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Showing posts from May, 2025

What’s Eating You?

  Photo source: Stockcake What Are You Eating? What's Eating You? A slow meditation for those who want to be nourished, not just inspired. Lately, I’ve been thinking a lot about food —but not just the kind that fills your stomach, but the kind that fills your soul. My dad used to say something I’ll never forget: “You can use good food to cure sicknesses.” It was wisdom passed down—his parents believed it. My mom and her parents too. They all knew the power of nourishment. They believe that if you eat well, your body naturally gets to heal, strengthen, and thrive. They knew this well and they lived by it. And it got me thinking: But what if the same is true for your soul? What if some of the fear, shame, anxiety, or spiritual fatigue you're feeling aren’t just about sin or stress or burnout—but about what we’ve been feeding or not feeding on ? Or what we’ve been starving from ? Or worse… what’s been poisoning us ? I’m learning that you can tell a lot about your spir...

Taste Buds and Grace: How God Gave Us a New Appetite

Photo source: Pinterest There’s something deeply spiritual about appetite. Not just physical hunger—but soul hunger. Longings. Cravings. What we reach for when we're empty. What we think will satisfy. The truth is: we were all born with an appetite for the wrong things. Not because we asked for it, but because we inherited it. We came into a fallen world as sinners—not choice, but by birth. Our taste buds were wired for junk. For lesser loves. For the fleeting things that could never truly fill. But the moment we encounter Jesus—when grace finds us and we receive it and we are made new—everything changes. We receive: A new life. A new spirit. A new nature. A new appetite. Suddenly, we didn’t have to “change” ourselves—God’s grace changed us and made us completely brand new. Now, in this new life, we find ourselves longing for something higher. Something better. Something holy. But here’s the thing about appetites: they’re shaped by what we keep consuming. And if we ...

Reborn Rich: Flip The Script K-Drama Review

Photo source: Viki.com         Hi there, have you ever watched a show that stirred something spiritual in you? That whispered Gospel truths behind every plot twist? That’s exactly what the K-Drama Reborn Rich did for me. So just in case you’ve not watched it, here's the gist of Reborn Rich (no spoilers): Yoon Hyun-woo, a loyal and diligent employee of the powerful Soonyang Group, has spent over a decade cleaning up the chaebol family's messes. But just when he thinks he’s earned their trust, he’s betrayed and murdered on a mission abroad. Instead of dying, he wakes up in the body of Jin Do-joon, the youngest grandson of the very family that killed him ( Lol. What a sick plot twist, yeah? ) Now living in the 1980s, he realizes he’s been reborn into the past ( Hello, time travel! ), right into the heart of the Soonyang dynasty. Armed with future knowledge and driven by revenge, Hyun-woo (as Do-joon) plans to dismantle the empire from within and take over Soonyang Gr...

Fight By Feeding: When Food Becomes Your Weapon

Photo source: Pinterest Prompted by a message from Pastor Joseph Prince, I found myself undone by one simple yet profound revelation: “As New Covenant Believers, the way we fight the fight of faith in life is by feeding.” What? It sounds counterintuitive, doesn’t it? In a world obsessed with hustling harder and praying louder, what if the secret to winning wasn’t in striving or swinging wildly in spiritual warfare—but in sitting down to eat? As soon as I heard that phrase, something leapt inside me. I paused and sat with it. “The way we fight… is by feeding.” It flipped the script. It rewrote the way I saw prayer, study, rest, resistance—even daily living. It reminded me that in the kingdom of God, nourishment is power. Bread is battle strategy. And the one who feeds well… fights well. Let’s walk through this slowly. Because this isn’t just a “spiritual” revelation—it’s a life one. So let’s start from the very beginning and why this matters. The Starting Point – Death, Not Di...