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Want to join in? Respond to our weekly writing prompts, open to everyone.
Before the dates for my denomination’s camp meeting were ever announced, before calendars filled up and schedules collided, I had already made plans.
About six months ago, I booked a vacation.
Not because I wanted to get away.
Not because I needed a break.
But because, in many ways, it’s a Make-A-Wish trip for my son, Vinnie.
For ten years now, he’s battled bone cancer.
Ten years.
He’s getting skinnier, yet somehow keeping his weight. The doctors can explain it medically; I just know what my eyes see. And what I see is a young man fighting a war that never seems to end.
So every year I load up the family and point the car south toward the Gulf Coast.
Fourteen hours.
Fourteen long hours.
The Gulf of Mexico.
Orange Beach, Alabama.
Gulf Shores, Alabama.
Sunshine.
Salt air.
Rolling waves.
Pelicans gliding across the water like little prophets of peace.
And every single time we go, something happens.
Vinnie comes back stronger.
Kaylee comes back refreshed.
Leo and Sydney come back smiling.
I come back breathing easier.
We all do.
The drive down hurts.
The drive back hurts even more.
Because you’re leaving something behind.
You’re leaving serenity.
You’re leaving tranquility.
You’re leaving peace.
But the pain is worth the destination.
And that’s when I think about Jesus.
Jesus talked about counting the cost.
He spoke of a king sitting down with his advisors before going to war, calculating whether he had enough strength to face an advancing army.
Count the cost.
Calculate the price.
Know what’s required before you begin.
And then Jesus applied that principle to discipleship.
He said if you’re going to follow Me, you’d better know what you’re signing up for.
Because following Christ costs something.
Are we willing to surrender our plans?
Our dreams?
Our reputations?
Our comfort?
Our pride?
Would we give up our Isaac like Abraham?
Would we surrender our son if God asked?
Would we surrender our future?
Our job?
Our popularity?
Would we endure being mocked by the world?
It’s one thing not to be conformed to the world.
It’s another thing entirely when the world turns around and laughs at you because you belong to Jesus.
Count the cost.
The world says, “Live your truth.”
Jesus says, “Follow Me.”
The world says, “Do what feels right.”
Jesus says, “Take up your cross.”
The world says, “Your will be done.”
Jesus says, “Thy will be done.”
Truth over lies.
His way over our way.
His kingdom over our kingdom.
His life over our life.
Thy kingdom come.
Thy will be done.
On earth.
In earth.
In me.
As it is in heaven.
And today, I’m not counting the cost.
I’ve already counted it.
I know what it takes to get to Orange Beach.
I know what it costs to get to the Gulf.
The gasoline.
The hotel.
The weariness.
The aching back.
The fourteen-hour drive.
I’ve counted that cost.
But I’ve also counted another cost.
The cost of heaven.
And here’s the good news:
I don’t have to pay it.
Because somebody already did.
The nails paid it.
The cross paid it.
The blood paid it.
Jesus paid it.
The price of my salvation was not silver or gold.
It was the precious blood of the Son of God.
And because He paid what I could never pay…
Because He purchased what I could never afford…
Because He conquered what I could never conquer…
I get to go.
Not because I’m good enough.
Not because I’m strong enough.
Not because I’m worthy enough.
I get to go because Jesus made a way.
And if you’ll trust Him…
If you’ll believe Him…
If you’ll surrender to Him…
You get to go too.
**************
Luke 14:25-28,30-35 NIV
Large crowds were traveling with Jesus, and turning to them he said: [26] “If anyone comes to me and does not hate father and mother, wife and children, brothers and sisters—yes, even their own life—such a person cannot be my disciple. [27] And whoever does not carry their cross and follow me cannot be my disciple. [28] “Suppose one of you wants to build a tower. Won’t you first sit down and estimate the cost to see if you have enough money to complete it? [30] saying, ‘This person began to build and wasn’t able to finish.’ [31] “Or suppose a king is about to go to war against another king. Won’t he first sit down and consider whether he is able with ten thousand men to oppose the one coming against him with twenty thousand? [32] If he is not able, he will send a delegation while the other is still a long way off and will ask for terms of peace. [33] In the same way, those of you who do not give up everything you have cannot be my disciples. [34] “Salt is good, but if it loses its saltiness, how can it be made salty again? [35] It is fit neither for the soil nor for the manure pile; it is thrown out. “Whoever has ears to hear, let them hear.”
from Douglas Vandergraph

Chapter 1: The Hill Where Proof Went Silent
A man stood near the edge of the crowd with dust on his sandals and a question he did not want anyone to hear. He had not come to Calvary because he was brave, and he had not come because he was cruel in the way some people were cruel that day. He came because the city was talking, because the streets had pulled him along, because there are moments when human beings walk toward pain simply because everyone else is walking that way. Later, when he would try to explain what happened inside him, he would not begin with theology. He would begin with the smell of sweat, the sound of wood, the hard glare of noon, and the terrible feeling that he might be looking at the truth and still not know what to do with it. This is the place where the Jesus talk about the miracle He refused to perform begins to matter, not as an idea, but as a wound in the imagination.
He had heard about Jesus before that day. Everyone in Jerusalem had heard something. One neighbor said Jesus gave sight to a blind man. A merchant near the market said He fed a crowd with bread that should not have been enough for one family. A woman who kept her voice low said her cousin had seen Lazarus alive after being dead. Others said Jesus was a troublemaker, a threat, a false hope, a man who made ordinary people too bold. The stranger had carried all of that in his mind the way people carry rumors now, half-believing, half-dismissing, waiting for one clear moment that would settle the matter. He had also been carrying his own quiet disappointments, the kind named in the reflection on feeling stuck when God seems silent, and he wanted God to make Himself undeniable for once.
So when the crowd shouted for Jesus to come down from the cross, the stranger felt something in him agree. He would not have shouted it himself, at least that is what he would tell himself later, but he wanted to see it happen. He wanted the nails to fail. He wanted the sky to split. He wanted the soldiers to step back. He wanted the priests to lose the calm look on their faces. He wanted proof that did not require faith, patience, humility, or a heart willing to be changed. He wanted what many of us want when life hurts too much: a God who ends the argument in front of everyone. He wanted the kind of answer explored in the faith lesson about staying faithful when escape looks easier, though at that moment he did not yet understand that faithfulness can look like silence to people who only recognize power when it wins quickly.
The hill was not far from the city, but it felt separated from ordinary life. Down below, people still bought food, carried water, argued over prices, worried about dinner, and watched their children. Up on the hill, men were dying in public. That is one of the hard things about suffering. It can be the center of your whole world while everyone else still has errands to run. The stranger noticed a woman holding a cloth in both hands until her knuckles lost color. He noticed a boy trying to see around the shoulders of taller men. He noticed a soldier with a dry mouth, licking his lips, bored by the horror because he had seen too much of it. The stranger noticed all of this, yet his eyes kept returning to Jesus.
Jesus did not look like the stories sounded. That bothered him. He had expected something around Him, some visible force, some glow of authority, some sign that heaven had marked this man differently. Instead there was blood on His face. His body strained against the nails. His breathing came with effort. His head lowered, then lifted, then lowered again. The stranger had seen men punished before. Rome made sure people saw. But this felt different, not because it was less brutal, but because the man on the middle cross seemed to be carrying more than pain. He seemed to be carrying the crowd itself, the hatred, the confusion, the fear, the private sins nobody had brought into the open, the prayers people had stopped praying.
A man near the front laughed and raised his voice. If you are the Son of God, come down. Others picked up the same thought and threw it at Jesus like stones. Save yourself. He saved others, but he cannot save himself. The stranger heard those words and felt a strange relief, because someone else had said what he was thinking. That is how crowds work sometimes. They give permission to the thoughts a person would be ashamed to own alone. He told himself the demand was reasonable. If Jesus was sent by God, why would God let this happen? If Jesus had power, why not use it? If love was real, why not stop the bleeding?
That question did not stay on the hill. It has followed people into hospital rooms, courtrooms, kitchens, bedrooms, and cars parked outside workplaces where someone cannot make themselves open the door yet. If God is good, why not stop this? If Jesus loves me, why am I still here? If heaven sees me, why does the pressure keep pressing? The stranger did not have our language for those questions, but he had the same human heart. He wanted the same kind of rescue. He wanted the same clean ending. He wanted pain to be interrupted in a way nobody could misunderstand.
For a moment, he imagined Jesus doing it. He pictured the arms pulling free, the wood cracking, the soldiers falling back with terror in their faces. He pictured the religious leaders suddenly small. He pictured the crowd going quiet, every mouth shut by power. In his mind, that would have been the perfect ending. Jesus would be proved right. The mockers would be proved wrong. No one would have to wrestle with mystery. No one would have to wonder whether God was near. Power would stand in the open, and everyone would know.
But the longer he watched, the more the imagined miracle became a problem. If Jesus came down only when mocked, would that be love or performance? If He answered cruelty with spectacle, would the crowd be changed or merely frightened? If He saved Himself, who would be saved through Him? The stranger did not have these questions fully formed yet. They were more like small movements under the surface, the first tremors before a wall inside him began to crack. He was beginning to feel that maybe he had misunderstood power, not just in Jesus, but in his own life.
He thought of his father. Not often, and never for long if he could help it. His father had been the kind of man who filled a room without raising his voice, a man whose anger made children move quietly. The stranger had learned early that strength meant control. Strength meant never being embarrassed. Strength meant making sure nobody could laugh at you twice. When he was young, he promised himself he would never look weak in front of anyone. That promise had protected him in some ways, but it had also made him hard to love. His wife had told him once, while folding laundry by the small lamp, that he treated every hurt like a battle he had to win. He had said nothing, because he knew she was right and did not want to give her the satisfaction of hearing it.
That memory came back to him on the hill, which felt unfair. He had not come there to think about his marriage, his pride, or the cold silences he brought home after a hard day. He had come to see whether Jesus would prove Himself. Yet standing before the cross has a way of bringing hidden things into the light. The stranger had wanted Jesus to come down because he thought victory meant refusing humiliation. But Jesus was not refusing humiliation. He was absorbing it without becoming like the people causing it. That kind of strength disturbed the stranger more than thunder would have.
Then Jesus spoke. The stranger leaned forward, expecting judgment. Maybe now the voice would change. Maybe now the power would show itself. Maybe now the mercy stories would end and the throne would appear. But the words that came from the cross were not the words of a man trying to protect His reputation. Jesus said, Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they do.
The stranger felt the sentence land in him slowly, like water sinking into dry ground. Forgive them. He looked at the soldiers. Forgive them. He looked at the leaders. Forgive them. He looked at the faces in the crowd, some amused, some curious, some empty from seeing too much pain in life to be moved by more of it. Forgive them. He thought of himself, standing there waiting for Jesus to entertain his doubt with a miracle. Forgive them.
Nobody near him seemed to understand the size of what had just happened. Some kept mocking. Some turned away. One man complained about the heat. Another asked how long it would take. The world is capable of standing inches from holy love and still thinking about lunch. The stranger knew that because he had done the same thing in smaller ways. He had ignored his wife’s tired face because he was busy. He had brushed past a neighbor’s grief because he did not know what to say. He had heard Scripture read and thought more about the dust on his sleeve than the state of his soul. Now he wondered if his whole life had been full of missed mercies.
Jesus stayed. That was the part that would not leave him. Every breath said He stayed. Every insult said He stayed. Every minute that passed said He stayed. The stranger began to see that the nails were not the deepest explanation. Rome could nail a man to wood, but Rome could not make a holy man forgive. The crowd could mock, but the crowd could not force mercy out of Him. The priests could accuse, but they could not turn His heart bitter. Something else was holding Jesus there, something stronger than iron, stronger than fear, stronger than the human instinct to survive at any cost.
Love was not weak because it stayed. Love was strong enough to stay without hatred. That thought frightened the stranger because it reached into places he had kept guarded. He had walked away from apologies because staying would make him feel small. He had answered sharp words with sharper ones because mercy felt like losing. He had prayed for God to fix other people without asking God to soften him. He had called his pride wisdom, his distance peace, and his silence self-control. Now the man on the cross was showing him a kind of strength that did not need to crush anyone in order to be real.
The stranger did not become a different man all at once. Most of us do not. A holy moment can open the door, but we still have to walk through it when the house is quiet and nobody is watching. He would still have to go home. He would still have to look at his wife. He would still have to decide whether to speak gently when his first instinct was to defend himself. He would still have to face the shame of realizing that some of the pain in his life had not only happened to him. Some of it had passed through him into others.
