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Personal Journey + Testimony
Posts that share my own stories, Daniel & Beth's walk, faith-stirring moments or prophetic direction to help connect spiritually with why this matters.


Church Redefined: Person, Place, or Thing?
We’ve long said “going to church,” but that phrase has shaped us more than we realize. Church was never meant to be a place, a program, or the charisma of a leader—it’s a people. Scripture calls us the ekklesia: the covenant family of God, living pictures of Yeshua’s Body on earth. Not walls, not performance, but presence. What if “church” wasn’t something we attend—but who we are?

Beth Estevis
Sep 54 min read


When Letting Go Feels Like Loss
Sometimes obedience doesn’t feel like victory—it feels like grief. Letting go of something familiar, even when God is the One asking, can feel like loss. In this post, I share what it looks like to trust Him in the empty spaces, when the cost of surrender feels heavy and the outcome unclear. If you're standing in that in-between place, this is for you: a quiet reminder that He is still good, even here.

Beth Estevis
Jun 253 min read


Why We Be Shabbatin'?
The Name Carries the Message: We Be Shabbatin' The Story Behind The Name: It may sound casual—even playful—but the name We Be Shabbatin’...

Beth Estevis
May 93 min read


Who We Are:
We’re Daniel and Beth—a husband and wife learning to live in the rhythm of rest.
We don’t come as experts or teachers, but as two people who said yes to something ancient, holy, and beautifully disruptive: Shabbat.
This post shares our heart behind We Be Shabbatin’—how we got here, why rest matters, and what it means to build a home that doesn’t run on striving, but on presence.
If you’ve ever longed for more than just survival in your faith walk… this is where we begin.

Beth Estevis
May 72 min read


The Shift Into Shabbat
Something happens when you stop running with the world and start walking with God’s rhythm. It’s not just a pause—it’s a shift.
In this post, Beth shares the internal transformation that began after returning from Israel—a burning that couldn’t be silenced and a call to obey that came with urgency. Shabbat wasn’t just a new practice; it became the doorway into a new identity.
This is more than a lifestyle change—it’s a prophetic alignment.
A fire. A yes. A release.
And it b

Beth Estevis
May 72 min read
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