Digging Deeper: Prepare the Way Internally

 

“The valleys will be filled, and the mountains and hills made level…”

Luke 3:4-6 (NLT)



PREPARE THE WAY INTERNALLY

 

Last year reminded me that capacity is not constant. Some days hold more strength than others. Plans shift. Expectations adjust.

God prepares hearts, not schedules. Valleys and mountains represent both despair and pride—places that make encountering Jesus harder.

God is not rushing us. He is readying us.

Consider: Where might God be inviting patience instead of pressure right now?

 


Minda Seagraves has been married to her best friend, Russell, for 17 years and is mom to Carson and Maddie. She is also a full-time missionary with the Fellowship of Christian Athletes, serving as a chaplain to local female high school teams and supports 380 staff across four states in the U.S. and 20 countries in East Africa as the Regional Director of Talent Advancement with FCA. Minda and her family live in Acworth and have been attending NorthStar Church since 2020.

 

Digging Deeper: Jesus is the Judge

 

“Even now the ax of God’s judgment is poised…”

Luke 3:9 (NLT)



JESUS IS THE JUDGE

 

Judgment can feel like a harsh word, especially when life already feels fragile. Last year helped me see that God’s judgment is not about condemnation—it is about clarity.

Trees are judged by fruit, not intention or appearance. Scripture tells us that judgment has been entrusted to Jesus, not as cruelty, but as righteousness.

In God’s hands, judgment becomes an act of mercy.

Consider: What might God be pruning—not to punish, but to bring life?

 


Minda Seagraves has been married to her best friend, Russell, for 17 years and is mom to Carson and Maddie. She is also a full-time missionary with the Fellowship of Christian Athletes, serving as a chaplain to local female high school teams and supports 380 staff across four states in the U.S. and 20 countries in East Africa as the Regional Director of Talent Advancement with FCA. Minda and her family live in Acworth and have been attending NorthStar Church since 2020.

 

Holy Graduation Day

 

“Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of His faithful servants.”

Psalm 116:15


 

HOLY GRADUATION DAY

A couple weeks ago, my son Zach experienced his college graduation at Kennesaw State University. It was an exciting moment watching him walk into the convocation center to the “Pomp and Circumstance” hymn and then walking across the stage to receive his graduation diploma, each step representing years of hard work, discipline, sacrifice, growth, and determination.

Graduation day did not come easily. However, when it arrived, it was filled with anticipation, celebration, excitement, and deep gratitude. It marked not an ending, but a new beginning.

Psalm 116:15 invites us to see life and death through a very similar lens. At first glance, the verse appears heavy:

“Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of His faithful servants.”

Death does not feel precious to those who are left behind. It brings loss, grief, separation, and unanswered questions. However, Scripture gently pulls back the curtains of heaven and allows us to glimpse God’s perspective, one shaped not by sorrow, but by completion, honor, and unconditional love.

For the servant of God, death is not defeat. It is a “Holy Graduation Day.”

Just as Zach’s college graduation marked the completion of years of preparation, so the death of God’s faithful servants marks the completion of a life lived in trust, surrender, obedience, and perseverance. Every prayer whispered, every tear shed, every burden carried, every disciple made, and every act of faithfulness, seen or unseen, comes to its full reward. Heaven celebrates what earth now releases.

God calls this moment “Precious.” Not rushed. Not panicked. Not dismissed. Not overlooked. But precious.

Why? Because it represents the fulfillment of God’s work in the life of His child. The believer fought the good fight. The believer finished the race. The believer kept the faith. Lessons have been learned. Trials have shaped the soul. And now, God the Father welcomes His son or daughter home.

Like a proud parent watching a child receive their graduation diploma, our Heavenly Father delights in that final “Holy Graduation Day” into His presence. He is not indifferent to the passing of His saints. He treasures it. Their arrival in heaven is marked by perfect love, joy, honor, and eternal reward.

