David Sunde's Blog
November 25, 2025
Do-overs Becoming Autobiography
The world is louder than it is accurate, and the truest things are often the most quiet.
Brad Montague wrote that in his Manifesto for Stubborn Optimists, and I can't stop thinking about it. Because right now, injustice screams. Fear accuses. The desperate stampede shouts a single message: save yourself. But underneath all that noise, there's this whisper—the world we know as normal is not the one God intended.
We know mea culpa—my fault, my confession. But what about felix culpa? Happy fault. For...
November 24, 2025
Identity as a Narrative
We know that moment when someone became "Mom" or "Dad" to us. Not when we mastered swaddling or figured out sleep schedules—but something deeper. A protective instinct we didn't know existed suddenly emerged. Identity shifted before competence ever caught up.
If you ask your child, "What do you want to be when you grow up?" try following up with, "Then what?" Because here's the truth: identity isn't a destination. It's not about arriving at a job title and stopping. It's about becoming.
Remember I...
October 19, 2025
Revolutionary Leadership & UN-cool Parents
In Almost Famous, rock journalist Lester Bangs snuck a profound, easily missed confession to his young protégé: "The only true currency in this bankrupt world is what you share with someone else when you're uncool." Parenting inevitably reveals how the older we get, the less cool we become (#facts). But, what could be more unnerving - like realizing a mirror works even when our eyes are closed – is that kids have a front-row seat to our harried moments of long days and late nights of our flawed ...
August 14, 2025
Disciple-Shaping Your Home.
One of the best to kill the vibe of a perfectly good small group is a curriculum. The alternative - discussing Sunday sermons - doesn’t offer a better growth trajectory. We’ve all been there - discussion narrows, relationships find a polite lane, and learning becomes primarily cognitive.
So, what if the “content” was your family rehearsing what you believe is true about God? What if you could move the needle of your small group from discussion to demonstration? From information to equipping? Wha...
August 8, 2025
Shaping the Soft Skills of Jesus
Spend five minutes with a child asking a few questions and you can quickly learn what their family values, expectations, what’s allowed, and what’s frowned upon. Why is that?
Because a mirror works even when our eyes are closed.
Without having to say a word and without intending to, human nature has a way of expressing preferences, fears, political leanings, approval, annoyances, pleasure, and doubts without having to say a word. It’s in our reactions, a heavy sigh, how we spend, and what’s permis...
March 18, 2025
A Tipping Point
Arriving before daybreak to immerse myself in the Austin phenomenon that is SXSW, I joined a rising tide of die-hard live music fans. A local radio station had set up in an oversized living-room-for-a-lobby at the Four Seasons. Sitting in the round, they live-broadcast their morning show all week—offering the perfect indie-music sampler platter. Two songs per artist, stripped-down sets with minimal DJ introductions—an ideal way to digest the week's overwhelming festivities.
These emerging artists...
March 16, 2025
Fruit > Results.
While the Church wrestles with outward cultural relevance, it's also navigating an inward challenge of metrics. Results and fruit, though both valuable, serve distinct purposes. The primary difference is:
God doesn't call His people primarily to results—He invites us to bear fruit.
Results manifest in statistics—attendance, sign-ups, volunteers, baptisms, small group involvement. Each number represents a life , yet the fruit of person’s life is best measured in developmental relationships; those c...
February 21, 2025
The IKEA effect & Other Things that Last
Even if shopping comes easily, an IKEA excursion can expose even the most committed of shoppers. I have a friend who imagines IKEA as the Swedish word for “hell.” Once inside, you’re lost in a maze that seems to lead you back to a vaguely familiar kitchen. Of course, in wandering, you’re sure to be separated from anyone you love. If you have to use the restroom, they’re all fake, like a bladder mirage. And when you think you’ve escaped the warehouse nightmare, you find yourself in self-assembly ...
December 7, 2024
Advent’s Three Time Zones
“Maranatha” is often translated as “our Lord comes,” which is as unfortunate as reducing Christmas to Jesus’ birthday party. This Aramaic word captures “three times zones” that Jesus came, He’s here, and He’s coming again.
Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol famously illustrates these three “time zones” through the ghosts of Christmas past, present, and future. He narrates the Christian vision that even the most Scrooge-like person among us can experience a change of heart. Dickens offers a compel...
November 1, 2024
On Becoming Un-equally Yoked
The Church today is missing a great opportunity to be UNequally yoked. When the idea of being “in community” consists mostly of life-stage gatherings and similar interests, we end up with a whole lot of sameness. Of course, sameness isn’t bad. It’s just geared for maintenance rather than growth.
When it comes to dating, every youth group kid is taught to be “equally yoked” (2 Cor.6:14), which is wise counsel. However, disciples only finding sameness makes it hard to embrace sent-ness. Meaningful...


