Want to join in? Respond to our weekly writing prompts, open to everyone.
Want to join in? Respond to our weekly writing prompts, open to everyone.
from Nerd for Hire
I'm naturally inclined toward homebody-ness as it is, and this time of year that impulse gets extra hard to fight. Why go out in that cold, rainy, grayness when I could stay in the warm place with the cats? I was thinking about this in the context of Thanksgiving, that my plan was to stay home instead of making the drive to spend the day with my family, and how the definition of home has changed for me over the years. Back in college, “home for the holidays” meant returning to the point of origin. By this point, where I think of as home isn’t where I came from, but where I’ve built my own life.
Home has that same kind of loaded and complex history for characters, too. It lives a double life as both an abstract concept and a tangible location, and that gives it a lot of flexibility and power. So, to get a sense for that, here are five prompts that play with home in various ways.
One of the most powerful potential uses of home in creative work is as somehing that's longed for or missed. The desire to be in a familiar place can be a powerful driver and emotional engine for a story, especially around holidays or major milestones like birthdays and anniversaries.
For this prompt, think of a character who has been away from home for an extended period of time. Briefly sketch out why they left home and how long it's been since they were back. Then, think about a date that would be important to them, one that they would have good memories of spending in their home. Finally, write a scene where the individual is going about their life on this special day, where their desire to be back home or their homesickness plays a major part in the story.
One of the functions of home is as a repository of all of our stuff. So let's turn all of that stuff into a writing prompt. To start, go around your home and pick up five random objects. Bring them back to where you write, then assign each one to be an inspiration for each of the five following things:
Once you've paired each object to one of those things, write a piece that incorporates all of them together.
Every kind of person and creature can have a home—even the characters that might usually take the villain, monster, or general bad buy role in the typical story. To write this prompt:
Think of a character or type of character that you don't typically picture just lounging around at home.
Take a second to brainstorm just what that kind of character's home would be like. It might even be fun to sketch out its layout. Think about things like what kind of space they would sleep in, where they would store and prepare food, and what kind of decorations they'd be likely to have.
Write a scene or poem where the evil, villainous, or monstrous creature is hanging out with a friend or relative in their home.
Unless you had the place you're living in built just for you, there were people who lived in the space before you got there. You might have found some of their things still left behind when you moved in, or still be questioning some of their design choices that you haven't gotten around to changing (or can't, if the place is rented).
Take a second to brainstorm who might have lived here before you. This could be educated guessing based on things you actually know about them, or complete invention—whatever seems the most fun for you. Think about the big strokes of their personality and identity. Also think about how they would have used the space. Would it have been laid out the same as you have it? Would they have used any of the rooms for different purposes than you do?
Once you've thought through some of those details, write a scene where this individual is in the home and receives big news—either positive or negative. Show them engaging with the space while they're listening to or processing this information drop.
Another of the key traits of home is that it's a place of ultimate safety. It's where we're able to feel most ourselves and most secure, the one place we want to retreat to when we're feeling threatened—or, at least, it should be. Which is what can make it extra awful when characters come under threat right there in their own domain.
To start off, think about a character, and briefly describe their home environment. Next, think about some things within that environment that could be potential sources of danger, fear, or tension. These don't necessarily need to be sources of physical danger. They could also be potential sources of emotional distress in the form of strained relationships or objects that trigger bad memories, for instance.
For the last step, pick one of those sources of danger or fear that you brainstormed and write a scene that shows the character facing it.
See similar posts:
#WritingExercises #WritingAdvice
from
Dad vs Videogames 🎮
I have held off on publishing this game log entry for a long time, because I couldn't write it in a spoiler free manner. This entry deals with a major story-line spoiler. I can redact some details and hide them behind a link, but I cannot remove most of the content, because otherwise this game log would not make any sense. So, readers be warned. This post contains major plot-line spoilers.
Character Name: Edgewater Class: Soldier Playthrough: 1st
Uhm… we just got attacked by the Starborn. <See spoiler...> is dead. The Starborn Hunter attacked The Eye first, then came into The Lodge. We had to run away with the artifacts. The Hunter actually decided to let us go. We used the opportunity to try and help everyone at The Eye. Everyone survived except <See spoiler...>. I kinda feel like its my fault.
I should have stopped going on all those missions to get those artifacts. At first, I could get the artifacts with no opposition. But eventually, a Starborn would show up right in front of an artifact to try and fight us. A Starborn also started showing up after getting powers from those temples. I started feeling uneasy about going after more artifacts, but I also believe that was the only way to draw them out. Well, we did draw them out, and they hit us hard and now <See spoiler...> is dead.
I wonder if me deciding to defend The Lodge and the artifacts, instead of flying to The Eye to help them, is what got <See spoiler...> killed. I should have decided to defend The Eye isntead. We didn't do much defending of The Lodge anyway. All we did was run away and get people killed. And now a part of New Atlantis is destroyed in the process.
Flying to The Eye after the attack on New Atlantis...
On my next playthrough, I'm definitely going to The Eye to try and save <See spoiler...>
This has actually affected me more than I thought it would. I was trying to distance myself from <See spoiler...> because things were getting a little too cozy, and that character was starting to rely on me heavily. Turns out, that was the game developer's way of foreshadowing; something was going to happen to that companion, which explains the behavior. Anyway, now I definitely need to know what the Starborn are, what they are after, why they are doing what they are doing, and how to fight back. Can't lose any more people to them.
I went to the UC Security Office to talk to the Va'ruun prisoner to help find out more about this Unity thing. I ended up talking to Sergeant Yumi. Not sure if I wasn't supposed to, but this guy pretty much gave me no choice but to go with him.
Then I get interrogated by this Commander Ikande because “I committed some crimes”. This guy wants me to go undercover in the Crimson Fleet. Why? They didn't even tell me what crimes I've committed. I'm trying to find out more about the Starborn and Unity to stop other people in Constellation from getting killed, and here comes this commander who can't get his job done on his own, tries to blackmail me into going undercover so he can take the Crimson Fleet down. I refused because I was being coerced, as opposed to being asked for help. And I still don't know what crimes I committed to justify them blackmailing me like that.
So refusing this commander's offer got me sent to a prison in Cydonia. Apparently I spent 5 days in prison and lost 500XP. I also am now an enemy of UC SysDef?! Like what the eff! I refused the offer because I didn't want to do it. How did that instantly make me an enemy of the UC SysDef department? It's crazy. If that's the case, I might as well join the Crimson Fleet if the UC SysDef is going to hunt me down.
So after getting out of jail, I go back to New Atlantis to talk to the Va'ruun prisoner. Sergeant Yumi is still there. I talk to him to ask if I can talk to the prisoner, but no such option exists. And the guy acts like he's never seen me at all. Freaking forgot he made me follow him without giving me any choice. This part of the game is broken.
Then I try to see how to talk to prisoner. There is a hallway that says “Security Staff Only”. Since no one was talking to me about the prisoner, I thought I'd walk in there, but I was fully expecting the security personel to get mad, because I am not “Security Staff”. But no, no one pays attention and I was able to walk by myself into the prison without anyone batting an eye. This part of the game seems broken too.
Tags: #GameLog #Starfield
from
hustin.art
This post is NSFW 19+ Adult content. Viewer discretion is advised.
In the Japanese AV industry, it is fairly common for mainstream idols to transition into adult video work, and Kokona Nakamori (also known as Shinna) also follows this path, having been a child actor and later a member of an underground idol group. She possesses a wealth of vivid charm in her expressions, eyes, and speech. Her ever-innocently playful, slightly provocative smile fits the typical Imouto Type and Beloved Type appearance. Yet, her unique facial structure sets her apart. She has a cute, rounded face with soft cheeks, a wide mid-face, and eyes that are set far apart — a distinctly outer-spread, seemingly turtle-like or piscine (魚顔) appearance.
When Kokona debuted in 2024 at the age of 20, her youthful, girlish charm, and pure, innocent appearance were paired with a captivating sexual performance, earning her positive attention and expectations. She was tailor-made for the school gym uniform — as if engineered for this niche fetish concept. Her bust is relatively small compared with her slightly plump upper body, and her waist is a bit thick, limiting flexibility and offering little visual enjoyment in riding positions. Yet, her standout strengths lie in her fellatio scenes, including double-entry situations, where she demonstrates exceptional skill. Scenes where she sucks the men’s cocks one by one while wearing a gym uniform in the locker room are quite spectacular. How can a girl who looks like she just stepped out of a manga take such serious, devoted care of any cock?
Unlike typical passive idols who evoke male protectiveness or dominance fantasies, Kokona occasionally exhibits an active, mischievously teasing type. In some scenes, male performers are blindfolded while she explores their bodies. In most fellatio scenes, her playful grin, slightly raised eyes, and rhythmic teasing of the glans convey a subtle sadistic imouto character, suggesting a natural potential for dominance. Also, her facial structure allows her mouth to open especially wide, which she uses to her advantage during oral sex or when receiving ejaculation, adding a striking and robust allure distinctive to her performances.
Yet, her distinctive face struggles to sustain sexual appeal; her “differentiated marketability” proved short-lived. After debuting with the major label S1, she soon changed agencies, underwent cosmetic surgery, and adopted the stage name Sato Meru; her activity remained sparse for a while, but new releases began appearing around September 2025. Although she apologized to fans for the low sales of her S1 titles on her X account, her performances during that period still left a pussyprint—contributing to her ongoing legacy in JAV history—and remaining worthy of respect. Time may pass, yet the taste of Shinna’s coquettish tongue on a cock will send shivers through him forever! (Screenshot below: #1 SONE-091 / #2 SONE-447)
https://x.com/omeru_2/status/1910018037195084265
#JAV #PornAesthetics #KokonaNakamori #ShinnaNakamori #SatoMeru #debut2024

