Wages of Love and Barrenness
The sun was a hammer on the back of Jacob’s neck as he straightened, wiping sweat from his brow with a forearm already gritty with dust. The air over the fields of Paddan-aram hung heavy, thick with the scent of…
The Throne Room Vision
The air left my lungs, not in a gasp, but in a quiet, final sigh, as if the very act of breathing had become a trivial thing. One moment, I was tracing the cracks in the ceiling of my cell,…
The Anchor Holds in Ephesus
The rain had finally ceased, but the damp clung to everything in Ephesus. It seeped through the plaster of the upper room where we met, making the lamplight seem thicker, the shadows deeper. My bones ached with it, or perhaps…
Paul’s Letter from Prison
The light in this place is a thin, grudging thing. It slants through the high, small window, cutting the straw and dust on the floor into sharp lines before it fades into the general gloom. The air smells of damp…
The Oar and the Tongue
The rain in Thessalonica had a particular weight to it, a greasy, persistent drizzle that seemed less to fall from the sky than to seep from the very stones of the city. It was the kind of damp that found…
Paul’s Appeal to Caesar
The salt air of Caesarea carried the scent of damp stone and distant rain. For two years, Felix had left him here, a forgotten piece of administrative clutter in the governor’s palace dungeon. Paul of Tarsus felt the ache in…
The Way, The Truth, The Life
The room held the close, warm scent of roasted lamb, wine, and worn leather. Smoke from the oil lamps drifted lazily toward the ceiling beams, staining them a deeper brown. The talk had been strange all evening—talk of betrayal, of…
Lord of the Sabbath
The dust of the path was fine as ground flour, coating sandals and ankles alike. It was a Sabbath, and the ache in Peter’s shoulders from a night of empty nets had been replaced by a duller, deeper hunger. Jesus…
The Economy of Heaven
The dust of the road was a fine, golden haze in the late afternoon sun, settling on our sandals and the hem of our robes as we trudged back toward Capernaum. A weariness clung to us, deeper than the physical…
Grace Fuels the Lampstand
The ache in my shoulders was a dull, familiar companion. It was the ache of stones hauled, of mortar mixed, of a city being coaxed, piece by painful piece, from its own ashes. I, Zechariah, stood in the twilight of…



















