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 It was a Sabbath, and the ache in Peter’s shoulders from a night of empty nets had been replaced by a duller, deeper hunger.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…

Unheeded Warnings in Bethel

The air in Bethel was thick with the smoke of sacrifices. It clung to the robes of the merchants and the perfumed hair of the wealthy women who came from Samaria, a sweet, heavy scent meant to mask other odors….

Faithful in a Foreign Feast

The dust of Judah was a particular kind of dust. It was fine and pale, and it clung to the sandals, the robes, and the despair of those walking the road north. For Daniel, son of a noble house in…

The Eagle, the Cedar, and the Broken Covenant

The heat in the chamber was a palpable thing, a dry, dusty weight that seemed to press the very air from the room. Ezekiel shifted on the packed-earth floor, his back against the sun-warmed wall, feeling the grit of the…

Flight to a Forbidden Refuge

The heat in Mizpah was a dry, clinging thing. It wasn’t the fierce sun of midday that pressed upon them now, but the stale, suffocating warmth of a land holding its breath. Dust coated the sandals of the men who…

The Idol and the Living God

The rain had finally come to Jerusalem, a slow, whispering drizzle that settled the dust in the streets and left the air smelling of wet stone and damp earth. Baruch, the scribe, felt it on his face as he walked,…