RHW 2026 Preview || A Year of Healing, Hope & Holy Renewal

Welcome to 2026 at RHW Ministries

A Year of Healing, Hope, and Holy Renewal

As we step into a brand-new year, my heart feels tender, grateful, and expectant. If you’re reading this today, I want you to know something right from the start:

You are not alone on your journey.

This past year has been stretching for many of us — physically, emotionally, spiritually. Maybe you’ve carried old wounds that resurfaced. Maybe you’ve been navigating health challenges, fear, or fatigue. Maybe life has felt like more than you could hold.

But here’s the beautiful truth:

God has been with you every single step.
And He will continue to carry you into this new year with grace, strength, and hope.

As I prayed over the direction of RHW for 2026, the Lord gently impressed one theme on my heart:

Healing.

Not quick-fix healing.
Not pressured healing.
But the slow, tender, intentional healing that Jesus does as we walk with Him day by day.

That’s the heart behind every column I’ll be sharing with you this year.


Your RHW Journey for 2026

Each Friday has a purpose — gentle, steady, and rooted in Scripture.

🌿 1st Friday — Recovery Reframed

We’ll take an honest look at the places women run when life becomes too heavy.
Not with shame.
Not with judgment.
But with compassion and Christ-centered hope.
Each month, we’ll uncover a new struggle and discover the healing Jesus offers in the middle of it.

2nd Friday — Running the Race (Hebrews Study)

Hebrews is a book of endurance, encouragement, and spiritual maturity.
This study will help us keep our eyes on Jesus — especially when we feel tired, distracted, or discouraged.
Think of this as your monthly “faith reset.”

🌸 3rd Friday — The Healing Journey

These posts will speak directly to the deeper places of your heart.
The emotional places.
The weary places.
The places that need rest, comfort, and gentle truth.
Each month, we’ll explore one facet of personal and spiritual healing.

📘 4th Friday — Book Study (Joyce Meyer: Answers to Anxiety)

This book has been a gift to me, and I believe it will bless you too.
We’ll walk through it together, one chapter at a time, pulling out practical wisdom and biblical encouragement for everyday peace.

🌼 5th Friday — Reviews & Sacred Pause Features

When a month gives us a 5th Friday, we’ll enjoy something lighter:

    • a spiritual review
    • a worship spotlight
    • a devotional reflection
    • or a simple “sacred pause” to breathe and rest
      These posts will be gentle and refreshing.

My Heart for You This Year

If you feel tired… discouraged… anxious… or simply ready for a fresh start, this space is for you.
My prayer is that RHW becomes a quiet sanctuary — a place to breathe, reset, and receive from the Lord.

This year is not about striving.
It’s not about perfection.
It’s not about doing more.

It’s about walking closely with Jesus and letting Him tend to the wounds we often try to hide.

He sees you.
He loves you.
And He delights in healing what hurts.


A Prayer to Begin the Year

Lord, thank You for carrying us into a new year filled with hope and possibility.
Meet us in the places that ache.
Heal the wounds we’ve carried for far too long.
Strengthen us where we feel weak.
Lead us gently into the plans You have for us in 2026.
May this be a year of deeper peace, fuller joy, and unexpected healing.
We trust You, Jesus — one step, one breath, one day at a time.

Amen.


As we close, I invite you to receive this blessing with a quiet and open heart. This new lyric video of “The Blessing” featuring Andrea Bocelli with Kari Jobe and Cody Carnes, feels like holy ground. Let these words—rooted in Scripture and wrapped in worship—rest over you as God’s covering for the year ahead. May His presence go before you, and behind you, and beside you, all around you and give you peace.

BOOK STUDY: The Search for Significance | Chapter 9: Shame

On the fourth Friday of each month in 2025, we’re studying The Search for Significance by Robert S. McGee. Join me as we confront the enemy’s lies of self-doubt and find our victory in the truth of who we are according to God’s Word!

