Welcome to the Revived Sacred Sobriety

A New Beginning for A Path for the Soul

Welcome, fellow travelers.

Sacred Sobriety: A Path for the Soul is being renewed, rebuilt, and prepared to become the primary home for my recovery-focused devotionals, spiritual reflections, and resources for living a disciplined, sober, and crucified Christian life.

This relaunch is more than a change of website. It is a return to the original purpose of Sacred Sobriety: creating a dedicated space for those seeking spiritual recovery, emotional sobriety, renewed identity, and a deeper walk with Jesus Christ.

Returning Sacred Sobriety to Its Own Home

Sacred Sobriety and Faith & Reason originally existed as separate platforms with distinct purposes.

Faith & Reason developed as a space for theology, apologetics, biblical discussion, and thoughtful engagement with matters of doctrine and belief. Sacred Sobriety was created to focus more directly on recovery, discipleship, emotional healing, spiritual formation, and the daily work of surrendering our lives to Christ.

Because of financial circumstances, I eventually had to bring both projects together under one platform. While that arrangement allowed the work to continue, it also meant that two different missions were sharing the same space.

I am now grateful to be in a position where Sacred Sobriety can once again stand on its own.

This website will become the dedicated home for content related to recovery, spiritual realignment, Christian discipleship, emotional sobriety, and the crucified life.

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Molded by God: Identity, Healing, and the Beauty of Being Fearfully and Wonderfully Made (Psalm 139:14)

I always had this inclination that something was wrong. And whenever that feeling rose up, I was convinced it was because of someone else. Someone failing me. Someone not stepping up. Someone not doing the honorable thing. I lived with this constant sense that other people were the reason I suffered. And underneath all of that? A deep ache that no one truly cared, no one appreciated me, no one saw the effort I poured out trying to prove myself.

I chased validation like oxygen. I wanted approval so badly that I shaped myself around what I thought others wanted. I tried to be the “better person” in the eyes of everyone else, all while never actually seeing who I was. I was blind to my own entitlement, blind to my victimhood, blind to the way I was both the victim and the villain in someone else’s story. Hypervigilant. Defensive. Exhausted. And yes—hurt by real betrayals, real lies, real wounds that left me carrying depression, resentment, bitterness, and anxiety like a backpack full of bricks.

And then came the moment that broke me open.

My father had just been released from the hospital after months in intensive care from a brutal auto accident. I had given up everything to be there. And yet, I found myself standing on a cold Seattle curb in January of 2005 with nothing but a backpack, work boots, and three cartons of cigarettes. No home. No money. No plan. No one.

I walked the streets of Seattle wondering if this was the end of me.

But God had other plans.

A transitional housing program took me in. I rested. I worked. I rebuilt. And slowly—slowly—I found my way back to faith. But even then, I still couldn’t see myself clearly. I still felt unworthy. I still lived for validation. I still believed I had to earn dignity, earn love, earn respect.

It wasn’t until years later that the Holy Spirit began breaking the spiritual blindness I had carried for so long. And the revelation was simple, but it shook me to my core:

I didn’t know who I was. And I didn’t know how my Heavenly Father saw me.

Anchor Verse — Psalm 139:14 (NASB2020): I will give thanks to You, for I am fearfully and wonderfully made; Wonderful are Your works, And my soul knows it very well.

Two words rise like mountains in this verse: fearfully and wonderfully. Fearfully — yārē’ — to stand in awe, reverence, astonishment. Wonderfully — pālā’ — marvelous, extraordinary, beyond human ability.

This is not casual language. This is identity language. God is not saying, “You’re barely acceptable.” He is saying, “You are My intentional, awe-inspiring work.” We are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works that He prepared beforehand (Ephesians 2:10). Even when we feel like a mistake, God calls us purposeful, crafted, and known (Psalm 139:1–4).

So today, let’s walk slowly through what it means to be fearfully and wonderfully made—especially when we don’t feel like it. Especially when addiction, shame, trauma, or codependency have distorted the mirror we look into. Especially when our past tells us one story, but God is trying to tell us another.

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