As the sky darkened, the crowd shifted with unease. The stranger looked up and felt the old demand fading. Come down, he had wanted to say. Prove it. End this. But now he was beginning to understand that Jesus was proving something deeper by not coming down. He was proving that God’s love is not a performance for the impatient. He was proving that mercy does not quit when misunderstood. He was proving that the Father’s will is not always the quickest path away from pain, but it is always the path where love remains true.
The stranger did not yet know the word resurrection would soon become the only word large enough to hold what God was doing. He did not know that the silence of that afternoon would be answered by an empty tomb. He did not know that the cross, which looked like public defeat, would become the place where millions of tired people would come to understand that they were not abandoned. All he knew in that first chapter of his own awakening was that he had come to see Jesus save Himself, and instead he had seen Jesus ask the Father to forgive the people who wanted Him dead.
He walked away from the hill before the city felt normal again. The streets were still there. The vendors were still calling out. Someone was sweeping dust from a doorway. A mother was pulling a child away from a cart of fruit. Ordinary life had not stopped, even though something eternal had happened just outside the walls. The stranger moved through it slowly, carrying a sentence he could not put down. Father, forgive them. It followed him past the market. It followed him toward home. It followed him into the doorway where his wife would look up and know from his face that the man who left that morning had not come back unchanged.
Chapter 2: The Door He Opened Quietly
When the stranger reached his home, his hand stayed on the wooden door longer than it needed to. Inside, he could hear the small sounds of evening beginning without him. A pot being moved. A stool scraping the floor. The low voice of his wife speaking to one of the children. Nothing in the house knew what his eyes had seen on the hill, and that made the moment feel even heavier. Sometimes the hardest part of being changed is walking back into a room where everyone still expects the old version of you to enter.
He could have stepped inside the way he usually did. He could have cleared his throat, waited for people to notice him, and carried the day like a weight everyone else needed to respect. He could have said very little, eaten in silence, and let his family guess what mood he had brought home. That was his habit. He had never thought of himself as cruel. He provided. He worked. He showed up. He did what a man was supposed to do, or at least what he had been taught a man was supposed to do. But there are ways to be present in a house while still making everyone feel alone.
He pushed the door open.
His wife looked up from the table. There was flour on the side of her hand. A child sat nearby with a piece of bread torn into small pieces, arranging them on the table as though each crumb had been given a place in the world. The stranger saw all of it with a softness that almost embarrassed him. The table was not special. The room was not special. The evening light was not special. Yet after Calvary, everything ordinary seemed to ask a question: will you carry mercy here too?
His wife studied his face. She did not ask what happened right away. She had learned to wait. That thought hurt him. She had learned to wait because he had taught her that asking at the wrong time could turn a simple question into a wall. He looked at her and remembered Jesus looking at the people below the cross. Not with denial. Not with softness that pretended evil was harmless. With mercy that saw clearly and still refused hatred.
He wanted to tell her about the hill. He wanted to say that he had seen something no one would believe if they had not stood there themselves. But the first words that rose in him were not about Jesus. They were about himself.
“I have been hard to live with,” he said.
The room went still.
His wife’s eyes changed, not because the sentence fixed everything, but because it was a door she had not expected him to open. The child kept arranging bread. The pot cooled. The evening moved around them, but something in the house had stopped holding its breath.
He almost took the words back. Pride is quick like that. It rushes in after honesty and tries to repair the old wall. He felt the urge to explain himself, to balance the confession, to say he had been tired, worried, pressured, misunderstood. All of that may have been true, but truth used as a shield can become another form of hiding. So he stood there and let the sentence remain simple.
His wife did not rush toward him. That mattered. Real life does not always reward one honest sentence with instant warmth. Sometimes people need time to trust what they are hearing. A person who has been wounded by years of sharpness cannot be expected to dance because one soft word finally appears. The stranger saw that too. Mercy did not mean demanding that she respond the way he hoped. Mercy meant telling the truth without trying to control what came next.
He sat at the table. The bread was plain. The room smelled of lentils, oil, and the dust that followed people indoors. He ate slowly. His wife moved carefully, not coldly, but carefully. He understood that carefulness now. It was not disrespect. It was survival. A person who lives with another person’s moods learns the weather of the house. They learn when to speak, when to stay quiet, when to soften their own joy so it does not irritate someone else’s heaviness. He had called that peace because nobody argued. Now he wondered whether some of what he had called peace was only fear wearing clean clothes.
This is where the lesson of Jesus becomes painfully practical. It is easier to talk about the cross as a holy event far away than to let it enter the kitchen. It is easier to admire Jesus for staying on the cross than to stay humble in a conversation where you want to defend yourself. It is easier to praise His forgiveness than to ask your own family where your presence has felt unsafe, distant, or sharp. But if the cross only moves us in public language and never changes private behavior, we have not yet let it come all the way home.
The stranger had wanted Jesus to prove Himself by coming down. Now, sitting across from his wife, he realized how often he had tried to prove himself by rising above everyone else. He rose above correction. He rose above apology. He rose above tenderness. He rose above the small needs of the people nearest him because small needs felt inconvenient after a long day of trying to survive. Yet Jesus, who was truly above all, had lowered Himself into mercy. The man who deserved worship had accepted mockery without becoming mockery in return.
A few days later, when rumors began to move through the city like wind through dry grass, the stranger heard things he did not know how to hold. Some said the tomb was empty. Some said the disciples had stolen the body. Some said women had seen angels. Some said Jesus was alive. The city, which had been so sure of itself on the day of crucifixion, suddenly sounded uncertain. The stranger found himself listening differently now. Before the cross, he would have wanted an argument he could win. After the cross, he wanted truth even if it had the power to undo him.
That is another thing mercy does. It changes what we are willing to know.
A man who only wants to be right will avoid any truth that makes him repent. A woman who has had to be strong for too long may push away comfort because comfort feels like weakness. A parent who carries guilt may reject grace because punishment feels more honest. A worker under pressure may treat kindness as a luxury because deadlines, bills, and expectations have trained the soul to stay braced. We all have ways of protecting ourselves from the very mercy that could heal us.
Think about someone sitting in a car outside a workplace before sunrise. The coffee is half gone. The phone has already shown three messages that feel urgent. There is a bill due Friday, a child who needs something after school, and a supervisor who speaks as if people are machines with shoes. That person may not be standing on a hill outside Jerusalem, but the same question lives inside the chest: God, if You are with me, why do I still have to walk into this? Why not lift the pressure? Why not prove You care by making this easier?
The cross does not answer that question cheaply. It does not say pressure is nothing. It does not tell the tired worker to smile harder. It does not turn pain into a slogan. The cross says God has entered the place where obedience is costly, where love is misunderstood, where the body is tired, where people misread silence, where everyone wants proof and heaven seems quiet. Jesus does not stand far away from human strain and tell us to endure what He has never touched. He steps into the deepest strain and shows us that the Father can be present even when escape has not arrived yet.
That does not mean every hard place is holy. Some places need to be left. Some harm needs to be named. Some relationships require boundaries. Some jobs break people and should not be defended with spiritual words. The lesson of Jesus staying on the cross must never be twisted into telling people to remain under abuse, cruelty, or danger. Jesus was not trapped by another person’s control. He was freely obedient to the Father’s redemptive purpose. That difference matters. Love is not the same as allowing evil to rule you. Mercy is not the same as pretending harm is acceptable.
But there are many daily moments where we are not being asked to remain under evil. We are being asked to stop fleeing humility. We are being asked not to come down from the difficult work of forgiving, apologizing, telling the truth, showing up, praying again, parenting with patience, keeping our word, or refusing to become bitter. We want rescue from discomfort, but sometimes God is rescuing us from the kind of person discomfort could turn us into if we let fear lead.
The stranger began to see this in small places. When his child spilled water near the doorway, his first instinct was to snap. He felt the old sentence rising, the one that would have made the child shrink. But another sentence rose first: Father, forgive them. The child had not sinned against him by spilling water. The child was only a child with clumsy hands and frightened eyes. The stranger bent down, picked up the cloth, and helped wipe the floor. It was not dramatic. Nobody outside the house would ever know. But heaven has always paid attention to small mercies.
Another evening, his wife asked him a question about money. The question was ordinary. The fear underneath it was not. They had grain to buy. A debt to answer. A relative who might need help. He felt shame move through him as anger, which is what shame often does when it does not want to be recognized. He wanted to say she worried too much. He wanted to accuse her of not understanding how hard he worked. He wanted to make the room about his burden so he would not have to face their shared fear. Instead, he took a breath and told her he was afraid too.
That one sentence did not pay the debt. It did not fill the storage jar. It did not make tomorrow easier. But it changed the room. His wife sat down across from him, and for once they were not standing on opposite sides of the pressure. They were under it together. The stranger realized that some miracles do not look like bread multiplying in public. Some miracles look like two tired people telling the truth without wounding each other for being afraid.
This is where many of us miss Jesus. We look for Him only in the large rescue. We want the door to open, the diagnosis to change, the money to arrive, the apology to come, the public proof to silence every voice that doubted us. Those things can happen, and when they do, we should thank God with our whole heart. But Jesus is also present in the quiet miracle of not becoming cruel while we wait. He is present when you keep your voice gentle with a child after a long day. He is present when you choose not to punish your spouse with silence. He is present when you admit fear instead of disguising it as anger. He is present when you do the next right thing without applause.
The stranger had spent years thinking strength was something other people should notice. Jesus showed him strength that could be hidden and still be real. No one applauded when Jesus forgave from the cross. No one in the mocking crowd stopped and said, Now that is power. Most people did not recognize it. That may be one of the purest tests of love. Can it remain love when nobody calls it impressive? Can faithfulness remain faithful when it does not make you look successful? Can mercy remain mercy when the person receiving it does not yet understand what it cost?
There is a quiet place in the soul where we decide what kind of people we are becoming. It is not always the public decision. It is not always the decision we explain later. Often it happens in the pause before a reply, the breath before a reaction, the moment after an insult, the small space between being hurt and choosing what to do with the hurt. Jesus entered that space on the cross and filled it with forgiveness. He did not fill it with denial. He did not say the people were doing no wrong. He said they did not know what they were doing, and He asked the Father to forgive them.
That matters because most people who hurt others do not fully understand the damage they are causing. That does not remove responsibility, but it does open a door for compassion. The sharp person may be scared. The distant person may be ashamed. The controlling person may be terrified of loss. The bitter person may be carrying old grief that has hardened into a weapon. Again, this does not excuse harm. It simply helps us see that human beings are often more broken than they appear. Jesus saw the whole truth and still chose mercy.
The stranger began to wonder what Jesus had seen when He looked down from the cross. Not just soldiers. Not just enemies. Not just a crowd. Maybe He saw frightened children grown into powerful men. Maybe He saw religious leaders so committed to control that they could no longer recognize God standing in front of them. Maybe He saw ordinary people swept into the mood of the crowd. Maybe He saw men like the stranger, waiting for proof while missing love. Maybe He saw every kitchen, every workplace, every hospital bed, every lonely room, every future person who would wonder whether God had forgotten them.
And maybe that is why He stayed.
Not because pain was beautiful. It was not. Not because the crowd deserved a performance. They did not. Not because Rome had the final word. It did not. Jesus stayed because love had a purpose deeper than immediate escape. He stayed because forgiveness was being opened from the inside of human violence. He stayed because sin had to be answered by something stronger than punishment alone. He stayed because mercy had come all the way down to the place where people were doing their worst.
The stranger did not understand all of that yet, but he understood enough to open the door differently the next time he came home. He understood enough to lower his voice. He understood enough to stop confusing pride with dignity. He understood enough to know that if Jesus could forgive from the cross, then he could stop making his family pay for fears they did not create. He understood enough to begin.
And beginning matters.
Most holy changes begin smaller than we expect. A softer answer. A real apology. A prayer spoken honestly instead of impressively. A decision not to return the insult. A willingness to sit with someone else’s pain without fixing it quickly. A moment of courage when you say, I was wrong. A moment of trust when you say, Lord, I do not understand why I am still here, but do not let this place make me hard.
The stranger went to bed that night with the city still restless around him. Somewhere beyond the walls, the tomb held a mystery he had not yet seen. Inside his home, his family slept. He lay awake longer than usual, not because fear was louder, but because mercy was. He had spent much of his life trying to avoid looking weak. Now he wondered if the strongest man he had ever seen was the one who had looked weakest to the crowd.
