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Midlife and the Ministry of Grief: Turning Loss into Legacy
Middle adulthood (roughly 35–65) is often described as the “middle miles” of life; the stretch where the road is long, the scenery changes, and our pace naturally shifts. Children launch, parents age, careers plateau or pivot, bodies speak a little louder, and our calendars fill with milestones we never imagined would carry so much ache.…
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Early Adulthood, Grief, and the Ministry of Companioning
Early adulthood (roughly 19–35) is often framed as the decade of becoming; love, work, family, and calling. Yet for many, it’s also when grief arrives: miscarriage or infertility, divorce, job loss, disenchantment with career, the death of a spouse or friend. These losses don’t just hurt; they can unsettle intimacy, identity, and purpose. What changes…
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When Adolescence Meets Grief: Companioning Identity in the Storm
Grief doesn’t wait until adulthood to arrive. It often breaks into adolescence; the fragile, formative years when a young person is asking life’s biggest questions: Who am I? Where do I belong? What is my purpose? When loss collides with these questions, sorrow doesn’t just ache; it can unsettle identity, shake belonging, and confuse moral…
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Industry, Inferiority, and Grief: How the “Middle Years” Echo in Our Losses
The ages of 6–12 can look ordinary from the outside; school days, team sports, spelling tests. But beneath the routine, a child is quietly asking life-shaping questions: Am I capable? Do I belong? Do my efforts matter? Erik Erikson called this the crisis of industry vs. inferiority: children are building competence through work, play, and…
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Small Hands, Brave Hearts: How Ages 3–5 Echo Through Our Grief
Grief rarely begins with the funeral. It often awakens older echoes; the first places we learned whether it was safe to try, to feel, to reach for comfort. The years from three to five are especially formative. In that season, children experiment with courage, test boundaries, and discover whether their questions are welcomed or shamed.…
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Rethinking Alpha: Leadership Rooted in Service and Love
When most people hear the term Alpha, they picture someone forceful, dominant, or unyielding. But what if true Alpha leadership; whether male or female, looked very different? What if it were less about dominance and more about vision, purpose, and care? The qualities of a true Alpha are not about intimidation but about inspiration: This…
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Understanding Grief Through Early Attachments
The First Two Years: Trust, Attachment, and the Foundations of Grief Resilience Grief often reopens the earliest wounds of our lives. When we sit with someone in their sorrow, we are not only entering the space of their present loss but also the echoes of their earliest attachments. The first two years of life, as…
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Healing Grief through Childhood Insights
Early Wounds, Lasting Echoes: What Ages 2–3 Teach Us About Grief Grief has a way of drawing us back to the most vulnerable places of our story. In counseling, I’ve seen how adults facing loss often revisit unresolved shame, fear, or insecurity first planted in childhood. Chapter 5 of Human Development by Joseph Bohac and…
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When Grief Speaks Through Anger: Lessons from Correctional Ministry
Grief has many voices. Sometimes it weeps silently. Sometimes it trembles with fear. And sometimes it erupts as rage. In correctional ministry, where trauma and loss are ever-present, I witnessed this truth in a profound way. During a conversation, one of the brothers stood suddenly, clenched his fists, and threatened to kill me. My instinct…
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Dominion and Discipleship
I. Introduction Genesis 1 and 2 form the foundation of the Christian worldview. They reveal God as Creator, humanity as His image-bearers, and the earth as the stage of His glory. Central to these chapters is the concept of dominion (Hebrew: radah), humanity’s God-given responsibility over creation. Yet, this dominion is often misunderstood. Is it…