Sam Luce's Blog
February 1, 2026
Pro-active Parenting in a Reactive World
The Thankful Poor by Henry O. Tanner Most parents have a built-in instinct to protect their kids. This is God-given and important. But like all good things, it can be taken too far, and I believe this is true in modern American life. There are more products than ever to protect kids from putting things in electric sockets, from bumping their heads on coffee tables, and to lock cabinet doors that contain unsafe items. In our right desire for protection, we have become obsessed with physical well-...
January 18, 2026
Why Wonder and Monotony are Better Than Innovation.
Church at Vernon, fog by Claude MonetAfter nearly three decades of pastoral ministry, I have found that the one thing the church in our day loves most is change and innovation. This is because modern culture has had a greater effect on the contemporary church than the church has had on our present culture.
If you have been around church culture long enough, you will have heard pastors talk about Good to Great as if Collins were the replacement for Judas rather than Matthias. You will have heard p...
December 26, 2025
Friendship and Living in a Place Everyone Leaves
Every year, our family watches "It’s a Wonderful Life.” It has to be one of the greatest movies of all time. Hot take, I know, but I stand behind it. I find that as I change and grow older, it hits a bit differently, and each year, it never fails to bring tears to my eyes.
George Bailey’s story in It’s a Wonderful Life is shaped by the tension between desires and responsibility. From a young age, George dreams of travel, education, and adventure. He wants to see the world, build great things, an...
December 18, 2025
My Top 10 Books of 2025
By Norman RockwellThis year was marked by changing and rearranging and facing fears. I started a new job after 28 years at the same church. I’m halfway through my doctoral program. My second book landed on a couple of lists, just like the one I am making here, for someone who has been making these lists for over ten years; that is so surreal. This coming year, I will also be finishing my second, third, and fourth books. One will come out in September, the other two in 2027. Writing out that last...
December 12, 2025
To My Friend Drew.
Drew,
I wanted to write to you to say I’m sorry. Rejection is never easy. To write and have someone say, “That isn’t what we want,” or “That isn’t good enough,” or “This won’t fit with our audience,” feels so personal. Writing is such a personal thing. You take your heart off your sleeve and put it on the internet for widespread consumption, you hope, but often what you get is specific and personal rejection.
To write requires honesty, and honesty demands courage. To risk being heard means you ri...
November 30, 2025
Buried
“Church in Winter landscape” by Sophus JacobsenText within this block will maintain its original spacing when publishedBuriedBuried between my finger and thumbMy pencil rests Eraser worn as much as the lead.Working both ends, led like A frantic candle of perfection. As a kid rain was God’s tearsMy back sore at fiftyFrom shoveling frozen tears That Date puts in hell.By God, the old man can handle a spade.Just like his old man.Cutting through the frozen turfCutting through the noi...
November 9, 2025
The Most Important Thing You can do for Your Kids is Follow Jesus.
The Golf Player by RembrandtI started golfing before I could remember, like, four. If I kept golfing, I probably could have been Tiger before Tiger was Tiger, but probably not. I didn’t play much until my senior year of high school, when I joined the golf team. I loved it. Golf relaxes me. I don’t think about anything when I’m golfing, as someone who thinks about everything all the time. I need to golf more. I fell in love, got married, and had kids. I didn’t play golf for twenty years.
When COVI...
October 26, 2025
How do I Get Better at Writing?
Dublin Streets a Vender of Books by Walter OsborneThe beauty of good literature is found in the writer’s ability to see what others miss. To say what others think and have experienced, but have no words to say. To pay attention to the simple and be inspired by the mundane. To access wonder in the middle of the everydayness of life. To say let there be…because our God has already said exactly that.
I’ve spent the last two weeks with my DMin cohort going to writerly places. Locations all over the ...
September 28, 2025
A New Season for the Luce Family
Flowing Peach Trees by Vincent van GoghWhat do you say about 28 years of anything?
I never wanted to attend Bible College because I never desired to be a pastor. It wasn’t because I didn’t know what a pastor’s life was like, but the opposite. Growing up in a pastor’s home, I understood the challenges and sacrifices that the call to ministry requires. We moved frequently growing up, sometimes out of a sense of call, others because of broken promises and damaged relationships. I wanted something d...
August 12, 2025
How to Read a Classic
The Reader by Jean-Honore FragonardMark Twain famously said in a speech that a classic is “something that everybody wants to have read and nobody wants to read.” Classics, like all beautiful things, grow more beautifully in time. Yet they require us to apporch them intentally. One of the reasons I decided to get an M.A. in Classical Studies was that I wanted to read whole chunks of the Western canon, but I knew I needed the accountability and Biblical framework that a Seminary setting provided. ...


