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Heather J Jonsson

Mining God's Word to Find Abundant Life in Jesus

March 23, 2025

New Writing at the Grit and Grace Project

Announcing Smart Living in Small Bites Guidebooks!

“Do you ever wish you had a guidebook for life’s challenges? Challenges that feel insurmountable, and you would love guidance from someone who has already traversed the road you find yourself on? Something easy to read that allows you to feel comfortable with your hurts, feelings, and thoughts?

We created those books in the Smart Living in Small Bites series. The first four are on sale now in paperback and Amazon Kindle eBook. Hard Marriage, Suicide Loss, Anxiety Struggles, and Past Sexual Abuse are the first of the subjects we are speaking to.”

I wrote the faith journal portion of each of these guidebooks. I remember sitting at my small writing desk while the Spring wind gently blew in through the window. Now these little booklets are published and out in the world! You can order them at the link below:

Learn more about Smart Living in Small Bites

You might also be interested in some of my newest writing published for The Grit and Grace Project. These two pieces are deeply personal as I put pen to paper about my wrestlings of the faith.

Can Good Come From a Denied Prayer

Hope feels Out of Reach – What Now?

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May 20, 2024

Don’t Give Up Studying God’s Word This Summer

Let’s be honest, summer can present its fair share of distractions that keep us from studying God’s Word. Perhaps you had a great Bible study rhythm during this past school year, but then summer comes along and turns routine on its head!

Yet instead of ending your Bible study over the summer months, here are 4 creative ways YOU can allow the flexibility of summer to stay grounded in God’s Word.

If you are looking for a shorter summer Bible Study, you can use my free Ephesians study. Click HERE. There are always 10 minute weekly teachings available at Bold Mercies Podcast.

Happy Studying! I can say this because studying God’s Word reminds us He is life, and life truly abundant!

(PS – This article below less about your family’s faith and more about your personal growth through God’s Word!) ❤

https://thegritandgraceproject.org/faith/grow-your-familys-faith?fbclid=IwZXh0bgNhZW0CMTEAAR2TKo8ieEeI6p_sgx1v8Dr3q1Ja_eeK3XhEi22NBVg4V8iTJqeUls_tI2I_aem_AWyMtNspdb3Ka-M2jNIFn3tTq6OZDGoh8PCnH5h_-M-743RJHmISQQd_42UpDGRmbHxll39rR1Z_B-B-qDxtTEqL

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April 16, 2024

The Power Of The Resurrection Within

It’s been a few days since the thrill of Easter, and I find myself wrestling discouragement wrought from the pangs of this sin-stained world. It is easy to dance upon death defeated, but harder to walk out the life he resurrected within us.

This world is masked in despair and disease and depression and darkness. It is a daunting place to live out our life of love and grace.

Today, the sorrow of a friend weighs heavily, and the defiance of a child wears on my patience. We may feel lonely and broken and overwhelmed and tired and fearful. A few days out from Easter, we may wonder if the resurrection story truly holds the power preached on Sunday.

So I knead my bread and ward off a tension headache, and I think about this. And I think about you. I pray words of comfort for my grieving friend. I pray for peace and direction for those who feel lost.

And I remember my beloved risen Savior, who rode a colt into a crowd that would betray Him, and carried a cross up a hill echoing with mocking voices. I lean in and I can hear the holy whispers of a Father and a Son. Together they walked to the cross until the moment the world heard, “It is finished.”

One day we will look back upon the rugged paths that we have trod, and see the holy working of our resurrection path. This life He called us into is not easy, but His work is sufficient and deeper than the devastation of our sin-scarred world. This is our hope, that the resurrection within us is stronger than the devastation around us Surely, our Redeemer lives, and I trust His resurrection power! ❤️

walking the resurrection path within

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April 8, 2024

Learning From Peter’s Bold Alignment With His Suffering Savior

The Echoes of Easter

With Easter just behind us, I have been lost in the lingering echoes of Holy Week. While reading the Bible demands we place ourselves in the context of the narrative, the echoes of the text allow us to extrapolate the Biblical stories into our current life. Then these echoes act as a bridge, bringing the stories of the past to lessons for our present. 

