Today's Contemplation
"Do not conform to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind."
Romans 12:2 — NIV
Transformation does not begin with behaviour. It begins in the mind — in the slow, honest work of examining what we believe and why. This is not a call to religion. It is a call to renewal.
Salvific Virtued Contemplation for True Being Through Self Reflection
A Founding Thought
Facts change. They shift and alter with each passing day, and the debates we wage in their name are never truly won — for the next discovery redraws the boundary. To build one's decisions solely on the discipline of fact and justice is to risk settling for a mediocrity that quiets the question without answering it. What remains unsolved in that settlement will follow us, quietly dividing our vision and our sense of self.
It is in turning inward — toward honest self-reflection and the values we carry — that we find what endures beyond argument. Not a conclusion, but a way of walking.
Wrestle Honestly
These are not comfortable questions. They are the ones people avoid from pulpits. Here they are met with scripture, reason, and the full weight they deserve.
Creation & Existence
The question assumes that everything requires a cause — but does that premise hold universally? Following that assumption honestly changes the entire conversation about existence.
"In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth." — Genesis 1:1
Suffering & Evil
The most honest objection to faith is human suffering — especially the kind inflicted by human hands. Scripture does not look away from this. Neither should we.
"The Lord is close to the brokenhearted and saves those who are crushed in spirit." — Psalm 34:18
Identity & Self
There is a desire that no natural happiness satisfies — a longing that points to something beyond the visible world. The feeling is not a flaw. It is a clue.
"He has made everything beautiful in its time. He has also set eternity in the human heart." — Ecclesiastes 3:11
Moral Truth
The very fact that we recognise brokenness implies a standard of wholeness. Where does that standard come from in a purely material universe?
"For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God." — Romans 3:23
Faith & Doubt
Many who arrived at deep faith first spent years in honest doubt. That journey was not a surrender of intellect — it was the most honest thing their intellect ever produced.
"Immediately the boy's father exclaimed, 'I do believe; help me overcome my unbelief!'" — Mark 9:24
Purpose & Calling
Four things every person seeks — origin, meaning, morality, and destiny — find their coherent answer only within the Christian worldview.
"For we are God's handiwork, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do." — Ephesians 2:10
Living Journal
These are not final conclusions. They are waypoints — honest records of where understanding stood on a given day, and what shifted next.
Self-Reflection · Identity
For a long time I believed self-knowledge was about uncovering something hidden —
as though the true self existed fully formed beneath the surface, waiting to be discovered.
But reflection has taught me that the self is not static. It is shaped by every choice,
every belief examined or abandoned, every moment of honest confrontation with what I
actually value versus what I claim to value.
Scripture understands this. Every time you make a choice,
you are turning the central part of yourself into something slightly different from what it was before.
This is not discouraging — it is the most hopeful truth about human nature.
We are not fixed. We are in process. And that process has a direction.
Suffering · Faith
When I encounter suffering — my own or others' — my first instinct is to ask why God allowed it.
But something reordered my thinking: the existence of evil and
suffering actually presupposes a moral standard. And a moral standard presupposes a moral lawgiver.
The very pain that makes me doubt God is structured by a sense of "ought" — that things
should not be this way. That "ought" doesn't come from matter. It comes from somewhere outside
the physical world. The complaint itself is an argument for the thing it seems to argue against.
Scripture by Theme
Organised not by book or chapter, but by what you are wrestling with today.
Identity
"So God created mankind in his own image, in the image of God he created them."
Genesis 1:27 — NIV
Suffering
"We also glory in our sufferings, because we know that suffering produces perseverance; perseverance, character; and character, hope."
Romans 5:3–4 — NIV
Truth
"Then you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free."
John 8:32 — NIV
Courage
"Have I not commanded you? Be strong and courageous. Do not be afraid; do not be discouraged."
Joshua 1:9 — NIV
Grace
"For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith — and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God."
Ephesians 2:8 — NIV
Purpose
"Before I formed you in the womb I knew you, before you were born I set you apart."
Jeremiah 1:5 — NIV
Your Private Space
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Why This Exists
Most platforms that call themselves Christian offer one of two things: comfort or condemnation. Neither is what the gospel actually is. This project exists because there is a third thing — honest, rigorous, costly engagement with what scripture actually says about the world as it actually is.
The title — Salvific Virtued Contemplation for True Being Through Self Reflection — is not decoration. It is a program. Salvific: aimed at something redemptive. Virtued: formed by genuine character, not performance. Contemplation: slow, deliberate, returning. True Being: not the self we perform for others, but the one we actually are in the dark. Self Reflection: the discipline that makes all of the above possible.
Faith is not found by being convinced. It is found by following every honest argument to its end — including the ones that make you uncomfortable. That is the model here. Not faith as surrender of thought. Faith as the conclusion of thought pursued with full honesty to its end.
Every person is asking four questions: Where did I come from? What gives life meaning? How do I decide right from wrong? Where am I going? These are not religious questions. They are human questions. Scripture addresses them — not with slogans, but with a coherent account of what it means to be a person.
This project grows over time — new questions added, new reflections written, new observations recorded as understanding deepens. It is not a finished product. It is a living document of a person in process.