Is sin really “missing the mark”? What the oldest word actually means
The Hebrew and Greek words translated as “sin” are archery terms. Understanding that changes everything about guilt, shame, and what you’re actually supposed to do about it.
The Hebrew and Greek words translated as “sin” are archery terms. Understanding that changes everything about guilt, shame, and what you’re actually supposed to do about it.
One is a spiritual practice over a thousand years old. One is a modern psychological phenomenon. They’re describing the same thing — and the differences between them reveal something important about what consciousness is for.
The hallway between the tradition you left and wherever you’re going is real. Here is what to do while you are in it — and what not to do.
The Bear is not a metaphor. He is the central theological argument of the entire 13-book series, embodied in one animal — and understanding him changes how you read everything else.
Not an argument for God. A look at why the question itself won’t leave certain people alone — and what that persistence actually means.
About 30% of Americans now call themselves spiritual but not religious. What are they reaching for — and where do they actually go?
Not what the church taught. What the Gospels actually say. The difference is significant — and most people who have sat in church their whole lives have never noticed it.
Six waves. Twenty-one exercises. The Focus levels explained — from someone who has spent years studying the work Robert Monroe left behind.
Wake-back-to-bed is the single most reliable technique for beginners. Here is exactly how to do it, why it works, and what to expect the first few times.
Most people use these three terms interchangeably. They are not the same thing. They describe three different experiences, three different