So as the tumult of Holy Week reverberated within, I thought of our own turmoil, both of a personal nature and on a global scale. In many ways, this is but an echo of what transpired 2000 years ago. Fickle crowds still shift with the changing winds. Suffering still pierces. Followers deny and doubt.

One might think that faith on this side of the resurrection would somehow be more simple. We are resurrection people after all!

Or do we sometimes forget?

How often have I, like Peter, denied my friend Jesus?

Like Mary, does my despair sometimes blind me to Jesus’ presence beside me?

Or perhaps, with shadows of doubt flickering in my mind, am I, like Thomas, slow to believe?

While our life on this side of Jesus’ resurrection is a far cry from that of Jesus’ followers, I can’t help but wonder if we share in the identical struggles as we await Jesus’ final return. Think of those who physically walked beside Jesus. Their Holy Week faith was a far cry from perfect. And here we are, knowing how this story ends, yet our struggles mirror their own.

So if you give me a few minutes of your time, let’s look back, so we can look forward. Together we can walk the bridge from the echoes of Easter into the turmoil of our own day, learning lessons to embolden our faith.

Over the next few weeks I will offer you three echoes of the past that serve as a bridge to our faith today. Here is the first:

Boldly Align Yourself with Jesus

Way back when I was a freshman in college, a girl on my dorm floor came up to me out of the blue and asked, “Heather, why are you alway so joyful?” That moment is the stuff of evangelistic dreams. It was perfect; a shoo-in transition that Jesus followers long for. It would have been easy for me to say, “because Jesus loves me,” or “because I am forgiven.” But instead I said, “I guess it is really just my nature.” 

Which is true, just not the entire truth. What a cop out.

On the night of Jesus’ deepest human suffering, after Peter had fallen asleep on Jesus when Jesus asked him to keep watch and pray, and after Peter told Jesus he would go to death with him even “if all [others] fall away,” we find Peter huddled around a fire pit doing exactly what he promised not to do. 

Peter denied knowing Jesus. Not just once, but three times.

Of course, Jesus completely forgave Peter and in a deeply restorative act, Jesus redeemed what Peter forsook, even giving Peter a future calling and purpose: “Feed my sheep.” Jesus reiterated the calling three times, exactly the number of times Peter denied his friend. 

It took great boldness for Peter to complete this calling. It even took his life.

Imagine you are standing around a neighborhood fire pit, all warm and cozy and comfortable. Your neighbor and friend from your son’s soccer team comes up to you and says, “We really miss your son at Sunday morning soccer games. Why do you always miss those games?” Instead of talking about who you worship on Sundays, you stutter out a half-hearted answer and sheepishly change the subject, feeling a bit more chilled than before your friend walked up to you.

Now, imagine standing around a fire pit near to where a mentor is being questioned and beaten by the government. Would you be willing to align yourself to this mentor, especially knowing it might mean your death as well? Ouch! That hits different; but is it really that different than the first scenario?

Peter went on to be a pillar in the early church. He taught and wrote and led many to know and believe Jesus, the Son of God. Most shocking, after Peter was condemned to die by Nero, tradition holds that Peter chose to be hung upside down because he felt unworthy to die like his Savior. 

Peter's writing about suffering found in 1 Peter

Denier Turned Bold Witness

In order to grow in this kind of boldness, Peter reconciled himself to the truth that a faithful servant is a suffering servant. Peter witnessed the persecution and suffering of the early church, but Peter also knew what it felt like to deny a dear friend. Given those two options, he chose the former – bold alignment with his suffering Savior.

Peter’s writing in I Peter helps us understand his clear-eyed example. Suffering, or its synonyms, are mentioned about 16 times in I Peter.