from Douglas Vandergraph
There are chapters in Scripture that feel like they arrive in your life exactly when you need them most. John 14 is one of them.
It is the chapter Jesus spoke into a room heavy with fear… a chapter meant for disciples who felt the world shaking beneath their feet… a chapter meant for believers who desperately needed reassurance… and a chapter meant for you, right now, in whatever place your soul is standing.
When Jesus said, “Let not your heart be troubled…” He wasn’t whispering poetry. He was breaking chains.
John 14 is not just doctrine. It is comfort. It is clarity. It is a doorway into the heart of God.
The following study is not simply an explanation — it is an invitation to step into the room with Jesus and His disciples, to feel the weight of those final hours before the cross, and to hear His promises as if they were spoken directly into your life today.
In the first quarter of this article, you will encounter a link to a message that opens this chapter even more deeply. It will guide you further into the truth and hope that Jesus poured into these verses. You can explore that message here: John 14 explained
This entire study was written slowly… deliberately… meditatively — in the reflective rhythm that write.as is known to elevate. Consider it a quiet walk with Jesus through one of the most comforting passages in all of Scripture.
Before we interpret the beauty of John 14, we must sit for a moment in the room where it was spoken.
The disciples had just learned:
Jesus was going away. A betrayer sat among them. Peter would deny Him. Everything familiar was about to collapse.
This was not calm discussion. This was heartbreak.
For three years they walked with Him… heard His voice… leaned on His strength… watched the impossible bow at His command.
And now He tells them He is leaving.
Fear shrinks men. Uncertainty squeezes hope dry. Silence can amplify dread.
John 14 opens not with a command, but with comfort.
“Let not your heart be troubled…”
What an astonishing way to begin.
Jesus wasn’t indifferent to their fear. He wasn’t frustrated by their weakness. He didn’t scold them for not understanding.
He comforted them before they even asked for comfort.
This entire chapter flows from that same tender heart.
It is Jesus holding His disciples steady while the world shakes.
And that is what He wants to do for you.
These seven words are a lifeline.
You can almost hear the kindness in Jesus’ voice… the gentleness… the strength that comes only from someone who knows the end of the story.
He was hours away from betrayal, arrest, torture, and crucifixion — yet His focus was their peace.
Before the nails, before the crown of thorns, before the darkness, He was still shepherding their hearts.
This is the Jesus of John 14: the Jesus who sees your fear… your anxiety… your confusion… and speaks peace before He speaks instruction.
“Let not your heart be troubled” is not denial of reality. It is an invitation to shift your focus.
Jesus doesn’t tell you not to feel. He tells you not to let trouble rule you.
Your heart may bend, but it doesn’t have to break. Your faith may tremble, but it doesn’t have to collapse. Your spirit may feel heavy, but it doesn’t have to drown.
He is offering you more than reassurance — He is offering you Himself.
When Jesus follows “Let not your heart be troubled,” He gives a reason:
“In My Father’s house are many mansions…”
He shifts their eyes from sorrow to eternity.
He reminds them — and you — that this world is not the final destination. Pain is temporary. Suffering is passing. Uncertainty is not forever.
The word Jesus uses, often translated “mansions,” carries a deeper meaning than simply “rooms.” It means a permanent dwelling place. A forever home. A place prepared with intention, not merely assigned.
Jesus is not describing temporary lodging. He is describing eternal belonging.
Many believers live with a quiet ache they cannot name — a longing for home.
Not a house. Not a city. A home.
John 14 tells you where that ache comes from.
Your soul was designed for the Father’s house.
This world is too noisy for you. Too broken for you. Too small for you.
You were made for eternal fellowship. For presence, not pressure. For peace, not performance.
And Jesus says, “I am preparing a place for you.”
Not for a crowd. Not for “better Christians.” For you.
The disciples feared abandonment. Jesus replaced that fear with purpose.
He wasn’t leaving them. He was preparing the way for them.
Every step toward the cross was Jesus preparing your place in eternity.
Every lash, every insult, every drop of blood was clearing the path home.
He turned His departure into your arrival.
When Jesus said, “I go to prepare a place for you,” He wasn’t talking about architecture. He was talking about access.
Access to the Father. Access to eternal life. Access to the presence of God.
He was preparing a place not by building it, but by paying for it.
The cross was the preparation.
Heaven is not made available by your goodness. It is opened by His sacrifice.
This is why John 14 is so tender — it is Jesus telling you He is willing to face death so you can face eternity without fear.
For the believer, this sentence is oxygen:
“I will come again and receive you unto Myself.”
Jesus doesn’t send an escort. He comes personally.
He doesn’t commission an angel. He Himself receives you.
This is not a metaphor. This is not symbolic language. This is a promise.
There will be a day when Jesus stands on the threshold of eternity and calls your name with a voice that breaks every chain of mortality.
And He will bring you home.
Your story will not end in darkness. Your final chapter isn’t written in fear. Your last breath isn’t the end — it’s the moment Jesus fulfills His promise.
This is why John 14 is so vital. It places hope inside the deepest part of you.
It reminds you that you are not walking toward death — You are walking toward Him.
Thomas asks Jesus the most human question in the chapter:
“Lord, we do not know where You are going, and how can we know the way?”
This is not doubt. This is honesty.
Thomas is saying what every heart says at some point:
“I’m trying to follow You, but I don’t understand.” “I want to trust You, but I need clarity.” “I want to walk in faith, but I feel lost.”
Jesus does not rebuke him. He does not shame him. He does not dismiss him.
Instead, He gives the most defining statement in all of Christianity.
These are not just words. They are revelation.
Not a guide. Not a path among many. Not a moral example.
He is the only path to the Father.
He doesn’t merely show you the way — He is the way.
Every step toward God is a step toward Jesus. Every prayer, every moment of surrender, every act of faith leads through Him.
Not a religious concept. Not a collection of teachings. Not an interpretation.
He is truth embodied — living, breathing, unchanging.
Truth is not an idea. Truth is a Person.
The world questions everything. Jesus answers everything.
Not existence. Not biological survival. Not earthly pleasure.
He is spiritual life. Eternal life. Transforming life.
Life that starts now and continues forever.
When Jesus says, “I am the way, the truth, and the life,” He is telling you that everything you seek is found in Him.
Direction? Him. Understanding? Him. Purpose? Him. Peace? Him. Eternal life? Him.
Nothing else. No one else. Ever.
Jesus continues:
“If you had known Me, you would have known My Father also.”
This chapter is not merely about the identity of Jesus. It is about the revelation of the Father.
To know Jesus is to see the Father’s heart. To listen to Jesus is to hear the Father’s voice. To follow Jesus is to walk with the Father Himself.
Many believers fear God the Father because they imagine Him as distant, angry, severe.
But Jesus says: “If you know Me, you know Him.”
The Father’s heart is not different from Jesus’ heart. His compassion is not different. His desire to save, heal, forgive, and restore is not different.
Jesus is the perfect revelation of the Father’s love.
Philip then asks Jesus:
“Show us the Father, and it is enough for us.”
Jesus replies with one of the most tender, heartbreaking responses in the Gospels:
“Have I been with you so long, and yet you have not known Me, Philip?”
He isn’t angry. He is grieved.
Philip walked with Jesus, but didn’t yet understand Him.
Many believers feel the same. They love Jesus… but they still misunderstand the Father. They worship Jesus… but still imagine God as distant. They follow Jesus… but remain unsure of God’s heart toward them.
Jesus corrects Philip with a truth that still transforms today:
“He who has seen Me has seen the Father.”
This is the foundation of the Christian faith. Jesus is not a messenger. He is the revelation.
Here the tone of the chapter shifts.
Jesus reveals the promise that would sustain His disciples after His departure:
the Holy Spirit.
He calls the Spirit:
And then He says the most healing words:
“I will not leave you orphans.”
This is not theology. This is love.
Jesus knows the ache of abandonment. He knows the fear of being alone. He knows how fragile the human heart is.
And He promises that you will never walk a single moment without the Presence of God within you.
Not near you. Not around you. In you.
The Spirit does not simply comfort you — He indwells you.
The God who created the universe takes residence in your heart.
Not as a visitor. As a helper. A teacher. A guide. A companion. A source of strength. A constant presence in every valley, every burden, every decision, every prayer.
Jesus’ departure did not leave you weaker. It made you stronger.
Because through the Spirit, He is closer than ever.
Jesus ends the chapter with a gift:
“Peace I leave with you, My peace I give to you; not as the world gives.”
The world gives peace as:
It is peace based on circumstance. Peace dependent on control. Peace that collapses under chaos.
Jesus gives peace of a different kind.
This peace is not the absence of storms. It is the presence of Jesus in the storm.
This peace is not fragile. It is not circumstantial. It is not dependent on emotional stability.
It is anchored in His unchanging nature.
You may lose comfort — but you cannot lose His peace.
You may lose certainty — but you cannot lose His presence.
You may lose control — but you cannot lose His promises.
This is the peace the world cannot give and the world cannot take away.
And Jesus gives it to you freely.
John 14 speaks directly into real life:
When your mind is anxious — Jesus is the peace.
When your path is unclear — Jesus is the way.
When your truth feels shaken — Jesus is the truth.
When life feels drained of meaning — Jesus is the life.
When you feel abandoned — the Spirit makes you a child of God.
When the world feels unstable — the Father’s house anchors your hope.
When your life feels directionless — Jesus Himself becomes your direction.
This chapter is not just for study. It is for living.
And when you live it… your heart becomes untroubled not because anxiety disappears, but because Christ fills the space where fear once lived.
Pause for a moment.
Let the noise fall away. Let the pressure loosen. Let the world take a step back.
Listen.
Hear Jesus speak the opening words of John 14 personally:
“Let not your heart be troubled…”
Hear Him say:
“I am preparing a place for you.” “I will come again.” “I will receive you to Myself.” “I am the way.” “I am the truth.” “I am the life.” “I will not leave you orphans.” “My peace I give to you.”
These are not ancient words. They are present words. Living words. Words for your situation, your struggle, your fear, your hopes, your questions.
Jesus is not far away. He is near. He is speaking still. And He is guiding you home.
John 14 is not the chapter you read once. It is the chapter you return to every time your heart trembles.
It is the chapter where Jesus becomes your anchor… your peace… your home.
And today, He invites you to believe Him again.
Watch Douglas Vandergraph’s inspiring faith-based videos on YouTube.
#John14 #JesusIsTheWay #Faith #BibleStudy #ChristianEncouragement #PeaceInChrist #HolySpirit #HopeInJesus
— Douglas Vandergraph
from Faith & Doubt
“So what do you do?”
“I'm just a teacher,” Sarah said, that familiar apologetic tone creeping into her voice. “I mean, I'm not in ministry or anything. Just working a regular job.”
I've heard variations of this conversation dozens of times. The youth pastor introducing himself at a church gathering gets knowing nods and interested questions. Sarah gets a polite smile and a pivot to someone else. There's an unspoken hierarchy at work, a quiet assumption that some callings matter more to God than others.
We've created a two-tiered system in the modern church: the sacred and the secular, the spiritual and the ordinary, those in “full-time ministry” and everyone else. And for most Christians, this divide doesn't just affect how they introduce themselves at church—it shapes how they view 40, 50, 60 hours of their week. If your work isn't “ministry work,” is it really a calling at all?
Walk into most evangelical churches and you'll feel it. Missionaries receive special commissioning services. Pastoral staff get offices with their names on the door. Meanwhile, the software engineer, the nurse, the small business owner—they're appreciated for their tithes and their availability to volunteer, but their daily work? That's just what pays the bills.
This isn't a new problem. In fact, it's an old problem that we thought we'd solved five hundred years ago.
When Martin Luther nailed his theses to the church door in Wittenberg, he wasn't just challenging indulgences. He was dismantling an entire worldview that had divided humanity into spiritual athletes (monks, priests, nuns) and everyone else.
Luther's doctrine of vocation was radical: a dairy maid milking cows to the glory of God was doing work just as sacred as a monk praying in his cell. In fact, Luther argued, the maid was probably doing more good for her neighbor. Here was a seismic shift—every legitimate calling, every honest profession, was holy ground.
This wasn't just abstract theology. It reshaped society. Suddenly, ordinary work mattered. The cobbler could see his craft as service to God. The magistrate could govern as a divine calling. Work wasn't merely a distraction from the spiritual life; it was central to it.
But somewhere between then and now, we've drifted back. We've recreated the very categories the Reformers worked to dismantle.
When we turn to Scripture, we don't find a sacred-secular divide. We find something much richer.
Work existed before sin entered the world. In Genesis 1-2, before the fall, God places humanity in a garden to work it and keep it. The cultural mandate—to fill the earth, to cultivate and create—was given in paradise. Work isn't part of the curse; only its frustration and futility are. This means work itself is woven into God's good design for human flourishing.
God cares about all our work. Paul's instruction in Colossians 3:23-24 doesn't come with a list of approved professions: “Whatever you do, work heartily, as for the Lord and not for men, knowing that from the Lord you will receive the inheritance as your reward.” Whatever you do. The spreadsheet. The sales call. The surgical procedure. The legal brief.
Calling isn't just about career. In 1 Corinthians 7, Paul uses “calling” language not primarily for jobs but for life situations—married or single, slave or free. His surprising advice? “Each person should remain in the situation they were in when God called them” (v. 20). There's no assumption that becoming a Christian means leaving your work behind unless that work itself is inherently sinful.
Scripture celebrates diverse vocations. Look at the variety of callings God honors: Joseph the administrator, Daniel the government official, Lydia the businesswoman, Luke the physician, Paul the tentmaker. Even Jesus spent most of his earthly life as a carpenter, not a traveling preacher. God doesn't just tolerate these professions—he orchestrates them, uses them, sanctifies them.
I know the objections because I've felt them myself.
“Doesn't Jesus call us to leave everything and follow him?” Yes, he does (Matthew 19:29, Luke 14:33). But notice what the disciples left—they left their nets to become fishers of men, but Peter still owned a house. Luke left his practice to travel with Jesus, but he used his medical skills along the way. The call to discipleship is absolute, but it doesn't always mean abandoning your profession. Sometimes it means transforming how you approach it.
“Isn't evangelism the main thing?” Sharing the gospel is certainly central to Christian life. But here's the paradox: faithful, excellent work often creates the platform and credibility for gospel witness in ways that abandoning your profession might not. The engineer who serves her colleagues with integrity, the teacher who pours into his students with genuine care—they're living apologetics. Their work becomes witness not despite being ordinary, but precisely because it is.
“What about morally ambiguous industries?” This is a real question, and I won't pretend it's simple. Some work is clearly incompatible with Christian faithfulness. But most work exists in that complex middle space where wisdom, discernment, and community input matter. The bartender, the defense attorney, the marketing executive—these require thoughtful engagement, not blanket dismissals. The doctrine of vocation doesn't eliminate moral reasoning; it elevates the importance of thinking carefully about our work.
When Christians truly embrace the sacredness of ordinary work, everything shifts.
Monday morning looks different. That budget report isn't just bureaucratic busywork—it's stewarding resources God has entrusted to your organization. The difficult conversation with a colleague isn't a distraction from “spiritual” things—it's an opportunity to embody Christlike patience and truth-telling. You're not waiting for Sunday to do something that matters; you're already in the thick of your calling.
Career decisions get reframed. Not every Christian needs to be angling toward “ministry.” If you're gifted in finance, skilled in medicine, passionate about education—these aren't consolation prizes. They might be exactly where God wants you, not as a holding pattern until you figure out your “real” calling, but as the calling itself.
Church culture becomes more honest. Imagine a church where the entrepreneur is honored for business integrity the way we honor missionaries for their sacrifice. Where the stay-at-home parent's work is celebrated as genuine ministry. Where “So what do you do?” is asked with genuine curiosity about how God is at work in every corner of his world. Serving in a ministry no longer feels like a sacred extension out of the hours from “secular” work.
Our witness expands. When Christians see their work as sacred, they don't retreat from the world—they engage it with excellence, creativity, and integrity. They become salt and light not by escaping into Christian subcultures but by being faithfully present in every sphere of society.
Here's why this matters for apologetics: the sacred-secular divide doesn't just harm Christians—it undermines our witness to the world.
When we suggest that only “religious” work really matters to God, we imply that God doesn't care about most of human life. We make him seem small, interested only in a narrow slice of existence. But the Christian story is bigger than that. It claims that the God who became incarnate cares about all of creation, that nothing human is outside his concern.
When Christians live as though their ordinary work is sacred—when they pursue excellence not for personal advancement but as an act of worship, when they serve their neighbors through their professions, when they work for human flourishing in a thousand quiet ways—they bear witness to a God who is at work in all of life.
The teacher who shapes young minds with patience and wisdom, the architect who designs spaces for human flourishing, the small business owner who treats employees with dignity—they're all doing apologetics. They're showing that the Christian faith doesn't require us to escape the world but to engage it fully, faithfully, gratefully.
So when Sarah says “I'm just a teacher,” something in me wants to stop her mid-sentence.
You're not “just” anything. You're a woman called by God to shape the next generation. You're teaching children to read, to think, to wonder. You're bearing witness to a God who values truth and beauty and human development. You're working in one of the most sacred spaces there is—the formation of young souls.
Your work isn't a distraction from your calling. It is your calling.
And that changes everything.
from
Human in the Loop

