The Story of Life After Death
by Tom Castor on March 30th, 2026
A Bible Story About ResurrectionThe Problem: Death Enters the WorldIn the beginning, God made the world.God made the sky.God made the land.God made the animals.And God made people.God made people in His image.This means people were special.They could know God.They could walk with God.They could live with God.At the beginning, everything was good.There was no death.There was no pain.There was no fe... Read More
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What Did the Death of Jesus Accomplish?
by Tom Castor on March 27th, 2026
A reflection on 1 Corinthians 15:3The death and resurrection of Jesus is the center of the Christian message. It is not one truth among many. It is the truth that holds everything else together.So, when we think about the death of Christ, we must think about it in the ways that the scriptures speak of it. The cross was not an accident. It was not merely an example of love. It was a deliberate act ... Read More
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When Courage Fails / Christ Stands
by Tom Castor on March 22nd, 2026
A reflection on John 18John chapter 18 takes place in one of the most riveting moments in the gospel story. That quiet opening, “When he had finished praying, Jesus... crossed the Kidron Valley”, sets the stage for a dramatic sequence of events.It is dark.Soldiers arrive with weapons and torches.Religious leaders maneuver behind the scenes.A Roman Governor must make a political decision.Crowds wil... Read More
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The Trial That Reveals the King
by Tom Castor on March 20th, 2026
Reading John 18–19 with new clarityWhen we read the Gospel of John 18–19, it can feel like everything is unraveling.Jesus is arrested.He is questioned, mocked, and handed over to be crucified.At first glance, it looks like a tragic collapse.But when you pay attention to how John structures these two chapters, you begin to see that he is doing something far more deliberate.He structures the trial b... Read More
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What Jesus Wanted Most
by Tom Castor on March 16th, 2026
Reflections on John 17Imagine hearing the private prayer of someone you love just before they leave for good. Not a public prayer. Not something polished or formal. Just an honest conversation with God.In moments like that, people reveal what matters most.That’s what makes John 17 so remarkable. It records the longest prayer of Jesus in the Gospels, spoken just before His arrest. The cross is only... Read More
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Listening to Jesus Pray (A Preview)
by Tom Castor on March 12th, 2026
When a pastor is preparing a message (if he’s serious about what he’s doing), he does a significant amount of work that does not always show up in his sermon.This week at The Well, we continue our “survey” series on the Gospel of John.This Sunday, chapter 17. So, I have decided to “show my work.” and write a few of my preliminary observations (literary, theological, logical, structural) on John 17... Read More
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When Following Jesus Gets Complicated
by Tom Castor on March 10th, 2026
(A reflection on John 16)Most of us carry a quiet assumption about faith.If we follow Jesus…If we obey…If we trust God…Life should get easier.But what happens when it doesn’t?What happens when following Jesus actually makes life more complicated?When obedience creates tension?When our faith leads to confusion?When doing what Jesus asked puts you at odds with people you respect?John 16 is written f... Read More
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The Holy Spirit is John's Gospel
by Tom Castor on March 8th, 2026
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Grape Expectations
by Tom Castor on February 28th, 2026
What Does Abiding Look Like in Ordinary Life?There it is. Clear as day, right there in Red Letters. “Abide in me.” Sounds like it should be simple. But if you ask most Christians how to “abide,” something tightens inside them. We know it is important, but it sounds a bit intense — like long hours of prayer, constant spiritual focus, a life where our attention never drifts from Jesus. And because o... Read More
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The Prepositions of Prayers
by Tom Castor on January 11th, 2026
It has been a long time, but somewhere in those first few years of my education, I came across prepositions. Prepositions, I was told, are the “hardware” of a language. Like fasteners and hinges and doorknobs, sentences do not hang together without them. Good literature doesn’t happen without prepositions. As a student, they were hard to figure out. As a literacy tutor and an EAL instructor on occ... Read More
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Grace Wounds Before It Heals
by Tom Castor on January 1st, 2026
A few days ago, I sat in a hospital room beside a friend. He had just come out of surgery to remove a cancerous thyroid. He wasn’t supposed to talk (instructions that are hard to follow for a professional speaker). So, he feigned compliance when the medical staff was present. As I sat close, we examined the scar together. He seemed thankful for it, because he was wise enough to know what it repres... Read More
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The Love That Came All the Way Down
by Tom Castor on December 21st, 2025
Thoughts on John 1:1–18Most Christmas stories begin the same way.A town.A census.A journey.A baby.They begin close to the ground.But when John tells the Christmas story, he begins somewhere else entirely. He begins before the ground existed at all. He begins before the beginning.“In the beginning was the Word.”Before there was a world to fix, there was the Word. Before there were people to rescue,... Read More
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When Joy Shows Up in the Dark
by Tom Castor on December 17th, 2025