Chapter 3: When the Answer Does Not Arrive the Way You Asked
The next morning, the stranger woke before the house did. The room was dim, and the air carried that stillness that comes before people begin asking things of the day. His wife slept turned slightly away from him. One child had shifted in the night and now lay sideways on a mat, one foot uncovered. Outside, someone was already moving a cart along the street, the wheel making a low uneven sound over stone. The stranger stayed still and listened. He had prayed many mornings in his life, but most of those prayers had been quick, practical, and guarded. Give us bread. Keep us safe. Help me work. Let the debt be answered. Bless my house. He had prayed like a man asking God to help him keep control.
That morning, he did not know how to pray. The words that had usually come so easily felt too small. He was not sure whether to ask for forgiveness, understanding, courage, or proof. His mind kept returning to the cross and to the strange refusal that had unsettled him. Jesus had been dared to come down. He had not come down. The stranger could not stop asking why the unanswered demand felt more powerful than the miracle would have felt. A miracle of escape would have ended the argument on the hill. But the mercy of staying had followed him home.
He rose quietly and stepped outside. The street was cool. A woman across the way was pouring water into a jar. A man adjusted a bundle on a donkey. Two boys argued softly over something one of them had found in the dirt. Life was beginning again with no respect for the fact that his soul had been disturbed. That is how it often happens. You can have a holy crisis inside you, and the world still expects you to buy food, answer messages, go to work, pay bills, drive the same road, wash the same dishes, and respond when someone calls your name.
He walked without a clear plan. His feet carried him toward the part of the city where news gathered. Near a corner, three men spoke in low voices. He heard the word tomb and slowed down. One of them said the body was gone. Another laughed in disbelief, but not with confidence. The third said the women had gone early and found the stone moved. The stranger pretended to be looking at a basket of figs while every part of him listened.
Gone.
The word felt impossible. It also felt like the only thing that made sense after what he had seen.
He wanted to interrupt them. He wanted details. He wanted someone to tell him exactly what had happened, what time, who saw it, who could prove it, whether the soldiers had spoken, whether the leaders were afraid, whether the disciples had been seen. But he stayed quiet. Not because he did not care, but because something about the cross had made him careful with holy things. He had been too quick before, too ready to demand, judge, dismiss, and decide. Now he felt that rushing might be another way of avoiding reverence.
The men moved on. The stranger remained by the figs, holding one he had not meant to buy. The seller looked at him with impatience, and he paid without bargaining. As he walked away, he almost smiled at himself. Yesterday he had wanted the sky to open on command. Today he was buying fruit because he had been caught listening to a rumor about an empty tomb. Faith can begin in strange ways. Not always with a song. Not always with certainty. Sometimes it begins with a man standing in a market, pretending he is not shaken.
This is a mercy for those of us who think faith has to arrive fully formed or not at all. Many people imagine belief as a door you either walk through with confidence or refuse altogether. But sometimes faith begins as a question that will not leave you alone. Sometimes it begins as discomfort with your old answers. Sometimes it begins when the version of strength you trusted no longer looks strong. Sometimes it begins when you see mercy in a place where you expected power and realize your whole idea of God may have been too small.
The stranger did not yet know how to explain Jesus. He only knew that the cross had exposed him. It had shown him that his hunger for proof was mixed with pride. It had shown him that he wanted God to act in ways that made sense to his wounded instincts. It had shown him that he had confused being convinced with being changed. That is a painful discovery. A person can want evidence without wanting surrender. A person can want God to win the argument without wanting God to enter the hidden rooms of the heart.
Later that day, he went to see a man who owed him money. The debt was not large enough to destroy him, but it was large enough to irritate him. For weeks he had rehearsed the conversation in his head. He would be firm. He would not be made a fool of. He would remind the man of every promise. He would make sure the man understood that patience was not weakness. Before Calvary, that plan would have felt righteous to him. After Calvary, it felt incomplete.
The debtor lived in a narrow house near a wall that held the afternoon heat. When the stranger arrived, the man’s wife opened the door with a baby on her hip and worry in her eyes. The debtor came out wiping his hands on his tunic. He looked thinner than the stranger remembered. Before either man spoke, a child coughed inside the house, a rough cough that seemed to scrape the room behind him. The stranger had come prepared to demand payment. He had not come prepared to see need.
The old instinct still rose in him. Need does not erase debt, he thought. A promise is still a promise. He was not wrong. Mercy does not require us to pretend responsibility has disappeared. But the cross had begun teaching him that truth without compassion can become a weapon, and compassion without truth can become avoidance. He stood there, trying to find a way to be honest without being hard.
The debtor began apologizing. Too many words, too quickly. The kind of talking people do when they fear the person in front of them has power over their peace. The stranger heard his own voice in the man’s fear. He had made people talk like that. He had enjoyed it sometimes, though he would not have called it enjoyment. He would have called it respect.
He looked down at his hands. They were clenched.
Then he thought of Jesus’ hands.
That memory changed the air. The hands of Jesus had been opened by nails, yet His heart had not closed. The stranger slowly released his own fingers. He told the man the debt still mattered, but he would give him more time. He asked what work the man had found. He listened. Not perfectly. Not like a saint from a story. He still felt the cost. He still felt the fear of being taken advantage of. But he did not let that fear rule the conversation.
On the walk home, he wrestled with himself. Had he been foolish? Had he been merciful? Had he been weak? Had he obeyed God or simply avoided conflict? Real mercy often leaves us with questions because it lives in the space between truth and tenderness. It is not always obvious. It does not always give us the clean feeling of being right. Sometimes mercy feels like trusting God with the part of the outcome we cannot control.
That is where many of us live. We want God to give us clear lines in every situation. We want to know exactly when to stay, when to leave, when to speak, when to be silent, when to forgive, when to set a boundary, when to keep trying, when to rest. Sometimes Scripture gives us a clear command, and we should obey it. But in many daily moments, we need wisdom shaped by the heart of Jesus. We need more than a rule that protects our pride. We need the Spirit to make us honest, brave, and kind at the same time.
Think of the person who has prayed for a relationship to heal, but the other person keeps sending short, cold replies. Every message feels like a small trial. The phone lights up, and the body tightens before the words are even read. That person may want God to fix everything at once, to make the apology come, to restore warmth, to make the other heart soft. Sometimes that happens. But sometimes the first answer is not the other person changing. Sometimes the first answer is God teaching you not to let someone else’s coldness turn you cold too.
That is not a small miracle.
It may not be the miracle you asked for. It may not be public. It may not be something you can explain in a sentence. But when Jesus keeps your heart from becoming a mirror of the hurt done to you, something holy is happening. When He helps you answer without revenge, speak without cruelty, wait without hatred, and tell the truth without trying to destroy, He is not absent. He is working in the place where most of our lives are actually lived.
The stranger began to understand that unanswered prayer is not always ignored prayer. Sometimes the answer comes in a form we do not recognize because we were only looking for escape. He had asked God, in ways he barely admitted, to prove Himself through force. Instead, God had shown him mercy under force. He had wanted Jesus to come down from the cross. Instead, Jesus had stayed long enough for the stranger to see his own soul clearly.
This did not solve every question. Faith that cannot admit mystery becomes fragile. The stranger still wondered why suffering had to be so costly. He still wondered why good people were crushed by powerful people. He still wondered why God allowed Rome to nail bodies to wood and religious men to bless their own fear as righteousness. But after the cross, his questions changed tone. They were no longer accusations shouted from a safe distance. They became prayers carried by a man who had seen that God was not far from the wound.
That difference matters. There is a way to question God that is really a way of keeping Him out. There is also a way to question God while reaching for Him. The first kind of question says, Explain Yourself before I trust You. The second says, I do not understand, but I have seen enough of Your heart to keep holding on. The stranger was moving, slowly and unevenly, from the first kind to the second.
Near evening, he passed a group of children playing with a scrap of cloth tied around a stick. One child fell and scraped his knee. The others laughed, then stopped when they saw blood. The child’s face tightened as he tried not to cry. The stranger paused. A few days earlier, he might have walked past. Children fall. Knees bleed. Life is hard. But now he saw the small battle on the child’s face, the desire to appear strong, the fear of being mocked for pain. He knelt and offered the edge of his cloth. The child looked suspicious, then took it.
It was such a small thing that it almost seemed foolish to remember. But the stranger did remember. He remembered because he saw himself in the child. He saw how early people learn to hide pain so others will not use it against them. He saw how much of the world trains us to come down from tenderness before anyone can laugh. Jesus had not come down from love. Maybe the stranger did not have to come down from it either.
That night, the rumors of resurrection grew stronger. Someone claimed Jesus had appeared to His followers. Someone else said the leaders were angry and frightened. Another said the guards had been told what to say. The stranger did not know which voices to trust. But as he sat in the dim room with his family nearby, he understood something he had not understood before. If Jesus was alive, then the refusal to come down had not been defeat. It had been the road to a victory deeper than escape.
And if that was true, then many things in life had to be seen again.
The delayed answer might not be abandonment. The quiet season might not be emptiness. The place where obedience feels costly might not be proof that God has forgotten. The moment when love looks weak might be the very moment heaven is doing something stronger than pride can recognize. The prayer that was not answered your way may still be held by a God who knows what redemption requires.
The stranger looked at his wife across the room. She was mending a tear in a garment, pulling the thread carefully through the fabric. It struck him that healing looked like that sometimes. Not instant. Not loud. A small tear drawn together one patient movement at a time. He watched her hands and thought of the hands of Jesus, wounded and still merciful. He did not have all the words yet, but he had one prayer.
Do not let me mistake mercy for weakness again.
He whispered it so quietly no one else heard. But for the first time in a long time, he felt that heaven did.
Chapter 4: The Mercy That Walks Back Into the Same Room
Two mornings later, the stranger found his mother sitting outside her doorway with a blanket across her knees though the day was already warm. She had always been a difficult woman to describe because the truth about her did not fit into one clean sentence. She had fed him when he was hungry. She had worked until her hands swelled. She had remembered every wrong done to her with the strength of a scribe copying sacred words. Age had made her smaller, but it had not made her gentler. Her voice could still find the one place in a person that was already bruised and press there.
He had avoided her the day before. He told himself he was busy. There was work to find, food to buy, rumors to sort through, a family to calm. All of that was true, but not the whole truth. The whole truth was that his mother made him feel like a child again, and he hated that feeling. One sentence from her could pull him backward twenty years. One look could make him want to defend his entire life. He had more patience for strangers than he had for the woman who had raised him, which is one of the quiet humiliations many people carry. We can appear merciful in public and still become sharp at the family doorway.
She saw him before he could decide whether to keep walking.
“You remembered I was alive,” she said.
The old anger rose so quickly that it almost comforted him. There it was, familiar and ready. He could answer in the tone she had earned. He could remind her that he had brought grain last week. He could say that nothing was ever enough for her. He could tell himself that honoring a parent did not mean standing there to be cut by every bitter word. Some of that would have been fair. But fairness alone does not always make a soul free.
He stopped by the doorway. A fly moved along the rim of a bowl beside her. Her sandals were near the wall, one turned sideways. Her hair, once carefully kept, had come loose at the temple. For the first time in a long time, he saw not only the woman who irritated him, but the woman whose body was failing. He saw the loneliness underneath the complaint. He saw the fear of becoming forgotten. He saw how old pain can become a habit because it is the only voice some people still know how to use.
He did not pretend her words were kind. He did not pretend they had never hurt him. Mercy does not require us to lie about what happened. It simply refuses to let hurt become the only truth we see. The stranger bent down, picked up the bowl, and asked if she had eaten.
She stared at him as if he had answered in a foreign language.
This was not a grand moment. No one sang. No one praised him for spiritual maturity. His mother did not become tender. She complained that the bread was too dry and that the neighbor’s daughter had been louder than a goat at dawn. But he stayed long enough to bring water, straighten the blanket, and listen without letting every word become a hook in his skin. He left tired, not glowing. Yet something in him remained unbroken that would have broken before.
That is one of the hidden lessons of the cross. Jesus did not stay because the crowd became kind. He stayed while they remained exactly what they were. He did not forgive after the apology. He forgave before understanding appeared in their faces. He did not wait for the room to become safe before revealing the Father’s heart. He brought the Father’s heart into an unsafe world without letting the world rewrite it.
