and model faith for the next generation.

    If you’re ready to:

    • Trade illusions for intimacy with God
    • Stop performing and start resting in grace
    • Break free from anxiety, shame, and spiritual exhaustion
    • Build your life on solid rock instead of shifting sand

    …then this is your wake-up call.

    Because true faith isn’t built on legends. It’s anchored in the living, breathing Word of God.

    Discover who Veronica really is—and what you should do about her.

    Phil Strong’s latest title available for you here. (click the image to read more)

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    or… you can read the first chapter for free here.

  • More like a burden?

    More like a burden?

    Have you ever wondered why your faith feels more like a burden than freedom?

    You’re serving faithfully. Reading your Bible. Attending church. Doing all the “right” things. Yet you’re exhausted, anxious, and secretly wondering if you’re good enough for God.

    Here’s the truth: You might be building your spiritual life on beliefs that aren’t actually in Scripture—”little t” truths that feel right but lead you away from the freedom Christ died to give you.

    Drawing from the intriguing Catholic legend of Veronica—a compassionate woman whose story isn’t found in any Gospel—this book gives you a powerful question to ask yourself: “Who the heck is Veronica?” It’s a tool for identifying false beliefs, challenging inherited traditions, and replacing lies with biblical Truth.

    Through riveting biblical stories (like Naaman’s pride and Gehazi’s greed), practical exercises, and raw self-reflection prompts, you’ll learn to:

    • Distinguish between “little t” truths and “capital T” Truth
    • Identify false beliefs causing anxiety, shame, and spiritual bondage
    • Apply the Five R’s process to replace lies with Scripture
    • Break generational patterns affecting your children and grandchildren
    • Live authentically in Christ’s grace without performance pressure

    Whether you’re a teen navigating peer pressure or an adult wrestling with doubt, this isn’t just a read—it’s a roadmap to freedom, humility, and legacy.

    Stop climbing the wrong hill. Discover how letting go of your “Veronicas” can lead to healing and empower you to live in the Truth that actually sets you free.

    True faith isn’t built on legends—it’s anchored in the living Word.

    NEW BOOK RELEASING SOON!

    Get it from my shelf to yours. Click the image below to read more.

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    or… you can read the first chapter for free here.

  • From Broken to Beloved

    Healing Through Grace

    We all carry baggage. Like reusable shopping bags accumulating in your garage, emotional wounds and hurts seem to pile up without us really noticing. We don’t set out to collect this baggage—life just happens. People disappoint us. Circumstances crush dreams. Words leave lasting scars.

    But here’s what I’m sensing God saying to His people: it’s time to step into healing through His grace.

    When Reality Becomes Your Truth

    Here’s something crucial about healing: our reality often becomes our truth. What we believe based on our experiences, emotions, and circumstances—what I call “little t truth”—guides our lives. But it might not be God’s capital T Truth.

    If you were told as a child that you were worthless, that might feel absolutely real. Your emotions confirm it, your self-talk reinforces it. But it’s not God’s Truth. His Truth is that you are fearfully and wonderfully made, chosen, beloved, and precious in His sight.

    The wounds in our hearts become tools the enemy uses to manipulate us, creating strongholds that resist God’s truth and keep us trapped in limiting patterns.

    Mephibosheth: Grace That Transforms

    In my book Stay Strong, I explore the remarkable story of Mephibosheth—a man whose life was marked by trauma but transformed by grace. At five years old, he lost his father Jonathan and grandfather King Saul in battle. In the panic that followed, his nurse dropped him while fleeing, leaving him lame in both feet.

    For years, Mephibosheth lived in exile in Lo Debar—literally meaning “no pasture” or “barren place.” He lived in obscurity, poverty, and fear, believing himself forgotten and possibly hunted.

    Then King David asked a life-changing question: “Is there anyone still left of the house of Saul to whom I can show kindness?”

    Notice David wasn’t looking for someone who deserved kindness—he was looking for someone to whom he could show it. Grace isn’t based on merit but on the character of the one showing grace.

