Personal growth is a path to alienation from the world.
When I was younger, I assumed that things such as spiritual growth and personal development would allow me to fit in with those around me better. I thought that as I learned to love others and learned to experience God more fully, it would be easier to live in human society.
I’ve realized lately that the truth is just the opposite. It’s easy to fit into the culture around us without emotional or spiritual growth. All it requires is molding ourselves into whatever those around us want.
But finding transcendental meaning and discovering your true self require you to give up what your culture and your friends and your family want you to be — because human culture is ultimately in conflict with what God created us to be.
I’ve realized lately that Jesus told us this 2,000 years ago, but we’ve simply missed the point. Finding the truth — and finding our true self — requires us to be something entirely different from what our culture demands.

Conflicting expectations can kill even the deepest love and hope
On this website’s 10th birthday, I’m planning for the next decade
Members of Congress can’t tell constituents ‘Merry Christmas’
All humans are a little bit insane; we’re not as rational as we think
There’s hatred, evil and injustice, but this is the ‘real’ America, too
We know our world must change, but we keep saying, ‘yes, but…’
Snapshots of hurting people and broken families, but no resolutions
I’m looking at myself in mirror and asking difficult questions
Maybe it wasn’t correct choice, but I’m not having surgery Friday