Awakening Freedom

Awakening Freedom Christian Gift Shop • Boutique • Ministry Hub

Awakening Freedom exists to awaken hearts, equip believers, and help people live free and on mission.

Faith-based gifts, apparel, and active ministry.

✝️ Faith • Freedom • Purpose
🔥 Living on mission

When Humility Hurts but HealsHave you ever been so sure of something that no one could tell you otherwise…Only to later ...
02/27/2026

When Humility Hurts but Heals

Have you ever been so sure of something that no one could tell you otherwise…

Only to later discover what you were so certain about was actually wrong?

When you realized it, did it hurt?

If it did, that’s the process of when humility hurts — but heals.

Humility is not always soft.
Sometimes it feels like the sting of realization.

• The moment you see what you couldn’t see before.
• The moment you recognize your tone wasn’t wisdom — it was pain.
• Your reaction wasn’t discernment — it was defense.
• Your control wasn’t leadership — it was fear.

And then it hits you…

That ache in your chest.
That quiet, internal “Oh…”

That’s humility.

And yes — it hurts.

Because pride protects the ego.
Humility exposes it.

“God opposes the proud but gives grace to the humble.”
— James 4:6 (ESV)

But here’s the mercy:

God does not humble you to crush you.
He humbles you to heal you.

“Humble yourselves before the Lord, and he will exalt you.”
— James 4:10 (ESV)

Humility is surgery.

➡️It cuts — but only to remove what is infecting.
➡️It reveals — but only to restore vision.
➡️It corrects — but only to realign your steps.

“Before I was afflicted I went astray, but now I keep your word.”
— Psalm 119:67 (ESV)

The pain of humility is temporary.
The fruit of humility is freedom.

When God allows you to feel that sting of awareness, it’s not rejection — it’s refinement.

He is not saying, “You failed.”

He is saying, “You’re ready to grow.”

Humility hurts.

But it heals what pride could never fix.

🙏 Father, give me a heart that welcomes humility. When correction stings, help me receive it without defensiveness. Remove pride where it has protected my wounds. Heal the places that caused me to respond out of fear or insecurity. Let humility produce strength, clarity, and maturity in me. Thank You that Your refinement is proof of Your love. In Jesus’ name, amen.

02/13/2026
Maybe the reason you feel exhausted is because you’re trying to steer something God never asked you to control.Yesterday...
02/13/2026

Maybe the reason you feel exhausted is because you’re trying to steer something God never asked you to control.

Yesterday I shared a message about something that hit me while studying Noah’s Ark, and honestly, I haven’t been able to shake it. When you really slow down and read the story, you realize something most of us never notice. We love trusting God until trusting God means letting go of control. We say we have faith, but if we’re honest, we still want a steering wheel. We want direction, clarity, and reassurance about where everything is going.

As I looked closer at the ark described in Genesis, something stood out to me. God gave Noah extremely detailed instructions: “Make yourself an ark… this is how you are to make it.” (Genesis 6:14–15). He provided measurements, materials, and structure. God was incredibly specific about how to build, but do you know what He never gave Noah? A way to steer it. There was no rudder, no sail, and no steering system. That means Noah built exactly what God asked him to build, but he was never meant to be the captain. The ark wasn’t designed to be navigated by human control; it was designed to float.

That realization changes everything because many of us think faith means saying, “God, I’ll follow You just let me help drive.” But Scripture shows us something different. “Thus Noah did; according to all that God commanded him, so he did.” (Genesis 6:22). Noah’s responsibility wasn’t direction; it was obedience. And when the storm finally came, the rain, the chaos, and the uncertainty, Scripture quietly says something powerful: “And the Lord shut him in.” (Genesis 7:16). Noah didn’t close the door; God did. This means Noah wasn’t protected because he controlled the situation. He was protected because God covered what He commanded.

And here’s the part that really struck me: “The waters prevailed and lifted up the ark.” (Genesis 7:17). The flood didn’t sink the ark; it carried it. The same storm that brought destruction became the vehicle of deliverance. And I wonder how many of us are fighting the very waters God is using to move us. We pray for control when God is asking for trust. Scripture says, “Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and lean not on your own understanding… and He shall direct your paths.” (Proverbs 3:5–6). Notice the order: trust comes before direction.

Maybe the reason you feel tired isn’t because you’re failing. Maybe it’s because you’re trying to steer something God only asked you to trust Him with. You don’t need a rudder when God is guiding the waters, and you don’t need control when God has direction. And maybe the greatest act of faith today isn’t doing more. Maybe it’s finally letting go and realizing you were never meant to be the captain, just the one who trusts the God who carries what He commands.

For those who prefer reading instead of watching, this is the written reflection from yesterday’s message. If it encouraged you, I’d love to hear what stood out to you.

- Tristan Miller

02/12/2026

Awakening Freedom Message | You Were Never Meant to Steer the Ark

Some of our biggest frustrations with God don’t come from disobedience…

They come from obedience when we realize we’re not actually in control.

