That's How God Rolls

That's How God Rolls

by Shore Healing
Season 1
Learning to Love Beyond Right
There is such a thing as harmful interpretation of Scripture — but it’s not what most people think. Harmless incorrect interpretation is when someone’s misunderstanding still leads them toward God. Harmful incorrect interpretation is when someone’s misunderstanding distorts God’s character and leads them away from love. That’s the only boundary that matters.
The Easy Yoke - When Nothing Feels Easy
The easy yoke isn’t about having no responsibilities. It’s about having Someone carry the weight with you. The light burden isn’t about having nothing to do. It’s about having nothing to fear. And when you live in that place — when you let God be the One who fights for you, shields you, and clears the path before you — you start to feel something you may not have felt in a long time: Rest. Safety. Held‑ness. Belonging. Because the One who carries you is the One who made you.
Isaiah, Moab, and the Culture That Teaches Us to Earn Love
Isaiah’s Moab becomes a symbol of a culture of performance — a world where people are shaped by the pressure to be desirable, admirable, enviable. A world where parents pass down the same anxieties they inherited. A world where identity is built on sand.
Hemmed In: When God Hold You Steady
There are seasons in the life of faith when you feel as though you are where God wants you to be, and yet the path becomes narrow and strangely difficult. You step into obedience expecting clarity, maybe even relief, and instead you find yourself pressed on every side. Life feels tight. Options shrink. The way forward seems resistant. And you quietly wonder whether obedience should feel this hard.
When Truth Turns Bitter
Scripture has deep respect for truth-tellers. The prophets confronted kings. Jesus overturned tables in the temple because worship had been corrupted by performance and profit. The Bible is not afraid of uncomfortable honesty. But Scripture also warns that not every fight for “truth” is spiritually healthy. Some people begin with discernment and end in bitterness. They become consumed by proving themselves right, exposing others, and interpreting every interaction through suspicion. That is the tension many people quietly navigate inside. So when does confronting dysfunction become courageous — and when does it quietly become corrosive? The answer is rarely found in the argument alone. It is found in the spirit underneath it.
Healing Comes First
This episode speaks to the ones fighting battles that won’t let go — reminding you that healing isn’t unspiritual, getting help isn’t weakness, and God meets you at the bottom so you can rise into maturity.
The Great Mediator
In this episode, we sit with one of the oldest cries in the Bible — Job’s longing in Job 9 for someone who can stand between humanity and God. Someone who understands both sides. Someone who can carry what we can’t. Centuries later, Jesus answers that ache with His invitation in Matthew 11: “Come to Me, all who are weary… My yoke is easy and My burden is light.” This episode is for anyone who feels tired, overwhelmed, or alone — whether you’ve been in church your whole life or you’ve never believed in anything at all. It’s a conversation about the God who steps into human pain, the One who carries the heavy side of the load, and why you don’t have to do life alone anymore. If this speaks to you, share it with someone who might need it too.
The Moral Law and the Unseen Realms
The moral law preached to us by Christ is that we must treat others how we wish to be treated. We are to treat other people as if they are ourselves. However, the sad truth of the matter is that many people are mind controlled by Satan, or inhabited, tormented or influenced by demons, which are often the perpetrators behind cruelty. This means at times when we are dealing with a person that is troubling us, it is not only the person who we need to manage, but also their spiritual puppeteer.
When I Finally Understood Why Jesus Is Good News
I can completely relate to those diseased, possessed, and bleeding in the Gospel of Mark. I may not have had literal leprosy, but I carried the spiritual equivalent — trauma, guilt, shame, and self‑loathing from childhood sexual wounds. I wasn’t physically paralyzed on a mat, but I lived with depression, burnout, and chronic fatigue that made every day feel like dragging a lifeless body through thick mud. I wasn’t possessed by a legion of demons, but I knew what it felt like to be fragmented inside, pulled in many directions by fear, addiction, confusion, and despair.
The Locusts Within: Joel's Message for the Modern Soul
The short book of Joel is often treated as a prelude to the Book of Revelation — a smaller prophetic storm hinting at a larger one. As explored in the previous essay, Revelation is not a geopolitical forecast but a portrait of the spiritual commotion within a person. Joel belongs to the same tradition of inner apocalypse, but it approaches the human soul from a different angle. Joel is the apocalypse of the wounded inner self. Joel reveals the personal psychology of the spiritual battle — the locusts that slowly eat away at joy, the famine of the inner life, the return to honesty, and the valley where God confronts the internal enemies that have ruled a person’s story. Joel not only prepares you to understand Revelation, Joel exists to help you understand yourself.
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