For those of us still on the journey, this truth brings comfort and hope. We grieve, yes, but not without hope and assurance. Graduation days are emotional because they are significant. They matter. And so does the moment when a [servant of God] steps from this life into eternity.

Listen closely. One day, every servant of God will experience their own “Holy Graduation Day.” If that describes you, your life of faith will be complete. Your struggles in this world will give way to glory. And the Lord Himself will declare your moment precious.

However, until that day, remain faithful, trusting, serving, locking eyes with Jesus every day, and walking toward Him in obedience, knowing that your labor in the Lord is not in vain. And when your final day comes, it will not be marked by fear, but by fulfillment. Why?

Because “Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of His faithful servants.”

Love God. Love people. Live sent.

Be Worth Being.

Kevin


 

Kevin Burrell has worked in professional baseball as both a player and MLB scout for the past 44 years, and currently serves as an area scouting supervisor. Kevin was drafted in the 1st round of the 1981 free agent amateur draft (25th selection overall), and played ten years of professional baseball with four different organizations. He and his wife, Valerie, live in Sharpsburg, Ga.

Digging Deeper: Jesus is the Forgiver

 

“…preaching a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins.”

Luke 3:3 (NLT)



JESUS IS THE FORGIVER

 

Last year reshaped how I think about repentance. I no longer associate it primarily with shame or self-correction, but with alignment. Repentance has looked less like trying harder and more like releasing what no longer brings life.

John’s message is clear: repentance prepares the way for forgiveness. It is not repentance that saves, but repentance that opens us to receive grace. Forgiveness is not earned by heritage, effort, or religious familiarity.

Jesus forgives completely, but He invites honesty first.

Consider: What might God be inviting you to turn toward as this new year begins?

 


Minda Seagraves has been married to her best friend, Russell, for 17 years and is mom to Carson and Maddie. She is also a full-time missionary with the Fellowship of Christian Athletes, serving as a chaplain to local female high school teams and supports 380 staff across four states in the U.S. and 20 countries in East Africa as the Regional Director of Talent Advancement with FCA. Minda and her family live in Acworth and have been attending NorthStar Church since 2020.

 

Digging Deeper: God Speaks in the Wilderness

 

“At this time a message from God came to John son of Zechariah, who was living in the wilderness…”

Luke 3:2-3 (NLT)



GOD SPEAKS IN THE WILDERNESS

 

Last year taught me how much clarity can come from quieter spaces. When life slows—whether by choice or circumstance—we often notice things we’ve been too busy to hear. Wilderness seasons strip away noise, schedules, and the illusion of control. They are rarely comfortable, but they are often clarifying.

Luke intentionally names powerful political and religious leaders, only to tell us that God’s word bypassed all of them and came instead to John in the wilderness. Preparation for Jesus did not begin in palaces or temples, but in obscurity. God’s voice is not impressed by influence; it is drawn to availability.

The wilderness is not a punishment. It is a place of preparation.

Consider: Where has life slowed enough for you to listen—and what might God be speaking there?


Minda Seagraves has been married to her best friend, Russell, for 17 years and is mom to Carson and Maddie. She is also a full-time missionary with the Fellowship of Christian Athletes, serving as a chaplain to local female high school teams and supports 380 staff across four states in the U.S. and 20 countries in East Africa as the Regional Director of Talent Advancement with FCA. Minda and her family live in Acworth and have been attending NorthStar Church since 2020.

 

Digging Deeper: Don’t Waste the Waiting

 

And Jesus increased in wisdom and in stature and in favor with God and man. 

Luke 2:52 (ESV)


 

DON’T WASTE THE WAITING

 

The light peeked in through the window screens, and I barely moved. I could feel every inch of the OSB board just below the thin mattress. It gave an unyielding pressure, sending a dull throb crawling up my back. I shifted, then shifted again, but there was no position where the ache didn’t bloom and spread. It didn’t matter that the bell was ringing—I both wanted to lie in that bed longer and not be in it at the same time.

