My Deliverance

A Reminder That We Don’t Walk Through Anything Alone
I meant to share this last week for the Second Sunday of Advent — Peace — but maybe it landed right on time. Advent has a way of teaching us that God shows up even when we’re running behind.

My Deliverance
A Reminder That We Don’t Walk Through Anything Alone

Paul is sitting in prison, chained to the floor, waiting to find out whether he’ll live or die — all for saying “Jesus is Lord” in a world where Caesar insisted on that title.

He doesn’t know how the trial will go. He doesn’t know if he has weeks or hours. He doesn’t know if he’ll walk out free or be carried out. And yet he writes these impossible words:

“And because of this, I rejoice… for I know that what has happened to me will turn out for my deliverance.” (Philippians 1:18–19)

Rejoice? Deliverance? Now?

Paul isn’t delusional. He’s anchored. And there’s a difference. 

When Paul says, “This will turn out for my deliverance,” he’s quoting Job — the sufferer who stood in the rubble of his life and still said, “Though He slay me, yet will I trust Him.”

And honestly, I understand that move. You see, there are days when I can’t find the right words to pray. I start, stop, stare at the ceiling… and nothing comes out the way I mean it. On those days, I borrow someone else’s words.

Sometimes it’s Niebuhr and his Serenity Prayer — that quiet nudge to accept what is and release what isn’t mine to carry. Then there are days I borrow from St. Francis, asking God to make him an instrument of peace when everything inside me feels anything but peaceful.

Many times, I turn to Mother Teresa — who heard Jesus whisper, “Come be my light,” and responded with a simple, steady, “I will never refuse you.” She promised to “do something beautiful for God” and spent her life carrying a small flame into the darkest places on earth. On the days when my own light flickers, I borrow a little of hers.

And often, it’s St. Patrick’s Breastplate — my favorite. That long, old prayer that wraps Christ around you like armor:

Christ before me, Christ behind me,
Christ beneath me, Christ above me…

A reminder that deliverance doesn’t always remove the danger, but it does surround you with Presence.

When my voice shakes, I lean on theirs. Their prayers steady me when my own run out. It isn’t cheating. It’s community — across generations and stories.

That’s exactly what Paul is doing: borrowing strength from saints before him until he can feel his own again.

When Paul talks about deliverance, he uses the word soteria — but he doesn’t mean escape. He isn’t saying: “Don’t worry — I’ll be home for dinner.” Or “These chains are about to fall off.”

He knows deliverance might mean life but it also might mean death.

What he is saying is: “Whatever happens, I will stay true. My hands will be clean. My heart will be steady. I won’t lose myself.”

That’s deliverance. Faithfulness that survives circumstances. He refuses to let despair be his narrator. He refuses to say something he’ll regret just because he’s tired and afraid. That is its own kind of freedom.

Paul is quite clear how he will make it: “Through your prayers and the help of the Spirit of Jesus Christ.” If he runs out of strength, someone else’s strength will carry him. If he runs out of hope, someone else’s hope will cover the bill.

This is Paul’s theology of community: none of us gets through anything alone. Imagine if we lived that way. It would change everything.

That reminds me of what Advent Peace is all about. Advent Peace isn’t calm circumstances or a detour around uncertainty. It’s Christ-with-us — the Presence that keeps your heart from unraveling even when your world is.

Paul isn’t peaceful because prison is comfortable. He’s peaceful because he isn’t alone. And that is Advent’s promise. Not escape. Something better – Presence. 

Maybe the Unlikely Altar this week isn’t a manger or a star. Maybe it’s the prayers you borrow when your own run out. Maybe it’s the saints whose words help you breathe again. Maybe it’s the people whose strength carries you when yours is gone.

Maybe deliverance isn’t being rescued — but being carried.

And maybe the prayer Paul prayed from prison is the one Advent whispers to us again:

This will turn out for my deliverance.”

Not because the road is easy. Not because we’re strong. But because we are held.


