Pip: Drink of Jesus is a site that takes seriously the idea that ancient words still do something — that Scripture isn’t a relic but a resource for people trying to stay upright in a world that keeps shifting.

Mara: Today we’re covering two territories: what it looks like to treat God’s Word as actual shelter when the noise gets loud, and what happens inside a church when silence becomes a tool of harm rather than peace.

Pip: One of those is comforting. The other is necessary. Let’s start with the refuge side of things.

Scripture As Refuge

Mara: The central question here is whether God’s Word can actually hold you when everything around you feels unstable — not as a sentiment, but as a lived practice.

Pip: The post “Finding Refuge in God’s Word: Strength for a Shifting World” goes straight to Psalm 119 for the answer, and the writer sets up the quote with real precision: the psalmist isn’t asking for comfort, he’s asking to be upheld. “You are my hiding place and my shield; I hope in your word.”

Mara: That’s the spine of the piece. The post unpacks what “hiding place” and “shield” actually mean — not passive safety, but active trust. True security isn’t found in money, people, or circumstances, but in the Lord alone.

Pip: And the post doesn’t stop at warmth. Verse 120 gets its own treatment: “My flesh trembleth for fear of thee.” The writer is careful to say that’s not terror — it’s awe, reverence, recognition of holiness. The refuge isn’t soft; it has weight.

Mara: “The Gospel Still Works in a Changing World” extends this outward. Where the Psalm 119 piece is personal and devotional, this one addresses how believers speak into a culture that treats old truths as expired. It quotes Hebrews 13:8 directly: “Jesus Christ is the same yesterday and today and forever.”

Pip: So the anchor holds whether you’re journaling through your own divided thoughts or trying to explain your faith to someone who finds certainty suspicious.

Mara: Both pieces land on the same practical point — steady obedience in ordinary moments is itself a witness. The gospel spreads through homes and workplaces, not only platforms. That’s the argument.

Pip: Which makes the next question harder: what do you do when the institution meant to carry that witness becomes the source of harm?

Church Silence And Abuse

Mara:When Silence Protects the Wrong” addresses something specific and serious — what happens when abuse or misconduct inside a church is minimized or covered up, and when the people seeking help are silenced instead.

Pip: The post doesn’t soften the charge. It goes straight to Ephesians 5:11: “Have nothing to do with the fruitless deeds of darkness, but rather expose them.” That’s not a suggestion — it’s a command.

Mara: And the post situates that command historically. It points to Ezekiel 34, where God rebukes shepherds who used the flock for their own benefit rather than protecting it, and to Matthew 23 where Jesus condemned leaders who looked righteous outwardly while hiding corruption inwardly.

Pip: So this isn’t a modern complaint dressed in Scripture. The pattern has a name, and it’s old.

Mara: The post is also careful about what healing actually requires. It says healthy biblical leadership welcomes accountability, protects the vulnerable, and pursues restoration through truth — not denial. Then it closes with Psalm 34:18: “The Lord is close to the brokenhearted.” The institutional failure and God’s character are kept separate deliberately.

Pip: That distinction matters. The post’s journaling prompt makes it explicit: it asks whether past experiences have caused readers to confuse God’s character with the failures of people who claimed to represent Him.

Mara: That’s the real pastoral work in the piece — not just naming the problem, but keeping the door open for people whose faith was damaged by the very people who were supposed to tend it.

Pip: Truth and protection over reputation. That’s the whole argument, and it’s a hard one to argue against.


Mara: Scripture as shelter, and accountability as care — those two ideas aren’t in tension. They’re the same commitment from different angles.

Pip: Steady words for an unsteady moment. More from Drink of Jesus next time.

Let nothing be done through selfish ambition or conceit, but in lowliness of mind let each esteem others better than himself.
Philippians 2:3

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