Pay attention to just a few of Peter’s words:

“In all this you greatly rejoice, though now for a little while you may have had to suffer grief in all kinds of trials.” (I Peter 1:6)

“For God is pleased with you when you do what you know is right and patiently endure unfair treatment.” (2 Peter 2:19)

“For God called you to do good, even if it means suffering, just as Christ suffered for you. He is your example, and you must follow in his steps.” (I Peter 2:21)

Granted, I understand that persecution for righteousness’ sake is categorically different from suffering. Suffering may take the form of a terminal illness, a divorce, or the death of a child, and while horrific these obviously aren’t persecution for righteousness sake. 

But suffering is similar to persecution in the sense that Satan is dead set on persecuting the world bound under his cruel reign of depravity and brokenness. In this broader sense of persecution as hostility, all forms of suffering are akin to persecution.

Clearly from I Peter, he reconciled himself to the fact that following Jesus would inevitably mean suffering. So Peter counted the cost and decided Jesus was worth it. In the end, he chose bold alignment with his suffering Savior.

What about you? Have you counted the cost and decided suffering alongside Jesus is worth it? 

Suffering. Not comfort or ease or power or winning or getting-ahead. 

But here is the beauty of it all – just like Jesus’ example on the cross, suffering is your path to life, the kind of life that is a wellspring within your soul. Or, as Jesus himself refers to it, “life more abundant.” 

A woman sitting before a cross, showing bold alignment with the suffering Savior.

The Blessing of Suffering

Remember Jesus’ teaching upon the hills of Galilee? “Blessed are you when people insult you, persecute you and falsely say all kinds of evil against you because of me.” This kind of suffering causes you to lose pieces of yourself. Maybe you will lose friends when you boldly align yourself to Jesus. Maybe you will be laughed at, misunderstood or go down a notch in popularity. Yet suffering alongside Jesus ushers us into greater grace, the grace to choose love when our sinful nature desires otherwise. And in humility we find Jesus.

Dear one, within His perfect love, and the fellowship of suffering alongside Jesus, we gain Him, filled up, to the brim, and overflowing. It is the beauty of belonging to God’s Kingdom. His perfect redemption of all that is broken. The way He is making all things new – less of us and more of Him. The stuff true life is made of.

With so great a hope, let us, like Peter, boldly align ourselves to our suffering Savior. We may be tempted to remain Jesus-adjacent, but the calling to reconcile our heart to suffering and hold fast to Jesus is the path to life. As Peter wrote, and Eugene Peterson so brilliantly summarized, “The Day is coming when you’ll have it all—life healed and whole.” But until that day, “the future starts now.” (I Peter 1:3-5)

Peter learned the lesson the hard way, but maybe we can learn bold alignment with our suffering Savior from the echoes of his story, and in doing so walk into the joy of the Father.

❤️

PS – I highly suggest you commit I Peter 1:3-9 to memory. It’s beautiful. Here is the gist – You are blessed. You have a new life. You have been reborn into a living hope, a great expectancy, a confident assurance. These are yours to usher you into peace and grace in the turmoil.

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March 19, 2024

Let Your Feelings of Loneliness Lead You To Others

Heather J Jonsson sitting on the sidelines feeling lonely.

As I stood alongside couples laughing, and ladies clumped in cozy groups, my heart was like a kid at recess. “Pick me! Pick me,” I silently asked. I was standing on yet another foreign sideline, holding the same familiar feeling.

Like a virus that comes on the winds of winter, feelings of loneliness is my recurring companion. With every military move, I know what it is to be on the outside of belonging, alone on the sidelines.

So last weekend when I felt that familiar ache, I decided to lean into it. I didn’t push it away. I didn’t remind myself I would make friends soon. Rather, I opened my heart to feel the pull on my tender heart, and the sinking of my stomach.

Because only in understanding can one empathize.

And empathy is the bridge to action.

