Through conviction, Scripture, brokenness, and surrender, the Lord opened my eyes to the reality that salvation is not merely about acknowledging facts about Jesus—it is about being made new by Him.
The gospel is not behavior modification.
It is transformation.
Jesus Christ did not come merely to make bad people better; He came to bring dead souls to life. He came to rescue sinners, reconcile us to God, and conform us into His image through the power of the Holy Spirit.
That realization changed everything.
As the Lord continued to sanctify and refine my life, He also placed a growing burden on my heart for others who may be resting in religious familiarity while lacking genuine surrender to Christ. I began to see how many people know church culture yet remain strangers to true intimacy with Jesus. I saw how easy it is to confuse emotional moments, outward morality, or intellectual agreement with authentic saving faith.
This burden eventually became the foundation for much of my preaching, teaching, writing, and discipleship. It is why themes such as self-examination, surrender, sanctification, discipleship, and the sufficiency of Christ remain central throughout this ministry.
His Will Not Mine was born from a growing conviction that life is not ultimately about building our own kingdom, pursuing comfort, or chasing the approval of the world. It is about surrendering fully to the Lordship of Jesus Christ and allowing Him to shape every area of our lives for His glory.
The Christian life is not a call to shallow religion.
It is a call to die to ourselves and follow Christ.
And though that journey often leads through valleys, trials, and refining fires, I have found again and again that Christ truly is enough.
My prayer is that this ministry would faithfully proclaim the truth of the gospel, encourage believers toward deeper obedience and intimacy with Christ, and point weary souls toward the only One who can truly save, sustain, and transform.
May everything always lead back to Jesus.