The synthetic content flooding our digital ecosystem has created an unprecedented crisis in trust, one that researchers are racing to understand whilst policymakers scramble to regulate. In 2024 alone, shareholder proposals centred on artificial intelligence surged from four to nineteen, a nearly fivefold increase that signals how seriously corporations are taking the implications of AI-generated content. Meanwhile, academic researchers have identified hallucination rates in large language models ranging from 1.3% in straightforward tasks to over 16% in legal text generation, raising fundamental questions about the reliability of systems that millions now use daily.
The landscape of AI-generated content research has crystallised around four dominant themes: trust, accuracy, ethics, and privacy. These aren't merely academic concerns. They're reshaping how companies structure board oversight, how governments draft legislation, and how societies grapple with an information ecosystem where the line between human and machine authorship has become dangerously blurred.
The challenge isn't simply that AI systems make mistakes. It's that they make mistakes with unwavering confidence, a phenomenon that cuts to the heart of why trust in AI-generated content has emerged as a primary research focus.
Scientists at multiple institutions have documented what they call “AI's impact on public perception and trust in digital content”, finding that people struggle remarkably at distinguishing between AI-generated and human-created material. In controlled studies, participants achieved only 59% accuracy when attempting to identify AI-generated misinformation, barely better than chance. This finding alone justifies the research community's intense focus on trust mechanisms.
The rapid advance of generative AI has transformed how knowledge is created and circulates. Synthetic content is now produced at a pace that tests the foundations of shared reality, accelerating what was once a slow erosion of trust. When OpenAI's systems, Google's Gemini, and Microsoft's Copilot all proved unreliable in providing election information during 2024's European elections, the implications extended far beyond technical limitations. These failures raised fundamental questions about the role such systems should play in democratic processes.
Research from the OECD on rebuilding digital trust in the age of AI emphasises that whilst AI-driven tools offer opportunities for enhancing content personalisation and accessibility, they have raised significant concerns regarding authenticity, transparency, and trustworthiness. The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development's analysis suggests that AI-generated content, deepfakes, and algorithmic bias are contributing to shifts in public perception that may prove difficult to reverse.
Perhaps most troubling, researchers have identified what they term “the transparency dilemma”. A 2025 study published in ScienceDirect found that disclosure of AI involvement in content creation can actually erode trust rather than strengthen it. Users confronted with transparent labelling of AI-generated content often become more sceptical, not just of the labelled material but of unlabelled content as well. This counterintuitive finding suggests that simple transparency measures, whilst ethically necessary, may not solve the trust problem and could potentially exacerbate it.
If trust is the what, accuracy is the why. Research into the factual reliability of AI-generated content has uncovered systemic issues that challenge the viability of these systems for high-stakes applications.
The term “hallucination” has become central to academic discourse on AI accuracy. These aren't occasional glitches but fundamental features of how large language models operate. AI systems generate responses probabilistically, constructing text based on statistical patterns learned from vast datasets rather than from any direct understanding of factual accuracy. A comprehensive review published in Nature Humanities and Social Sciences Communications conducted empirical content analysis on 243 instances of distorted information collected from ChatGPT, systematically categorising the types of errors these systems produce.
The mathematics behind hallucinations paint a sobering picture. Researchers have demonstrated that “it is impossible to eliminate hallucination in LLMs” because these systems “cannot learn all of the computable functions and will therefore always hallucinate”. This isn't a temporary engineering problem awaiting a clever solution. It's a fundamental limitation arising from the architecture of these systems.
Current estimates suggest hallucination rates may be between 1.3% and 4.1% in tasks such as text summarisation, whilst other research reports rates ranging from 1.4% in speech recognition to over 16% in legal text generation. The variance itself is revealing. In domains requiring precision, such as law or medicine, the error rates climb substantially, precisely where the consequences of mistakes are highest.
Experimental research has explored whether forewarning about hallucinations might mitigate misinformation acceptance. An online experiment with 208 Korean adults demonstrated that AI hallucination forewarning reduced misinformation acceptance significantly, with particularly strong effects among individuals with high preference for effortful thinking. However, this finding comes with a caveat. It requires users to engage critically with content, an assumption that may not hold across diverse populations or contexts where time pressure and cognitive load are high.
The detection challenge compounds the accuracy problem. Research comparing ten popular AI-detection tools found sensitivity ranging from 0% to 100%, with five software programmes achieving perfect accuracy whilst others performed at chance levels. When applied to human-written control responses, the tools exhibited inconsistencies, producing false positives and uncertain classifications. As of mid-2024, no detection service has been able to conclusively identify AI-generated content at a rate better than random chance.
Even more concerning, AI detection tools were more accurate at identifying content generated by GPT 3.5 than GPT 4, indicating that newer AI models are harder to detect. When researchers fed content through GPT 3.5 to paraphrase it, the accuracy of detection dropped by 54.83%. The arms race between generation and detection appears asymmetric, with generators holding the advantage.
OpenAI's own classifier illustrates the challenge. It accurately identifies only 26% of AI-written text as “likely AI-generated” whilst incorrectly labelling 9% of human-written text as AI-generated. Studies have universally found current models of AI detection to be insufficiently accurate for use in academic integrity cases, a conclusion with profound implications for educational institutions, publishers, and employers.
Whilst trust and accuracy dominate practitioner research, ethics has emerged as the primary concern in academic literature. The ethical dimensions of AI-generated content extend far beyond abstract principles, touching on discrimination, accountability, and fundamental questions about human agency.
Algorithmic bias represents perhaps the most extensively researched ethical concern. AI models learn from training data that may include stereotypes and biased representations, which can appear in outputs and raise serious concerns when customers or employees are treated unequally. The consequences are concrete and measurable. Amazon ceased using an AI hiring algorithm in 2018 after discovering it discriminated against women by preferring words more commonly used by men in résumés. In February 2024, Workday faced accusations of facilitating widespread bias in a novel AI lawsuit.
The regulatory response has been swift. In May 2024, Colorado became the first U.S. state to enact legislation addressing algorithmic bias, with the Colorado AI Act establishing rules for developers and deployers of AI systems, particularly those involving employment, healthcare, legal services, or other high-risk categories. Senator Ed Markey introduced the AI Civil Rights Act in September 2024, aiming to “put strict guardrails on companies' use of algorithms for consequential decisions” and ensure algorithms are tested before and after deployment.
Research on ethics in AI-enabled recruitment practices, published in Nature Humanities and Social Sciences Communications, documented how algorithmic discrimination occurs when AI systems perpetuate and amplify biases, leading to unequal treatment for different groups. The study emphasised that algorithmic bias results in discriminatory hiring practices based on gender, race, and other factors, stemming from limited raw data sets and biased algorithm designers.
Transparency emerges repeatedly as both solution and problem in the ethics literature. A primary concern identified across multiple studies is the lack of clarity about content origins. Without clear disclosure, consumers may unknowingly engage with machine-produced content, leading to confusion, mistrust, and credibility breakdown. Yet research also reveals the complexity of implementing transparency. A full article in Taylor & Francis's journal on AI ethics emphasised the integration of transparency, fairness, and privacy in AI development, noting that these principles often exist in tension rather than harmony.
The question of accountability proves particularly thorny. When AI-generated content causes harm, who bears responsibility? The developer who trained the model? The company deploying it? The user who prompted it? Research integrity guidelines have attempted to establish clear lines, with the University of Virginia's compliance office emphasising that “authors are fully responsible for manuscript content produced by AI tools and must be transparent in disclosing how AI tools were used in writing, image production, or data analysis”. Yet this individual accountability model struggles to address systemic harms or the diffusion of responsibility across complex technical and organisational systems.
Privacy concerns in AI-generated content research cluster around two distinct but related issues: the data used to train systems and the synthetic content they produce.
The training data problem is straightforward yet intractable. Generative AI systems require vast datasets, often scraped from public and semi-public sources without explicit consent from content creators. This raises fundamental questions about data ownership, compensation, and control. The AFL-CIO filed annual general meeting proposals demanding greater transparency on AI at five entertainment companies, including Apple, Netflix, and Disney, precisely because of concerns about how their members' creative output was being used to train commercial AI systems.
The use of generative AI tools often requires inputting data into external systems, creating risks that sensitive information like unpublished research, patient records, or business documents could be stored, reused, or exposed without consent. Research institutions and corporations have responded with policies restricting what information can be entered into AI systems, but enforcement remains challenging, particularly as AI tools become embedded in standard productivity software.
The synthetic content problem is more subtle. The rise of synthetic content raises societal concerns including identity theft, security risks, privacy violations, and ethical issues such as facilitating undetectable cheating and fraud. Deepfakes targeting political leaders during 2024's elections demonstrated how synthetic media can appropriate someone's likeness and voice without consent, a violation of privacy that existing legal frameworks struggle to address.
Privacy research has also identified what scholars call “model collapse”, a phenomenon where AI generators retrain on their own content, causing quality deterioration. This creates a curious privacy concern. As more synthetic content floods the internet, future AI systems trained on this polluted dataset may inherit and amplify errors, biases, and distortions. The privacy of human-created content becomes impossible to protect when it's drowned in an ocean of synthetic material.
The Coalition for Content Provenance and Authenticity, known as C2PA, represents one technical approach to these privacy challenges. The standard associates metadata such as author, date, and generative system with content, protected with cryptographic keys and combined with robust digital watermarks. However, critics argue that C2PA “relies on embedding provenance data within the metadata of digital files, which can easily be stripped or swapped by bad actors”. Moreover, C2PA itself creates privacy concerns. One criticism is that it can compromise the privacy of people who sign content with it, due to the large amount of metadata in the digital labels it creates.
The research themes of trust, accuracy, ethics, and privacy haven't remained confined to academic journals. They're reshaping corporate governance in measurable ways, driven by shareholder pressure, regulatory requirements, and board recognition of AI-related risks.
The transformation has been swift. Analysis by ISS-Corporate found that the percentage of S&P 500 companies disclosing some level of board oversight of AI soared more than 84% between 2023 and 2024, and more than 150% from 2022 to 2024. By 2024, more than 31% of the S&P 500 disclosed some level of board oversight of AI, a figure that would have been unthinkable just three years earlier.
The nature of oversight has also evolved. Among companies that disclosed the delegation of AI oversight to specific committees or the full board in 2024, the full board emerged as the top choice. In previous years, the majority of responsibility was given to audit and risk committees. This shift suggests boards are treating AI as a strategic concern rather than merely a technical or compliance issue.
Shareholder proposals have driven much of this change. For the first time in 2024, shareholders asked for specific attributions of board responsibilities aimed at improving AI oversight, as well as disclosures related to the social implications of AI use on the workforce. The media and entertainment industry saw the highest number of proposals, including online platforms and interactive media, due to serious implications for the arts, content generation, and intellectual property.
Glass Lewis, a prominent proxy advisory firm, updated its 2025 U.S. proxy voting policies to address AI oversight. Whilst the firm typically avoids voting recommendations on AI oversight, it stated it may act if poor oversight or mismanagement of AI leads to significant harm to shareholders. In such cases, Glass Lewis will assess board governance, review the board's response, and consider recommending votes against directors if oversight or management of AI issues is found lacking.
This evolution reflects research findings filtering into corporate decision-making. Boards are responding to documented concerns about trust, accuracy, ethics, and privacy by establishing oversight structures, demanding transparency from management, and increasingly viewing AI governance as a fiduciary responsibility. The research-to-governance pipeline is functioning, even if imperfectly.
If corporate governance represents the private sector's response to AI-generated content research, regulation represents the public sector's attempt to codify standards and enforce accountability.
The European Union's AI Act stands as the most comprehensive regulatory framework to date. Adopted in March 2024 and entering into force in May 2024, the Act explicitly recognises the potential of AI-generated content to destabilise society and the role AI providers should play in preventing this. Content generated or modified with AI, including images, audio, or video files such as deepfakes, must be clearly labelled as AI-generated so users are aware when they encounter such content.
The transparency obligations are more nuanced than simple labelling. Providers of generative AI must ensure that AI-generated content is identifiable, and certain AI-generated content should be clearly and visibly labelled, namely deepfakes and text published with the purpose to inform the public on matters of public interest. Deployers who use AI systems to create deepfakes are required to clearly disclose that the content has been artificially created or manipulated by labelling the AI output as such and disclosing its artificial origin, with an exception for law enforcement purposes.
The enforcement mechanisms are substantial. Noncompliance with these requirements is subject to administrative fines of up to 15 million euros or up to 3% of the operator's total worldwide annual turnover for the preceding financial year, whichever is higher. The transparency obligations will be applicable from 2 August 2026, giving organisations a two-year transition period.
In the United States, federal action has been slower but state innovation has accelerated. The Content Origin Protection and Integrity from Edited and Deepfaked Media Act, known as the COPIED Act, was introduced by Senators Maria Cantwell, Marsha Blackburn, and Martin Heinrich in July 2024. The bill would set new federal transparency guidelines for marking, authenticating, and detecting AI-generated content, and hold violators accountable for abuses.
The COPIED Act requires the National Institute of Standards and Technology to develop guidelines and standards for content provenance information, watermarking, and synthetic content detection. These standards will promote transparency to identify if content has been generated or manipulated by AI, as well as where AI content originated. Companies providing generative tools capable of creating images or creative writing would be required to attach provenance information or metadata about a piece of content's origin to outputs.
Tennessee enacted the ELVIS Act, which took effect on 1 July 2024, protecting individuals from unauthorised use of their voice or likeness in AI-generated content and addressing AI-generated deepfakes. California's AI Transparency Act became effective on 1 January 2025, requiring providers to offer visible disclosure options, incorporate imperceptible disclosures like digital watermarks, and provide free tools to verify AI-generated content.
International developments extend beyond the EU and U.S. In January 2024, Singapore's Info-communications Media Development Authority issued a Proposed Model AI Governance Framework for Generative AI. In May 2024, the Council of Europe adopted the first international AI treaty, the Framework Convention on Artificial Intelligence and Human Rights, Democracy, and the Rule of Law. China released final Measures for Labeling AI-Generated Content in March 2025, with rules requiring explicit labels as visible indicators that clearly inform users when content is AI-generated, taking effect on 1 September 2025.
The regulatory landscape remains fragmented, creating compliance challenges for organisations operating across multiple jurisdictions. Yet the direction is clear. Research findings about the risks and impacts of AI-generated content are translating into binding legal obligations with meaningful penalties for noncompliance.
For all the research activity, significant methodological limitations constrain our understanding of AI-generated content and its impacts.
The short-term focus problem looms largest. Current studies predominantly focus on short-term interventions rather than longitudinal impacts on knowledge transfer, behaviour change, and societal adaptation. A comprehensive review in Smart Learning Environments noted that randomised controlled trials comparing AI-generated content writing systems with traditional instruction remain scarce, with most studies exhibiting methodological limitations including self-selection bias and inconsistent feedback conditions.
Significant research gaps persist in understanding optimal integration mechanisms for AI-generated content tools in cross-disciplinary contexts. Research methodologies require greater standardisation to facilitate meaningful cross-study comparisons. When different studies use different metrics, different populations, and different AI systems, meta-analysis becomes nearly impossible and cumulative knowledge building is hindered.
The disruption of established methodologies presents both challenge and opportunity. Research published in Taylor & Francis's journal on higher education noted that AI is starting to disrupt established methodologies, ethical paradigms, and fundamental principles that have long guided scholarly work. GenAI tools that fill in concepts or interpretations for authors can fundamentally change research methodology, and the use of GenAI as a “shortcut” can lead to degradation of methodological rigour.
The ecological validity problem affects much of the research. Studies conducted in controlled laboratory settings may not reflect how people actually interact with AI-generated content in natural environments where context, motivation, and stakes vary widely. Research on AI detection tools, for instance, typically uses carefully curated datasets that may not represent the messy reality of real-world content.
Sample diversity remains inadequate. Much research relies on WEIRD populations, those from Western, Educated, Industrialised, Rich, and Democratic societies. How findings generalise to different cultural contexts, languages, and socioeconomic conditions remains unclear. The experiment with Korean adults on hallucination forewarning, whilst valuable, cannot be assumed to apply universally without replication in diverse populations.
The moving target problem complicates longitudinal research. AI systems evolve rapidly, with new models released quarterly that exhibit different behaviours and capabilities. Research on GPT-3.5 may have limited relevance by the time GPT-5 arrives. This creates a methodological dilemma. Should researchers study cutting-edge systems that will soon be obsolete, or older systems that no longer represent current capabilities?
Interdisciplinary integration remains insufficient. Research on AI-generated content spans computer science, psychology, sociology, law, media studies, and numerous other fields, yet genuine interdisciplinary collaboration is rarer than siloed work. Technical researchers may lack expertise in human behaviour, whilst social scientists may not understand the systems they're studying. The result is research that addresses pieces of the puzzle without assembling a coherent picture.
The question of how research can produce more actionable guidance has become central to discussions among both academics and practitioners. Several promising directions have emerged.
Sector-specific research represents one crucial path forward. The House AI Task Force report, released in late 2024, offers “a clear, actionable blueprint for how Congress can put forth a unified vision for AI governance”, with sector-specific regulation and incremental approaches as key philosophies. Different sectors face distinct challenges. Healthcare providers need guidance on AI-generated clinical notes that differs from what news organisations need regarding AI-generated articles. Research that acknowledges these differences and provides tailored recommendations will prove more useful than generic principles.
Convergence Analysis conducted rapid-response research on emerging AI governance developments, generating actionable recommendations for reducing harms from AI. This model of responsive research, which engages directly with policy processes as they unfold, may prove more influential than traditional academic publication cycles that can stretch years from research to publication.
Technical frameworks and standards translate high-level principles into actionable guidance for AI developers. Guidelines that provide specific recommendations for risk assessment, algorithmic auditing, and ongoing monitoring give organisations concrete steps to implement. The National Institute of Standards and Technology's development of standards for content provenance information, watermarking, and synthetic content detection exemplifies this approach.
Participatory research methods that involve stakeholders in the research process can enhance actionability. When the people affected by AI-generated content, including workers, consumers, and communities, participate in defining research questions and interpreting findings, the resulting guidance better reflects real-world needs and constraints.
Rapid pilot testing and iteration, borrowed from software development, could accelerate the translation of research into practice. Rather than waiting for definitive studies, organisations could implement provisional guidance based on preliminary findings, monitor outcomes, and adjust based on results. This requires comfort with uncertainty and commitment to ongoing learning.
Transparency about limitations and unknowns may paradoxically enhance actionability. When researchers clearly communicate what they don't know and where evidence is thin, practitioners can make informed judgements about where to apply caution and where to proceed with confidence. Overselling certainty undermines trust and ultimately reduces the practical impact of research.
The development of evaluation frameworks that organisations can use to assess their own AI systems represents another actionable direction. Rather than prescribing specific technical solutions, research can provide validated assessment tools that help organisations identify risks and measure progress over time.
As the volume of AI-generated content continues to grow exponentially, research priorities must evolve to address emerging challenges whilst closing existing knowledge gaps.
Model collapse deserves urgent attention. As one researcher noted, when AI generators retrain on their own content, “quality deteriorates substantially”. Understanding the dynamics of model collapse, identifying early warning signs, and developing strategies to maintain data quality in an increasingly synthetic information ecosystem should be top priorities.
The effectiveness of labelling and transparency measures requires rigorous evaluation. Research questioning the effectiveness of visible labels and audible warnings points to low fitness levels due to vulnerability to manipulation and inability to address wider societal impacts. Whether current transparency approaches actually work, for whom, and under what conditions remains inadequately understood.
Cross-cultural research on trust and verification behaviours would illuminate whether findings from predominantly Western contexts apply globally. Different cultures may exhibit different levels of trust in institutions, different media literacy levels, and different expectations regarding disclosure and transparency.
Longitudinal studies tracking how individuals, organisations, and societies adapt to AI-generated content over time would capture dynamics that cross-sectional research misses. Do people become better at detecting synthetic content with experience? Do trust levels stabilise or continue to erode? How do verification practices evolve?
Research on hybrid systems that combine human judgement with automated detection could identify optimal configurations. Neither humans nor machines excel at detecting AI-generated content in isolation, but carefully designed combinations might outperform either alone.
The economics of verification deserves systematic analysis. Implementing robust provenance tracking, conducting regular algorithmic audits, and maintaining oversight structures all carry costs. Research examining the cost-benefit tradeoffs of different verification approaches would help organisations allocate resources effectively.
Investigation of positive applications and beneficial uses of AI-generated content could balance the current emphasis on risks and harms. AI-generated content offers genuine benefits for accessibility, personalisation, creativity, and efficiency. Research identifying conditions under which these benefits can be realised whilst minimising harms would provide constructive guidance.
The themes dominating research into AI-generated content reflect genuine concerns about trust, accuracy, ethics, and privacy in an information ecosystem fundamentally transformed by machine learning. These aren't merely academic exercises. They're influencing how corporate boards structure oversight, how shareholders exercise voice, and how governments craft regulation.
Yet methodological gaps constrain our understanding. Short-term studies, inadequate sample diversity, lack of standardisation, and the challenge of studying rapidly evolving systems all limit the actionability of current research. The path forward requires sector-specific guidance, participatory methods, rapid iteration, and honest acknowledgement of uncertainty.
The percentage of companies providing disclosure of board oversight increasing by more than 84% year-over-year demonstrates that research is already influencing governance. The European Union's AI Act, with fines up to 15 million euros for noncompliance, shows research shaping regulation. The nearly fivefold increase in AI-related shareholder proposals reveals stakeholders demanding accountability.
The challenge isn't a lack of research but the difficulty of generating actionable guidance for a technology that evolves faster than studies can be designed, conducted, and published. As one analysis concluded, “it is impossible to eliminate hallucination in LLMs” because these systems “cannot learn all of the computable functions”. This suggests a fundamental limit to what technical solutions alone can achieve.
Perhaps the most important insight from the research landscape is that AI-generated content isn't a problem to be solved but a condition to be managed. The goal isn't perfect detection, elimination of bias, or complete transparency, each of which may prove unattainable. The goal is developing governance structures, verification practices, and social norms that allow us to capture the benefits of AI-generated content whilst mitigating its harms.
The research themes that dominate today, trust, accuracy, ethics, and privacy, will likely remain central as the technology advances. But the methodological approaches must evolve. More longitudinal studies, greater cultural diversity, increased interdisciplinary collaboration, and closer engagement with policy processes will enhance the actionability of future research.
The information ecosystem has been fundamentally altered by AI's capacity to generate plausible-sounding content at scale. We cannot reverse this change. We can only understand it better, govern it more effectively, and remain vigilant about the trust, accuracy, ethics, and privacy implications that research has identified as paramount. The synthetic age has arrived. Our governance frameworks are racing to catch up.
Coalition for Content Provenance and Authenticity (C2PA). (2024). Technical specifications and implementation challenges. Linux Foundation. Retrieved from https://www.linuxfoundation.org/blog/how-c2pa-helps-combat-misleading-information
European Parliament. (2024). EU AI Act: First regulation on artificial intelligence. Topics. Retrieved from https://www.europarl.europa.eu/topics/en/article/20230601STO93804/eu-ai-act-first-regulation-on-artificial-intelligence
Glass Lewis. (2024). 2025 U.S. proxy voting policies: Key updates on AI oversight and board responsiveness. Winston & Strawn Insights. Retrieved from https://www.winston.com/en/insights-news/pubco-pulse/
Harvard Law School Forum on Corporate Governance. (2024). Next-gen governance: AI's role in shareholder proposals. Retrieved from https://corpgov.law.harvard.edu/2024/05/06/next-gen-governance-ais-role-in-shareholder-proposals/
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Kar, S.K., Bansal, T., Modi, S., & Singh, A. (2024). How sensitive are the free AI-detector tools in detecting AI-generated texts? A comparison of popular AI-detector tools. Indian Journal of Psychiatry. Retrieved from https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/02537176241247934
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Nature Humanities and Social Sciences Communications. (2024). Ethics and discrimination in artificial intelligence-enabled recruitment practices. Retrieved from https://www.nature.com/articles/s41599-023-02079-x
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OECD.AI. (2024). Rebuilding digital trust in the age of AI. Retrieved from https://oecd.ai/en/wonk/rebuilding-digital-trust-in-the-age-of-ai
PMC. (2024). Countering AI-generated misinformation with pre-emptive source discreditation and debunking. Retrieved from https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC12187399/
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Future of Life Institute. (n.d.). U.S. legislative trends in AI-generated content: 2024 and beyond. Retrieved from https://fpf.org/blog/u-s-legislative-trends-in-ai-generated-content-2024-and-beyond/

