There comes a moment when faith shifts from something we inherit to something we choose.
It may begin quietly—questions we can no longer ignore, scriptures that feel suddenly alive, or a longing that isn’t satisfied by surface answers. This is often where faith stops being theoretical and becomes deeply personal.
A personal faith does not look the same for everyone. It is shaped by lived experience, doubt, joy, and prayer. It grows in ordinary moments: conversations, solitude, work, and rest. Over time, belief becomes less about knowing the right words and more about trusting God with the whole of who we are.
This kind of faith does not remove struggle, but it reframes it. Challenges become invitations to lean in rather than pull away. Worship becomes less performative and more honest. Scripture becomes not just instruction, but relationship.
Faith becomes personal when it is no longer borrowed—but lived.
And once it reaches that point, it quietly shapes everything we create, how we love, and how we see the world around us.
