Most devotionals give you a verse and a warm thought. This one gives you the cross-and asks what you'll do with it.
You've read the Easter story a hundred times. You know Jesus died for your sins. But somewhere between the head knowledge and your actual Monday morning, something gets lost.
The guilt still lingers. The old patterns return. And your faith feels more like routine than resurrection.
Transformed by the Cross is the resource for Christians who are done with surface-level devotions and ready to understand-truly understand-why the cross changes everything.
This is more than a 90-day devotional.
Before you reach the daily meditations, you'll work through over 140 pages of rich biblical study covering:
→ The Biblical Foundations: Trace the scarlet thread from Old Testament sacrifice and prophecy to Christ's passion-and finally see how it all connects
→ The Theology of the Cross: Understand substitutionary atonement, divine justice, and reconciliation in language that's deep but never dry
→ Daily Life Transformation: Discover how the cross redefines your identity, reshapes your relationships, and releases you from guilt you were never meant to carry
Then the 90-day journey begins.
Each daily meditation includes:
Scripture passage (NIV)Thoughtful reflection rooted in theologyQuestions that move you from reading to respondingA guided prayer to anchor each truthBut we're still not done.
Weekly reflections offer extended insights for deeper study or small group discussion. Practical exercises and journaling prompts help you integrate what you're learning. Sections on accountability, service, and redemptive practices in family relationships ensure this isn't just information-it's transformation.
This book is for you if:
You want theological substance, not spiritual fluffYou've felt disconnected from the "why" behind Christ's sacrificeYou're ready to move from knowing about grace to living from itYou need a resource that works for personal devotion AND group studyYou believe the cross should change more than your Sunday morningsThe cross wasn't meant to be a symbol you glance at. It was meant to remake you from the inside out.