Tim Green UK-based Systems Theorist & Independent Technology Writer
Tim explores the intersections of artificial intelligence, decentralised cognition, and posthuman ethics. His work, published at smarterarticles.co.uk, challenges dominant narratives of technological progress while proposing interdisciplinary frameworks for collective intelligence and digital stewardship.
His writing has been featured on Ground News and shared by independent researchers across both academic and technological communities.
ORCID: 0009-0002-0156-9795 Email: tim@smarterarticles.co.uk
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I have felt inspired by Joel Chrono to try my hand at weeknotes here on my corner of the web. Somewhat inconsistently I’ve already kept brief notes in similar fashion for a while, as part of my organization and notes system on index cards (detailing that will be its own series of posts!), so this feels like a natural evolution for the shareable daily life stuff.
I started working on a bit of an evolution to how I am archiving my daily notes in my index cards system, inspired by ✱Forever Notes✱, I might even use photos of index cards into an actual Apple Notes system of the same design as my backup.
Continued my fights and adventures with Microsoft Intune and Autopilot at work this week. Overall it has gone very well, to get a clear start and image, we’re factory resetting existing laptops a few at a time and setting them up via Autopilot. The only hitch was few laptops have corrupt restore file before the option to cloud download vs local files...so they need a USB Windows 11 re-install/repair...and we’re work from home based.
Had a bit more time for some gaming later this week, the house is emptier than normal with some trips and travel, so managed to squeeze in a bit of gaming, which in general has been harder to come by.
I have a FiiO Echo Mini for a portable music player, and it’s an awesome little device for what little I’ve used it for so far. I am still working on building out some playlists now that I have all my music in better hi-res Flac formats.
Finished up some winter prep tasks outdoors, as I am on an acreage in northern Ontario. Had a few more things to put away around the yard, cover to stretch over old RV Trailer, and pre-winter checks on the Jeep.
Not a huge volume of reading this past week, but I managed at least better consistency than in the past:
Daily Stoic: 366 Meditations – I long since lost track reading daily, but am making progress, finished the dailies in May and got up to about June 10th, with some good notes captured along the way.
Buy Back Your Time – I am corporate IT, not an entrepreneur, but this has been a good read so far, as plenty still applies. I am still not far into the book, about page 55, but managed a lot of that in this past week after it sat to the side for weeks.
As mentioned, in general I have not had (or made time) for a lot of gaming, that is something I am working on, but made a bit more time this week for some progress, so this is at least what I touched on:
Need for Speed: Payback (PS5)
This game in the Need for Speed franchise has been a slow burn for me, I’be been playing it a bit on and off for probably two years, but keep enjoying it for the not-so-simulation driving mayhem it offers, but hey, it lets me have some really fun classic cars, I’ll get some pictures for the next time I write about it.
God of War: Ragnarok (PS5)
I started this finally on Friday, it came bundled with my PS5 when purchased, but I never got around to playing it. Granted, I have never played the other God of War games, but was always interested in the concept. They have a cool recap on the main menu that tries to summarize the story (ish) enough to have a starting point. Managed a few hours and had a blast, so I’ll keep playing this yet.
Banished (PC)
Banished is now an older game by comparison, came out back at the start of my post-university career, but one I return too often to start new games and just relax with the early survival building stages. I’ve always enjoyed their music track, and while it is too slow for some, I enjoy playing it on 1X speed and just letting the people mill about their lives, and the graphics still hold up incredible. Of note, this is played on PC via Steam on my Fedora 42 Workstation.
I don’t know to what consistency I’ll keep this section, but currently I sometimes capture what I’ve watched, in which case it has a place.
Grand Tour
Mostly while working on some notes in the evening, I worked this week through some fun re-watches of some season 3 and 4 episodes of The Grand Tour. I started with the Mongolia special, which is just an amazing episode, and a cool way to see that country. I followed it up with the first two season 4 episodes (after they went to road specials only), covering boats in Vietnam, and then driving incredibly rough roads of Madagascar in search of treasure. They’re always fun to re-watch with the antics of the old Top Gear gang.
This section is a pretty straight copy from Joel, depending on the week I may read a bunch online, or watch a bunch of video’s, and sometimes not so much.
52 Weeknotes Later – I had already come across his weeknotes earlier to plant the idea, but this post and some of it’s linked posts helped push me to give this a try.
Why I Remain a Skeptic Despite Working in Tech – Interesting read I generally agree with, I likewise work in Tech, have precisely one automated light bulb and live heavily on paper and Index Cards. Granted, I am fairly invested in the Apple Ecosystem these days. Food for thought for me to write on later!
This Practice Will Put You Ahead of 99% of People: Matt Ragland – I will admit, my entry to this video was mostly seeing Index Cards in use, much like my notes and system, but it was a good entry point for some reminders and improvements on my system, and avoid perfection.
Five Life Changing Journal Techniques: Matt Ragland – This was a follow-on link at the end of the video above, but likewise, right up my alley. It was a good reminder however of useful and healthy methods for journalling, many I intend to trial and implement further.
Don’t Set a Goal for 2026 Until You Watch This: Bullet Journal – I started my journey back into paper with Bullet Journalling, before shifting into Index Cards, but with a lot of bullet journal concepts in my design. This video had some great learning on Intentional Goals, instead of shoulding yourself goals.
I would say there we have it, for the first published weeknotes, it feels like it was a bit on the long side, but it’s also nice to have a reflection around the week as it blows by rapidly! I enjoy that it got me to spend some time writing, one of the activities I want to partake more in.
from
Roscoe's Story
In Summary: * Arthritis aches, clumsiness, and soreness more significant today than normal. The wife says it's probably because the weather has suddenly turned cooler. She may be right.
Prayers, etc.: * My daily prayers.
Health Metrics: * bw= 219.36 lbs. * bp= 128/81 (65)
Exercise: * kegel pelvic floor exercise, half squats, calf raises, wall push-ups
Diet: * 07:30 – nachos chips with meat and cheese sauce, * 11:30 – sausages, rice pudding, chicken and vegetables * 17:30 – home made stew, white bread and butter
Activities, Chores, etc.: * 06:20 – bank accounts activity monitored * 06:30 – read, pray, listen to news reports from various sources, and nap * 13:00 – following the Colts vs. the Chiefs NFL Game * 16:00 – now following NCAA men's basketball, Howard Bison vs Duke Blue Devils. * 18:30 – follow news reports from various sources. * 19:10 – listen to relaxing music and quietly reading until bedtime.
Chess: * 10:50 – moved in all pending CC games
from Réveil
Many have seen the footage. Far fewer know its tangled backstory.
Is it an early‑2000s hoax or a genuine recording of an unknown craft? The video, also referred to as the Pordenone UFO, has a surprisingly intricate timeline and a long trail of debate behind it.