So next time you enter a space where you feel belonging, remember those who don’t. Whether it is at church, attending a Bible Study, or on your kid’s sports sidelines. Let my story remind you of those who are alongside you. Then let it spur you to be the love of Jesus to them. ❤️

I have a great podcast episode offering you practical advice on how you can offer the love of God to fill the void of the feelings of loneliness in others. Click HERE to listen to the podcast. Warmly, Heather

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March 13, 2024

God’s Grace Weaves a Rich Tapestry From Your Ordinary Moments

For the most part, our lives are a thread of ordinary moments. A cobbling together of sick children and dinner prep, of carpools and coffee dates.

But ordinary moments are the fabric of life. A weaving together of space and time and people we love, becoming a soft kiss upon our souls.

It is one tiny hand resting in ours. A secret shared. A memory created, then treasured. An evening brimming with laughter, which speaks of belonging more than words alone.

So do not reject the ordinary. Do not seek out what looks bright and shiny and glitters like fools gold. For the ordinary moments are the stuff that magic is made of.

Because today’s thread will interlace with tomorrow’s. And tomorrow’s with the next. So that one day, looking back upon that which seemed ordinary, you will behold and be held by the extraordinary.

A tapestry of God’s love and grace woven just for you. ❤️

So let me ask you, what ordinary moments do you find either mundane or difficult right now? What steps can you take to thrive in this season? Let me know in the comments! I would love to hear from you!

(For more encouragement, you might also like this podcast episode I did recently.)

An ordinary moment of blowing bubbles with a child

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December 31, 2023

How Lazy Mom Month Gifts You Restorative Rest

I hereby declare the month of January as Lazy Mom Month. You, dear Mother, have put so much time and energy creating magical memories over the past few months. Now you get a break. This is your time to drink in the restorative rest of Lazy Mom Month.

You have cooked and planned, shopped and celebrated. You tied dainty bows on gifts, and delivered plates of cookies to your neighbors. Pouring yourself out for the sake of your family and friends, you offered a beautiful sacrifice. Now it time to rest, and absolutely not feel guilty about it!

A Mom finding restorative rest by playing with her child.

While I treasure serving my family through the holidays, I likewise cherish Lazy Mom Month. A few years ago I realized that as I ran out of steam over the Holidays, I simultaneously grew in bitterness. Everyone else was resting except ME! Now, knowing I get a rest in January, helps me fully attend to family throughout the Holiday Season.

I know lots of your friends will be racing on a new Peloton in the basement, setting their alarm earlier, or committing to a bullet journal. But we aren’t going to be doing that just yet. (Unless this serves your rest, then by all means go ahead and do it!) We have given so much this past year, and especially the past two months, so let’s use the first two weeks of January to re-fill our tanks, and open the gift of restorative rest.

What To Do Next

This is going to look different for everyone, so I need you to set a Lazy Mom standard for yourself. Let me give you some examples from my own life:

  1. With less social commitments, and fewer demands from my family, my schedule opens up a bit. Therefore I use some of this extra time to take long walks. Nature feeds our souls, and exercise feeds our body. So take the time to fill up in the beauty of creation.
  2. Because I prepared so much food over the past two months, I need a break. I still cook, because my family would wither away if I didn’t, but nothing is elaborate. Canned bean soup and bread is what is on the menu for dinner. And doubling it will help it last longer. At other times I’ve done a month of boxed meals, such as Hello Fresh. Whichever you choose, less prep work is my goal.
  3. I choose to be a bit more lavish with my time. When given a choice between completing two loads of laundry and reading a book, I choose the book. Necessary demands of home life still need to be completed, but some days those demands will wait.
  4. As you probably know, I spend a lot of time talking about and preparing Bible Studies. I’m not quite sure how I got to this place, but I now begin the first few weeks of the New Year in prayer and journaling. Whether I’m outside on my extra January walks, or beginning the day in the early morning hours, I spend less time studying God’s word and more time in prayer. I review the last year and talk with God about what is ahead. With the roller coaster of ups and downs throughout the year, this time of prayer helps level the ground. I remind myself of the specific ways God cared for me over the past year, and this helps launch me into the next year with solid footing.