In Chapter 8, we marveled at the incredible truth of propitiation—that Jesus not only forgave our sins but took our punishment upon Himself. This month, in Chapter 9: Shame, we turn our attention to one of the deepest wounds in the human heart: the belief that we are unworthy, unlovable, and beyond redemption. Shame tells us there’s something wrong with who we are—but God’s Word tells a different story.

 

Summary: Chapter Nine – Shame

In this chapter, McGee addresses the destructive lie: “I am what I am. I cannot change. I am hopeless.” Shame is different from guilt. Guilt says, “I did something wrong.” Shame says, “I am something wrong.” It is the painful belief that our identity is flawed, that we’re unworthy of love, forgiveness, or change. This lie keeps us hiding, pretending, and disconnected. But Jesus came to not only cleanse us from sin but to restore our sense of worth. In Him, shame has no power—because we are made new, fully loved, and never beyond hope.

“Shame says you are too broken to be whole. But Jesus says, ‘You are mine.’” – Paraphrase from Robert S. McGee


Biblical Truths

    1. Romans 8:1“Therefore, there is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.”

      • In Christ, we are not condemned—not by God, not by our past, and not by shame.

    2. Isaiah 61:7“Instead of your shame, you will receive a double portion, and instead of disgrace, you will rejoice in your inheritance.”

      • God promises restoration and joy in place of shame and disgrace.

    3. 2 Corinthians 5:17“Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, the new creation has come: The old has gone, the new is here!”

      • Your past doesn’t define you. Your new identity in Christ does.


Key Idea

Shame is a lie that says your value is gone—but in Christ, you are a new creation, completely restored and deeply loved.


Reflection Question

What labels or lies of shame have you believed about yourself, and how can God’s truth begin to rewrite those beliefs?


Practical Application

    1. Name the Lie, Replace the Label – Write down one shame-based lie you’ve believed (e.g., “I’m damaged,” “I’ll never be enough”) and then write a Scripture-based truth next to it. Speak the truth over yourself daily.

    2. Stand in the Mirror of Grace – Each morning, look into the mirror and declare: “I am not shame. I am God’s beloved.” Speak to your soul like you would to your dearest friend.

    3. Soak in God’s Word – Read Psalm 139 slowly this week. Let the truth of your value and design wash over your heart until it drowns out every voice of shame.


My Personal Reflections

Shame has followed me for most of my life—often in subtle whispers, sometimes in paralyzing waves. It crept in during childhood when I didn’t feel seen or understood. It clung to me in adulthood when I made mistakes, said the wrong thing, or didn’t measure up to my own expectations. It told me I was broken beyond fixing, unworthy of deep love—even from God.

But the Lord has been so gentle, so faithful, in peeling away that shame layer by layer. Through His Word, He reminds me: “You are not what happened to you. You are not what you failed to do. You are Mine.”

I still have days when shame tries to resurface, but now I know where to take it—straight to Jesus. His truth silences the lies. His love removes the weight. His presence restores what shame tried to destroy.


Sister, if shame has been your shadow, I want to encourage you today: you don’t have to live under its weight any longer. Jesus bore your shame on the cross. He’s not ashamed of you. He delights in you. And He’s rewriting your story—not with judgment, but with mercy and grace.

Next month, we’ll explore Chapter 10: God’s Answer – Regeneration, where we’ll rejoice in the truth that we are new creations in Christ.

Until then, may this truth ring louder than shame:
You are not what you’ve done. You are not what’s been done to you.
You are who God says you are—redeemed, restored, and deeply loved.
💖

🎵 Worship Reflection
As you reflect on this chapter, I invite you to listen to “Run to the Father” by Cody Carnes. This powerful worship song reminds us that we don’t have to carry the weight of shame or strive to fix ourselves. Instead, we can run—again and again—to the arms of a loving Father who welcomes us just as we are. Let the lyrics wash over your heart and lead you into a place of surrender, healing, and grace.