Grace is More Than You Think

Grace is one of those words we throw around a lot in church. We sing about it. We put it on wall art. We say it before meals. But I’m not sure we always understand just how radical it really is.

Grace is not God tolerating you. It’s God pursuing you.

Ephesians 2:8-9 says, “For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith — and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God — not by works, so that no one can boast.”

A gift. Not a reward. Not a transaction. Not something you earned by being good enough or going to church enough or praying long enough. A gift. Plain and simple.

And here’s what makes grace so hard for some of us to receive — we’re not used to things being free. We’ve been conditioned to earn everything. Work for it. Prove yourself. Deserve it. So when God shows up and says I love you unconditionally, with nothing required on your end except faith — something in us wants to add fine print.

But grace doesn’t have fine print.

The prodigal son rehearsed his apology speech the whole walk home. He had a plan to negotiate his way back into the house as a servant. But his father didn’t wait for the speech. He saw him coming from a long way off, ran to him, and threw a party.

That’s grace. It runs toward you before you can finish apologizing.

You don’t have to clean yourself up before you come to God. You come as you are and He does the cleaning. That’s the whole point.

Stop trying to earn what’s already been freely given. Receive the grace. Walk in the grace. And then extend that same grace to the people around you who need it just as much as you do.

-Terrence Burton

You Are Not Who They Say You Are

Somebody has spoken over your life and what they said wasn’t good. Maybe it was a parent, a teacher, an ex, a boss — somebody who looked at you and decided to put a ceiling on who you could become. And if you’re honest, some days you still hear their voice louder than you hear God’s.

It’s time to change the channel.

God told Jeremiah something powerful in Jeremiah 1:5 — “Before I formed you in the womb I knew you, before you were born I set you apart.”

Before anyone had a chance to label you, limit you, or leave you — God already knew you. He already called you. He already set you apart for something that no one else’s opinion can cancel.

The enemy knows that if you ever fully believe what God says about you, you become dangerous. So he uses people, past mistakes, and painful memories to keep you living beneath your identity. He wants you confused about who you are so you never walk in what God called you to do.

But here’s the truth — you are not your worst moment. You are not the name they called you. You are not the rejection you experienced or the door that got slammed in your face.

You are chosen. You are called. You are covered.

David’s own father didn’t think enough of him to even bring him in from the field when Samuel came looking for a king. But God looked right past every brother in that lineup and said — it’s the one they overlooked.

God specializes in choosing the ones the world passes over.

So the next time that old voice tries to tell you who you’re not — remind it of who God says you are. His Word is the final authority. Not their opinion. Not your past. Not your feelings.

You are who God says you are. And that’s more than enough.

-Terrence Burton

Nobody likes waiting. We live in a world built for speed — fast food, same-day delivery, instant answers. So when God tells us to wait, it can feel like a punishment. Like somehow we did something wrong and now we’re stuck in a holding pattern with no ETA in sight.


But waiting on God is never wasted time.


Isaiah 40:31 says it best: “But those who wait on the Lord shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings like eagles, they shall run and not be weary, they shall walk and not faint.”


Read that again. Waiting on God doesn’t drain you — it renews you. That’s not how the world works, but that’s exactly how God works.


Here’s the thing about waiting seasons — they’re not empty. They’re loaded. God is doing something in you that can only happen in the stillness. He’s building character. He’s removing what doesn’t belong. He’s aligning people, places, and opportunities that you can’t yet see from where you’re standing.


Joseph waited in a pit. Then a prison. Years went by. And then one day — not a moment too soon, not a moment too late — God elevated him to a palace. The waiting wasn’t a detour. It was the preparation.


Your waiting season is your preparation season.


Don’t despise it. Don’t rush it. Don’t try to manufacture what only God can produce. The promotion, the breakthrough, the healing, the restoration — it’s coming. But it has to come in His timing, not yours. Because His timing is always perfect, even when it doesn’t feel that way.


So while you wait — worship. While you wait — stay faithful. While you wait — keep your eyes on Him instead of the clock.


The wait is almost over. And what God has on the other side of it will be worth every single moment.


-Terrence Burton

When God Says Wait


There’s something deeply unsettling about not knowing what’s next. We plan, we prepare, and still — life has a way of throwing curveballs that leave us standing in the middle of uncertainty, wondering if God is even paying attention.


He is.


Proverbs 3:5-6 puts it plainly: “Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways submit to Him, and He will make your paths straight.”


That’s not a suggestion. That’s a promise.


But trusting God in the unknown is easier said than done, isn’t it? Our minds want answers. We want a roadmap, a timeline, a guarantee. And when none of those show up, doubt has a way of creeping in through the back door.


Here’s what I’ve come to understand — faith was never designed to be comfortable. It was designed to be transformative. The moment you stop leaning on what you can figure out on your own and start leaning into what God has already figured out for you, something shifts on the inside.


Abraham didn’t know where he was going when God told him to move. Moses didn’t have a plan when he stood at the edge of the Red Sea. David didn’t look like a king when Samuel anointed him. But God wasn’t looking at their circumstances — He was looking at their hearts.

And He’s looking at yours too.


Whatever you’re facing today — the job situation, the relationship, the health scare, the financial pressure — God has not forgotten about you. Your story is not over. The chapter you’re in right now may feel dark, but even in darkness, God is writing something beautiful.


So take a breath. Release the grip. Trust the One who holds it all.


Your path is already straight — you just haven’t walked far enough to see it yet.

-Terrence Burton

The Power of Trusting God in the Unknown

Not every path leads to life. Some are wide, easy, and well-traveled—but they do not end where they promise. Scripture presents a contrast not just of destinations, but of choices made along the way.

Jesus said, “Enter ye in at the strait gate… because strait is the gate, and narrow is the way, which leadeth unto life” (Matthew 7:13, 14 KJV). The narrow way is not hidden, but it is deliberate. It requires intention. It is not shaped by crowds, but by direction. Many walk broadly because it requires little consideration, but the narrow way calls for awareness at every step.

This path is defined by obedience. “If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross daily” (Luke 9:23 KJV). The narrow way is not merely belief—it is daily alignment. Denial of self is not loss of identity, but submission of will. It reshapes decisions, priorities, and responses. The way becomes narrow because it filters out what does not align with God’s direction.

Proverbs gives another perspective: “There is a way which seemeth right unto a man, but the end thereof are the ways of death” Proverbs 14:12 KJV). The danger of the broad path is not always obvious. It often appears reasonable, even appealing. But appearance is not the measure—outcome is. The narrow way may seem restrictive at first, but it leads where the broader way cannot.

Walking this path also requires endurance. Hebrews says, “Let us run with patience the race that is set before us” Hebrews 12:1 KJV). The narrow way is not a sprint—it is a sustained direction. Patience keeps the course steady when distractions arise. The path does not widen over time; it remains consistent.

The narrow way is not defined by difficulty alone, but by destination. It leads to life—not just at the end, but along the journey itself.

Takeaway: The narrow way requires intentional obedience and steady endurance, leading to life that the broad path cannot offer.

Tags: Narrow Way, Obedience, Matthew 7, Discipleship, Wisdom, Endurance

— Terrence Burton

The Narrow Way