However you choose to structure your Lazy Mom Month, let it all serve to fill up of your Mom tank. Mothering is a 24 hours a day, 7 days a week job. This will not change. And, believe me, it is so worth it! Yet, consider this as your permission slip to soak up Lazy Mom Month for the purpose of restorative rest.

You are doing a wonderful job, Momma! Happy New Year, dear one!

(Let me know how you are framing your Lazy Mom Month. I would love to know what you think! You can also connect with me on Facebook or Instagram.)

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November 15, 2023

Jesus is the Door to Abundance

I’m excited to be a new team writer for the Grit and Grace Project! My first article came out today. It’s a peek into a time that felt brittle in my past, and how I found a door to abundance. (Spoiler alert: Jesus is the Door!) Click here to read If Life Feels Brittle, It’s Time to Walk Through This Door

For some of you it is easier to listen to the article. I recorded the article on my podcast, and you can also listen to it below.

https://pdcn.co/e/www.buzzsprout.com/729152/13992326-if-life-feels-brittle-it-s-time-to-walk-through-this-door.mp3?download=true

If you found this encouraging you might want to check out more of my Bible teaching. My fervent desire is to empower women to read and study God’s Word, enabling YOU to discover God’s majestic glory and enduring truths. Since Jesus is the door, we can choose to walk through the door time and time again to find the abundance in the middle of the brittle.

Jesus is the door to abundant pastures.

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October 23, 2023

30 Day Seek First Challenge

When you wake up in the morning, what is the first thing you do? Brush your teeth? Find the coffee pot? Or … open your phone? If we are being honest, many of us are in this group. Maybe we want to see how many likes we had from last night’s post, or scroll through a few tik-tok videos to fully wake up, or find the latest news in our world’s crises. I’m not casting stones! I am talking about my own issues! Which is why I want to invite you a 30 Day Seek First Bible Reading Challenge!

Beginning October 30th we will commit to Seek First the Kingdom of God and His righteousness. (Matthew 6:33) Before we open our phones. Before we check our socials. Before we turn on the news. Why? Because we long to be woman whose minds and hearts overflow with the love and beauty of Jesus! And in 2023 I don’t think there is anything more adversarial to this cause than the constant input of social media and news.

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is Seek-First.png

Here is the layout for the challenge:

For 30 days we will not open social media or the news until we open the Word of God. If you need a Bible reading plan, I will email a 30 Day reading plan that will take you from Genesis to Revelation, with about 2 chapters a day. If you are already in a women’s Bible Study, or an individual reading plan, stick with that!

But what if time slips through your fingers and you don’t have time to sit down and read? I get it! My early mornings are a mixture of helping kids get out the door, cold coffee, and an open Bible. So on choatic days like this, listen on a Bible app. (I like the YouVersion Bible App.) The method doesn’t matter, just the outcome.

Lastly, this is not a legalistic approach, nor a structure to further beat yourself up if you fail. This is an invitation; an invitation to Seek First, trusting His exquisite glories will far outweigh the trifling feelings we get when we open our socials. We long to be women who are serious about knowing God’s Word and following His voice, and how are we going to get there if we inundate ourselves with wordly words over God’s Word?

If you would like to join the Seek First Challenge, please join HERE. I will send out the Bible reading plan next Sunday, Oct 29th. Also, to make our challenge interactive follow me on Facebook or Instagram.

Let’s be women who seek God first!

Warmly,

Heather

PS – I also have a new podcast episode. Please check out Inviting the Crucified Jesus into my Pain. You will be blessed by Susanne’s story!

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September 20, 2023

Discover A Better Way To Read The Bible When Sorrows Like Sea Billows Roll

This past Sunday night I collected a few weekend photos, hoping to post about the needed fusion of fun and rest, community and solitude. Really, I thought it was charming. But then, in the blink of an eye, a phone call shattered this neatly curated carousel of social media photos.

