New Series Announcement: Practices Rooted
What Christian Practices Look Like When Grounded in God's Character

Christian practices do not generate relationship with God. They express it.
That distinction is easy to state and difficult to hold. Every tradition has practices. Prayer. Fasting. Lament. Generosity. Sabbath. Service. Worship. Enemy love. Communion. The practices themselves are not the problem. The problem is what happens when they become detached from the God they are meant to orient us toward — when they become techniques for earning proximity, demonstrating seriousness, or moving God to act on our behalf.
When that happens, the practice does not disappear. It continues. But something has shifted at the root, and the shift changes everything: what the practice costs, what it produces, and what we are actually doing when we do it.
I know this from the inside. I spent years practicing from the wrong place, with genuine sincerity and considerable effort, before I could see what I was doing or name why it was not working. This series is partly the record of what I found when I finally looked.
The conviction underneath all twenty-five parts is this: Christian practices are not ladders we climb to reach God. They are the natural overflow of knowing Him. When we reverse the order — when we practice in order to earn what has already been given — we distort both the practice and our understanding of the God behind it. The corrective is not better technique. It is clearer sight.
The series begins with two foundational essays before moving into the practices themselves. The first establishes what practices are for. The second establishes who makes them possible. From there it moves through repentance, prayer, lament, thanksgiving, fasting, and the practices of relational, communal, and outward life, before arriving at worship as the place the whole argument returns to.
The series builds. Start with Part 1 tomorrow.
Kemi