Many of us want mercy to be easy before we practice it. We want the other person to soften first. We want the apology first. We want the proof that our kindness will not be wasted. We want the family member to stop speaking in old patterns, the coworker to stop taking credit, the child to stop pushing back, the friend to finally notice how much we have carried. Then, we think, we will be gracious. Then we will be patient. Then we will be warm again. But Jesus did not wait for humanity to become easy to love before loving us.
This does not mean you let people tear you apart. It does not mean you keep handing your heart to someone who uses it carelessly. There is a difference between mercy and access. There is a difference between forgiveness and pretending trust has been rebuilt. Jesus forgave from the cross, but He did not call mockery good. He did not say the nails were harmless. He did not make evil holy by enduring it. He exposed evil by answering it with a love evil could not produce.
The stranger began to learn that difference slowly. With his mother, mercy meant bringing food and not returning insult for insult. It did not mean letting her rule his home. It did not mean making his wife and children live under the shadow of his mother’s bitterness. It did not mean confusing guilt with obedience. It meant asking God for a heart soft enough to serve and strong enough not to be controlled by every complaint.
That lesson reaches into ordinary life now more than we like to admit. A woman cares for an aging parent who criticizes the way she folds towels, cooks soup, speaks to doctors, and spends money. She goes home at night with a headache and a phone full of missed calls. She loves this parent, but love feels tangled with resentment, duty, sadness, and exhaustion. She wonders if a good Christian would feel more patient. She wonders if her weariness means her faith is weak. What she needs is not shame. What she needs is Jesus, who understands costly love and never asks her to call exhaustion a sin.
A man sits beside a hospital bed while machines measure things he cannot control. He has prayed for healing. He has bargained in the quiet. He has promised God he will change if the numbers improve. Nurses come and go. Family members send messages asking for updates. He wants a miracle, and there is nothing wrong with wanting one. But in that room, another miracle may also be needed: the grace to remain gentle while afraid, the courage to speak love while there is still time, the humility to stop performing strength and let tears come. Jesus does not despise that kind of weakness. He meets people there.
A young mother stands in a hallway after snapping at her child over a spilled cup. She is not angry about the cup, not really. She is worn thin by bills, laundry, loneliness, and the feeling that she has become invisible except when someone needs something. She sees the child’s face fall and immediately feels regret. The old voice in her mind says she is failing. Another voice, quieter but truer, invites her to kneel, look the child in the eye, and say, “I should not have spoken that way.” That apology may become the holiest moment of the day. Not because everything is fixed, but because mercy has entered the same room where hurt happened.
The cross belongs in those rooms. Not as decoration. Not as a religious phrase used to silence pain. The cross belongs there because Jesus shows us what love does when human beings are at their worst. He tells the truth about sin by suffering under it, and He reveals the heart of God by forgiving through it. If we only keep the cross in songs and paintings, we may admire it while avoiding its invitation. The invitation is not to seek suffering. The invitation is to let the mercy of Jesus reshape what we do when suffering finds us.
The stranger discovered that his hardest moments were not always the large ones. He expected transformation to be tested by big decisions, public danger, dramatic sacrifice. Instead, he was tested by tone. He was tested by interruption. He was tested by hunger, heat, delay, and family history. He was tested when someone spoke to him as if he were foolish. He was tested when his wife’s caution made him feel ashamed. He was tested when his mother made a cutting remark with no idea how deeply it landed. The old self had trained for these moments too. It knew exactly how to win them and lose his soul at the same time.
One afternoon, his oldest child asked whether Jesus was truly alive. The question came while he was repairing a strap near the doorway. He had been thinking about work, about money, about whether the rumors could be trusted. The child stood there with serious eyes, waiting for the kind of answer children need from adults, not polished, not evasive, not careless. The stranger opened his mouth, then closed it. He did not want to pretend certainty he had not fully grown into. He also did not want to hand his child doubt as if it were wisdom.
So he told the truth he had.
“I saw Him forgive people who were killing Him,” he said. “I do not understand everything yet. But I know what I saw was not weakness.”
The child considered this. Children often understand more than adults think and less than adults hope. The child asked if forgiving meant nobody had done wrong. The stranger set down the strap and looked toward the light near the door. That question deserved care. He said no. Forgiving did not mean wrong became right. Forgiving meant wrong would not be allowed to become lord over the heart. He surprised himself as he said it. Sometimes we learn what God is teaching us by trying to explain it simply to someone else.
That evening, he thought about how often he had let wrong become lord over him. Old insults had ruled whole days. Old fears had ruled conversations. Old disappointments had ruled his expectations of God. He had called it memory, but sometimes it was bondage. He had called it caution, but sometimes it was unbelief. He had called it strength, but sometimes it was a refusal to be healed.
The cross did not erase the wrong done to Jesus. It revealed it fully. Every nail, every mocking word, every false accusation showed what human sin does when it is afraid of holy love. But the cross also showed that sin does not get to be the highest truth. Mercy spoke from above the violence. Forgiveness rose from inside the wound. Love stayed longer than hatred could understand. Then resurrection would soon declare what the stranger was only beginning to believe: evil can do real damage, but it cannot outrank God.
That truth can steady a person who is tired of being controlled by what happened. It can steady the one who keeps replaying an argument from three years ago while washing dishes. It can steady the one who wakes up angry at someone who has moved on without apology. It can steady the one who cannot hear a certain name without feeling the body tighten. Jesus does not ask us to pretend those reactions are not real. He invites us to bring them to the cross, not so we can be shamed for having them, but so they can stop owning us.
The stranger visited his mother again the next day. She complained again. He almost smiled, not because it was funny, but because he saw the pattern coming and did not feel as trapped by it. He brought her softer bread. He moved a stool into the shade. When she criticized the way he placed it, he felt the spark in his chest. It was still there. Following Jesus had not removed his temper overnight. But now the spark did not have to become a fire.
He breathed. He adjusted the stool. He told her he would come again.
As he walked home, the city noise rose around him. Somewhere, people were still arguing about the empty tomb. Somewhere, leaders were trying to protect their version of events. Somewhere, disciples were hiding, rejoicing, fearing, wondering. The stranger was not at the center of any of that. He was just a man walking through the street with dust on his sandals, trying to let mercy change the way he loved difficult people. But he had begun to understand that this is where faith becomes real. Not only in what we claim about Jesus, but in what His mercy teaches our hands, our voices, our homes, and our next conversation.
Chapter 5: The Insult He Did Not Have to Answer
The stranger was carrying two small sacks of grain through the market when he heard his name spoken in a tone that made his shoulders tighten. It came from behind him, near the place where merchants kept their scales and men gathered when they had more opinions than work. He knew the voice before he turned. It belonged to a man who had never liked him much, though neither of them had ever said that plainly. Some people become enemies without a single great event. They become enemies through small comparisons, old jealousies, pride, and the quiet pleasure of seeing another person lowered.
The stranger could have kept walking. Part of him wanted to. Another part, older and louder, wanted to turn around quickly so no one would think he was afraid. That had always mattered to him. The appearance of fear. The appearance of weakness. The appearance of being someone others could speak about freely. He felt the sacks pull against his hands, the rough fibers pressing into his palms. He stopped near a stall of onions and listened.
The man was telling a story about him. Not a large lie, exactly. Something worse in its own way. A truth bent until it served cruelty. He spoke about the debt the stranger had delayed collecting, making it sound like foolishness. He suggested the stranger had become soft since the crucifixion, like one of those people who could be moved by any holy rumor carried on a woman’s tongue. A few men laughed. One of them glanced toward the stranger and looked away too late.
Heat rose in his face.
There are moments when the body responds before the soul has time to pray. His chest tightened. His jaw set. His mind prepared a reply with the speed of a trained soldier. He knew exactly what to say. He knew the man’s weak places. He knew about a failed trade, a son who had left, a promise unpaid, a public embarrassment from years ago. He could answer sharply and accurately. He could make the laughter turn. He could make the other man regret choosing him as a subject.
For one breath, it almost felt righteous. Why should lies be allowed to stand? Why should mockery go unanswered? Why should people think mercy means a man has no spine? This is how pride often dresses itself. It wears the clothing of justice so we do not notice how hungry it is for revenge.
The stranger turned.
The group saw him now. Silence moved through them, but it was not clean silence. It had smirks under it. The man who had been speaking raised his eyebrows as if surprised, though he was not surprised at all. The stranger stepped closer. The sacks of grain hung at his sides. He could feel every eye waiting. The market did what crowds do. It leaned inward.
Then another hill rose in his memory.
He saw Jesus above the crowd, not in a dream, but in the sharp clarity of a wound remembered. He heard the voices again. Come down. Save yourself. Prove it. He remembered wanting Jesus to answer. He remembered being almost disappointed when Jesus did not. Now the stranger understood that temptation from the inside. Not the temptation to save the world, but the temptation to save face. The temptation to turn pain into a performance. The temptation to come down from mercy because mockers had made mercy look weak.
He looked at the man in front of him and saw more than an insult. He saw bait.
That realization did not make the anger disappear. It simply gave him room to choose. Anger is not always the master, even when it arrives loudly. Sometimes, by the grace of God, anger can be a visitor you do not hand the house keys to.
The stranger said the man’s name. Quietly. Not warmly, but quietly.
The man shifted, disappointed perhaps that the first word was not sharper.
“What you said is not the whole truth,” the stranger said. “You know that.”
The man shrugged. “Then tell it better.”
There it was, the invitation. The crossroad hidden inside a sentence. Tell it better. Fight. Defend. Perform. Make the market your courtroom and your pride the judge. The stranger felt the pull of it. He wanted witnesses. He wanted correction. He wanted the clean satisfaction of making his case in public. But he also knew how quickly truth could become a weapon in his hands. He knew that if he began speaking from the place that wanted to hurt back, even accurate words could become unclean.
So he did something that felt almost impossible.
He did not give the crowd the scene it wanted.
“I will speak to you later if there is something between us,” he said. “But I will not turn this into food for people who are only hungry for laughter.”
The sentence surprised him. It surprised the men too. A few looked away. Someone coughed. The man’s face hardened because public restraint can expose foolishness more deeply than public victory. The stranger did not wait for permission to leave. He lifted the grain and walked on.
Every step felt both free and unfinished.
That is one of the hardest parts of refusing to perform for mockery. It does not always feel good right away. Sometimes you walk away still angry. Sometimes you replay what you could have said. Sometimes part of you worries that silence gave the wrong impression. Sometimes obedience does not feel like peace at first. It feels like your old self shouting from behind a locked door.
The stranger reached the end of the market and stood in the shade of a wall. His hands were shaking. He hated that. He wanted holiness to feel calm and clean. Instead, it felt like wrestling with a strong animal inside his own chest. He set the grain down and pressed his palms against the wall until the rough stone steadied him.
“Lord,” he whispered, though he was still learning what that word meant when spoken to Jesus, “do not let me use truth to serve my pride.”
The prayer was small, but it was honest. Honest prayers often do more in us than polished ones. He did not say he was not angry. He did not pretend the insult had not cut him. He did not ask God to bless his bitterness and call it discernment. He simply brought the raw thing into the light before it could grow teeth.
Many people need that exact mercy. Not the mercy of never being insulted. Not the mercy of everyone understanding your motives. Not the mercy of a reputation that never gets touched. We need the mercy of not becoming ruled by the need to answer every voice. We need the mercy of knowing when to speak and when to let the hunger of the crowd go unfed.
This is not easy in ordinary life. A person checks a message and sees that someone has misunderstood them completely. Another person at work takes a sentence out of context and repeats it with a different tone. A family member tells the story of an argument in a way that makes themselves look wounded and you look heartless. Someone online makes a cruel comment after seeing only one minute of your life. Everything in you wants to respond, not only to correct the record, but to recover the feeling of control.
Sometimes you should speak. Truth matters. Falsehood can harm people. Silence is not always wisdom. Jesus Himself spoke hard truth when truth was needed. But not every insult is an assignment. Not every accusation deserves your whole nervous system. Not every mocking voice has earned access to your peace. There are moments when the most faithful response is not a louder answer, but a cleaner heart.
The stranger had never thought much about a clean heart before. He had thought about a protected name, a respected position, a stable house, obedient children, paid debts, and enough bread. Those things mattered in their places. But after seeing Jesus, he began to see that a man could keep his reputation and lose his soul in the process. He could win the market and bring poison home. He could silence another man and still be mastered by him. He could come down from mercy just to prove he was strong, only to discover that pride had nailed him somewhere else.