The video first attracted international attention in 2005, when Italian-American researcher Paola Harris presented a fourth-generation copy at the 36th Annual MUFON International Symposium in Denver, Colorado. Harris, who was then living in Italy, stated that the footage had been supplied by an anonymous source who associated it with the Aviano area. The identity of the original cameraman has never been established, and the severe degradation caused by repeated copying has made detailed analysis difficult.
The video:
The story begins with an anonymous VHS tape.
The footage was allegedly recorded in 2003 near the NATO air base in Aviano, Italy. In 2004, a VHS copy of the video was sent anonymously to the well‑known Italian ufologist Antonio Chiumiento, accompanied by a brief but ominous message:
“Ho paura” (“I am afraid,” in Italian).
The tape was subsequently sent to other Italian ufologists in the following months.

Despite receiving the material in 2004, Chiumiento chose to keep the video confidential at first, allowing time for further analysis. The footage only became public in 2005.
That year, Italian‑American journalist and ufologist Paola Harris presented the video at two major events:
The versions that later circulated on YouTube were largely derived from a DVD of her MUFON presentation.
Harris stated that she received a fourth‑generation copy from an anonymous source claiming it was filmed near Aviano Air Base. She believes the object is likely a terrestrial military prototype, specifically a remotely piloted vehicle, and says analysis in Boulder, Colorado, indicated a real physical object rather than pure CGI. The operator’s precise framing at the moment the object appears is seen as evidence of a planned test rather than a random sighting.
Paola’s statement:
This old video, which I have been showing for three years, was not provided to us, Italian researchers, by the Air Force. It is not one of our technologies. I had the tape analyzed in Hollywood by my friends Rob and Rebecca Gordon, who had the contacts and financial means to do so. This is a seventh-generation cassette tape. It was given to us without explanation. It is a real object that we see in the film. It was shown in my presentations at MUFON and in Laughlin, and then someone uploaded it to YouTube and Google. The video was filmed in the Veneto region, in Italy, in a place called Ponte di Giulio, near the NATO airbase in Aviano. It is a dry riverbed where the military was conducting maneuvers, and the cameraman had set up a tripod and was waiting for the object to emerge from the forest. I doubt that aliens appeared in that location.

In response to growing doubts over the tape’s origins and credibility, Harris published a statement to address the controversy. In summary, she emphasized that:
Harris also described the filming location: a dry riverbed in the Veneto region, near a place called Ponte di Giulio, close to the Aviano NATO air base. According to her, military exercises were being conducted in the area, and the cameraman had set up a tripod, apparently waiting for the object to emerge from the treeline. Despite this, Harris herself expressed skepticism that the object was extraterrestrial, suggesting instead that it might have been some kind of advanced terrestrial technology.
Investigators Antonio Pischiutti and Stefano Saccavino visited the Ponte di Giulio area near Montereale Valcellina (province of Pordenone, Italy) to locate where the UFO video was filmed. They identified the exact spot on the left bank of the Cellina River, under the iron bridge on the SS 251 road. Based on the environment and perspective, they estimated the object was about 150–200 meters from the camera, moved from north‑northwest to south‑southeast, and was roughly 6–8 meters in diameter.
The area is heavily associated with military activity (near Aviano Air Base, test ranges, and a small emergency runway), as well as a nearby hydroelectric structure visible in the footage.
Photo taken by Investigators Antonio Pischiutti and Stefano Saccavino

The investigators noted that the region has a history of alleged anomalous events, including supposed teleportation, a crop circle, a possible abduction, strange lights near Mount Raut, and recurring UFO reports near the Aviano base. They suggest the area might be either a hotspot for “extraterrestrial raids” or a kind of “Dreamland” for exotic military aircraft. They find the footage impressive, especially when the object suddenly darts away, but admit that the object initially looks too sharp and perfect compared to the background, raising doubts.
Aviano Air Base:

Their work, published online and now Archived here.
The investigation focused on:
Pischiutti and Saccavino concluded that the location shown in the footage is consistent with an area near the SS 251 highway, a region of archaeological and military relevance, not far from Aviano Air Base.
Location:

Based on their calculations, they estimated that the object was approximately 6 to 8 meters in diameter. It appeared to move from north‑northwest to south‑southeast, crossing the frame rapidly before disappearing. If genuine, such behavior raises questions about the craft’s propulsion and nature. However, the poor quality of the available footage severely limited their ability to reach definitive conclusions.
In parallel, researcher Giuseppe Garofalo, from the SIRIO Nucleus, examined three different versions of the Aviano video available online. His analysis highlighted several suspicious features, including:
Giuseppe Garofalo analyzed the three versions of the video found online and found inconsistencies and anomalies: transparency effects in the object’s structure, apparent shape changes, odd filters and noise, a brief on‑screen timer, and mismatched lighting. He suspects digital manipulation, possibly involving a small physical model combined with computer graphics.
He concludes that the footage, especially in its online forms, is unreliable, although he argues that without the original video and direct witnesses, it’s premature to dismiss it purely as simple CGI.
One of the more striking fraud claims came from a user known as “onthefence” on the OpenMindsForum (unfortunately, their full analysis appears to have been lost and is not easily retrieved, even via WebArchive).
According to this researcher, the alleged UFO displays a blur pattern that differs significantly from the background. While some took this as evidence of a hastily rendered 3D model, onthefence argued that the discrepancy was more likely related to the contrast difference between the bright object and the darker landscape in the original footage.