    The Moment Everything Changed

    When Mephibosheth came before David, he fell down calling himself “a dead dog”—seeing himself as worthless and expendable. But David’s response revealed the heart of grace:

    “Don’t be afraid, for I will surely show you kindness… I will restore to you all the land that belonged to your grandfather Saul, and you will always eat at my table.”

    In one moment, fear was replaced with security, poverty with abundance, exile with belonging, shame with honor. Not because of anything Mephibosheth had done, but because of grace.

    Your Invitation to Healing

    The great news is that healing and freedom is fully accomplished in Christ. You don’t have to work for it, earn it, or deserve it. For those in Christ, healing is available—you just need to reach out and embrace it.

    This involves:

    • Recognizing the lies you believe about yourself that contradict Scripture
    • Choosing to forgive those who hurt you and releasing bitterness
    • Receiving grace for yourself—you’re not the exception to God’s love
    • Walking in your new identity based on who God says you are, not your wounds

    Like Mephibosheth taking his place at David’s table, you have a seat at the King’s table. Your past doesn’t define you—His grace does.


    GRAB PHIL’S LATEST BOOK:

    Ready to discover how biblical heroes found unshakeable strength in surrender? Order Stay Strong now and learn the timeless secrets of spiritual resilience that can transform your overwhelming circumstances into testimonies of God’s faithfulness.

    You can purchase a PDF version of the book here: https://philstrong.com/shop

  • The Secret to True Community Connection

    “I just don’t feel connected. I just don’t feel plugged in.”

    If I had a dollar for every time someone said this to me, I’d be wealthy. It’s one of the most common struggles I encounter—this deep longing for authentic connection and belonging. People drift through life feeling isolated, even when surrounded by others. They attend church but feel like spectators. They live in neighborhoods but barely know their neighbors.

    But here’s a phrase that might change your perspective entirely: The way for you to feel connected is for you to choose to serve the very thing you want to be connected to.

    The Barnabas Model: Building Connection Through Contribution

    In my book Stay Strong, I explore the remarkable story of Barnabas—nicknamed “Son of Encouragement” by the early church. While others focused on what they could get from community, Barnabas consistently looked for ways to contribute.

    When the early church needed financial support, Barnabas sold his field and gave the proceeds. When Saul of Tarsus (later Paul) needed someone to believe in him after his conversion, Barnabas vouched for him when everyone else was afraid. When young John Mark needed a second chance after disappointing Paul, Barnabas invested in him—and that young man became the author of the Gospel of Mark.

    Barnabas understood a fundamental truth: connection follows contribution.

    Community in Layers: Where You Can Serve

    Think about community in expanding circles:

    Your Inner Circle: Family Start here. If you want to feel loved by your spouse, start loving your spouse. Want deeper connection with your kids? Choose to serve them consistently, especially when they seem to push you away. God chose you for this family—it’s your first and most fundamental community.

    Your Extended Family: Church Community Your faith community needs your contribution to thrive in its mission. This isn’t about massive commitments—look for ways to add value rather than just consume. Volunteer, encourage others, help with practical needs.

    Your Broader Context: Neighborhood and City God told the exiles in Babylon to “seek the peace and prosperity of the city” where they’d been placed (Jeremiah 29:7). You’re not just passing through your community—you’re planted there with purpose.

    The Focus Principle That Changes Everything

    Here’s a truth that will transform your relationships: What you focus on is what you move toward.

    If you constantly focus on what you’re not getting from community—how they don’t appreciate you, include you, or meet your needs—you’ll find yourself moving away, becoming more isolated and bitter.

    But when you focus on what you can contribute, how you can serve, where you can add value, you naturally move toward deeper connection and greater fulfillment.

    Your Next Step

    Don’t let this be just another inspiring idea you forget by next week. Ask God: “Where have You called me to contribute?

    What community do You want me to serve?”