Later that afternoon, the man from the market came by the stranger’s work area. He did not apologize. He acted as if the earlier scene had been nothing. This irritated the stranger more than a direct insult might have. People who wound casually often want to move on casually. They want the freedom to cut without the burden of repair.
The stranger looked up from the strap he was mending. The man asked about a piece of work, ordinary words, ordinary tone. The stranger wanted to say, Now you come privately, after making sport publicly. He wanted the man to feel small. Instead, he asked him to sit.
This time there was no crowd. No laughter waiting. No market leaning inward. Just two men, one table, and a small blade used for cutting leather. The stranger told him plainly that the words in the market had been wrong. He said the debt had not been ignored, only delayed because a household was under strain. He said mercy should not be mocked by people who might need it tomorrow. His voice was firm. His hands stayed still.
The man looked away.
For a long moment, nothing happened. No confession. No embrace. No clean ending. Then the man said, almost under his breath, that he had spoken carelessly. It was not a full apology, but it was the closest thing he seemed able to give. The stranger accepted it without pretending it was more beautiful than it was.
That meeting taught him something he would remember: refusing a public fight does not mean refusing truth. Mercy is not silence forever. It is the choice to let love govern how truth is spoken. Jesus did not answer every mocker from the cross, but His whole life was truth. His silence before certain accusations did not mean He had no authority. It meant His authority was not controlled by their demand.
A nurse learns this in a hospital hallway when an exhausted family member speaks harshly because fear has made them unreasonable. She can answer with the same sharpness and be justified in the eyes of almost anyone. Or she can tell the truth firmly, explain what is happening, set the necessary boundary, and refuse to let their panic turn her cruel. A father learns it when a teenager says something cutting at the end of a long day. He can crush the child with adult power, or he can correct the disrespect without using shame as a weapon. A woman learns it when someone questions her faith because she is still struggling. She can build a wall of defense, or she can say, “I am still walking with God, even here,” and let that be enough.
These are not small things. They are the daily training ground of the soul. The cross is not only about where we go when we die. It is about who we become while we live. It teaches us what to do with pain before pain teaches us what to become. It shows us how love acts when surrounded by misunderstanding. It calls us away from the false strength of constant self-defense and into the deeper strength of belonging to the Father.
The stranger carried that lesson home with the grain. His child asked why he was late. His wife noticed the dust on his clothes and the tiredness in his face. He told her what had happened, but not in the old way. He did not tell it to make himself the hero. He did not sharpen the other man’s faults for the pleasure of being pitied. He told it carefully, still examining his own heart as he spoke.
His wife listened. At the end, she said, “You would not have done that before.”
He almost defended himself out of habit. Then he smiled a little, tired and honest.
“No,” he said. “I would not have.”
The room did not fill with dramatic joy. It simply felt safer. That was enough. The grain was placed in a jar. The children settled. Evening came on slowly. Somewhere in the city, people were still arguing about Jesus. Some believed. Some doubted. Some resisted because belief would cost them too much. The stranger understood that cost now in a way he had not before. Jesus was not only asking to be admired. He was asking to be followed into the hidden places where pride had been making decisions for years.
Before sleep, the stranger stepped outside and looked toward the dark shape of the city walls. Beyond them was the hill he had not wanted to remember and could not forget. He thought again of the words thrown at Jesus. Come down. Prove Yourself. Save Yourself.
He understood now that those words did not only belong to the crowd. They came to every human heart in different clothing. Come down from patience. Come down from forgiveness. Come down from humility. Come down from obedience. Come down from the quiet work of becoming gentle. Come down and show them they cannot speak to you that way. Come down and make yourself feel powerful again.
Jesus had stayed.
The stranger breathed in the night air and asked for the grace to stay too, not in places where evil demanded his silence, but in the holy places where love required his surrender. He asked for the grace to stay kind without becoming weak, truthful without becoming cruel, steady without becoming hard, and faithful without needing every person in the market to understand.
Inside the house, one of the children turned in sleep and murmured. His wife moved softly near the lamp. The world remained unfinished. So did he. But something in him had stopped needing every insult to become a trial where he defended his worth. His worth had begun to rest somewhere else now, not in the crowd’s opinion, not in the market’s laughter, not in the sharpness of his own reply, but in the mercy of the One who could have come down and chose to stay.
Chapter 6: The Morning Mercy Stopped Looking Weak
On the morning the stranger finally believed Jesus was alive, he was not standing in a temple court or listening to a teacher explain prophecy. He was kneeling beside a cracked storage jar in his own home, trying to repair a place where water kept seeping out. His youngest child was still asleep. His wife was grinding grain with slow, steady movements. The room held the pale light of early day, the kind that makes ordinary things look honest. The jar had been cracked for weeks, and he had kept meaning to mend it. That morning, with clay under his fingernails and his mind crowded with rumors, he realized he had been doing the same thing with his life for years. Trying to patch leaks without asking why the vessel kept breaking.
A knock came at the door.
It was not loud, but everyone in the room heard it. His wife stopped grinding. The stranger wiped his hands on a cloth and opened the door to find a neighbor breathing hard, one hand against the doorframe. The man had the look of someone carrying news that had outrun him. For a moment he could not speak. Then he said that more people had seen Jesus. Not a body stolen. Not a story invented by frightened followers. Seen Him. Heard Him. Some said He had eaten with them. Some said He had spoken peace to people who had abandoned Him. Some said wounds remained in His hands, yet death no longer owned Him.
The stranger did not answer. He stepped back as if the doorway itself had widened.
His wife came near, still holding the grinding stone. The neighbor repeated what he had heard, this time with more detail and less breath. The disciples were saying the Lord had risen. The city was unsettled. The leaders were angry. The frightened were becoming bold. The ones who had scattered were gathering again. Something had happened that could not be put back into the tomb.
After the neighbor left, the stranger stood in the open doorway for a long time. The street looked the same. A woman carried a basket. A man called to his son. Dust shifted under passing feet. Yet nothing was the same. The world did not glow. Angels did not line the roofs. But the stranger felt that the center of everything had moved. The cross had not been the end of Jesus. The refusal to come down had not been failure. The mercy that looked weak had walked through death and come out alive.
He looked at his hands, still marked with clay from the cracked jar. He thought of the hands of Jesus, wounded and living. That detail mattered to him more than he expected. If the reports were true, Jesus had not risen as if the cross had never happened. He rose with wounds. The suffering was not erased from His story. It was redeemed inside His story. That gave the stranger a kind of hope that was stronger than forgetting. Many people want healing to mean they never have to remember what hurt them. But the risen Jesus shows another kind of healing. The wound no longer rules, but it still tells the truth about the love that passed through it.
The stranger sat down because his legs felt unsteady. His wife lowered herself across from him. Neither spoke for a while. Some truths are too large for quick sentences. The child on the mat stirred and then slept again. The grinding stone rested beside the bowl. Morning kept moving, but the room had become a holy place without changing shape.
Finally his wife asked, “What does this mean?”
He wanted to answer well. He wanted to sound certain, wise, worthy of the question. But the cross had been teaching him not to perform. So he told her the truth as plainly as he could.
“It means He was not trapped,” he said. “He stayed because He chose to. And God raised Him.”
His wife’s eyes filled, but she did not look away. Perhaps she was thinking of all the places where they had felt trapped. Money. Fear. Old arguments. Family pressure. The smallness of a life lived under empire and taxes and illness and disappointment. Perhaps she was thinking of the ways they had both mistaken survival for faith. Perhaps she was simply tired and relieved to hear that death had not won.
The stranger reached across the table and took her hand. It felt like a small act, but for him it was not small. For years, tenderness had made him feel exposed. Now he was beginning to understand that love without tenderness becomes duty, and duty without love becomes another burden people carry in silence. Jesus had not saved the world from a safe distance. He had come near enough to be touched, wounded, buried, and recognized. If the risen Christ still carried wounds, then the stranger did not need to hide every mark in himself either.
That afternoon, he went back toward the hill outside the walls. He did not know why exactly. No crowd pulled him there this time. No spectacle waited. The place was quieter now, which somehow made it harder to face. Public suffering has noise around it. Afterward, silence asks what you have learned. The stranger walked slowly, passing stones, scrub, and patches of earth pressed by many feet. The crosses were gone or being used elsewhere. Rome did not waste wood. The ground remained.
He stood where he thought he had stood that day. He could almost hear the shouting again. Come down. Save Yourself. Prove it. The words sounded smaller now, not because they had not been cruel, but because resurrection had exposed how little they understood. The crowd had asked Jesus to prove He was the Son of God by escaping the cross. The Father proved Him through the empty tomb. The crowd wanted immediate display. God was doing eternal redemption. The crowd wanted a miracle that would end the moment. God gave a victory that would open mercy for the world.
The stranger knelt, not because anyone told him to, but because standing felt too proud. He did not know the right words. He had never been trained for a prayer like this. He only knew that he had been wrong. Wrong about strength. Wrong about proof. Wrong about mercy. Wrong about himself. He had wanted a God who would come down on command. He had been given a Savior who stayed, died, forgave, and rose.
“Jesus,” he whispered, and the name felt different now, no longer only the name of a man he had watched suffer, but the name of the Lord who had seen him in the crowd and loved him anyway. “Teach me how to live like mercy is stronger than fear.”
The prayer did not make him perfect. He would still fail. He would still speak too quickly some days. He would still feel the old heat rise when mocked. He would still worry about grain, illness, family, and the future. He would still have to apologize, forgive, work, rest, listen, and begin again more times than he wanted. But now his life had a center that his moods did not create and his failures could not destroy. Jesus was alive. That meant mercy was not only a beautiful idea. Mercy had a heartbeat. Mercy had walked out of the grave.
This is where the lesson comes home for us too. We may not stand at Calvary with dust on our sandals, but we know what it is to demand proof in pain. We know what it is to say, Lord, if You love me, make this stop now. We know what it is to look at a hard season and assume silence means absence. We know what it is to feel mocked by life itself, as if every delay asks whether faith has made fools of us. We know what it is to want Jesus to come down from the cross and win in a way everyone can see.
But Jesus gives us something deeper than visible escape. He gives us Himself. Crucified, risen, near, patient, truthful, and merciful. He shows us that the Father’s love is not proven only when pain disappears. It is proven forever in the Son who entered pain, carried sin, forgave enemies, surrendered His life, and rose with authority no grave could resist.
That does not make every question easy. It does not turn grief into a lesson we can tie up neatly. It does not mean Christians should speak lightly to people who are suffering. Never use the cross to rush someone past their tears. Jesus did not rush past suffering. He entered it fully. The hope of the cross is not that pain is unreal. The hope of the cross is that pain is not final. The hope of resurrection is not that wounds never happened. The hope of resurrection is that wounds can lose their throne.
A person sitting alone after a funeral needs that kind of hope. Not a shallow sentence. Not someone saying everything happens for a reason before the tears have even dried. That person needs the Jesus who stood at a tomb and wept before calling Lazarus out. The Jesus who knows grief from inside the body. The Jesus who can hold silence without becoming distant. The Jesus whose resurrection promises that death may be terrible, but it is not ultimate.
A person trying to rebuild after failure needs that kind of hope too. The business collapsed. The marriage broke. The addiction returned. The words were said and cannot be unsaid. The chance was missed. Shame sits beside the bed like a living thing. That person does not need a God who only loves the unscarred. That person needs the risen Jesus who still has wounds and still says peace. The One who can tell the truth about sin without throwing away the sinner. The One who can make repentance feel like a doorway instead of a grave.
A person who has been strong for everyone else needs that kind of hope. The dependable one. The steady one. The one who answers the calls, handles the forms, pays the bill, checks on the parent, encourages the child, keeps working, and cries only when the water is running so nobody hears. That person may feel like coming down from love because love has become heavy. Jesus does not shame that weariness. He meets it. He teaches that staying faithful does not mean pretending you are never tired. It means bringing your tiredness to the Father before it turns into bitterness.
The stranger learned that resurrection did not remove him from ordinary life. It sent him back into it with a different heart. He still had a mother who complained. He still had a wife who needed trust rebuilt slowly. He still had children who spilled water, asked hard questions, and watched more than they understood. He still had work to do and people to face. But now every ordinary room had become a place where the risen Jesus could be followed.