Then I heard a deep voice beside me. A hand rested on my shoulder as I lay on my side. But the voice wasn’t a counselor’s. It was familiar.

“Hey, Dad. It’s time. Morning Watch is about to start.”

I sat up, but not fully. I exited diagonally, my sandy feet hitting the floor. With bits of grit clinging to my skin, my adult brain finally understood the importance of the nightly broom sweepings.

As we walked down the dirt hill, I overheard two boys—both far younger than my sons—talking to each other.

“I heard there’s a giant turtle that lives at the bottom of the lake.”
“The lower one?”
“No, the upper one with the dock. And it once ate a kid’s toe.”

I almost blurted out, finger—almost. But I stayed silent.

The chaplain was Matt, and he nearly collided with my oldest son as we approached the makeshift amphitheater by the lake.

“Tripp, you have those forms turned in?”

Tripp shook his head no.

Matt smiled. Crow’s-feet lined the corners of his eyes—the kind I tend to notice on people who have been walking with the Lord for a long time.

“You’ll be good with the kids.”

Matt moved to the center as we settled into our seats. The roar of Morning Watch dropped an octave, layered with the weight of grown voices—fathers seated shoulder to shoulder with their sons on the benches, all facing forward. Matt said nothing at first, letting the silence stretch. His gaze drifted upward, breath slow and deliberate, as though he were counting the trees one by one.

“This place… is special, for God is here.”

There are two theories of time. One is like a book, where the past is as real as the present and the future—kind of like how a book has all its pages coexisting at the same time. The other is that only the present exists. The past is truly gone; the future is merely potential. I’m inclined to think the latter is true. If so, the stories I’ve shared here—those moments, the way the trees leaned, the way the campers and counselors looked, and even some of the people themselves—all of that is gone. All that is left are memories.

In one sense, the moments—from searching for Cary to attending father-son weekend at the same camp—seemed to stretch on forever. In another, they passed in the blink of an eye. 2026 is out there, waiting—full of potential for you to build God’s kingdom: to witness, to encourage, to serve. Don’t waste it. I once heard Tim Tebow say something along the lines of, “I don’t want to enter heaven well rested.”

Remember what we’ve learned this week. Jesus truly grew—in wisdom, stature, and favor. He is worthy of worship, receiving what belongs to God alone. Love for God is shown through obedience, by aligning our will with His. God’s commands are not burdensome, but flow from perfect love and wisdom. And because our time is brief, don’t waste the waiting—seek Jesus, worship Him, and pour your life out on what lasts.

 


Curt Bowen is a husband, father, and group leader who loves engaging in apologetics, theology, and good BBQ. A thrill-seeker at heart, he enjoys roller coasters and has an appreciation for snakes—just not the conversational type.

 

Digging Deeper: Worthy of Worship

 

And Jesus increased in wisdom and in stature and in favor with God and man

Luke 2:52 (ESV)


 

WORTHY OF WORSHIP

 

Without lights, and with only the noise from the wind and insects, it’s really hard to stay up late. Likewise, it’s really hard to sleep in with the sun’s rays on your nose. The soft mattress cradled my back as I stared at the underside of the top bunk. By now, postcards from loved ones were tucked into every crevice I could find. And that familiar bell rang out again across the sky.

I knelt over my trunk, tossing items out like a dog digging in sand. There was only one shirt for today: it was my only collared shirt, and my only white shirt that didn’t have sports logos or cartoon characters on it.

As our cabin arrived at Morning Watch, we sat on two benches marked 26. A sea of white shirts with dusty imprints surrounded the makeshift cross in a half-circle. The chaplain gave a unique message. Normally, we’d hear about building character or some life lesson, but today was Sunday.

I didn’t go to church back home. Sundays at camp focused on God, and we would hear about Jesus. Throughout the week, we would sing songs mostly about being in the wild. Fire on the Mountain, Country Roads, and Rocky Top were all staples. But on Sundays, we sang about Jesus.