By Strength Built One Honest Day at a Time. January 30, 2026
Some of the strongest people I know are on my team. More than being on my team, many of them have become my friends. And the one who taught me the most is my fraternity little brother. But you wouldn’t necessarily spot them right away. No capes. No podiums. No dramatic backstories offered up over morning coffee. What you might notice first is how steady they are. They show up. They listen well. They tell the truth. They laugh, sometimes loudly, sometimes at themselves. They know how to sit with another human being without trying to fix them too fast. They know how to stay. Many of them are in recovery. That sentence alone carries more weight than it looks like. Recovery isn’t a chapter you finish and put back on the shelf. It’s a daily practice. A way of walking through the world with your eyes open and your defenses down. It’s choosing honesty over hiding, one ordinary Tuesday at a time. I’ve watched these folks do hard things quietly. They answer phones. They make follow-up calls. They hear grief stories and financial fears and family tensions and don’t flinch. They know what it’s like to rebuild a life one small decision at a time, so they don’t rush anyone else through theirs. That kind of strength doesn’t shout. It hums. It sounds like showing up on ordinary days. It sounds like listening more than talking and like staying when it would be easier to disappear. What amazes me is not just that they are sober or clean or in recovery. It’s how they live because of it. They know the cost of avoidance, so they lean into conversations most people would rather dodge. They know what denial sounds like because they once spoke it fluently. They know the danger of “I’ll deal with it later.” Later has taught them its limits. Recovery hasn’t made them perfect. It has given them direction and purpose. It looks like answering the phone honestly, keeping the next appointment, and doing the work in front of them with care. They know that showing up matters. That today counts. That people don’t need to be perfect or polished nearly as much as they need someone to be present. I hear it when they talk with families who are scared and overwhelmed. There’s no judgment in their voice. No impatience. Just a steady kindness that says, “You’re not alone, and you don’t have to carry this by yourself.” That’s not a sales skill. That’s a soul skill. Some days they’ll tell you recovery is about routines. It is about meetings and boundaries. And it is. But it’s also about learning how to live honestly in your own skin. It is about discovering that your story doesn’t disqualify you. They will tell you that your actually qualifies you. If you listen closely, you’ll hear it in the way they talk about time. They don’t waste it. They respect it. They know how quickly things can unravel and how slowly they are rebuilt. Recovery teaches you patience, but not passivity. It teaches you urgency without panic. That’s holy ground. The Unlikely Altar isn’t in the meeting room or the certificate or the anniversary chip. The Unlikely Altar is built in the daily choice to live with your eyes open. To be accountable. To be kind even when kindness costs something. The Unlikely Altar is in the courage it takes to say, “This is who I am, and I’m still standing.” I don’t put these folks on a pedestal. Pedestals are lonely places. But I do learn from them. Every day. They remind me that grace isn’t a one time thing. Grace keeps knocking. And sometimes it knocks through another human being who knows what it means to be rescued and responsible at the same time. If you’re in recovery and reading this, know this: your strength shows. Even when you think it doesn’t. Maybe it shows even more in those times. You are doing sacred work in ordinary moments. You are building Unlikely Altars just by showing up as yourself. And some of us are watching, grateful, steadying our own steps because of yours. To my friends, and to the people I love in recovery, thank you. Truly.
By Why I Keep Calling When Silence Would We Easier. January 24, 2026
There are days when this work feels quiet in all the wrong ways. It’s dial after dial after dial, and no one answers. Voicemail after voicemail that never gets returned. Texts that get sent carefully, kindly, without pressure. And the hardest part is this: I can see that the texts are read. They don’t go unopened. They don’t disappear into the void. They are delivered. They’re seen and read. And then there’s…silence. And that silence is heavy in its own way. The calls we make aren't cold calls. We pay money for the leads - - leads that are people who filled out a form and asked for information. They raised their hand and said, “Yes, I want to know more.” And then life happens. Or fear does. Or denial. Or exhaustion. Or maybe just the hope that there would always be more time. I don’t know the true answer. But what I do know is that sometimes, when I circle back and try again, I discover that a couple of those names now belong to people who have died. No conversation ever took place. No plan was ever made. Just a request for information, followed by silence, followed by an ending that came sooner than anyone expected. That’s when the questions show up in my head and my heart. What would have been different if I had persisted a bit more? If I had called one more time? If I hadn’t worried so much about being a bother? I know the answers I’m supposed to give myself. I know I can’t control outcomes. I know people get to decide when they engage. I know all of that. And still. This work has a way of slipping past what you know and settling into what you carry. I recently spoke with a widow who told me she waited too long. She managed to scrape together enough to bury her husband, but just barely. The funeral happened. The casseroles came. And then the bills arrived, and they didn’t care that her world had just fallen apart. Months later, she was still struggling to catch up, still paying for decisions she never