That may be the most important part for someone reading this today. The story of Jesus is not only meant to be admired from a distance. It is meant to enter the next conversation. The next apology. The next morning when your chest feels tight. The next time someone misunderstands you. The next time you want to prove yourself by becoming harsh. The next time you are tempted to believe that if God has not removed the hard thing, He must not be near.
Look again at Jesus.
He did not come down when the crowd demanded it. He stayed because love had not finished its work. Then He rose because death did not get to finish the story. That means your own hard chapter is not allowed to call itself the whole book. Your sorrow is not the author. Your shame is not the judge. Your delay is not the final word. Your weakness is not proof that God has left. The risen Christ is still able to bring life where you cannot see life yet.
The stranger walked home from the hill as evening approached. The sky was soft, and the city walls held the last light. He did not walk like a man who understood everything. He walked like a man who had finally stopped needing to. There is a peace that comes not from having every answer, but from trusting the heart of the One who stayed. He had seen mercy bleed. He had heard mercy forgive. Now he believed mercy lived.
When he reached home, his child ran to him with a question about something small, a broken toy or a missing piece of cloth. His wife looked up from the doorway. The house smelled of bread. His mother would complain again soon. The market would still have rumors. Rome would still be Rome. Life would still ask for courage in ordinary ways. But the stranger stepped inside with a gentleness that had once felt impossible.
He had gone to the cross wanting Jesus to prove Himself by escaping.
He came away learning that Jesus proved Himself by staying.
And when resurrection came, the lesson became clear enough to carry for the rest of his life. The greatest miracle was not only that Jesus rose from the dead. It was that love had stayed long enough to reach the dead, the guilty, the proud, the frightened, the wounded, the tired, the stubborn, and the ones standing at the edge of the crowd pretending they only came to watch.
He stayed for them.
He stayed for us.
He stayed for you.
And because He stayed, you can bring your whole unfinished life to Him without pretending. You can bring the anger you are ashamed of, the fear you hide, the grief you cannot explain, the faith that feels smaller than you want it to be, and the questions you are scared to say out loud. Jesus is not frightened by the truth of you. He already saw humanity at its worst and answered with mercy.
The miracle He refused to perform still speaks. He did not save Himself from the cross because He was saving us through it. He did not come down because love was going all the way. He did not answer mockery with spectacle because the Father was preparing resurrection. He did not let pain have the final word then, and He will not let it have the final word now.
So stay close to Him.
Not to prove you are strong.
Not to impress anyone.
Not to pretend life is easy.
Stay close because Jesus is the mercy that stayed, the Savior who rose, and the friend who can teach your heart to live again.
Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph Watch Douglas Vandergraph inspiring faith-based videos on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@douglasvandergraph Support the Christian encouragement library through GoFundMe: https://www.gofundme.com/f/help-douglas-vandergraph-build-a-christian-encouragement-lib Support the daily work by buying Douglas a coffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/douglasvandergraph
from
M.A.G. blog, signed by Lydia
Lydia's Weekly Lifestyle blog is for today's African girl, so no subject is taboo. My purpose is to share things that may interest today's African girl.
The Corporate Girlie’s Guide to Lingerie-Inspired Fashion in Accra. Before HR starts sweating, let’s be clear: We’re talking lingerie-inspired fashion — chic, polished, and office-appropriate styling that whispers elegance instead of screaming bedroom playlist.
The Golden Rule: Suggest, Don’t Shock: Corporate lingerie styling is all about subtlety. We are inspiring curiosity, not starting emergency office meetings.
Keep it classy by:
Layering strategically
Avoiding overly sheer fabrics
Choosing neutral tones for work settings
Keeping hemlines and fits polished
Because the goal is fashion editor energy, not “the office group chat discussing you before lunch.”
Confidence Is the Real Outfit: The beauty of lingerie-inspired corporate fashion is the balance of strength and softness. It reminds us that power dressing doesn’t always have to be stiff blazers and black trousers every single day.
Sometimes power dressing is:
Silk instead of cotton
Lace instead of plain basics
Confidence instead of playing safe.
And the Accra girlies? Oh, we know how to do both business and beauty effortlessly.
Now excuse us while we strut into the office looking like the CEO of elegance.
Quality clothing? What to look for? Look for signs of wear, if already the item has snags, premature peeling or bubbling on the fabric, likely caused by friction from people trying on the garment, it's probably not a quality purchase.
Turn the item inside out. Does it look as good on the inside as it does on the outside? If so, it's a good indication you've got a decent quality garment. Look for quality hemming, button holes, buttons, are the button holes at the right place for the buttons? What about the zip, does it look quality? Does it run smoothly? Is it stitched in and invisible?
While the piece is inverted, lightly tug at the seams that join the panels of fabric together. They shouldn't be loose or show any big gaps when you pull at them.
Consider the material. It should make sense for the purpose of the garment. For example, if you're buying a sweater, choose one with a material that will keep you warm, like wool. If you're buying summer clothes, choose fabrics that will keep you cool, like linen. If you're buying swimwear or sportswear, you'll likely need a synthetic performance or technical fabric.
Don't conflate durability with quality. If a garment falls apart in the wash, it's not necessarily a bad piece of clothing. Silk or clothing with beading and embroidery, may need handwashing.
Read the labels. What material is it? Are there proper washing instructions?

China, the other side of the Chinese yuan coin (also called renmibi). China, superpower, super copier, factory of the world, making robots, electric cars and the iPhone. Right now they are building the longest bridge, the deepest tunnel, the highest building, what not.
They have moved from the 3 years of hunger (1959-1961) when about 40 million people died of hunger (Ghana has about 36 million people) to a country that is now economically challenging the world order (where the USA claims to be on top). So a loud Ayeeko is not out of place. But? Europe has about 6 % unemployment, the USA 4.3 %. And the Chinese? Similar figures, except for young people, 16% cannot find a job. So they go for anything they can get, like delivery services for those who are busy with their job. And here is the interesting part. Those who have a job work so hard and so much that they don't have time to make friends. So if they want to have a nice dinner they hire a companion. Someone who does not have a job. Or to go to the cinema. Or to go hiking. It’s a big business, 200 million people, 14 % of the Chinese population is available for rent. To do shopping for you or to go shopping with so you don't have to feel lonely.

Anemia. The latest (2022) Ghana Demographic and Health Survey claims that 40 % of Ghanian women of reproductive age have anemia. And amongst pregnant women it is 50 %. Some regions have higher figures, like 70 %. What is it? Your blood mainly consists of red and white blood cells (and a host of other things), the red blood cells carry oxygen to where it is needed to get energy (organs, cells, muscles), we get oxygen by breathing. Anemia is insufficient red blood cells (RBC in your lab results).
Anemia symptoms often include headache, dizziness, palpitations (the sudden, abnormal awareness of your own heartbeat), pallor (an unnatural paleness or loss of colour in the skin), tiredness and out of breath. And low birth weight children. How come? Assuming you are not “sick” (not suffering from illness such as malaria, sickle cell, or severe blood loss) you mainly get anemia by not eating sufficient iron rich food. What is iron rich food?
Beans, beef, (chicken) liver, chickpeas, dark chocolate, eggs, lentils, oats, pumpkin seeds, sardines, spinach, tuna.
Trick: add vitamin C to every meal, like bell pepper, tomato, orange or lemon for better iron absorption, avoid tea, coffee, milk, yogurt and cheese 2 hours before meals, they block iron absorption. And don’t overcook those green leaves.
Au Grand Ecuyer. Ring Road, opposite Fire Service Headquarters, Osu, Accra , popularly called the French restaurant, though they sell many local and African dishes as well, is one of my favourites. They sell a very good local tasty tender beef steak at 200 GHC, no need to import from Argentina or Australia, it comes with potato chips, mashed potatoes or green beans (you could choose others) and if you want with black pepper sauce. Popular is attiéké (also spelled adjèkè, acheke) with tilapia, you mostly will not be able to finish this huge fish and have to go for take away.
Their shrimp avocado salad is also nice and fresh, they add tomato on request. There’s more, much more there, prices are a bit reasonable.

from Faucet Repair
11 June 2026
Read Paul Klee's Pedagogical Sketchbook (1953) based on his Bauhaus lectures for the first time today before getting to work and felt reinvigorated by it. Evergreen. Over time I’m planning to sit with each of its subdivisions (below, as organized by Sibyl Moholy-Nagy) in depth…
I: Line as point progression Line as planar definition Line as mathematical proportion Line as coordinator for the path of motion
II: Line as optical guide Line as optical reason Line as psychological balance
III: Line as energy projection
IV: Line as symbol of centrifugal and centripedal movement Line as symbol of will and infinity Line as symbol of color mutations and kinetic harmony
…but for today I’m noting the first principles he lays out because they’re helping me think through the spatial inquiry that’s starting to happen in my studio (the Delimitation Stacks). With the caveat that I’m trying to submerge these things after learning them as I make—their relationship to intuition feels very important to preserve.
Anyway, to begin with, I think the categorization of active, medial, and passive lines (with respect to their cause, impact, and effect) relates to what I’ve arrived at recently in thinking about the goal of an optical essence of a space as a stack (vertical for now) of independent elements, which can then be individually (and endlessly) augmented to arrive at new structures. Which, when done well, seem to point towards inner relationships. Which Klee traces to nature—how we can think of line as it relates to the rhythms, patterns, and forms of human anatomy, plans, and earth, water, and air.
And so I think what’s crucial to implementing his teachings is to internalize them to the point where I can take an “active line on a walk, moving freely, without goal,” yet still honor certain instincts of the eye as they relate to emotional honesty. The toggling of delimiters through active, medial, and passive lines can be a playful, exploratory exercise. Even the simple notion of finding a space between an active and passive plane feels like it could be generative for an entire painting—an active/passive gradient—or a single choice to move something stagnant into a more dynamic range.
from Faucet Repair
9 June 2026
Delimitation Stack
from
Notes I Won’t Reread
I said I’ll continue last time on A Week of Terrible Execution about the dream and the magical week i had. but i guess we will move it further as today was an absolute ridiclous day. Being unconscious in the hospital for what felt like a full week was enough to destroy whatever patience i had left. i decided to stop by work today to see how things were going, only to walk into an absolute mess that nearly made me turn around and leave immediately. After spending long enough questioning both the company and my life choices, i sat in the car for a while, wondering why i bothered. Naturally, i then bought a Red Bull despite every doctor and therapist I know treating caffeine like a personal attack against my recovery. At least it wasn’t alcohol, so lets keep the celebration modest. The rest of the day was spent mostly outside after an argument with my housemate. i was supposed to be resting at home, recovering like a sensible person. Instead, i spent the day making myself progressively more miserable. A talent i seem determined to perfect.
I was given very, very. clear instructions to rest and recover and avoid unnecessary stress. Instead, i went to work, got irritated, argued with my housemate, drank Red bull and spent half the day sitting in my car questioning my life choices. So , Yes. I am absolutely nailing the whole “ rest and recover, Ahmed” thing. No notes. ( Im being sarcastic ill eventually find a way to nail it the right way.)
Good night. dont get used to this tone, you pathetic reader. It’s not directed at you personally.
Sincerely, Ahmed
from
Roscoe's Story
In Summary: * Now tuned into ESPN Chicago ahead of tonight's MLB Game between the the Chicago White Sox and the Detroit Tigers. I'll stay with this station as broadcast over the MLB Gameday Service for the radio call of the game.
Hopefully by tomorrow my eyesight will have returned to my normal and I'll be able to access the Internet as I usually do..
Prayers, etc.: * I have a daily prayer regimen I try to follow throughout the day from early morning, as soon as I roll out of bed, until head hits pillow at night.
Health Metrics: * bw= 235.90 lbs. * bp= 130/76 (68)
Exercise: * morning stretches, balance exercises, kegel pelvic floor exercises, half squats, calf raises, wall push-ups, BP breathing exercises, pilates
Diet: * 05:15 – 1 barbacoa breakfast taco * 06:10 – 1 ham & cheese sandwich * 15:00 – 3 crispy oatmeal cookies and milk * 15:45 – fried chicken, baked beans * 18:00 – 1 fresh orange
Activities, Chores, etc.: * 04:00 – listen to local news talk radio * 04:40 – bank accounts activity monitored. * 05:00 – read, write, pray, follow news reports from various sources, surf the socials, nap * 08:00 – work on computer printer * 10:00 – prep for Doctor's appointment * 12:00 to 15:00 – at Retina Doctor's appointment, traveling to and from. * 15:00 -home again, waiting for my eyesight to return to close to normal * 17:00 – tuned into ESPN Chicago ahead of tonight's MLB Game between the the Chicago White Sox and the Detroit Tigers. I'll stay with this station for the radio call of the game.