    Start where you are. Choose one specific way you’ll begin contributing more intentionally—whether it’s being more present with family, volunteering at church, or simply getting to know your neighbors’ names.

    Remember: you’re not just trying to get connected—you’re called to help build the kind of community that reflects God’s heart to the world.


    GRAB PHIL’S LATEST BOOK:

    Ready to discover how biblical heroes found unshakeable strength in surrender? Order Stay Strong now and learn the timeless secrets of spiritual resilience that can transform your overwhelming circumstances into testimonies of God’s faithfulness.

    You can purchase a PDF version of the book here: https://philstrong.com/shop

  • From Burden to Breakthrough

    Finding Your Purpose Through Meaningful Action

    Are you just going through the motions of life? Wake up, work, pay bills, enjoy the weekend, repeat. It’s a cycle that leaves many feeling empty and disconnected from their true purpose. But what if you were created for something far greater than just existing?

    In Ephesians 2:10, Paul reminds us that “we are God’s handiwork, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do.” You’re not an accident—you’re intentionally designed by the Creator for a specific purpose.

    The Nehemiah Model: From Burden to Breakthrough

    In my book Stay Strong, I explore the incredible story of Nehemiah—a man who transformed heartbreak into meaningful action. Serving comfortably in the Persian court, Nehemiah could have remained in his secure position. But when he heard about Jerusalem’s broken walls, something stirred within him that changed everything.

    Nehemiah’s journey reveals three crucial elements of purposeful living:

    1. Recognising Your Burden

    Nehemiah’s transformation began with heartbreak. The news of Jerusalem’s vulnerability didn’t just sadden him momentarily—it burdened him deeply. He wept, mourned, and prayed for days.

    What breaks your heart?

    What situation in your community, workplace, or family stirs something deep within you? Often, God plants these burdens as the first step toward our calling.

    2. Combining Prayer with Planning

    Nehemiah didn’t just hope things would improve. After praying, he developed a strategic plan. When opportunity arose, he was ready with specific requests—letters of passage, building materials, and permission to lead the project.

    This shows us that meaningful action requires both dependence on God and diligent preparation.

    We pray as if everything depends on God, and we plan as if everything depends on us.

    3. Persevering Through Opposition

    The moment Nehemiah began his mission, critics emerged. But his response reveals the heart of purposeful action: “I am carrying on a great project and cannot go down. Why should the work stop while I leave it?”

    When you’re walking in God-given purpose, opposition is inevitable. But when you know God has called you to the work, you can stay focused on what matters most.

    Your Call to Meaningful Action

    Whether you’re working in retail, raising a family, or wondering what’s next in retirement, ask yourself: “God, what meaningful work have You prepared for me in this season?”

    Start where you are. Excellence in small things often prepares us for larger opportunities. The way you serve today develops the character you’ll need for whatever God calls you to tomorrow.

    Remember, you’re God’s workmanship—created not for self-glorification, but to represent Him well in whatever role you occupy.


    GRAB PHIL’S LATEST BOOK:

    Ready to discover how biblical heroes found unshakeable strength in surrender? Order Stay Strong now and learn the timeless secrets of spiritual resilience that can transform your overwhelming circumstances into testimonies of God’s faithfulness.

    You can purchase a PDF version of the book here: https://philstrong.com/shop

  • The Caleb Spirit: 45 Years of Unwavering Faith

    Holding Onto God’s Promises in Uncertain Times

    Life has a way of testing our faith, doesn’t it? One day we’re walking confidently, and the next we’re facing giants that seem insurmountable. In those moments, we need something solid to anchor to—something that doesn’t shift when storms hit or fade when circumstances get dark.

    That something is the promises of God.

    The Caleb Spirit: 45 Years of Unwavering Faith

    In my new book Stay Strong, I share the incredible story of Caleb—a man who understood what it meant to live by God’s promises. At 40 years old, he was one of twelve spies sent to scout the Promised Land. While ten spies returned terrified by giants and fortified cities, Caleb boldly declared, “We can certainly do it.”

