The Table is Open for All
Jesus ate with the outcasts. The table was as important of a place to him as the temples. If not more. It was where people could be people and Life could flow without fear.
Start Here
New to Faith
Start with our beginner’s guide and a short reading plan. Watch one video, then read one story about Jesus-shaped love. When you are ready, subscribe and send your first question.
Healing From Church Hurt
You can move slowly here. Begin with our trauma-aware reading list and the “why it still hurts” series. Comment if you want, or just read and rest.
Serving Others in my City
Learn what faithful action looks like in everyday life. Read a two-minute practice, try one small act this week, and reflect in your journal. Share what you learned in the comments so others can try it too.
Standing Tenants
God is Open, Relation, and Love’s First
God meets us in real time, at hospital bedsides, kitchen tables, and protest lines. Love does not force; it invites, persuades, and stays. The future is not locked, so our choices carry weight and dignity. God knows every possible path and keeps leaning us toward the most healing one. Not retribution, but restoration, again and again.
Scripture is a Living Library
This library sings in many voices: poems, letters, stories, and hard questions. We read it like a people in formation, not a courtroom searching for loopholes. The Jesus story stays in front and teaches us to handle the sharper edges with mercy and courage. We ask, “What brings life to the neighbor right now?” Then we do it.
We Radically Follow Jesus
Jesus keeps widening the circle, so we do too, with no asterisks on dignity or welcome. LGBTQ+ siblings, survivors, doubters, and cradle-church folks, pull up a chair. We practice consent, safety, and agency because healing is embodied work. Justice becomes an act of care, not a slogan. Church at its best feels like exhale.
God Is Open, Relational, and Love-First
Most of the big God questions do not show up in philosophy books. They show up at hospital bedsides at 3 a.m., at kitchen tables covered in bills, and in the ache of protest lines when your feet hurt and nothing seems to change. This first core conviction of ours is...