As I have tenderly held onto grief these past few days, the words from a familiar hymn came to mind.

When peace, like a river, attendeth my way,
When sorrows like sea billows roll;
Whatever my lot, Thou hast taught me to say,
It is well, it is well with my soul.

Horatio Spafford’s poetic words about grief remain unparalleled. Many of you are probably familiar with the heartbreaking story. After loosing his son to Scarlet Fever, Horatio sent his wife and four children to Europe for a time of inner healing. However, tragedy struck when their boat collided with a Scottish vessel, resulting in the loss of all four children. As Horatio traveled to join his grieving wife in Europe, he sailed near the location where his children had perished. There he penned these poignant words, “When sorrows like sea billows roll…”

Indeed, as we traverse the oceans of life, sorrows like sea billows roll. In those moments when you find yourself at a loss for words, these are fitting. But how did Horatio sing “it is well with my soul” while sorrows swamped his boat?

As a Bible Teacher, I would love nothing more than to offer answers wrapped up in tidy Biblical bows. But pretty bows disintegrate beneath the flame of sorrow. Victorious platitudes fall flat under the weight of grief. And a magic bullet eludes the hands wearied by suffering.

So I want to offer you a better approach to reading your Bible, especially in preparation for moments like this. In a world where sorrows like sea billows roll, a misreading proves misguiding.

Many Christians emphasize the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow while glossing over the thorns. I am certainly enthusiastic about discussing the ultimate triumph through Jesus, but we do a disservice to our faith when we read the Bible through this lens alone. I do think faithful victory should be the primary lens, but not the only one. Perhaps a better reading can offer solace to weary hearts.

Walk with me for a moment and let us sit in the sorrow of others; sorrow that shatters today because it cannot predict what tomorrow may bring.

Consider Job, he regained much that the Lord took away, but the loss of his children must have left a permanent void. Hannah prayed for and received a child, only to give him over as soon as he was weaned. Joseph wept more than any other man recorded in scripture, and although the Bible never uses the word, we would certainly say his life was marked by trauma. David spent years as a hunted man. Jesus was a “man of sorrows and acquainted with grief.” And Peter, a steadfast rock of the church, was crucified upside down.

When we read our Bible, what difference would it make if we slowed down and engaged all of our senses? Could we feel less adrift in this world? Could we commensurate with the gaping hole of Job’s loss, and realize there is room for our wounds in the Kingdom narrative. Might the sting of Hannah’s empty arms remind us profound sorrow and deep faith can intermingle? Could we summon a scrap of courage to bear up under the weight of threat as we hide with David the fugitive? Or perhaps we could inherit a greater trust as we sit with Joseph in a dank prison.

By doing so, maybe we could process our broken, tumultuous reality better. And might this open the door to fully show up for the pain of others?

So I encourage you, as you read your Bible, pay attention to time and context. Sit in the gaps between chapter breaks and sense the months and years passing. Feel the emotions of David’s years as a hunted man, and Joseph languishing in prison, and Sarah’s near lifetime of infertility.

And let’s resist the urge to skip to the good part. Life is flecked with good parts like stars at midnight. But if we adopt the wrong theology that life’s joys are like perpetual sunshine, then our faith may falter when darkness envelopes us.

Read the Bible well, sea billows and all. Your soul depends on it. ❤️

PS – If you would like to learn how to mine the treasures of scripture, subscribe here and I will send you a one week study to help jumpstart your time in God’s Word!

And make sure you visit Bold Mercies Podcast to hear stories of women living their journey with boldness and strength. You will be encouraged!

Heather

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About Me

About Me

Beloved of Jesus who finds great joy in His Word and teaching about His lavish love. I am also an Air Force wife and mother. We are always seeking wide open spaces to feed our souls and grow acorns to oak trees.

https://amazon.com/author/heatherjjonsson

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