My Books

BOOK COPYRIGHTB

Explore my collection of books written to inspire, inform, and encourage. Each work is protected by copyright and may not be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form without prior written permission, except for brief quotations used in reviews or scholarly references. Thank you for respecting the intellectual property behind every page.

The Ezer ("Helper")

There is a word buried in the Genesis that, if properly understood, would permanently silence every debate about women being lesser, weaker or secondary. It is a Hebrew word. It is ancient. And God chose it deliiberately. The word is Ezer - pronounced ay-zer. This book is not about who is superior. It never was. God used the same word used for Himself, and gave it to describe the woman.

The Qualified Didn't Throw

We live in a time where the pressures on a believer are real and relentless. Pressure from without, pressure from within, and a cultural environment that grows more hostile to genuine faith with every passing year. But one of the most dangerous pressures the church faces is not external at all. It is the quiet, corrosive tendency of those who have received grace to become the most ungracious toward others who are struggling. It is the spirit that picks up stones.

Biblical and Money Matters

The bible is not silent about money. it is in fact one of the most extensively addressed subjects in all of scripture! Jesus spoke about money and possessions more than He spoke about Heaven and Hell combined. The Proverbs return to it on almost every page. And yet the Church has often oscillated between two unhealthy extremes. This piece charts the biblical middle ground.

Refined Not Ruined

Life’s journey often includes seasons of hardship, loss, and bewildering trials. The Scriptures never promise believers a life free from suffering. In fact, those who follow God are repeatedly reminded that trials are a normal part of human existence in a fallen world. Even fervent believers sincerely seeking to live according to the will of the Creator experience challenges, disappointments, and painful circumstances. Scripture emphasizes it is not the absence of trials, but the purpose God brings out of it.

The Eternal Debt of Love

Before we examine how we love one another, we must first understand how God loves us. This is not a small thing - it is the very foundation upon which the entire Christian life is built. God's love is not a reward for good behaviour. It is not something we earn by attending church, giving offerings, or saying the right prayers. God's love is an extension of who He is.

Yet Will I Trust Him

Life can be very challenging. For those of us who believe in God, who hold to His power and His Word as the framework by which we live this life as we await His coming Kingdom, it can be particularly challenging to cope with the stress and trials life throws at us. Scriptures we have memorized and stood upon for years about God's promises, abundant and encouraging in their entirety, — have made it extraordinarily difficult for many sincere believers to cope when prayers seem to go unanswered.

A Friend Loves At All Times

This reflection takes Proverbs 17:17 — at its plainest a celebration of true friendship and true brotherhood — and follows its weight outward into a question the rest of Scripture takes up at length: who proves to be such a friend or brother when adversity arrives, and how should the one walking through trouble respond to what is revealed? Wisdom literature, the lament psalms, the gospel accounts, ordinary life, and a set of honest self-examination questions are drawn together so the reader may both honor the genuine where it is found, examine themselves humbly where they have fallen short, and respond with the mercy and gratitude the moment deserves

Finding Love Again

This is a reflection on the gentlest and most fragile of journeys — the path from love, through loss, and back again to love. It does not pretend that grief is brief or that healing is simple; it does not minimize what is taken when a beloved is removed in what feels, to our finite human view, far too soon. But it dares, with Scripture, friendship, and grace as its companions, to say that love does not diminish in being multiplied. To love again, after love has been deeply lost, is not a betrayal of memory but its honoring — an act of courage that testifies to the enduring beauty of life and to the faithful kindness of the God who heals the broken heart.

Few, Little, Small

This reflection explores a recurring biblical pattern that challenges the human tendency to equate size, visibility, and numbers with divine approval. Scripture consistently presents God working through the few, the little, and the small, especially among His people. Rather than encouraging anxiety about numbers, the biblical wisdom and evidence calls believers to faithfulness, discernment, prayer, and loving stewardship of those God Himself draws. It is a deeply human reflex — one that runs almost instinctively through every culture and generation — to associate greatness with magnitude. Large crowds feel significant.