G.K. Chesterton
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Quote to Ponder ~ G.K. Chesterton
”The aim of life is appreciation.” ~ G.K. Chesterton Continue reading
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Agency — The Turning Point

Agency is the hidden strength beneath every virtue, the power to direct your life rather than drift through it. After thirteen weeks of practiced discipline, this is the turning point: intention, responsibility, discipline, courage, and self-government rising into a directed life. Agency is yours. Use it with purpose. Continue reading
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Virtue Series | Week 13 – Humility

Humility steadies a man. It clears pride, sharpens vision, and anchors daily life in truth. It strengthens relationships, shapes leadership, and opens the heart to God’s guidance. This virtue frees us from performance and invites us into teachability, service, and quiet strength. Humility is the ground where grace does its best work. Continue reading
A.W. Tozer, Agency, Andrew Murray, Apostle James, Apostle Paul, Benjamin Franklin, C.S. Lewis, Character, Christianity, Epictetus, Faith, G.K. Chesterton, Humility, J.R.R. Tolkien, Jesus, Joacko Willink, Leadership, Marcus Aurelius, Oswald Chambers, Personal Development, Prophet Micah, Quotes, Resolution, Saint Augustine, Seneca, Socrates, Thomas A Kempis, Virtue, Writers -
Sunday Evening Collective ~ November 2nd Edition

This week’s Sunday Evening Collective turns toward gratitude — not as sentiment, but as strength. The Grace of Enough invites a slower look at the ordinary, where grace is already present and gratitude opens our eyes to see it. Enough isn’t about settling; it’s about seeing clearly what’s been given. Continue reading
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Virtue Series | Week 8 – Justice

Justice is more than the absence of harm; it is the active pursuit of what is right. Franklin’s virtue calls for proportion, not equality—truth joined with mercy, courage shaped by humility, and goodness extended both outward and inward. To live justly is to restore right order, one act at a time. Continue reading
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Virtue Series | Week 6 – Industry

Industry is more than busyness, it’s purposeful work that redeems the hours. Franklin saw it as the soil of every other virtue. Roosevelt called it “work worth doing.” True industry aligns effort with meaning, balancing diligence and rest, so each day builds toward usefulness, service, and quiet strength. Continue reading
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Virtue Series | Week 5 – Frugality

Franklin’s virtue of Frugality is about stewardship, not stinginess. This week I saw how much time and energy I waste—and how simplicity restores joy. Frugality directs resources to what matters most, frees us from clutter, and makes generosity possible. It’s not less life, but more. Continue reading

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