Brokenbelievers.com has hit a landmark. I want to encourage all those who visited, prayed, and corrected this ministry over our existence. You are loved!
Kyrie eleison, Pastor Bryan Lowe

Letters from Fawn Creek
by Jonathan B. Coe
Carson is a new Christian and graduate student who started an interdenominational men’s Bible study at the university he attends. Keith is the likeable and gifted doctoral candidate who becomes the de facto discussion leader of the study. Things are going well until it comes to light that Keith is leading a secret double life that involves illicit behavior. This revelation causes the group to enter a season of disappointment, confusion, and self-doubt, and leads Carson to call upon his uncle and famous former pastor, Aaron Joiner, for counsel.
Time magazine once listed Aaron Joiner as one of the one hundred most influential people in America, but tragedy and misfortune have caused him to become a recluse and distance himself from his former life. Yet, out of his brokenness emerges a gentle and illuminating wisdom through letters that promise to help the group arrive at their desired destination, which is to hear these words: “Well done, you good and faithful servant.” (Matthew 25:23, KJV).
260 pages – $14.99 (paperback)
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“Always carrying in the body the death of Jesus, so that the life of Jesus may also be manifested in our bodies.”
2 Cor. 4:10, ESV
Somebody has been pulling your leg! There isn’t any provision added to your contract with the Father that releases you from “any pain or duress while acting as a disciple while in this dark world.” This “rider clause” doesn’t work, it has no validity or legal precedent–it simply is not true.
Not everyone agrees with me on this point. But becoming a saint is not an automatic or a painless process. Discipleship is like being mashed until you are soft and gracious inside, and that my friend, takes a lot of time and tears, in equal proportions. Painless Christianity and spontaneous sainthood is definitely fiction. It is a lie, and a crooked one at that.
Just pour a little water on it, and presto-chango! And stand back and watch it grow.
Perhaps our “hi-tech” culture gives us false expectations. We have the microwave, high-def TV, fast food places and the computer/internet (my fave.) I guess that I’m trying to say is that we think that there is a corresponding effect into spiritual things. But there isn’t.
Spiritual growth or discipleship is a definite growth process. The incredible redwood forests of Northern California where all once tiny, vulnerable seeds. But something happened! They grew and grew. It took centuries to attain their amazing heights. We see them in the present, the “now” –and never what they used to be.
Unquestionably, the life-giving, Holy Spirit can accelerate growth. But the standard set in the Word is more like “slow and steady.” Even God’s favorites in scripture had periods of waiting and testing. I suppose that’s where faith comes in to play. All too often we look for a formula when we should be seeking an obedience. (But honestly, formulas are fun– and nice, and clean and quick.)
Formula-istic faith isn’t really real, we just insist that it has to be. But the Father has different plans for raising his children. No shortcuts or detours, we walk through the floods and then we take a lap (or two) through the fire (my theory, this is to dry us off after the floods, lol.) Otherwise, he would have to write an apology to the martyrs that came before us.
But I beg, and plead for you, to accept the real terms of your discipleship. You will only fool yourself if you think instant is better then real. But to accept the foolish may seem to be faith to some; but to walk through the darkness with just a candle takes real faith. I’m not a “palm reader,” but I predict you are going to face hard times and challenges that will “rock your world.”
“Paul and Barnabas preached the good news in Derbe and won some people to the Lord. Then they went back to Lystra, Iconium, and Antioch in Pisidia. 22 They encouraged the followers and begged them to remain faithful. They told them, “We have to suffer a lot before we can get into God’s kingdom.”
Acts 14:21-22, CEV
Wendy & Mary—Instant Breakfast
“God is Spirit, and those who worship God must be led by the Spirit to worship him according to the truth.”
John 4:24, CEV
When we come to a faith in Jesus, we often find we have to overcome a great deal of ignorance. But at the starting point, we have got to understand that God is a Spirit. He is not physical or material. Things that can be seen or touched are simply not in His realm or circumference. He is Spirit.
When we come to Him in faith, we need to enter His presence under the amazing auspices of the Holy Spirit. He opens the door, and gives us a royal entrance into the very depths of His presence. We put ourselves under His control, and He escorts us into a deep communion.
Our dependence on the Holy Spirit shouldn’t be a hardship. Think of Him as a ‘master of divine protocol.’ The Spirit’s presence with us will communicate an openness and a certain sincerity. He authorizes us, and in a way ‘translates’ for us while we are deep in God’s presence. He makes things work for us.
John knits together the idea of ‘spirit’ and ‘truth.’ Truth will always carry with it “worship”. As we begin to understand, we will begin to truly worship. Often we have an invalid concept that our praise and worship are just happenings in a charged atmosphere. But authentic worship pushes down its roots into what is true and real. And essentially, it is the ‘most real’ thing we could choose to do.