Chess: * 09:00 – moved in all pending CC games
from anatolie
In the Enneagram, the laws of One, Three, and Seven are fundamental. This means they are fulfilled everywhere below and within their worlds.
The Law of Three references the triadic nature of any one thing.
Points Three, Six, and Nine correspond to the three forces Active, Passive, and Reconciling, respectively.
As do Centers, Harmonics, and Hornevians, firstly as whole groups, then on a lower level both as their individual triad members within each of the three phases, as well as within each Enneagram type.
As with the Object Relations Frustration, Rejection, and Attachment.
The assembly of three forces of any one creation is an active process, relative to the passive integration & disintegration process, and to the reconciling process of wings. These correspond to the Law of Three, the Law of Seven, and the Law of One, respectively.
The three types (Three, Six, and Nine), the three phases (Centers, Harmonics, and Hornevians), and the three Object Relations (Frustration, Rejection, and Attachment) are also active, passive, and reconciling relative to each other.
Living in the universe of Three, Six, and Nine, these are our active forces, while the three phases are passive.
Which is active, which is passive, and which is reconciling globally may not yet be decided, and may be precisely what is being played out for our universe at a fundamental level.
In the triad matrix illustrated by the horisontal Three, Six, and Nine triad divisions, the vertical Center, Harmonic, and Hornevian triad divisions, and the diagonal Object Relations, the triads are arranged by their orders.
The orders of occurrence varies by perspective, as per the relativity of time.

Return to Perinthos is now available in both PDF and print. It contains over 80 “one-spread” dungeons that can be used together or standalone, unpublished Q&A with Jaquays, and a mini-setting by Luke Gearing:
Return to Perinthos is a megadungeon a la Caverns of Thracia. It is a U.S. letter-sized approximately 200-page wirebound book. You will be able to plop almost 80 dungeon tiles and keys right onto your gaming table.
The content for the book was created by the Jennell Jaquays Memorial Game Jam. As part of this community effort, Luke Gearing graciously agreed to write a setting that ties all of the disparate dungeon tiles together. The book also features an unpublished Q&A with Jennell Jaquays that was donated by Tavis Allison with permission from Goodman Games.
All proceeds from digital sales will be donated to Trans Lifeline.
One of the included dungeons is my Halls of Viridian Mist, a dungeon level for 4 to 6 Swords & Wizardry Complete characters levels 3 to 5. This challenging adventure features many tricks Jaquays used in her dungeons like non-linear loops, multiple elevations, interactive factions, and secret doors hidden behind other secret doors.

Digital copies are available at DriveThruRPG, while wirebound print copies are available from the publisher.
#News #Adventure #OSR #SW
from An Open Letter
It’s an ugly feeling that I don’t like, and I was already starting to journal in my head when I was driving home, and several different things came to mind. One of the things was that I just kept thinking to myself that I am an ugly person, not physically, but in the sense of this jealousy and envy. Later today I am hanging out with J and I, and both of them I would consider as close friends of mine that I hang out with frequently. I is a relatively newer friend and I’m honestly not that close with him yet, but J is. I have my therapy session today, and they knew that I was busy with that, and we have plans to hang out later, but apparently right now they are hanging out together.. I have to be careful with my mind and my thoughts because I automatically kind of want to feel like shit and remind myself of how excluded I am, but that’s likely not the case this is just childhood scars and attachment wounds in play. But I can’t lie it does kind of feel shitty to not be invited. And it hurts because I considered and I still do, J as one of my closest friends here. Who am I kidding, she is my closest friend here. And she connects with I pretty well it seems like they have their own friendship completely separate from me which is completely normal and I understand is healthy and natural, but it hurts me in these jealous ways. Like I think about how she doesn’t invite me over to just like I just be there and have her cook, and then I think about the places where I kind of feel a little bit of rejection from her. And I start to feel this ugly thing rear its head. And I know that I’m being irrational or I’m just kind of like replaying past patterns and this isn’t actually what’s happening, but I would be lying if I didn’t at least acknowledge the way that I’m feeling. I feel like I had a pretty nice long stretch of feeling like I am socially where I would like to be, but when something as benign as two of my friends being friends with each other in a way that doesn’t revolve around me happens, it’s enough for me to get in my head in this way. And even though it’s not true, I take this ambiguity to reinforce these painful thoughts of the possibility that I am liked by many, but no one’s number one. This feeling that I could disappear without consequence. It’s the same feeling I get after I host an event and everyone there has fun, but it’s almost like they have fun with other people and my value is as the one who facilitates it, and not much else. I turned on do not disturb just now because it has been like 10 minutes since I sent a message that was a little bit risky, in response to I saying that J is currently cooking and that he is over at her place. I wanted to fertilize that I would appreciate an invite even if they think I could not make it, and I said “mfw no invite 😔”. I feel kind of ashamed because it feels insecure to me, but I also don’t really know how to voice my asks properly. I guess I feel like whenever people invite me to things it’s like them saying that they actively want me there, and it’s not just because I am the one providing something. It’s like someone saying that they want my company, not just what I plan or invite them to. I am a little bit weary about venting in this way because I don’t want to confirm feelings that maybe are just transient, or things that I shouldn’t necessarily give weight to. But I also feel like maybe if I can say these things into words I can process these emotions. Thankfully I have my therapy session right after this. I remember at the end of obsession bear commits suicide in Nikki’s arms, and she desperately holds him and cries and begs for him to come back. And I remember how my brain automatically told me how no one feels that way about me. And I think that thought is an extreme instance of the underlying seed, which is the feeling that I could disappear easily. And I feel this way maybe because I grew up with this being drilled into me. I remember one year my parents forgot my birthday. I remember feeling hurt about how friends didn’t remember mine, I remember for Christmas one time a friend got everyone a present looked around and said is that everyone, went yup! And I was pretty much the only person without a present. I remember getting my best friend a present and she didn’t really get me anything, and when I said that made me sad, she went nuclear and completely ghosted me. I remember the one time I got to have a birthday party, I think I was 16, and that same friend that I had known since kindergarten started crying and everyone spent the rest of the night comforting her. And everyone kind of forgot about me at my own party. And I think about the time when I try to commit suicide and I got hospitalized and no one knew about it. Not even my family. It was several months later when my dad found out from the insurance bill. And I feel like this is not maybe what people deserve. But this was the hand that I was dealt. And unfortunately that is the mold that I have to break out of as an adult now. And it’s hard because there are so many different little sections of it that are completely hardened and rigid, and they won’t change until something presses against it like it does now. And so even though my life is such a nice one, and I had so many people envy me and I even think about how grateful I am for it, something this small happens and I’m reminded of the cage I grew up in. And it kills me to think about these hypotheticals that I don’t even think exist, those of people that check in on you, where it’s not an inconvenience or ask. Where people willingly tell you that you have a space in this world and in their minds and that they are happy that you exist. I feel like I’ve spent a lot of of my life going through it and learning that love is not really something that you get, it’s something that you earn. And it’s something that you kind of constantly have to pay for. And sometimes it feels like I just don’t have it now for it. And I get that I’m wrong in this, at least I really hope that I am. But it just feels shitty to think about how it exists out there, unconditional love or at least something near that. A love that exists when you aren’t at your best. And I feel like that is the most accurate way of putting how I feel, I know that I am loved when it is easy or when I am just that worth it. The problem is feel so much pressure to keep this up and the fact that sometimes it just doesn’t work. And I don’t even know what I would want differently here that is reasonable. Like all it is is two friends are hanging out together before we all hang out together. And I guess I would want to be invited or to just I just know that I’m not being replaced. And sometimes it just feels like I serve as a platform for other people, but at the end of the day they form connections and I just exist. Maybe I expect too much from friends. I think it is unreasonable and it’s not a healthy thing to expect to be invited every single time or to expect them to want to only hang out with me, and never just them together. I just feel excluded, and it feels like even though I am the friend that brings all these people together, and so I am the person that is at the forefront, at the end of the day that is not the person that they want to connect with. I really want the kind of love where I’m not afraid of it expiring or going away. One where is conditional on the core being that I am, not extra things like me putting in this much effort to connect. And the sad thing is I will still put in that effort, because I need connection. But it feels like I’m constantly job searching and preparing for interviews and going through that and I never have that security. And it just feels like I’m going to get cornered out of this friendship. And then where do I go? I have other friends and it’s not like I can’t deepen other friendships. And it’s not like that’s happening anyway. I just get terrified when the security that I value feels threatened. J is my best friend in person, and by far the person that I interact with most. And I felt secure that she is my best friend here, and vice versa. It’s that fear that priority goes away. And my access to someone I’m close with shrinks. I know that I want to start dating now, and I kind of am worried about codependency, because I think the thought of someone being completely reliable and completely there is addicting. And it feels safe. It feels like I can have something that I have been searching for and rest with that. And I’m tired feel like I have had to fight for so many things in this life that are kind of essential for a good life. And I wish that life was a little bit easier. I wish that connection was not something I have to work hard and face uncertainty with, and I wish that it was just a basic human right. I wish that I grew up with abundant love. I wish that I modeled the world in a way that I default to feeling connected to people when I need support, rather than isolation. And I worry so much about over depending on people or asking for too much, and I feel like it’s almost a self fulfilling prophecy because the more I don’t ask for help the more builds up until it becomes a monumental ask. And it feels unfair because I know that the world has been exceptionally kind to me, there have been so many places where I have been so incredibly privileged and unfortunate. And I sometimes can’t even comprehend how I would go through life if I didn’t have some of the blessings that I do. I think about how I struggle already, and how if I added it on some large problems that a lot of people have to face like financial insecurity, or things that the basic needs that all humans have, for stability, safety shelter food, etc. I don’t have to face those things really, and I still struggle enough to sometimes just want to have a way out of it. And I think about how they kind universe should not feel this way. And I know that this is strongly because of the mental conditions that I have that make everything seem worse than they are. And fundamentally if the scoring is wrong it’s pretty damn hard to win the game. But I feel like I would see more sunsets and smile more if life was a bit more kind. And it took me a while to say that sentence because I don’t know if that’s true. Maybe a lot of this because I have a scarcity Puff it. I know how meaningful and rare these happy moments can be. And we could fit whenever I get them I want to hang onto them as much as possible and savor them, or at least I try to. And I guess this only happens because of depression. Without it I would not have to understand the value of it and the scarcity that comes. And I guess for that I am grateful. And at least circling back to the original point, I do think that they are not excluding me, or anything like that. It’s not like I am losing friends. I’m just incredibly sensitive to this sort of feedback and I take a lot of this with a very negative lens to protect myself. But that does not make it any more true than it is.
from
Arkham Blog
Ich bin ziemlich gehyped. Gut, das geht mir öfter so*. Ein gutes Zeichen ist allerdings, wenn das Gefühl länger als eine Woche anhält.
In diesem Fall sind es schon drei Wochen und ich bin immer noch heiß. Die Rede ist vom WE20-Buchclub. Klar, ich weiß ... just another damn Buchclub? Really? Es ist schließlich weder mein erster noch mein einziger Buchclub.
Was daran anders ist, kann ich gar nicht genau sagen. Aber als Paul von WE20 mit der Idee um die Ecke kam, war ich sofort begeistert (siehe oben *). Es gibt einige Konstanten in meinem Leben: Pen&Paper und Bücher. Nicht nur das Lesen derselben, sondern Bücher ganz allgemein. Und genau das ist es vielleicht. Im Moment beschäftige ich mich viel mit Obsidian und der Buchclub bietet die Möglichkeit, zwei Interessen miteinander zu verbinden: Das Anlegen von Listen, die Organisation von Autoren und Büchern sowie die Freude am gemeinsamen Lesen.
Ehrlich gesagt weiß ich gar nicht, was mich mehr flasht. Obsidian ist nämlich echt cool (solche Sätze hört man vermutlich auch nur von Menschen, die keine sozialen Kontakte außerhalb des Internets haben), und ich freue mich darauf, damit zu arbeiten.
Diesen Monat lesen wir Altered Carbon von Richard Morgan. Treffpunkt ist der WE20 Discord jeden zweiten Montag. Einladung ist draußen.