Why do we sing songs about Jesus, but not the disciples? What about some of the heroes of the faith throughout history? Why don’t we sing about Billy Graham? Or Martin Luther King Jr.? Or Mother Teresa?

Take a moment to really—I mean really—think about the following question: What does it mean to be worthy of worship? I do not mean mere admiration or praise, but being worshiped. Nor do I mean that people haven’t been worshiped. Plenty of musicians, athletes, actors, and politicians have been worshiped. But what would it mean for someone to be worthy of worship?

Worship is appropriate only if its object is morally perfect and unsurpassable. In other words, a being worthy of worship would have to be not only maximally great, but morally perfect. In this sense, God is the only being who deserves worship. God is, by definition, the greatest possible being. He is also morally perfect, including both perfect love and justice. This is the God we find in the Bible.

In Scripture, men and angels refused worship,* while Jesus welcomed it.** Think of the woman who wiped Jesus’ feet with her hair—or the alabaster jar broken open and poured out on Him. Jesus didn’t correct them by saying that only God is worthy of worship. Instead, He received it.

This is not, by itself, an argument for the divinity of Jesus. Rather, it reveals the radical nature of Jesus’ self-understanding. Jesus saw Himself as being able to stand in the place of God and speak. He forgave sins, modified Old Testament Law, and even received worship—all actions strictly assigned to God. Jesus saw Himself as God; it was what got Him crucified.

And while this alone is not an argument for Jesus being God, if Jesus was raised from the dead, then that is the ultimate vindication of these radical claims. If the resurrection occurred, we can have confidence that Jesus truly is worthy of worship.

So what is the best way to worship? In my own life, I’ve found it is by elevating God above all else. Whatever competes for your attention, tell Him He is greater.

God, You are more exciting than the vacation I’ve been planning.
God, You are more affirming than any raise or pat on the back from work.
God, You are more secure than any amount of money in my bank account.

Worship Him—because He is truly worth it.

* Revelation 19:10; Acts 10:25-26
** John 9:38; Matthew 28:9, 17; 14:36

 


Curt Bowen is a husband, father, and group leader who loves engaging in apologetics, theology, and good BBQ. A thrill-seeker at heart, he enjoys roller coasters and has an appreciation for snakes—just not the conversational type.

 

Digging Deeper: No Candy, No Exceptions

 

And Jesus increased in wisdom and in stature and in favor with God and man. 

Luke 2:52 (ESV)

 For this is the love of God, that we keep his commandments. And his commandments are not burdensome.

1 John 5:3 (ESV)

 Saying, “Father, if you are willing, remove this cup from me. Nevertheless, not my will, but yours, be done.”

Luke 22:42 (ESV)


 

NO CANDY, NO EXCEPTIONS

 

There were a few rules to make summers more… wild at Falling Creek Camp. Clearly, there was a ban on any technology, and I was mostly fine with that. My Sony Walkman and Game Boy, as essential as they were, could live back home for the 27 days we spent in the woods. Most phones had cords back then, and you weren’t calling home. You could spend the silent period writing to your parents, but few letters were written. The rooms were broom-swept nightly—the floors bare and spotless, nothing out of place, nothing allowed to linger.

But the kicker was always candy. No candy, no exceptions.

I knew kids who had spent June building false bottoms in their trunks. At least the adults could tell they’d been paying attention in woodworking. Cary’s older brother and my cousin Hamilton even stripped the laces from a football to fill it with candy. He didn’t foresee the counselor asking for a pass on our arrival day. Hesitantly, Hamilton threw a perfect spiral across the cabin—when a Now and Later spun out as well. It slid to rest at the feet of Aunt Allison, who grew to a shade of red that matched the cherry flavor.

Never doubt the ingenuity of young boys with a sugar addiction.