This message has been burning in my heart for a while and today I finally sat down and shared it.

👉 You were never meant to steer the ark.

If you’ve ever felt like you’re doing what God asked but still don’t know where you’re going… this is for you.

If this speaks to you, encourages you, or challenges you consider sharing it. Someone else may need this reminder today too.

Would love to hear what stands out to you.











01/14/2026

How many of you in this season are feeling like we are being taught how to move differently?

Whether it’s prophetically or physically, there has been a shift in the way things are being done.

What once felt natural may now feel unfamiliar. What once flowed easily may now require intention. That doesn’t mean something is wrong. It means something is being realigned.

Genesis 32 is the chapter where Jacob wrestles with God and his hip is touched. His encounter with God was so real that it left a physical mark. He didn’t just walk away blessed, he walked away changed.

The hip represents strength, movement, and how we carry ourselves forward. It also represents legacy and authority. When God touched Jacob’s hip, He wasn’t punishing him. He was shifting him from self-reliance into God-dependence. From striving into identity. From Jacob the wrestler into Israel, the one who prevails with God.

“And as he passed over Penuel the sun rose upon him, and he halted upon his thigh.”
Genesis 32:31

Notice this:
He limped, but he moved forward.
He was touched, but he was blessed.
He was marked, but he was not stopped.

The limp was not weakness.
The limp was evidence of encounter.

Sometimes we think transformation should make us feel stronger, but often it makes us more dependent. God doesn’t always remove the struggle; sometimes He changes how we walk after it. The limp became Jacob’s reminder that his strength no longer came from himself.

Jacob said,
“I will not let You go unless You bless me.”

That wasn’t desperation. That was hunger for identity.

Many of us are in a Genesis 32 season.
Where God is touching how we move.
How we carry authority.
How we rely on Him.

Not to break us, but to realign us.
Not to wound us, but to mark us.

You can be blessed and marked at the same time.

You can be changed and still moving forward.

You can walk differently and walk with greater authority.

Sometimes the limp is proof that you encountered God and lived to tell about it.

“Did God really say…?” (Genesis 3:1)Has there ever been a time when you plainly heard the Spirit reveal something to you...
01/09/2026

“Did God really say…?” (Genesis 3:1)

Has there ever been a time when you plainly heard the Spirit reveal something to you?

Maybe it was your next move or course of action.

Maybe, it was healing for you or someone you are close to.

Maybe, it was the blueprint for where He is leading you to.

But once you received the revelation, doubt crept into your mind. You believed what you heard, but doubt began shouting louder than the truth and confusion started setting in.

That moment is not a sign you missed God—it’s often proof that you heard Him clearly.

The enemy’s strategy has always been the same:
to question what God already established.

“Did God really say…?” (Genesis 3:1)

Notice the timing. Doubt usually shows up after God speaks, after He heals, after He delivers, after He confirms. The attack is rarely about what’s coming—it’s about undoing your confidence in what’s already finished.

What’s really happening is this:

God speaks ➡️ Satan questions
God establishes ➡️Satan accuses
God completes ➡️Satan confuses

But Scripture is clear:

“It is finished.” (John 19:30)

“The gifts and the calling of God are irrevocable.” (Romans 11:29)

“He who began a good work in you will bring it to completion.” (Philippians 1:6)

When the enemy whispers, “What if it wasn’t God?” He’s trying to pull you back into a place God already brought you out of.

Don’t re-examine what Heaven has already ruled on. You don’t overcome doubt by striving for another word— you overcome it by standing on the word already given.

The attack is rarely about what’s coming—it’s about undoing your confidence in what’s already finished.

“I will not question what God confirmed.
I will not fear what Christ finished.
I will not surrender ground I already inherited.”

Sometimes the greatest warfare is simply resting in what God already said—and refusing to let hell rewrite heaven’s record.

When worship becomes routine instead of relational, our first love is no longer first. God has never been after songs su...
01/07/2026

When worship becomes routine instead of relational, our first love is no longer first.

God has never been after songs sung in perfect key or services with moments orchestrated to fit an agenda. He doesn’t desire a certain number of songs before He “shows up,” because He already lives inside the hearts of the surrendered. Worship has been lowered down to something that we do instead of the way that we live.

Long before worship became something we do, it was something we shared. It was walking with Him in the cool of the day. It was hearts turned toward one another. It was love responding to love.

Somewhere along the way, worship went through a shift. Not because we stopped loving God, but because we became familiar with it and wonder was lost. Our first love was quietly displaced. We learned the rhythm, the lyrics, the language. We learned when to lift our hands, when to cry and when to bow down. And without realizing it, we began offering Him habit instead of heart. We left our first love but He is not beyond reach.

Yet, God doesn’t rebuke us for this. He is drawing us to Him with love because He desires our closeness, not our habits. It is the ache of a Father whose children are near, but not with Him.