Thoughts on Luke 2:1-20I have a confession to make. If I were in charge of the arrival of joy, I would plan it very carefully. I would choose the right lighting, the best music, the perfect venue. Joy would show up at just the right moment—when the house was clean, distractions were minimal, and the audience was hungry.But God did not ask for my advice. And he certainly did not ask for my permissi... Read More
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Good News. Great Joy. For People Like Us
by Tom Castor on December 15th, 2025
Thoughts on Luke 2:1–20Joy is one of the words we use most during Advent. We put it on cards, sing it in our carols, hang it in bright letters across our living rooms. But for many of us, joy feels fragile—something that slips away the moment life becomes complicated. And life, as we know, rarely stays simple.That’s why Luke’s account of the first Christmas is such good news. Joy didn’t arrive in ... Read More
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Sovereign Lord: A Word About a Word
by Tom Castor on December 10th, 2025
Thoughts on Lukea 2:29Sovereign LordIn Luke 2:29, Simeon holds the baby Jesus and begins to sing:"Sovereign Lord, as youhave promised,Now dismiss Your servant in peace."The Greek word translated “Sovereign Lord” is despotēs (pronounced DES-po-tace). This word can sound harsh to modern ears because our English word “despot” means a cruel ruler. But the Bible uses the word very differently. Understa... Read More
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The Promise Simeon Held Onto
by Tom Castor on December 7th, 2025
Thoughts on Luke 2:22–39At approximately 11 AM on April 30, 1975, North Vietnamese tank number 390 crashed through the gates of the Presidential Palace in Saigon. Within hours, Hanoi radio declared that the nation had been reunited and peace had come to Vietnam.But sometimes peace arrives quietly.No trumpet blasts. No diesel engines pouring out black smoke. No headlines. No fireworks. Just a baby ... Read More
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Advent Hope: When the Light Breaks Through the Winter
by Tom Castor on November 30th, 2025
Hope is an Advent word. Not a weak wish. Not shallow optimism. Not a sentiment written on a card in gold foil.Biblically, hope is something far stronger, sturdier.And more demanding.Hope is the decision to trust God’s promises in the face of circumstances that seem to contradict every single one of them.That’s why the book of Isaiah speaks so powerfully into Advent. By the time we reach chapters 4... Read More
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What Sets Christianity Apart?
by Tom Castor on November 23rd, 2025
Walk into any bookstore’s “Spirituality” section and you could easily conclude that Christianity is simply one shelf among many. Buddhism, Islam, Hinduism, humanism, New Age practices, and dozens more all claim to guide us toward truth, peace, or the divine.It’s no surprise, then, that people these days often assemble their own belief systems, borrowing bits and pieces—some Jesus here, some Buddhi... Read More
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The God Who Searches, Values, and Welcomes
by Tom Castor on November 17th, 2025
Thoughts on Luke 15Parables, if you hadn’t noticed, are sneaky things. They creep up quietly, charm you with a story, and before you know it—they have rearranged your thinking. Jesus knew that. Which is why He used parables more often than theological diagrams. People don’t usually change their minds because of diagrams. They change because a story slipped past their defenses.Luke, that meticulous... Read More
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The Good News
by Tom Castor on November 15th, 2025
John 3:16 - The Good NewsThere are more than 7,000 languages spoken in the world. And we all speak at least one of them. That means that all of us know that words are important. It is important to understand what words mean and when and how to use them. I don't know if you have noticed, but as followers of Jesus, we have our own vocabulary. Christians use words when they talk to one another that y... Read More
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Welcome One Another
by Tom Castor on November 14th, 2025
Thoughts on Romans 16:16, 1 Peter 4: 8-9, and Romans 15:7We spent the early fall moving from “me” to “we”—reshaping the architecture of our lives to make space for people. We called that series of messages: Community Under Construction. There were so many “One Another” passages to cover, we couldn’t talk about them all. But here are a few more. Even though I did not include them in our series at T... Read More
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What is the Gospel (Part Two)
by Tom Castor on November 12th, 2025
More Thoughts on the GospelWhat Is the Gospel?Many churches in the Western world are becoming divided. Because of this, many Christians do not share the same understanding of the gospel. Some people know only a small part of the gospel. Others mix it with ideas that do not belong to it.One of the clearest and most interesting answers to this question came at a conference I attended. The message wa... Read More
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What Did Jesus Come to Do?
by Tom Castor on November 7th, 2025
Thoughts on the GospelWhat is the gospel? And how, exactly, should we define it?That seems like it should be an easy question to answer. But surprisingly, Christians don’t always agree. And sometimes, their disagreements can be quite heated.Some Christians say the gospel is only the message that sinners can be forgiven through Jesus’ death and resurrection. Others say the gospel also includes the ... Read More
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Caring for One Another
by Tom Castor on October 24th, 2025
Thoughts on Galatians 5:13; Galatians 6:2: Ephesians 6:18Happiness is one of those elusive things we all chase but struggle to define. Neuroscientists can now track the brain’s activity when we experience joy, but knowing what makes us happy is still up for debate. Marketers will tell you it’s prosperity. The more we have, the happier we’ll be.But the research says otherwise. Today we are four tim... Read More
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