We were in our favorite period—skipping. My trunk sat in the middle of the cabin, surrounded by Frank, Hamilton, and two boys whose names I no longer recall. I do remember what was on the trunk: Starburst, Warheads, Jolly Ranchers, Skittles, and Airheads. I reached for a playing card from a pile. As I shuffled, I looked up—and everyone’s eyes were as wide as the pile in the middle of the trunk.

Twigs snapping, leaves crunching, and the heavy, methodical pace of someone—or something—was approaching. Hamilton and the other two dove underneath the bunk beds, ditching their cards, as Frank and I froze in the middle of the room. The screen door slammed open.

Our counselor had a clean buzz cut, and the sleeves of his T-shirt stayed rolled whether he meant them to or not. He spoke little, but his stories always started with where he was sent, not why. He gazed around the room as cards fell to the floor. I don’t think Frank or I actually breathed as he scanned the room, perhaps acting on animal instincts, hoping for camouflage.

He knelt beside the trunk of candy and locked eyes with me. And without even looking, he reached under the bunk bed and grabbed Hamilton, flailing like a freshly caught fish.

I once heard a definition of “love” that says to love someone is to “will the good for them.” If that’s the definition, it raises a question: how can you love God? God isn’t just Himself good—God literally is the standard for what is good. How do you will the good for… the good?

No matter how much we told the counselors we appreciated them, even loved them, disobedient actions seemed to stick out more than mere words, didn’t they? It seems to me the primary way we show love toward God is by aligning our will with His, similar to what John said in his epistle: to “keep His commandments.”

Jesus took aligning His will with God’s will so seriously that He even conditioned His request not to go to the cross with, “Nevertheless, not my will, but yours, be done.”

Rules about candy and technology may feel arbitrary—probably good ideas for young kids. But suppose the rules were created by a perfect, infallible being? What if every possible consequence of those rules could be known—and not only known, but known to lead to good? Whether that good was for the person the rule was prescribed to, another, or even the rule-giver Himself. Adherence would be wise, good, and loving.

Today, know that God loves you. And following what He commands is how you can say, “I love you,” back.

 


Curt Bowen is a husband, father, and group leader who loves engaging in apologetics, theology, and good BBQ. A thrill-seeker at heart, he enjoys roller coasters and has an appreciation for snakes—just not the conversational type.

 

When God Appears Silent

 

“But when the fullness of time had come, God sent forth His Son.”  

Galatians 4:4


 

WHEN GOD APPEARS SILENT

Silence can feel unsettling. When prayers seem unanswered and heaven appears quiet, we often assume God is distant or displeased. Have you ever been there? I certainly have. Yet Scripture reveals a deeper truth: God’s silence is not His absence. Often, it is His preparation.

Between the final words of the Old Testament book of Malachi and the opening of Matthew chapter 1 in the New Testament lies a span of 400 years of recorded silence. No new prophetic books. No fresh “Thus says the Lord.” Generations were born, lived, and died without hearing a single new word from God. To many, it must have felt like abandonment.

But God was not idle.

During those silent centuries, God was arranging history with precision. Empires rose and fell. The Greek language spread across the world, creating a common tongue for the gospel. Roman roads were built, allowing the message of Christ to travel quickly. Though heaven seemed quiet, God was working everywhere.

Then, in God’s perfect timing, the silence was broken.

An angel spoke to Zechariah. Another appeared to Mary. And ultimately, God did not merely send a message—He sent His Son.

“But when the fullness of time had come, God sent forth His Son.”

The silence gave way, and “the Word (Jesus) became flesh and dwelt among us” (John 1:14).

Listen closely: silence is often God’s soil. In your waiting, He is forming what you cannot yet see.

I’m not sure what you’re going through or what you’re enduring. However, this is what I do know: when God feels silent in your life—when prayers linger unanswered, when direction seems unclear—

remember the space between Malachi and Matthew. The 400 years of silence were not wasted. They were sacred. And they were necessary.

God’s silence is often an invitation:
• To trust without explanations.
• To grow without applause.
• To wait without control.

And when God speaks again, it will be clear, direct, purposeful, and right on time.