When worship becomes routine, we may still show up, but we stop leaning in. We stop listening for His voice. We stop letting His presence interrupt us. But He is still waiting. Longing for us to come closer. He never withdraws His affection. He simply invites us back into the place where love flows freely again.

“Return to Me, and I will return to you,” says the Lord of hosts.
—Malachi 3:7

This is the heartbeat of God. Not correction, but reconnection. Not distance, but drawing near. Not obligation, but desire.

Relational worship is unhurried. It lingers. It listens. It responds. It lets love lead the moment instead of the moment leading love.

It is not measured by volume or visibility, but by surrender.

God is not asking for more from you.
He is asking for you again.

May our worship become a meeting place once more. May our songs become conversations. May our obedience flow from affection. And may love be the reason we come.

“We love because He first loved us.”
—1 John 4:19 (ESV)

Let worship return to its first language—
love.

Merry Christmas — all glory to Jesus!May your Christmas be filled with His peace, His presence, and the joy that only He...
12/25/2025

Merry Christmas — all glory to Jesus!

May your Christmas be filled with His peace, His presence, and the joy that only He can give.

12/21/2025

There are seasons in life where you can feel a shift coming before anything actually changes. A decision. A new direction. A step that feels right… but still a little scary.

Most meaningful things start that way. You’re excited one day, unsure the next. You question yourself. You replay the “what ifs.” That doesn’t mean you’re off track. It usually means you’re standing at the edge of growth.

Anything worth building asks for commitment. It asks for time, energy, patience, and faith. But when you finally decide to move forward, not just chasing an idea, but being intentional about it… something changes. The effort has purpose. The long days have meaning. And eventually, you get to see the fruit of what you were willing to say yes to.

One thing’s for sure: big decisions shouldn’t be made alone. When we slow down, reflect, and invite God into the process, clarity starts to come. It may not always come all at once, but step by step.

If you’re standing in a season of decision right now, don’t ignore that moment. Pay attention to it. Be honest about your fears. Be clear about your values. And move forward with intention.

“Commit your work to the Lord, and your plans will be established.” — Proverbs 16:3

“The heart of man plans his way, but the Lord establishes his steps.” — Proverbs 16:9

Growth rarely feels comfortable, but it’s often exactly where we’re supposed to be.

- Tristan Miller

HAPPY THANKSGIVING!
11/27/2025

HAPPY THANKSGIVING!

10/15/2025

When the Storms Come

Life has a way of surprising us. Sometimes, it’s with blessings we never expected and other times, it’s with storms we never saw coming. Maybe you’ve been there… walking through loss, heartbreak, or a season that feels too heavy to bear.

But here’s the truth. God is still faithful in the storm.

In Mark 4:39, Jesus stood up in the middle of the storm and said, “Peace, be still!” and the wind and the waves obeyed Him. That same Jesus who calmed the storm back then still has power over the storms in your life today.

When you can’t see the sun, remember the clouds don’t change its position. And when you can’t see God moving, the storm doesn’t change His presence. He’s still right there, holding you together even when everything feels like it’s falling apart.

Romans 8:28 reminds us that “God works all things together for good for those who love Him and are called according to His purpose.” That means even the pain, even the loss, even the parts you don’t understand… He’s weaving it into something beautiful.

Maybe you don’t need all the answers right now. Maybe you just need to know you’re not alone and that the One who spoke creation into existence still speaks peace into chaos.

So hold on. Keep your eyes on Jesus, not the waves.

What the enemy meant for evil, God can and will use for good.

If you’re going through a storm, don’t lose heart. This season won’t last forever. But what God does in you during it will.

- Tristan Miller

Don’t Sleep Through Your CallingOne of the greatest dangers for believers today isn’t rebellion, it’s spiritual sleep. Y...
10/12/2025

Don’t Sleep Through Your Calling

One of the greatest dangers for believers today isn’t rebellion, it’s spiritual sleep. You can love Jesus, go to church, and still live half-awake to what He’s actually called you to do.

The enemy doesn’t always come with destruction; sometimes he just lulls us into routine. We settle into comfort, and before long, the fire fades and the mission feels distant. But Scripture says, “Wake up, for your salvation is nearer now than when you first believed.” (Romans 13:11)

This isn’t a time to coast. It’s time to live awake… to remember eternity is real, people matter, and your everyday life is a mission field.

You don’t have to stand on a stage to live with purpose. Every conversation, every act of kindness, every moment you choose obedience over comfort… that’s living on mission.

The world doesn’t need a sleepy Church. It needs sons and daughters who are fully alive… burning with passion, purpose, and the presence of God.

🔥 Wake up. The time is now.

- Tristan Miller

Address

90 West 2nd Street
Parsons, TN
38363

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Awakening Freedom posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Business

Send a message to Awakening Freedom:

Share

Category