Power Love & Miracles exists to help people notice where God is already at work—often quietly, patiently, and closer than we expect.
This space is for readers who love Scripture but are weary of spiritual pressure; who sense that faith is meant to deepen peace rather than anxiety; and who are discovering that transformation often happens through presence rather than force.
The writings here explore the Bible with care and curiosity, attend to the lived experience of faith, and invite a slower way of seeing—one that trusts God’s unfolding work in ordinary life.
A Different Pace
Much of modern spirituality is driven by urgency: more certainty, better outcomes, stronger belief.
This space moves at a different pace.
Here, faith is approached as:
attentiveness rather than control
participation rather than performance
love rather than fear
Rather than chasing miracles, these reflections invite readers to recognize them as signs of coherence—moments when life quietly aligns with God’s deeper purposes.
About the Writer
I’m J. Brent Eaton—a Bible scholar, writer, and hospice chaplain.
For decades, my work has centered on walking alongside people during times of transition, loss, doubt, and awakening. Those experiences have shaped how I read Scripture and how I understand faith—not as something to be mastered, but as something to be lived with humility, patience, and trust.
My writing is informed by biblical scholarship, pastoral care, and a conviction that God’s presence is more constant than our awareness of it.
Why This Space Exists
Power Love & Miracles is not built to persuade or perform.
It exists to offer companionship through words—reflections meant to steady the heart, clarify perception, and encourage a faith that is resilient, grounded, and quietly hopeful.
If you find yourself slowing down as you read, noticing more than you did before, or sensing God’s nearness in unexpected places, then this space is serving its purpose.
An Open Door
This work is offered freely.
Some readers and listeners choose to help sustain it so it can remain steady and available. Others simply return when something calls them back.
Both ways of being here are honored.
There is no requirement to agree, subscribe, or commit to anything—only an invitation to linger and see what unfolds.