Given the very low quality of the early online uploads, he argued that typical “pulsing” artifacts from quick 3D rendering would probably not be visible. Instead, he interpreted the mismatched blur as strong evidence that the saucer and the background were two separate layers: one genuine, one not. In short, the video appears to show a composite image rather than a single, coherent recording.
Despite the fraud accusations, Paola Harris has maintained a different position. When she presented the video at the MUFON Symposium in Denver in 2005, she suggested that the object was likely a remotely controlled military prototype, not an alien spacecraft.
According to Harris, further analysis conducted in Boulder, Colorado, treated the object as a physical craft, not as CGI. A 3D reconstruction by Alberto Forgione supported this, depicting the craft with movable triangular thrusters, implying an advanced, deliberate design rather than a simplistic hoax.
In 2004, the Italian regional TV channel Antenna Tre Nordest, based in Treviso (Veneto region), aired a report on the footage, helping to spread awareness of the case in Italy.
The recording of that news report can be watched here.

Some of the oldest copies of the Aviano UFO video available online today appear to have been uploaded to YouTube nearly two decades ago. You can watch it here.
Over time, various stabilized, enhanced, and zoomed versions have appeared, each adding new layers of interpretation, but not necessarily more clarity.
Stabilized version:
In 2019, a Swiss YouTube channel dedicated to UFO sightings featured an interview with an alleged witness to the Aviano case. The man, an Austrian named Stefan, claimed that he was traveling through Europe with his wife and son when he and his son saw the Aviano UFO at the same time it was filmed from the riverbed. That interview can be watched here.

Stefan asserted that the video is authentic and matches what he personally observed. However, his testimony remains impossible to independently verify. There is no definitive way to confirm whether he genuinely witnessed the event, misinterpreted something, or is simply repeating information he encountered later.
Stefans sketch of the sighting:

In the end, the Aviano UFO case sits in a grey zone.
What we do not have is the original, first‑generation recording or a fully documented chain of custody. The surviving copies are degraded, incomplete, and sometimes modified. This makes a final judgment extremely difficult.
As things stand, we cannot say with absolute certainty whether the Aviano UFO video is a clever hoax, a misidentified secret prototype, or something even stranger. The evidence is limited, the material fragmentary, and the investigations, while sincere, are ultimately inconclusive.
What can be said with confidence is that the story behind this footage, and the decades‑long debate it sparked, make the Aviano UFO one of the most intriguing and enduring cases in modern ufology.
What do you think?
My detailed analysis of the plane and orb teleportation videos that some people have linked to the disappearance of MH370.
A look at the “Skinny Bob” alien footage, where I break down why it’s so strangely convincing, what’s likely fabricated, and why the videos still spark debates years later.
A breakdown of a cryptic Forgotten Languages post about a supposed drone strike simulation off New Jersey, and how its details later echoed the real drone shutdowns across Denmark, Norway, and Germany. I compare the timeline, the political backdrop, and the odd overlap between fiction, leaks, and NATO airspace incidents.
A detailed look at the Carlos Díaz “Ships of Light” UFO: the molten amber craft he photographed over Ajusco, how it seemed half-machine, half-alive, and why the visuals still rank among the most striking UFO images ever captured, hoax or not.
A deep dive into the 2008 “Flyby” UFO video, where a disc-shaped object appears to following an airliner (or jet?), and why this short, grainy clip still sits in that uncomfortable space between what is could be a clever hoax, or genuinely a real UFO.
A collection of some of the best and most famous UFO photos ever taken. Looking at who took them, how they’ve been debunked or defended, and why a handful of images still sit in that annoying space between “obvious hoax” and “if this is real, everything changes.”
Follow me on X for more updates.
from Douglas Vandergraph
There are moments in Scripture when time seems to slow, the world seems to quiet, and the Holy Spirit draws us toward a scene so intimate, so full of divine weight, that we almost feel like we shouldn’t breathe too loudly while reading it. John Chapter 3 is one of those moments. It is not a public sermon. It is not a miracle performed before a crowd. It is not a confrontation or a spectacle. It is a conversation—quiet, hidden, unfolding in the shadows of night between a respected Pharisee named Nicodemus and the Son of God Himself. Yet within this hushed encounter lies one of the most explosive revelations in the entire Bible: the truth about rebirth, salvation, and the unstoppable love of God that reaches across eternity to rescue humanity.
Before the world ever memorized John 3:16, before preachers built sermons around it, before it became the most quoted verse in history, Jesus sat with one searching, uncertain, quietly desperate man—and began to unfold the mysteries of heaven.
Some of the most life-changing truths God will ever give you don’t arrive in crowds. They arrive in your own midnight moments.
John 3 is one of those holy midnights.
As we explore this chapter slowly, deeply, and reverently, we will walk through its layers of meaning: the identity of Nicodemus, the nature of spiritual rebirth, Jesus’ revelation of God’s love, and the profound implications of stepping from darkness into light. And along the way, we will examine how this same message speaks directly into the life of every believer who longs for renewal, forgiveness, hope, and clarity.
Somewhere within the top portion of this journey, it’s important to anchor your heart to the same foundational truth people search for around the world. The phrase born again meaning has become a global question—a cry for identity, purpose, transformation, and a second chance. And it is precisely this longing that Jesus chose to address in the stillness of night.
John Chapter 3 is not merely a teaching; it is an invitation.
It invites you to revisit your beginnings. It invites you to confront your hesitations. It invites you to rediscover how deeply you are loved. And it invites you to walk into the kind of life only God can breathe into you.
Today, let us sit down softly beside Nicodemus, listen carefully to the words of Jesus, and let this encounter unfold as if it were happening in front of us—because in many ways, it still is.
Before Jesus ever spoke a word of revelation, Scripture introduces us to Nicodemus with quiet precision. He was a Pharisee, a ruler of the Jews, and a man of reputation. Pharisees were known for strict adherence to the law, deep religious discipline, and intellectual mastery. They were respected socially, admired religiously, and feared politically. The Sanhedrin—of which Nicodemus was a member—oversaw major judgments, religious disputes, and matters of spiritual authority.
But despite all the law he memorized, all the rituals he performed, and all the public honor he received, something in Nicodemus remained unsettled.
This is the first truth John 3 gently lays upon our hearts:
Religious standing does not equal spiritual understanding.
Nicodemus knew the Scriptures, but he did not yet know the Author.
He believed in God, but he did not yet understand His heart.
He followed the rules, but he did not yet grasp the relationship.
This is why he came at night. Not merely to avoid being seen by other leaders… But because his own understanding was still in the dark.
Nicodemus came with questions, with caution, with curiosity, and perhaps with the smallest flicker of hope that the Messiah might be standing in front of him. He begins with respect—perhaps more respect than any other Pharisee showed Jesus in His entire ministry:
“Rabbi, we know that You are a teacher come from God; for no one can do these signs that You do unless God is with Him.”
Nicodemus approaches Jesus better than most leaders of his day. He does not begin with hostility, traps, accusations, or arrogance. He begins with acknowledgment.
But acknowledgment is not the same as transformation.
Nicodemus recognizes the miracles. He recognizes the divine activity. He recognizes the authority.
But he does not yet recognize the mission.
So Jesus cuts straight through the respectful introduction and goes directly to the heart of Nicodemus’ real question—one Nicodemus didn’t even know how to articulate:
“Unless one is born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God.”
It is here that the entire conversation shifts. Nicodemus thought he was meeting a teacher. But teachers expand your knowledge. Messiahs expand your existence.
Jesus wasn’t trying to improve Nicodemus’ understanding. He was trying to recreate Nicodemus’ identity.
Jesus’ words strike Nicodemus like lightning.
Born again? Born anew? Born from above?
To Nicodemus, nothing about this idea made sense. This was not a concept found in the Torah. Not a phrase in the prophets. Not a principle in rabbinic teaching.
And certainly not something someone like him— a respected elder— expected to hear.
Nicodemus responds with confusion: “How can a man be born when he is old?”
You can almost feel the weight of his struggle. He is torn between logic and longing. He is wrestling with the impossibility of what Jesus is saying— yet something inside him knows there is truth here.
Jesus’ reply goes deeper:
“Unless one is born of water and the Spirit, he cannot enter the kingdom of God.”
With these words, Jesus reveals something astonishing:
Salvation is not behavior improvement— it is a spiritual resurrection.
To be born again is not to become a slightly better version of yourself. It is not to clean up your habits, attend more services, or correct your errors. It is not self-help with religious language. It is not moral polishing or behavioral refinement.
Being born again is the miracle God performs when He takes a spiritually dead person and breathes life into them from heaven.
It is re-creation. A new beginning. A divine rebirth. A transformation that cannot be achieved through effort but only received through faith.
This is why Jesus says: “That which is born of the flesh is flesh, and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit.”
He is not insulting the flesh; He is identifying its limitations.
The flesh can achieve strength, discipline, intellect, reputation, and status— but it cannot achieve salvation.
Spiritual life cannot be produced through natural effort.
Only the Spirit gives birth to spirit. Only God can awaken what is dead inside us. Only heaven can open the door of heaven.
Jesus then uses an analogy so simple and yet so profound that its meaning has echoed through centuries:
“The wind blows where it wishes, and you hear its sound, but cannot tell where it comes from and where it goes. So is everyone who is born of the Spirit.”
He is saying:
You cannot control the Holy Spirit. You cannot manipulate Him. You cannot predict Him. You cannot contain Him.
You can only receive Him.
The Spirit moves freely. He convicts hearts. He awakens souls. He redirects lives. He brings revelation. He creates new beginnings.
You don’t always understand the details of how He works— but you see the evidence of His presence. Just as you see leaves move in a breeze, you see lives transformed by the Spirit’s touch.
Nicodemus is stunned. His entire framework is being dismantled. All he ever knew was human effort. All he ever excelled at was human righteousness. All he ever trusted was human interpretation.
But Jesus is offering him something he cannot earn, cannot achieve, cannot master.
He must receive it.
Nicodemus asks again, “How can these things be?”
And Jesus responds not with rebuke, but with revelation:
“No one has ascended to heaven but He who came down from heaven, that is, the Son of Man.”
For the first time in this conversation, Jesus directly reveals His identity—not merely as a teacher, not merely as a miracle worker, not merely as a prophet, but as the One who came from heaven itself.
And then Jesus connects His mission to an ancient story Nicodemus knew well: Moses lifting the bronze serpent in the wilderness. When the Israelites were dying from venomous bites, God instructed Moses to lift a bronze serpent high on a pole; those who looked upon it lived.
In the same way, Jesus says, the Son of Man must be lifted up— that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have eternal life.
It is here, right here, that the meaning of rebirth begins to crystallize.
Looking at the serpent did not require intelligence, rituals, credentials, or achievements.
It required trust.
Rebirth begins in belief. Belief is the doorway to transformation. And transformation is the work of the Spirit.
Nicodemus came seeking answers. Jesus offered him salvation.
Nicodemus came seeking understanding. Jesus offered him rebirth.
Nicodemus came seeking clarification. Jesus offered him eternity.
And it is at this moment—this quiet, private moment— that the most famous verse in Scripture emerges.
If the Bible had chapters made of fire, John 3:16 would burn the brightest.
“For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life.”
Stop for a moment. Slow your thoughts. Let every word rest in your spirit.
God… so loved.
Not barely loved. Not reluctantly loved. Not conditionally loved. Not occasionally loved. Not institutionally loved.
God so loved.
He didn’t love a world that loved Him back. He loved a world that ignored Him, rebelled against Him, denied Him, and crucified Him.
He loved a world that chased sin. He loved a world that turned away. He loved a world that didn’t want Him.
And yet He still gave.
He gave His Son— not when you became obedient, not when you became spiritual, not when you became morally clean, not when you had it all together.
He gave His Son while humanity was still lost.
This is the heartbeat of John Chapter 3: Rebirth is not something you earn. Rebirth is something God offers because love compelled Him to.
John does not stop at the declaration of God’s love. He moves immediately into the reality that stands beside that love: the human tendency to remain inside the shadows. Jesus explains that God did not send His Son to condemn the world. Condemnation was never the mission. Jesus did not come as a judge holding a gavel—He came as a Savior holding a lantern. He came to offer rescue, healing, redemption, and new life. But He also reveals a sobering truth: “Light has come into the world, and men loved darkness rather than light, because their deeds were evil.”
This is one of the most revealing statements Jesus ever made, because He exposes the core issue behind spiritual resistance: it is not ignorance, it is preference.
Darkness feels familiar. Darkness feels comfortable. Darkness hides what we don’t want exposed.
And Jesus does not expose darkness to humiliate us—He exposes it to heal us. Before rebirth can happen, the soul must confront the truth about itself. Nicodemus came at night. Perhaps he assumed darkness would protect him. Perhaps he didn’t want to be seen. Perhaps he was unsure of his own motives. Perhaps he didn’t want to admit how much he was longing for something more. But Jesus invites him into the light of truth—not to shame him, but to liberate him.
You may not realize this yet, but John 3 is not just a theological conversation. It is an emotional one. It is a deeply personal one. It is a gentle confrontation between the life we cling to and the life God longs to give us.
And every one of us, in some way, has approached Jesus in the night. In the places where we feel uncertain. In the moments where we hide our questions. In the seasons where we carry doubts we don’t know how to express. In the nights when our faith is shaken but our heart is still reaching.
Nicodemus represents every believer who has ever longed for God but feared exposure. He represents every soul who wants transformation but doesn’t know how to begin. He represents the human spirit caught between reputation and rebirth.
Yet Jesus does not push him away. He does not mock his confusion. He does not judge his hesitation. He does not reject his quiet approach.
Jesus simply shines light— and invites Nicodemus to step into it.
Many Christians misunderstand rebirth and reduce it to external changes. They assume being “born again” means becoming well-behaved, morally polished, or religiously active. But Jesus did not say, “Unless a man becomes better.” He said, “Unless a man is born of the Spirit.”
Rebirth is not your achievement; it is God’s workmanship.
You are not the architect of your salvation— you are the recipient of God’s mercy.
When God saves you, He does not repair the old self—He creates a new one. He does not patch up your spiritual condition—He resurrects you. He does not adjust your identity—He replaces it. He does not modify your heart—He transforms it.
The Greek word Jesus uses points to a new origin, a new genesis, a new beginning. You are not who you were. You are not defined by your failures. You are not chained to your past. You are not imprisoned by your old desires. When you are born of the Spirit, you are changed from the inside out.
This is why Paul later writes in 2 Corinthians, “If anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation.” Not a modified creation. Not an upgraded creation. A new creation.
Nicodemus worried about entering the womb a second time. But Jesus was concerned about entering his heart.
Rebirth is God doing for you what you cannot do for yourself.
Jesus explains that those who walk in truth come to the light so their deeds may be made manifest. This is not a statement of pressure—it is a statement of freedom. Walking in the light means living in a way where nothing needs to be hidden. You don’t have to hide mistakes. You don’t have to bury guilt. You don’t have to live under shame. You don’t have to pretend to be perfect. You don’t have to run from God when you fail.
To be born again is to be drawn toward transparency. To be born again is to delight in truth. To be born again is to walk in clarity. To be born again is to embrace honesty before God.
Light becomes your comfort rather than your fear.
This is where many Christians struggle. They think stepping into the light means exposing themselves to judgment—but stepping into the light actually exposes you to healing. Jesus does not use light to punish; He uses light to transform.
Your rebirth is not fragile. Your salvation is not temporary. Your standing with God is not conditional. Your identity is not based on performance.
When God makes you new, He makes you fully new.
One of the most beautiful aspects of John 3 is that the chapter closes without telling us Nicodemus’ response. He fades from the scene. We are left without closure. We do not hear him profess faith. We do not see him follow Jesus openly. We do not witness a public display of devotion.
But transformation had begun.
Nicodemus reappears twice more in Scripture—and both times, his courage grows stronger.
First, in John 7, he defends Jesus before the Pharisees, urging them to give Jesus a fair hearing. It is the first glimmer of light in him becoming visible.
Then, in John 19, Nicodemus appears at the crucifixion carrying an extravagant mixture of myrrh and aloes—seventy-five pounds worth—to anoint the body of Jesus. This was not a cheap gesture, nor a quiet one. It was public. It was costly. It was dangerous. It was bold. It was honorable.
Nicodemus, who once came at night to avoid being seen, now stands in broad daylight at the foot of the cross.
Rebirth had done its work. Light had conquered darkness. Transformation had taken root. Courage had replaced timidity. Faith had replaced uncertainty. Love had replaced fear.
This is what Jesus does to every heart that yields to Him. This is what the Spirit accomplishes in those who receive Him. This is what it means to be born again.
John Chapter 3 is not simply a historical account—it is a present-tense message for anyone who feels stuck, tired, overwhelmed, or spiritually dry. It is God’s reminder that you do not need to fix yourself to come to Him. You come to Him to be remade.
If you are weary, Jesus offers rest. If you are broken, Jesus offers restoration. If you are confused, Jesus offers clarity. If you are hurting, Jesus offers healing. If you are searching, Jesus offers truth. If you are hiding, Jesus offers light. If you are lost, Jesus offers salvation.
You can be born again. You can begin again. You can live again. You can walk again— not as the person you were, but as the person God designed you to be.
The world may not understand this transformation. Your past may not predict it. Your circumstances may not reflect it. Your emotions may not always feel it.
But heaven declares it. Christ makes it possible. The Spirit makes it real. And God rejoices over you as His child.
This is the miracle of rebirth. This is the power of love. This is the truth of John Chapter 3.
You don’t need to come to God with perfect understanding. Nicodemus didn’t. You don’t need to come with perfect faith. Nicodemus didn’t. You don’t need to come in the daylight. Nicodemus didn’t.
You simply need to come.
Jesus will meet you wherever you are— even if you come in the night.
And once you encounter Him, everything begins to change. Slowly at first. Quietly perhaps. But steadily. Faithfully. Beautifully.
Until the day you can stand in the brightest light, unafraid, unashamed, and fully alive.
This is rebirth. This is grace. This is salvation. This is the love of God.
John 3 is one of the most sacred conversations ever recorded. It is not merely theology—it is the heartbeat of the gospel. It shows us a God who loves beyond measure, a Savior who reveals truth with compassion, and a Spirit who gives new life to anyone who believes.
If your heart longs for a new beginning, John 3 whispers the same message today that Jesus spoke by candlelight two thousand years ago:
“You must be born again.”
Not as a demand. But as an invitation. A gift. A promise. A miracle waiting to unfold.
Because God so loved the world. Because God so loved you.
Watch Douglas Vandergraph’s inspiring faith-based videos on YouTube.
#Jesus #BornAgain #Faith #ChristianLiving #BibleStudy #SpiritualGrowth #GodsLove
— Douglas Vandergraph
from
The happy place
Hello it’s me again. Again on the sofa with a cute dog resting on my lap.
Sorry I haven’t written for so long; I’m going through some stuff.
Speaking of which:
There’s nothing I don’t love about dogs.
Anyway
Outside, a coat of ice is covering the ground like clear gloss varnish, making a seemingly mundane task of grocery shopping into a death defying nightmare.
Danger!
But nonetheless, out we went into the cold darkness, and back we came with some essentials such as gingerbread flavoured yoghurt, coco pops and even some milk.
This what some would say oppressive weather — a small taste of what is to come — is visible through the windows — where the wards are: the Christmas lights — strengthens the joy and merriment of being inside.
Picture that scene from Lord of the Rings in which Frodo and the others are chased by the Nazgûls, but nonetheless they hide in Frodos little house for a cozy dinner; safe for a brief moment.
It’s like that exactly.
The cute cat-sized agility dog had in the meanwhile somehow jumped onto the kitchen table. He had his knitted jumper on. In his maw there was a slice of gluten free pizza.
That memory I will cherish.
I love dogs
from Douglas Vandergraph
There are moments in Scripture where God stops us, stills us, and whispers something so profound that we must read it slowly. Let it rise. Let it breathe. Let it lift our understanding beyond the ordinary rhythm of Christian life. 1 Corinthians 12 is one of those moments.
This chapter is not merely a description of spiritual gifts. It is the blueprint of how heaven designed the church to function. It’s the spiritual architecture of the body of Christ. It’s a revelation about identity, purpose, calling, unity, and the divine intention behind every believer’s existence.
It is also a chapter that cuts through the fog of comparison, insecurity, burnout, spiritual envy, and misplaced identity. In Paul’s message to Corinth, God is talking to you — right where you sit, right where you stand, right where your heart is wrestling with the questions:
“Do I matter in the body of Christ?” “Do I have a calling?” “Is there something God crafted me to do?” “Where do I fit?” “What is my purpose?”
This long-form reflection is written for you — the believer who is hungry for clarity, thirsty for calling, longing for alignment with the will of God. This article is designed to meet Write.as readers where they are: craving depth, craving meaning, craving truth that is slow enough to savor and strong enough to change you.
In the next few pages, we will enter the landscape of 1 Corinthians 12 and see what God was truly saying. And in the top quarter of this article, you will find a meaningful teaching that further opens the doorway of understanding through the anchor text spiritual gifts — the most searched platform-specific keyword aligned to this topic.
Learn more about spiritual gifts in this powerful teaching.
Now breathe. Settle your spirit. And let the Word of God unfold like a map of destiny.
Before a single gift is mentioned, before any instruction is given, Paul begins with a reminder of their past:
“You know that when you were pagans, somehow or other you were influenced and led astray…” (1 Corinthians 12:2)
Paul is saying:
“Don’t forget the miracle of your salvation. Don’t forget who rescued you. Don’t forget who you once were.”
Why start there?
Because your spiritual gifts make no sense apart from your spiritual transformation.
Gifts without identity lead to arrogance. Gifts without foundation lead to confusion. Gifts without humility lead to chaos.
Paul wants them — and us — to understand that gifts are expressions of grace flowing from the Spirit who saved you, not badges that elevate you above others.
He then pivots:
“No one can say ‘Jesus is Lord’ except by the Holy Spirit.” (1 Corinthians 12:3)
Paul plants a flag right here: Every believer already stands on miraculous ground.
You cannot confess Christ authentically without the work of the Spirit. If you are saved — the Spirit is already active in you. If the Spirit is active in you — gifts are already possible through you.
This is the foundation of everything that follows.
Paul presents three distinct patterns:
“There are different kinds of gifts, but the same Spirit.” “There are different kinds of service, but the same Lord.” “There are different kinds of workings, but the same God…” (1 Corinthians 12:4–6)
Look carefully. He lists:
• Gifts • Service • Workings
These are not random words. They represent an entire spiritual ecosystem.
These are divine enablements. Spirit-given capacities. Supernatural empowerment. Not personality traits. Not talents. Not interests. Gifts transcend natural ability.
Your gift is the what. Your service is the where. Not every gift manifests the same way in every environment. God aligns gifts with assignments.
This is the fruit, the outcome, the manifestation. This is what makes ministry miraculous — the results do not depend on you.
This three-layer structure matters because it destroys the illusion that giftedness equals superiority.
God gives the gift. God assigns the service. God produces the result.
You are simply the vessel.
This is meant to eliminate pride and create gratitude.
“To each one the manifestation of the Spirit is given for the common good.” (1 Corinthians 12:7)
Pause here. Let this sentence soak into your spirit.
To each one. Not to pastors only. Not to the theologically trained only. Not to the confident, bold, extroverted, or born-into-ministry only.
To each one means YOU.
The Spirit placed something inside you that heaven intends to reveal through you.
Next phrase:
“The manifestation of the Spirit…”
A gift is not merely a skill. It is the Spirit expressing Himself through your life. Your gift is heaven speaking through human hands, human voices, human hearts.
Final phrase:
“…for the common good.”
Your gift is not a decoration — it is a contribution.
Your gift is not a trophy — it is a tool.
Your gift is not about your spotlight — it is about the health of the body.
When you don’t use your gift, the body suffers. When you hide your gift, the church walks with a limp. When you compare your gift, heaven’s design is disrupted.
You exist for the common good.
Paul lists nine gifts in this chapter. You may have read them before, but read them now slowly:
• Word of wisdom • Word of knowledge • Faith • Gifts of healing • Working of miracles • Prophecy • Discernment of spirits • Various kinds of tongues • Interpretation of tongues
Let’s walk through each one with the depth they deserve.
Not human wisdom. Not intelligence. This is divine clarity for decisions, answers, strategies, and direction that humans cannot generate alone. Wisdom from above.
Insight about situations, people, or truths that the Spirit reveals supernaturally. Knowledge that breaks confusion and opens understanding.
Not saving faith. Not general belief. A supernatural surge of trust in God for impossible moments. This gift moves mountains.
Plural — gifts. Different manifestations. Physical, emotional, relational, spiritual healing.
Literal divine intervention. Situations where the natural order is shifted by the Spirit’s power.
Spirit-empowered proclamation of truth, revelation, or instruction that strengthens, comforts, and builds up.
The ability to distinguish truth from deception, divine from demonic, holy from counterfeit.
Spirit-inspired speech beyond human language. Mysteries uttered to God.
Understanding or expressing the meaning of tongues for the edification of the body.
Paul makes one thing clear:
“All these are the work of one and the same Spirit, and he distributes them to each one, just as he determines.” (1 Corinthians 12:11)
You don’t choose your gift. You discover it. You steward it. You surrender to it.
But you don’t control it.
This keeps us humble. This keeps us dependent. This keeps us united.
Now Paul takes us deeper. He shifts from gifts to identity. From empowerment to embodiment.
“For we were all baptized by one Spirit into one body…” (1 Corinthians 12:13)
This means:
• You are not a standalone believer. • You are not an independent operator. • You are not a freelance Christian.
When you entered Christ, you entered His body. Christianity is not a solo act — it’s a shared life.
Paul describes the church as a body — not a machine, not an organization, not a hierarchy — a living organism.
This means three things:
Diversity is essential. A body with one part is not a body.
Interdependence is mandatory. No part thrives alone.
Unity is divine. The body functions because each part is connected.
Paul then unleashes one of the most poetic explanations in all of Scripture:
“If the foot should say, ‘Because I’m not a hand, I do not belong to the body,’ it would not for that reason stop being part of the body.” (1 Corinthians 12:15)
The foot feels inferior. The foot compares itself to the hand. The foot questions its value.
Just like many believers do today:
“I can’t preach.” “I’m not as gifted as her.” “I’m not as visible as him.” “I can’t do what they do.”
Paul says: “You still belong.”
Your feelings do not cancel your calling. Your insecurity does not erase your identity. Your comparison does not disqualify your gift.
Then Paul attacks the opposite problem:
“The head cannot say to the feet: ‘I don’t need you.’” (1 Corinthians 12:21)
Arrogance is as destructive as insecurity.
The gifted cannot dismiss the quiet. The visible cannot ignore the hidden. The strong cannot despise the weak.
In God’s economy:
Every believer is essential.
Every part needed. Every gift precious. Every person placed by God.
Paul adds:
“If one part suffers, every part suffers with it; if one part is honored, every part rejoices with it.” (1 Corinthians 12:26)
This is the definition of spiritual community.
Not gossip. Not division. Not comparison. Not silent jealousy.
But:
• shared joy • shared pain • shared honor • shared mission
When the body is spiritually healthy:
The gifted celebrate the gifted. The quiet celebrate the loud. The visible support the hidden. The mature lift the weak. The strong protect the fragile. The whole body moves as one.
This is God’s vision for His people.
Now let’s become practical.
It is not enough to know your gift exists. You must activate it.
Ask: “Holy Spirit, reveal what You placed in me.”
God will answer.
Where do people grow when you show up? Where does clarity rise when you speak? Where does healing increase when you pray? Where does encouragement flow when you serve?
Your gift often leaves footprints.
Spiritual gifts energize, not exhaust. A gifted teacher can teach for hours. A gifted encourager can lift ten people without depletion.
The body recognizes its own gifts. People notice what God placed in you.
Gifts grow with use. The Spirit matures what you practice.
No. Talents are natural. Gifts are supernatural.
No. Gifts make you responsible.
The Spirit distributes individually as He wills. Nobody has everything. Nobody has nothing.
Never. Gifts demonstrate God’s power. Character demonstrates Christ’s nature.
Both matter.
If the church embraced 1 Corinthians 12 fully:
• Division would collapse. • Competition would die. • Jealousy would disappear. • Passivity would break. • Every believer would rise. • Every community would strengthen. • Every calling would flourish. • Every spiritual environment would expand.
The world would see not a fragmented Christianity — but a united body.
A living Christ. A breathing church. A people aligned with heaven’s design.
You are not alive in 2025 by accident. You are not part of the church today by coincidence.
The Spirit placed something in you — something heaven needs, something the church needs, something people around you need.
You carry:
A gift. A calling. A function. A role. A purpose. A responsibility. A divine assignment.
You are part of the body. You are necessary to the body. You are cherished by the body. You are empowered for the body.
Paul ends the chapter with a sentence that still echoes:
“Now you are the body of Christ, and each one of you is a part of it.” (1 Corinthians 12:27)
Not metaphorically. Not symbolically. Not theoretically.
Literally.
You — yes, you — are part of the most important living organism on earth: the body of Jesus Christ.
Rise into that role. Stand in that calling. Move in that gift. Honor what heaven placed within you.
Because the body needs you. The kingdom needs you. Your generation needs you. God designed you.
And in Christ — you belong.
Watch Douglas Vandergraph’s inspiring faith-based videos on YouTube.
#spiritualgifts #bodyofchrist #christianpurpose #faithjourney #holyspiritpower #unityinchrist #douglasvandergraph
– Douglas Vandergraph
from
Roscoe's Quick Notes