thought she’d have to make alone. That conversation sits with me when I see a text marked “read” with no reply. It sits with me when someone tells me off for calling again. It sits with me when I’m tempted to believe that silence means disinterest. Because here’s the truth I’ve learned the hard way. I don’t know which call is an interruption and which one is a lifeline. I don’t know which family is one conversation away from relief. And I don’t know which silence will eventually turn into regret. So when someone cusses me out, I try to remember that anger is often fear wearing armor. It’s discomfort. It’s denial. It’s the ache of not wanting to look too closely at something that feels overwhelming. And when I keep calling, even after being ignored, it isn’t stubbornness. It isn’t pressure. It’s love. This work has become my calling, not because it’s easy, but because it matters . Because maybe, just maybe, one more dial leads to one family who doesn’t have to sit in a funeral home office wondering how they’re going to pay before they can say goodbye. Maybe one more conversation spares a widow from having to choose between burying her husband and paying her bills afterward. I can live with being misunderstood. I can live with being told to stop calling. What I don’t want to live with is knowing I stayed quiet when my voice might have helped. So I keep dialing. Not relentlessly, and not without care, but faithfully. With humor when I can. With humility always. And with the hope that somewhere on the other end of the line is a family who will never know how close they came to needing this conversation far too late. If you’ve ever wondered why someone like me keeps calling, even when it would be easier not to, this is why. Grief is heavy enough. And if love sometimes sounds like a ringing phone, I’m okay with that.
By Why I Made a Bingo Board for 2026 January 23, 2026
I didn’t make a New Year’s resolution list this year. Over time, I’ve noticed that my resolutions tend to come out sounding like demands. They’re usually written in a tone I would never use with another human being, and yet somehow, I think it’s reasonable to use it on myself. I’ve lived that story before. It usually goes strong for a few weeks and then fades into a quiet, half-hearted apology to myself somewhere around Valentine’s Day. So instead of resolutions, I made a Bingo Board. It’s simple, really. Twenty-five squares laid out in a 5×5 grid. Some are practical. Some are playful. And some are closer to the heart and ask for more presence than planning. For me, it’s an honest mix of things like writing more, moving my body, trying something new, showing up for people I love, and paying attention while I’m doing it. It feels truer to me than a list of resolutions ever has. A Bingo Board doesn’t bark orders. It doesn’t shame you for unfinished squares. It doesn’t pretend that life moves in straight lines or that effort always leads to neat outcomes. It simply sits there and invites you to notice what happens as the year unfolds. And that’s really the point. You don’t conquer a square. You encounter it. An encounter is slower than an achievement. It leaves room for surprise. You might come to a square feeling ready and confident, or arrive tired, distracted, and unsure. You might step into it intentionally, or stumble into it because the day took an unexpected turn. Either way, the square meets you where you are. When you truly encounter something, it tends to change you, even if only a little. A conversation lasts longer than expected. A moment asks more of you than you thought you had to give. A simple goal opens into a deeper story. What looked like a box to check becomes a place where you slow down and notice what’s stirring just beneath the surface. That’s usually where the sacred shows up. As I stared at the grid, I realized something else too. Almost every square wasn’t really about an accomplishment at all, but about a place or moment where life has already taught me that grace tends to show up - - an Unlikely Altar. Those ordinary places where grace shows up without fanfare. Waiting rooms. Kitchen tables. Bar stools. The quiet space after a hard conversation. The pause before a decision. The breath you didn’t know you were holding until it finally lets go. They aren’t polished. They don’t announce themselves. Most of the time you don’t even recognize them while you’re standing there. It’s only later that you realize something holy happened in a place that didn’t look holy at all. Grace keeps showing up in the middle of things. In the trying. In the waiting. In the ordinary, imperfect act of showing up again and again with whatever attention and honesty we can manage that day. That’s what this Bingo Board is really about. Each square isn’t something to accomplish so much as a place to stand still long enough to notice what’s happening. Some squares will get checked off neatly. Some will stay open longer than I expected. And some will crack open into stories I never planned to write. This year, I’m going to write my way through the board. Not as a scorecard and not as instruction, but simply as a way of paying attention to what actually happens inside the squares. The interruptions. The conversations. The resistance. And always, the grace that shows up, because I’ve come to believe that grace always does, even when it arrives a little sideways. If this idea resonates with you, you’re welcome to make your own version of a Bingo Board. Not as a productivity tool or a list of things to prove, but as a way of paying attention. Your squares don’t need to look like mine. They can be as simple or as tender as you want. And if you do end up sketching something and feel like sharing it, you can always reach me at martyvershel@gmail.com You don’t need your own board to follow along. You just need a little curiosity about where the sacred might be hiding in your everyday life. Because chances are, you’ve already been standing on an Unlikely Altar. You just didn’t know to call it that yet.