    But here’s where Caleb’s story becomes extraordinary. Due to Israel’s unbelief, he had to wait 45 years to see that promise fulfilled. Forty-five years! Yet at 85, this remarkable man stood before Joshua with fire still burning in his eyes, declaring, “Give me this hill country that the Lord promised me!”

    What kept Caleb strong through nearly five decades of waiting? He never let go of God’s word. He didn’t just passively hope—he actively agreed with heaven’s perspective on his situation.

    Your Promise Treasure Hunt

    Scripture is loaded with promises waiting for you to discover them. Whether you need encouragement about God’s provision, strength for relationships, or clarity about your calling, there are specific promises designed to anchor your soul.

    I challenge you to go on your own “Promise Treasure Hunt.” Search for verses that speak to your current struggles. Use your Bible app, ask God to reveal His heart through Scripture, and approach it with expectation. When you find those promises, write them down. Make them visible reminders of what God has declared over your life.

    Remember, promises aren’t just meant to comfort you in the waiting—they’re meant to strengthen you for the fight. Like Caleb, you can face giants and claim mountains because you know what God has said.

    When circumstances look impossible and doubt creeps in, that’s when you pull out those promises and declare with confidence: “This is what God has said, and I believe Him.”


    GRAB PHIL’S LATEST BOOK:

    Ready to discover how biblical heroes found unshakeable strength in surrender? Order Stay Strong now and learn the timeless secrets of spiritual resilience that can transform your overwhelming circumstances into testimonies of God’s faithfulness.

    You can purchase a PDF version of the book here: https://philstrong.com/shop

  • How to Find Strength in God When Life Feels Overwhelming

    Have you ever felt like David—coming home to find everything you held dear has been ripped away? Or like King Jehoshaphat, staring down impossible odds with nowhere to turn?

    “David strengthened himself in the Lord his God” (1 Samuel 30:6).

    That single verse holds the key to something profound—something that transformed two biblical heroes from defeat into victory, and something that can revolutionize how you face your own overwhelming circumstances.

    When Everything Falls Apart

    David’s story isn’t just about a moment of crisis. It’s about what happens when you lose everything—your family, your security, even the support of those closest to you. His own men, desperate in their grief, actually talked about killing him. If anyone had a right to give up, it was David.

    But he didn’t. Instead, he did something that reveals a secret most of us miss when we’re drowning in our circumstances.

    King Jehoshaphat faced a similar moment. Three massive armies were marching toward his small kingdom—a coalition so large it could crush Judah effortlessly. The Bible says he was afraid (thank goodness it records that!), but his response reveals the same profound principle that saved David.

    The Secret They Both Knew

    What did these two men understand that most of us struggle to grasp when life hits hard? How did they find strength when everything seemed lost?

    In Stay Strong, I unpack the two simple but powerful truths that carried both David and Jehoshaphat through their darkest valleys—the same truths that have sustained me through my own seasons of overwhelming circumstances.

    These aren’t complicated formulas or fancy programs. They’re timeless principles that work whether you’re facing relationship struggles, financial pressure, health challenges, or dreams that seem to keep slipping away.

    Your Turn to Discover

    The beautiful thing about David and Jehoshaphat’s stories is that they didn’t end in despair. David’s situation was completely restored—and then some. Jehoshaphat’s impossible battle became a testimony of God’s faithfulness that echoed through generations.

    What impossible situation are you facing today? What has you feeling alarmed, uncertain, or overwhelmed?

    The same God who was with David in his darkest hour, the same God who fought for Jehoshaphat against impossible odds, is with you in yours. And the way they accessed His strength is available to you too.


    GRAB PHIL’S LATEST BOOK:

    Ready to discover how biblical heroes found unshakeable strength in surrender? Order Stay Strong now and learn the timeless secrets of spiritual resilience that can transform your overwhelming circumstances into testimonies of God’s faithfulness.

    You can purchase a PDF version of the book here: https://philstrong.com/shop