Let’s Talk About Scribes

Grandma on Scribes
Hey

The Lord gave me a word and vision to tell me what He wanted. I knew it was Him, and knew a little of what He meant. But, when I was reading on Sandy Warner’s new board that her mother is a prophetic scribe by calling, I felt it to be good with the Lord to ask some questions for further understanding.

Below are the emails that Sandy’s mother and I wrote back and forth, edited just a bit for forum posting of instruction. Continue reading “Let’s Talk About Scribes”

This Is What Leadership Looks Like Sometimes

This Is What Leadership Looks Like Sometimes

If you’re called to lead—whether in ministry, business, or everyday life—there will be days like this.

Today, the posting plan got bumped. Legal work had to be prepared—an eviction. Not something anyone enjoys. The tenant had a pattern of being late but usually paid around this time of year. This time, he pushed it too far. And when leadership said, “File the eviction,” that was it. Continue reading “This Is What Leadership Looks Like Sometimes”

📌 The Cup … Are you Able?

You know, the disciples once got into an argument about who would sit at Jesus’ right hand and who would sit at His left. They were thinking about position, honor, and visibility. But Jesus looked at them and gently said:

“You do not know what you ask. Are you able to drink the cup that I am about to drink?”
— Matthew 20:22, NKJV

What a question… Continue reading

Ministry Ethics: Referencing Psychology with Care

Ministry Ethics: Referencing Psychology with Care

Guidelines for Ministers Who Teach About Emotional and Mental Healing

1. Stay Within Your Scope of Competence

Speak confidently about the Word, pastoral experience, and Spirit-led insight — but recognize when a topic crosses into professional territory.

“I’m not a licensed counselor, but here’s the spiritual side of what we’re talking about.”

This humble clarity protects both minister and listener. Continue reading “Ministry Ethics: Referencing Psychology with Care”

It’s Dangerous to Judge God’s Ministers

1. God Himself Appoints His Ministers

Romans 14:4 (NKJV)

“Who are you to judge another’s servant? To his own master he stands or falls. Indeed, he will be made to stand, for God is able to make him stand.”

Paul reminds believers that ministers serve God, not us. When we criticize or condemn them, we’re stepping into God’s jurisdiction — judging His servant as though we were their master.

Application: It’s not our role to decide if a servant of God is worthy or unworthy; that’s the Lord’s role alone.

Continue reading “It’s Dangerous to Judge God’s Ministers”