Some Sundays feel like a reset. You walk into church carrying a week of mess, and for a moment you can breathe again. You get reminded of truth. You get lifted. You feel hope rise.

Then you walk out into Monday. The same calendar is waiting. The same pressures. The same habits you are still fighting. The same numbness you thought you left at the altar. The same quiet voice that says, You are not enough. You are too much. You are still broken.

That’s why I’m writing this. Because faith isn’t only for the hour we sit in church. It’s for the long stretch of life that starts when we leave. It’s for everything between Sundays.

And in that stretch of ordinary life, a lot of people carry a misunderstanding that keeps them stuck. They think being a Christian means being flawless. Like you have to clean yourself up before you can come close to God. Like you have to earn your way into grace by being consistent enough, good enough, strong enough.

But the gospel does not start with your perfection. It starts with your need. Jesus did not come for the polished version of you. He came for the real one. The tired one. The ashamed one. The one still wrestling with bad habits, selfishness, hidden darkness, and wounds you do not talk about out loud.

That is why those timeless words matter. God so loved the world that He gave His Son, and whoever believes in Him will not be lost but will have life. Whoever means you. Not the future you. Not the cleaned up you. You right now.

Grace was never a prize for the worthy. It was a rescue for the broken. Some of you reading this are exhausted by trying to perform your way into peace. You are still living like God is grading you daily. Like your worst day makes you disqualified. Like your struggle makes you less loved. Hear me clearly. You do not have to perform for forgiveness.

Yes, we will all be held accountable for how we live. But accountability is not the opposite of grace. It is what grace produces over time. Grace is not God pretending sin is not sin. Grace is God choosing to meet you in the middle of it, forgive you, and then walk with you as you learn to live free.

He did not give you a lecture from a distance. He gave you a Savior up close. He did not send you a rulebook and say, good luck. He sent you Jesus and said, come home.

Grace is not a paycheck you earn. It is a gift you receive with open hands. For the person who feels broken, abnormal, or too far gone. For the person battling anxiety or depression and wondering why others seem fine when you feel like you are drowning. For the person who has real trauma sitting in their body and cannot shake it. For the one who feels unseen, unheard, or unworthy.

This isn’t theory for me. I’ve seen what this kind of love does when it meets people in real life. I know a young lady who was exploited as a child, carrying trauma so heavy it could have broken her for good. But she met Jesus through a man of God who did not treat her like her past was her identity. Grace found her. It did not erase every scar, but it rebuilt her story. Today she is living, growing, and walking in freedom she once thought was impossible.

I know a couple whose daughter was full of life until a tragic accident changed everything. She cannot speak or move the way she once did. Their world was shaken in ways most people cannot imagine. But they are still fighting for each other. Still loving their child with tenderness. Still holding on when it would be easier to fold. I have watched grace carry them through a pain they never asked for.

I know a man who, as a young guy, made choices that nearly destroyed his life. He stabbed someone in a fight and almost killed him. Later he went to prison for selling drugs. By every worldly label, his future should have been over. But grace does not live by labels. Today he is a father, a husband, a son who shows up with integrity, a man with a college degree and a life rebuilt from the ground up. He is the kind of man who proves that what you have done is not the end of what you can become. That is grace.

These are not rare exceptions. They are reminders of how God works. Grace comes close to the worst moments of our lives. Grace sits in the rubble with us. Grace does not flinch at our mess. Grace is not scared of our questions. Grace does not wait for us to be worthy before it reaches for us.

In the days after Sunday, you may feel like you are falling apart. But grace is not confused by your cracks. That is where it does its best work.

We are all broken in our own unique way. Some of us are loud broken. Some of us are quiet broken. Some of us are high functioning broken. But nobody makes it through this life unscarred.

The beautiful war of life is that God does not waste any of it. He does not waste your failures. He does not waste your grief. He does not waste your struggle. He does not waste your story.

Even when you feel like you are dragging yourself through the week, He is still shaping you. Still holding you. Still calling you by name.

So if your faith feels shaky today, do not run from Him. Run toward Him. If you feel unworthy, remember that worthiness was never the requirement. If you feel tired, remember that Jesus never asked you to carry your life alone.
If you feel like you keep messing up, remember that grace is not fragile. It is faithful.

Between Sundays, the invitation is not to pretend you are fine. It is to bring your real self to the One who already knows and still stays.

You are not loved because you are polished.
You are loved because He is good. Grace for the broken is not a side theme of faith. It is the whole point.

So take a breath. Lift your head. Come close again. You are not too far. You are not too late. You are not disqualified. You are exactly the kind of person Jesus came for.

Keep The Faith (K.T.F.)

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GOOD NEWS ACROSS THE NATION

Before we head into the weekend, here are a couple reminders that God is still moving close through ordinary people in ordinary places.

GivingTuesday Hit a New Record of Generosity
This week, America showed that compassion is still alive. On GivingTuesday 2025, people across the country gave about 4 billion dollars to nonprofits, and millions also chose to serve through volunteering. In a loud and divided season, that kind of generosity is a quiet witness. People are still paying attention to need, and still deciding to show up for someone else. That is a picture of hope we should not overlook. AP News

A School Adopted a Refugee Family for Christmas
In Texas, students and families at Grisham Middle School rallied around an Afghan refugee family through a Christmas giving drive connected to the Season for Caring program. They collected gifts and essentials so the family would feel supported, welcomed, and seen. What moves me most is that the kids are learning this early. Faith is not only what we believe on Sunday. It is what we do for the neighbor right in front of us on Monday. Statesman

An NFL Player’s Faith Became a New Life and a New Mission
San Francisco 49ers receiver Kendrick Bourne has been honest about how Jesus met him in the middle of a party driven life and gave him a new identity. He talks openly about being lost, chasing noise, and still feeling empty, until God came close and changed his heart. Now he is living differently and giving differently. Through his Bourne Blessed Foundation, he is pouring back into under resourced youth and the community that helped raise him. This story is a reminder that grace is real, change is possible, and faith is not just a Sunday feeling. It is a life that gets rebuilt from the inside out. sfchronicle.com

The Family Table: Grace for the Broken

This week at the table, ask one question:

“Where did you need grace this week, and where did you give grace to someone else?”

Listen for the places where grace showed up in real time. A mistake met with mercy. A tough moment met with love.

Let this be a reminder that grace is how God meets us in real life, not after we get it all together. And when we receive grace, we learn to share i

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