Begleitet wird das Ganze auf buchmafia.org. Die Seite wird mit Obsidian erstellt und über Vercel und GitHub ins Netz gebracht. Besonders schick ist sie nicht, aber hoffentlich nützlich – zumindest für die mitlesenden Clubmates.
Ich für meinen Teil habe schon einiges gelernt. Allein das Plugin Dataview, mit dem sich bestimmte Angaben aus einzelnen Seiten auslesen und in Tabellen oder Listen darstellen lassen, nutze ich erst richtig, seit ich an der Seite arbeite. Noob, ich weiß ...
Aber zurück zum Buchclub: Auf der WE20 Seite ist es möglich, die persönlichen Top 100 der Bücher (sowie Filme, Serien und Animes) anzulegen. Diese Liste wird mit denen anderer Nutzer abgeglichen und daraus eine gemeinsame Top 100 aller WE20 Mitglieder erstellt. Wer liebt keine Listen?
Auch die Abstimmung darüber, welches Buch als Nächstes gelesen werden soll, wird nun direkt auf der Seite angezeigt.
Beim Erstellen meiner Liste ist mir allerdings aufgefallen, dass ich viele Bücher gar nicht aufgenommen habe, weil es sich irgendwie falsch anfühlte. Kann man Bukowski und Lovecraft in derselben Liste haben? Ich habe es teilweise gemacht, aber eigentlich bräuchte ich mehrere Listen. Und ich habe gemerkt, dass ich zu wenig lese oder einige Bücher noch einmal lesen müsste.
Finde ich manche Bücher heute überhaupt noch so großartig wie mit 16, 17 oder 18?
from
Talk to Fa

from
Have A Good Day
Of all the World Cups I’ve experienced, none took place in the country where I lived. Until 2026. This one snuck up on me. With “so many things going on in the world,” it just did not fit in mentally.
Now it’s here, and it is exactly what we need: three host countries and 45 guest nations coming together to celebrate. And what is a better place than New York, where you can access city services in 175 languages? Someone here probably roots for each of the 48 teams, and every day someone has a reason to celebrate.
This changes the story and the mood, hopefully not just for the next weeks.
If you still don’t like the World Cup, let Bill Saporito of the New York Times convince you.
from
夏の思い出
想起多年前跟媽媽兩個人去日本大阪,結果第二天下午就跟媽媽吵架。到了晚上媽媽睡了,我一個人溜出去買酒,被超商店員要求看證件,當時護照被媽媽收走,翻遍了錢包,也沒證件可以證明自己滿二十,當下心情簡直糟到極點,我臉上可能很哀傷但店員一臉無奈。
後來總算找到一間超商沒檢查我證件,很慶幸地買到一罐啤酒,一個人坐在店門口外,一邊喝酒一邊掉淚、、、

#夏の思い出
from Lastige Gevallen in de Rede
U heeft mail van draculalallc@lorddarkweb.net
betreffende : mijnaccountdracula
Hallo gewaardeerde gebruiker. Het is ons opgevallen dat u al twee jaar niet hebt ingelogd op u mijnaccountdracula dit baart ons de nodige zorgen, als u nog in staat bent om in te loggen doe dit dan voor de termijn verstrijkt waarin wij u wettelijk moeten uitschrijven, dat is voor 12 november dit Sopse jaar.
Heeft u hulp nodig omdat u wordt achtervolgt door kundige jagers, te vroeg bent opgestaan, knoflook in u rauwvlees pasta terecht gekomen en daardoor last heeft van diverse infecties, bloedarmoede en constipatie en nu niet langer beschikt over voldoende capaciteiten voor inloggen op u mijnaccountdracula neem dan contact op met iemand werkzaam bij de dichtstbijzijnde bank. Daar is altijd wel iemand net zo schimmig, niet zelf-reflecterend als u maar met voldoende liquide middelen om te zorgen dat u kunt herstellen en daarna weer normaal bij ons kunt inloggen voor u (bij)bestellingen, tips & tricks, advies inwinnen over nieuwe technologische vernieuwing voor u late night zzp bedrijfje bij het Suck IT forum of voor leuke duistere ornamenten in uw eigen kasteeltje of herenhuis.
from Phosphor
I will be discussing the album The Post-Traumatic Manifesto by WeevilDoing and the song “covetous” by GHOST and Pals. These are are pieces of art that discuss some EXTREMELY triggering concepts with ZERO ambiguity, including:
These are pieces of art about being brutally, deeply traumatized, and the nature of how people ended up traumatized. I very staunchly stand on the side of art that is willing to be transgressive just for the sake of it, but this art that is transgressive because it documents real shit that happens to real people and how it makes them feel. I believe it is unethical to force people to prove that they're “licensed” or whatever to talk about a triggering topic just because it happened to them, but both GHOST and WeevilDoing have explicitly stated that these works are based on real life experiences, and I genuinely believe both are fucking gorgeous works of art that should be experienced by anyone willing to stomach them. With that said, there is a reason “covetous” is the only song I've ever gotten an 18+ warning for on the vocaloidlyrics miraheze, and “Chocolate-Box Girl” is the only song I've seen that has been outright excluded from having its lyrics hosted on the site (for context: “Zako” by Hiiragi Magnetite was allowed under the Akita Neru version, and other songs just as blatantly about CSA like Utsu-P's “Adult's Toy” or, of course, “covetous” by GHOST remain on the site). While this essay will not delve in depth on the songs and their topic, I do fervently recommend both and suggest that people listen to both in full.
I also want to start by saying this: I am going to say a lot of things that indicate that I do not like The Post-Traumatic Manifesto. I want to make it abundantly clear that, aside from a few technical qualms and matters of taste, I think it is one of the most fascinating albums I have ever heard, and that the majority of people who will find and listen to this album will fucking adore it. I do not want people to come away thinking that WeevilDoing made “bad art”, or that they have made anything other than a masterpiece. I want more people to listen to this, to have the experiences I didn't, to have gorgeous and difficult conversations on the nature of mental health, mental healthcare, trauma, everything. I want someone to find this album and have it awaken within them a feeling that, like the characters depicted within, they too can find hope and salvation. We good? We good. Let's go
A few days ago, I was scrolling through a few tags on VocaDB, and kept noticing a single album across a plethora of the most interesting ones to me.
I clicked into the page for The Post-Traumatic Manifesto by WeevilDoing and was greeted with this across the page.
If you have known my artistic tastes, both past and present, you should know this shit is like catnip to me. Within the hour, I had the album pulled up on my phone, excited and ready to listen to something that could have been my album of the year. Forty-one minutes later, I was sitting around wondering just why I felt so disappointed, nearly repulsed, to the point where it was the least favorite thing I had encountered in half a decade.
I think it's easiest to start with the less controversial parts. While VocaDB lists this as an industrial and experimental album, I think the “noise pop” tag here is probably most apt. Even within that space, this is a little closer to the poppier end than I generally find myself enjoying. I'm also just...befuddled at the choice to use SeeU here. There's a 15-year-old song from a Korean producer literally making fun of how poor English-language SeeU songs tend to sound. “Splitter Girl” would likely be one of my favorite tracks on the album if it was intelligible. English-language vsynth is already playing on fuckin'...Producer Must Die mode. It's not that WeevilDoing is a poor tuner (in fact, they're a fantastic tuner. “Caliber Girl” is fucking gorgeous on that front), but this just hubristic. I also personally tend to like music where the vocals are mixed a little quieter into the mix, feeling like part of the instrumentation rather than rising above it. Vocals here tend to stand out a little too much for my preferences here, but that's an extremely minor thing.
It's also worth stating that this wasn't originally an album meant to be listened to in a single sitting. Each track was released serially, alongside a carrd.co page for each character explaining who they are, giving them a sona, and a short blog post from each of them. Listening to this as an album robs it some of the breathing room each of the characters needs and deserves. Thankfully, an interlude gives room between the two songs I think need it most, in the transition between “Caliber Girl” and “Chocolate-Box Girl”. I think the sequencing of the songs in the album (something I do care about) is great. Mayyyyyyyyyyyybe I would move “Refraction Girl” somewhere else, but beyond that, zero complaints. If these were my only issues with the album, I'd sit it solidly next to something like All Hail West Texas by The Mountain Goats, something where I can see exactly why and where people love it but ultimately is something not for me. I'd've listened to it, told people I know to listen to it, and promptly put it down and never think about it again.
Unfortunately for me, The Post-Traumatic Manifesto has a tenth character, with her own song, and in one fell swoop loses me entirely. Objectively speaking, “Nurse Parallel, PMHNP” is the gorgeous and correct way to end this album. A soaring anthem of hope, and likely an anthem describing the creator's own hope through inpatient therapy. It's likely most people's favorite track off the album, and I can't fucking stand it.
So, this is where the turn happens. The next part of this is gonna be pretty abrasive, and a lot less cohesively structured. It's a ramble. Maybe get a drink of water or something before you go in.
You ready? Let's go.
“covetous” by GHOST and Pals is a song about your father wanting to kill you so he can rape you. I discovered it the same day I listened to Manifesto, and the dichotomy to my reaction to the two is why I'm writing this in the first place. It is pulsating, grinding, industrial darkness. It is vile. It is aggressive. It is threatening. It is raw. It is unambiguous. It is voyeuristic. It is a window into the worst things that people can feel, can do. This is what I want. This is the feeling I get from art that can't be bought anywhere else. I have enough music spreading messages about how you can get better if you just do the right things society asks of you. Go to therapy, take your meds, put down the knife, put down the blunt. Do all these things, magically things get better. I don't fuckin' care. I'm glad it worked for y'all, but it ain't worked for me. I want art that lives in that pit of darkness in your chest. I want art that reminds you of its buried presence, ripping it out from deep within your heart and making you stare at it. That black, pulsating mass that infects from within and without. “covetous” is bleak, terrifying, despair-inducing. It is what almost art is afraid of being. The same societal forces that tell you “Go to therapy, get a job, and you'll find friends that way” are the same ones that scare people away from making art about how shit just fucking sucks sometimes, that people do things to you that leave you feeling angry, hurt, alone, scared, weak, and that all you can do is fucking sit in it. The VN space calls this “utsuge”, literally “depressing game”. I feel no connection to folks who are getting better and channel that feeling into art. It's not that it's bad, it's that I can derive no value, no meaning from it. When art talks about how it gets better, it loses me. When art talks about how trauma can linger, festering like a wound, it grips me. It is a feeling I know all too well, and it's one I don't particularly get to share too often. I didn't go through what GHOST went through, but I'll be thinking about that bridge in “covetous” long before I can pick a favorite track from Manifesto. I don't want bittersweet, leaving you with a slight lasting saccharinity as relief from off-putting bitterness. I don't want kintsugi, strands of gold leaving that which was broken looking more beautiful than when it was fixed. I want bitterness that leaves you begging, not for sweetness to override it, but for something to wash it away clean to let the agony you just went through resonate throughout your mind. I want to cut myself sweeping up the shards of broken glass from a dropped plate, a reminder that brokenness is a state that itself produces something worth feeling.
This is something that Manifesto could never be, nor should it have tried to be that. It is not a lesser album for telling its story the way it should be told, but it is an album I cannot fathom caring for as a result. Earlier this year, I encountered viagr aboys by Viagra Boys, an album where I struggled to pick out a single thing I enjoyed, surrounded by friends who loved it and who were excited to hear me rave about it when I finished listening to it. The best thing I could say about viagr aboys was that the first two seconds of “The Pyramid of Health” reminded me of “Sex and Candy” by Marcy Playground, a song I actually liked. Despite being full of songs I absolutely enjoyed more than the entirety of viagr aboys, Manifesto immediately landed itself at the bottom of my list of albums I listened to this year, and even relistening to it to write this did not warm me to it at all. If anything, I enjoyed it less knowing that “Nurse Parallel” waited for me at the end of it all. This is a uniquely frustrating relationship to have with a work of art, but I would rather be frustrated and honest than lie about enjoying something I didn't.
Writing this was mostly an excuse to explore my own emotions on how art depicts hope. Yes, the fact that I am using the term “hope” for art like “Nurse Parallel” while describing “covetous” as “despair-inducing” is because I have been recently going through the Danganronpa games with a friend. If you can find a better dichotomy of terms, please feel free to send them to me by snail mail. They end up on my back porch a lot, I'm sure one of them will relay the message to me. If you derive literally anything of value from this then uhhhhhh...
👍