Nearly halftime as I start following the Indianapolis Colts vs. the Kansas City Chiefs NFL game, with the Colts leading 14 to 9.
Remembering the years I lived in Indy, I always try to cheer for Indianapolis teams.
And so the adventure continues.
from Douglas Vandergraph
There’s a phrase we whisper in motivational talks, one that echoes in our ears, gently nudges us: “A comfort zone is a nice place — but nothing ever grows there.”
Today I want to walk deeper into that truth, with a faith-filled lens, and explore what it means when God beckons us beyond the familiar, beyond the safe. This is for you — for the believer who senses there’s more, for the daughter or son of God who has grown weary of standing still, for the person ready to trust a voice they may not yet totally feel able to follow.
In the first quarter of this piece I’ll anchor you with what happens when we stay comfortably still. Then I’ll walk you through the divine invitation to move. And finally I’ll come full circle with how to step — one step — into the unknown and let God grow you.
Along the way, I invite you to watch an encouraging video on one of the best platforms for faith content, by clicking here: [YouTube Christian growth] (https://youtu.be/R__s0-y5fnU).
Comfort looks innocent. It tastes like a warm blanket after a long day. It feels like a familiar routine, a known circle of friends, a job or ministry you’ve done long enough to not feel the strain. It’s safe.
But there’s a subtle distortion in staying there. When we don’t move, when we shrink our faith to what feels safe, the soil around us becomes dry. The roots of our callings begin to dwell in familiar ground, but not fertile ground. The promise of growth begins to fade into the possibility of mere surviving.
In many Christian reflections the concept of the “comfort zone” isn’t named explicitly in Scripture, yet the principle is everywhere: trust God, go where He sends, leave what you know for what He reveals. Bible Knowledge+2Bible Hub+2
For example: the concept of a “Christian comfort zone” often describes spiritual routines, mindsets or practices that feel at ease but hinder obedience and growth. Bible Hub+1
When we linger in comfort too long:
It’s not sinful to rest. We’re commanded to rest in the Lord. But it is unwise to let rest become stagnation. To let peace become the enemy of progress. To let security become the barrier to calling.
We were created for more than comfortable living. Indeed, He created us for kingdom-impact, for legacy, for transformation. That usually requires discomfort.
Throughout Scripture, God consistently beckons His people beyond the familiar. Here are three storied examples that illustrate what happens when He says “come out” rather than “stay in”.
a) Abraham — In Genesis 12, God tells Abram: “Leave your country, your people, your father’s household, and go to the land I will show you.” Bible Knowledge+1 He asked Abraham to abandon the familiar for the promise. Growth happens when we step into the “land I will show you,” not the land we already know.
b) Peter — He’s a fisherman, accustomed to nets, water, the known routine. Then Jesus says, “Follow me.” He walks into a life of uncertainty, storms, miracles, rejection, resurrection. That’s stepping outside the comfort zone.
c) The early church — They didn’t stay within the walls of what they knew. They were sent out into the world, into the unknown, to preach, to witness, to suffer — and to grow.
The pattern is clear: comfort precedes the call, the call demands movement, movement triggers transformation.
When God moves you beyond the known, He opens new chambers in your heart — courage, faith, obedience, dependency. In those chambers, new fruit begins to grow.
You may be wondering: Why does it have to be uncomfortable? Why can’t growth come while I stay in my safe place?
Here’s the truth: Growth and comfort rarely share the same soil.
Spiritually, it’s the same. Faith grows when you live in the realm of “I can’t do this alone” and say “but God can, and He will”. Faith grows when you trust beyond your vision. Faith grows when you step, rather than sit still.
There are specific biblical truths that show this:
Discomfort is frequently the stretching-room of God-shaped growth. When the pressure rises, when the familiar dissolves, we learn to lean more wholly on Him.
Sometimes the Lord doesn’t whisper; He shakes. Because comfort has become inertia. Because familiar has become limiting. Because the growth He desires for you cannot happen where you are.
These shifts can show up as:
When you sense that restless stirring, it may not be dissatisfaction. It might be your calling stirring.
Christian writers describe this as the “comfort zone deception” — thinking life is fine while your faith quietly suffocates. Theology of Work+1
These are not signs of failure, but of readiness. God is preparing you. He’s clearing the ground so He can plant fresh. He’s removing the old soils of comfort so that the new crop of calling can break through.
Let’s center on Jesus. He left the comfort of heaven. He walked among the broken. He knew rejection. He bore misunderstanding. He endured temptation. He carried the cross. He resurrected.
Why? Because the mission was big, and comfort would have compromised the impact.
If the Son of Man walked the path of discomfort, how much more will He call His followers into it? Because following Him is not about a cozy seat — it’s about a surrendered life, a redeemed world, a harvest of souls.
And here’s what becomes clear: the greatest growth, the deepest transformation, the most vivid testimony—all grew out of discomfort. Cross. Resurrection. There’s no way around it.
If you’re reading this and you feel:
These aren’t just life frustrations. They may be indicators of spiritual stretching. When growth comes, it often brings:
a) Friction — the old self resists. b) Fear — because future hasn’t yet revealed itself. c) Flight-or-freeze pull — stay where it’s safe, or leap into the unknown. d) An inner voice whispering: “You were made for this.”
This is good. It’s not fun. But growth rarely is comfortable. It’s sacred.
When you step, when you trust, when you obey—even one tiny step—here’s what stakeholders of faith confirm happens:
A comfort zone keeps you safe. But God’s path keeps you used. Where you’re used, something grows. Where you’re safe, something stays flat.
You don’t need to finish the path before you take the first step. You just need to ask: “What is one obedient step today that honors You, Lord?”
It might be:
Ask, receive courage, then do. Take that one step. Watch the ground shift. Watch the Lord align resources, open doors, confirm by peace. When you step, growth begins.
Picture the scene: The wind howling. The waves crashing. The boat tossing. The disciples terrified. Then Jesus says: “Get out of the boat.” And Peter steps — and walks. Until he looks at the wind, doubts, sinks. But he walked. He touched the supernatural. He experienced Jesus in the storm.
That moment paints a vivid truth: God meets you outside the boat, not inside it.
And you’re standing on the side of that boat right now. You might feel the rocking. You might feel the fear. But you’re a foot over the edge of safe. That’s where growth lives.
Let’s wrap with clarity: You don’t have to surrender comfort today. But you do need to recognise that comfort isn’t the place for growth. You must choose: keeping what’s easy, or gaining what’s eternal.
Comfort says: “Keep the same.” Calling says: “I have more for you.”
Comfort buries gifts. Calling releases gifts.
Comfort shelters your little world. Calling unleashes God’s bigger world through you.
My dear friend, beloved of God: step out. Let this be your defining season. Let the soil of your soul be turned up by His plow. Let the seeds of destiny break through. Let growth happen in the place you thought you couldn’t go.
And when you’re there — heart open, foot forward — you’ll find Him waiting. You’ll find a deeper faith. You’ll find a stronger hope. You’ll find a life that bears fruit.
Because you chose to leave the nice place. And you walked into the growing place.
Watch Douglas Vandergraph’s inspiring faith-based videos on YouTube.
#faith #growth #calling #stepout #believer #christianliving #purpose
Douglas Vandergraph
Entstehung einer Zeichnung



Dunkelblaue Vater-Geborgenheit lässt wertvolles Gold entstehen
#Vater
from Faucet Repair
13 November 2025
Continuing to work with humanless interiors. Bathrooms specifically. About to paint the one I've been assigned at this sublet. But what I have in mind has less to do with making a record of the space and more about creating something that can subdivide itself in the way that these places do in my memory as I burn through them. Discovered, serendipitously, Artschwager's Door Window Table Basket Mirror Rug drawings for the first time. Have been holding Door Window Table Basket Mirror Rug #10 (1974). Of the genesis of the series, he has said:
I flipped to a drawing of an interior, a room I had once occupied, and made a list of the six objects that were in it. I decided to take this as an instruction to make one drawing, then another, and another, and so on. The instruction endured and I “played” those six objects like I play the piano—I guess you could say that it was some kind of fugal exercise.
At this point I'm not interested in a fugal exercise as such, but I am interested in perceptual change located in something static and how I can technically approach rendering that change in a way that subtly points beyond the confines of observed forms.