All posts by mjharvell

Welcome, friend—I’m glad you’ve pulled up a chair on the front porch of my little corner of the internet. My name is Michael Joe Harvell, and I live my life with one simple mission: to glorify God, encourage people, and leave this world a little better than I found it. I’m a husband, father, pastor, writer, Jeep enthusiast, and front-porch thinker who believes that life is best lived on purpose. I serve as pastor of Eureka Baptist Church in Anderson, South Carolina, where I get the joy of preaching, teaching, and walking with people through the ups and downs of everyday life. Over the years, I’ve discovered that faith isn’t just about Sunday mornings—it’s about living every single day in the presence and power of God. I’m also an author. My books—including The Grace Exchange: How Forgiven People Forgive People and The Word Works—grow out of the sermons, stories, and lessons I’ve learned on this journey. I write in a style that’s conversational, a little front-porch-rocking-chair, and full of stories, quotes, and Scripture that point us back to the goodness of God’s Word. When I’m not writing or preaching, you might find me sitting outside with my Bible and journal, cruising the backroads in my Jeep Gladiator, or sharing a meal and some laughs with the good folks God has put in my life. I love helping people find peace in their spirit, strength in their body, and encouragement in their soul. This blog is simply an extension of that mission. Here you’ll find devotions, encouragement, reflections, and practical insights for living a life of purpose, peace, and joy. So grab a cup of coffee, pull up a rocking chair, and stay awhile—I’d be honored to walk this road of faith with you.

Seeing The Unseen!

“When the unseen becomes more real to you than what you can touch or taste, you start to live in a world most folks can’t even imagine. The invisible things—the quiet stir of faith, the whispers of hope, and that pull of purpose deep in your soul—begin to shape your every step.

Listen to nature around you, to the mountains, rivers and trees, letting nature teach you that there’s a hand in all things, unseen but undeniable. The Holy Spirit calls, unseen yet deeply felt, leading you to trust beyond sight.  sometimes it’s the things you can’t prove that have the most power.

So keep the eyes of your heart open. When you let the unseen steer your course, the doubts and struggles of this world don’t stand a chance. They’re just a little mist in the morning, burning away in the light of what’s truly real.”

What Are You Leaning On?

Evening brings a quiet clarity, a chance to reflect on the foundations we lean on. Too often, we prop ourselves up with things of this world—money, status, pride—hoping they’ll carry us through. But let’s face it, they’re fragile; they crumble under pressure, leaving us stranded, like leaning against a rickety fence in a storm.

But when we rely on God, we’re leaning on a force beyond this world, a power that creates mountains and whispers peace into chaos. God doesn’t promise it’ll always be easy, but what He offers is deeper than mere ease—it’s a strength, a peace, a purpose that only He can produce. It’s like leaning into the wind with full confidence, knowing you won’t fall.

As we close the day, let’s ask ourselves—are we leaning on temporary things that shake and break, or on the One who never fails?

What It Is!

When the evening settles, there’s a quiet truth that rises like a river’s mist. To see the world as it is—raw, unpolished, and unapologetically itself—demands courage. 

We often twist our visions, dressing life up in expectation, crafting it into what we want rather than accepting what stands right before us. 

But nature has a way of setting things straight. Out here in the quiet, it whispers, “See the mountain, the river, the old oak for what they are, not for what you think they ought to be.”

Life is much the same. There’s beauty in facing each day without the trappings of expectation. 

When we strip away all the wants, we find life waiting for us, just as it was meant to be. 

That’s the heart of peace—learning to let things be, to let life unfold, to be grateful for what is, and to find that’s enough. So tonight, let go of what you think should be, and open your eyes to what simply is…