 

Have a Happy New Year!

Love God. Love people. Live sent.

Be Worth Being.

Kevin


 

Kevin Burrell has worked in professional baseball as both a player and MLB scout for the past 44 years, and currently serves as an area scouting supervisor. Kevin was drafted in the 1st round of the 1981 free agent amateur draft (25th selection overall), and played ten years of professional baseball with four different organizations. He and his wife, Valerie, live in Sharpsburg, Ga.

Digging Deeper: With Respect To

 

And Jesus increased in wisdom and in stature and in favor with God and man. 

Luke 2:52 (ESV)


 

WITH RESPECT TO

 

In the distance, the echoes of a bell shook the morning air. I popped up, barely missing the OSB board above my head, on the soft mattress. Bodies scurried through the cabin, alternating through the lone bathroom. A handful of two-minute showers, mismatched outfits, and cursory toothbrushing later, our group was herding itself down a dirt hill toward Morning Watch.

Mornings were usually the same. Morning Watch came first, an inspirational message delivered from benches facing a cross made of branches from the forest floor. Breakfast followed, a family-style meal with the entire camp. You stood behind your chair, hat in hand, for the morning blessing:

Gracious giver of all good,
Thee we thank for rest and food.
Grant that all we do or say,
In thy service be this day.
Amen.

Humorous skits and songs on the deck were the last thing before periods began: riflery, archery, canoeing, fishing, rock climbing, or skipping. My cousin Frank and I chose the latter. Walking down to an empty shack, he threw his arm in front of my chest. We hid behind a tree as an adult passed. We snuck into the hut and closed the door.

A pen about the size of a queen bed had a sign above it that read Bowser. Inside was the largest turtle I had ever seen. I could’ve ridden on his back like the horses up the hill at the farm. Frank was unamused.

“He’s dead.”

“No he isn’t.”

He grabbed a wooden broom from the corner, something in his eyes changing. Holding the bristles, he slid the handle slowly toward the beast’s face. It didn’t move. It didn’t blink. It didn’t even seem to breathe. Maybe he was right. He began bouncing the broom tip on its snout, and I began to believe him, until we heard footsteps outside.

As we peered through the slats in the door, a crackling sound rang out. Frank pulled up half a broomstick. It hadn’t snapped off the tip; the turtle had reached up as we looked away, and a clean cut broke the broom in half, right near Frank’s hands.

It’s fairly clear that each of us grows in wisdom over time. But how in the world does Jesus, being both God and man, increase in wisdom? God is omniscient. He knows everything. Isn’t that a contradiction?

Borrowing an example I’ve used before, and timely with the third film’s release, Avatar can be a helpful illustration (the word avatar literally means “descent” or incarnation). Jake Sully is a disabled soldier who enters the body of a Na’vi through a mind-body connection and futuristic technology. He thus has two natures, a human nature and a Na’vi nature. In his Na’vi body, the first thing he does is run outside the lab to sprint through the fields of Pandora.

So which is he, disabled or ambulatory?

This is the same problem theologians face with Jesus, and they’ve come up with a way of talking that is helpful. They use the phrase “with respect to.” So to answer the previous question, Jake is handicapped with respect to his human nature, but he is ambulatory with respect to his Na’vi nature. No contradiction.

Similarly, Jesus was omniscient with respect to his divine nature. He never lost that. But with respect to his human nature, he was limited in knowledge. He wasn’t acting when he said he was unaware of the date of his second coming; he was being honest. And in that sense, Jesus truly did grow in wisdom.

I doubt Jesus ever poked any Mediterranean turtles with a broomstick. But just like twelve-year-old me, he experienced the wilderness in a truly human way. And that makes him truly relatable to us.

 


Curt Bowen is a husband, father, and group leader who loves engaging in apologetics, theology, and good BBQ. A thrill-seeker at heart, he enjoys roller coasters and has an appreciation for snakes—just not the conversational type.